Are we reaching the tipping point on technology stocks? – Guernsey Press

NOT surprisingly, technology shares or tech stocks as they are colloquially called have been all the rage in recent months, if not years. Two decades ago a bubble expanded and burst leaving many embarrassed at having been caught up in the mania. What appeared to be a miracle at the time seemed more like a mirage in the aftermath.

With the benefit of hindsight it is easy to be judgemental but it should be remembered that some portfolio managers had harvested and re-cycled profits along the way. It was certainly the highlight of my career in terms of active trading and sheer excitement. The belief that technology was the gateway to the future also coincided with the onset of 2000 with all the optimism that entailed.

The subsequent crash was brutal and took two-and-a-half years to find a base with a peak-to-trough decline of 77% on the Nasdaq index; the most commonly referenced technology benchmark in America. Indeed, the lows were tested once more in 2009, making it a lost decade for returns on these investments. As ever the mainstay of capitalism is creative destruction and from the ashes emerged todays leaders without whom life would have been a struggle; especially in recent months.

Technology has become so all-consuming that the big five names (Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix, Google/Alphabet) now account for a record 22% of the top 500 US companies by stock market value. We have not seen such extremes since 2000 when the top five firms made up nearly 19% of the index. Back then share prices were based on theory and supposition but now they are grounded on real earnings. One must of course be mindful of the mantra this time its different but we should also remember that technology is a relentless source of innovation that sets human beings apart from other species.

We were fortunate in creating a technology portfolio in 2010 as the market began a decade-long rally. Rather than promoting the high returns irresponsibly we are at pains to point out cyclical corrections that see losses between 10% and 15% every other year; such is the nature of high-risk investing. Paradoxically, tech stocks proved to be relatively resilient during the pandemic as the shares fell less than other areas of the market and went on to rally strongly.

Investors are drawn to high returns like moths to flame and it is our job as advisers to temper expectations and highlight the potential downside. The lesson from history is that every boom or bubble sees opportunistic promotions that are often fraudulent or fantastical at best. This was true for the South Sea Bubble in 1720 and may well be the case for technology equivalents in 2020; the theme may have changed over the centuries but human behaviour remains unchanged.

There are other trends at play below the surface. Money printing in various guises will be coming to our shores soon because of our ties to sterling. This currency union was established in 1921 as a replacement for the Guernsey double, which had been dragged down by the deterioration of the French franc following the First World War. While the link to the pound may have brought benefits it now means Guernsey is not immune from the devaluation of mainstream currencies.

In this environment those who prudently saved cash on deposit will be punished while those who borrowed will be rewarded. This is because inflation whittles away debt over time just as it scythes purchasing power in equal measure. It applies as much to States finances as it does to individuals and is a reflection of the modern topsy-turvy world.

In a race to the bottom the principal safety net for the loss of our currencys value is investing in some kind of real asset, be it equity (shares), property or precious metals. Markets have already sensed the whiff of money printing so the rush into technology shares is symptomatic, with a rally of some 40% from the March lows. This can likewise be seen with the surge in precious metal mining stocks whose shares are up in excess of 50% since then. In the short term we should expect another downward correction but this is a healthy way of skimming off speculative froth. It also reminds investors of the reality of high-risk investing.

If money printing continues apace we may see a boom transition into a bubble for equities; sometimes known as a slingshot move. The degree of excess is anyones guess but you dont want to be the greater fool who is left holding over-priced shares at the peak. As ever, the public gets drawn in just as hype and hubris escalate and there is no reason to believe that the next episode will be any different. In the meantime it may be a case of making hay while the sun shines on technology meantime keeping an eye on the exit before a tipping point and subsequent topple.

n For further information please contact toby.birch@gowerfinancial.com or by telephone on 700155.

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Are we reaching the tipping point on technology stocks? - Guernsey Press

Global V2X Cybersecurity Market Report 2020-2025 – Increasing Trend of Connected and Autonomous Vehicle Technologies Prone to Cyberattacks -…

Dublin, July 29, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "V2X Cybersecurity Market by Unit Type (OBU and RSU), Form (In-vehicle and External Cloud Services), Communication Type (V2I, V2V, V2G, V2C, and V2P), Security Type (PKI and Embedded), Connectivity Type, Vehicle Type, and Region - Global Forecast to 2025" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

The V2X cybersecurity market comprises major companies such as ESCRYPT (Germany), OnBoard Security (US), Autotalks (Israel), AutoCrypt (Korea), and Continental (Germany).

The growth of the V2X cybersecurity market can be attributed to the increasing trend of connected and autonomous vehicles equipped with V2X technologies and growing cyber threats in the automotive industry.

The global V2X cybersecurity market size is projected to reach USD 3,065 million by 2025, from an estimated USD 935 million in 2020, at a CAGR of 26.8%. The advent of V2X technology will have a significant impact on connected and autonomous vehicle technologies, which, in turn, will drive the V2X cybersecurity market.

The focus of automobile manufacturers has shifted from fuel efficiency, performance, driver safety, and stability of the vehicle to additional features such as vehicle connectivity, electrification of functions, and digitalization. This change in focus has created a massive opportunity for non-automotive industry players such as Intel, Qualcomm, and Nvidia, to name a few. Also, from the demand side, consumers are more inclined toward connected features such as navigation systems, live traffic updates, and easy access to emails via the internet in their vehicles.

The growing attraction of connected cars is compelling automotive companies to develop skills in web technology, chip design, and embedded systems, starting with smartphone integration. However, with the technological evolution of V2X communications, secure data processing has become a significant challenge. Thus, cybersecurity has gained a significant focus in the V2X communication system of vehicles.

The increasing cloud-based applications would drive the V2C segment in the forecast.

The V2C segment is projected to be the largest market during the forecast period. The fact that cloud stores all the personal/private data such as driver information, driving details, location, and vehicle details, securing V2C communications is one of the highest priorities for cybersecurity companies. V2C is a technology where all the necessary information from vehicles is stored on the cloud in real-time as well as various cloud services are provided in the vehicle.

V2C offers features such as weather updates, firmware & software updates (FOTA and SOTA), and multimedia services over the cloud (internet) inside a vehicle. These features allow vehicle users and passengers to stay connected with the outside environment. However, such features and applications need a constant update for proper functioning. Thus, it is the top priority for security solution providers to make cloud technology secure.

To avoid any malware, security updates are provided with the help of cloud-based services. These frequent updates reduce the risks associated with data loss, and at the same time, reduce the cost of data retrieval, which helps overcome many issues related to cybersecurity.

The Asia Pacific is expected to be the largest and the fastest-growing market during the forecast period.

The Asia Pacific region is projected to account for the largest share of the global V2X cybersecurity market during the forecast period. The region is home to renowned V2X cybersecurity companies such as Autotalks, AutoCrypt, and Argus Security. China is expected to be the most influential factor in the Asia Pacific V2X cybersecurity market. China has been conducting various tests and trails on cellular connectivity for V2X, and the expected country-wide launch is by 2021. The large market share of China can also be attributed to the high sales of the Mercedes-Benz E-Class, which is equipped with V2X, especially V2C and V2I.

Moreover, increasing the adoption of electric vehicles will result in the increased demand for V2X technologies, which are quite suitable for electric vehicles. Apart from this, the increasing purchasing power of the population and growing concerns over the environment have triggered the demand for V2X in the Asia Pacific. Since South Korea and Japan are among the leaders in electronics, it would enable them to design V2X solutions with better performance at a lesser price. Thus, increasing V2X use in vehicles will result in high demand for cybersecurity solutions, thus, driving the Asia Pacific V2X cybersecurity market.

North America is expected to be the second-fastest market in the forecast period.

The North American automotive industry is one of the fastest-growing sectors globally. The region, which is home to the big three - Ford Motors, General Motors, and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles - is known for passenger cars with advanced comfort and safety technologies. It is expected that market growth in North America would be significant due to the rise in application areas based on connectivity. Thus, the demand for cybersecurity solutions for cars in this region will also increase. The region is home to many renowned V2X cybersecurity solution providers such as OnBoard Security (Qualcomm), Green Hills Software, and Harman, which would further help the market grow.

Research Coverage

The market study covers the V2X cybersecurity market size and future growth potential across different segments such as by unit type, connectivity, communication, security, vehicle type, form, and region. The study also includes an in-depth competitive analysis of the key players in the market, along with their company profiles, key observations related to product and business offerings, recent developments, and key market strategies.

Market DynamicsDrivers

Restraints

Opportunities

Challenges

Companies Mentioned

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/z4bt1i

Research and Markets also offers Custom Research services providing focused, comprehensive and tailored research.

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Global V2X Cybersecurity Market Report 2020-2025 - Increasing Trend of Connected and Autonomous Vehicle Technologies Prone to Cyberattacks -...

More vehicles are sitting parked during coronavirus and they’re a risk to kids – Detroit Free Press

The heat can kill. When temperatures outside reach 100 degrees, temperatures inside a car can get up to 138 degrees in 5 minutes and 150 degrees in 15 minute. Here are ideas on how to reduce the risk of forgetting a child or pet. Wochit

Aug. 22,2010, was the worst day of Jenny Stanley's life, and she wants to make sure otherfamiliesdon't experience the loss of a child like her family has.

That Sunday was the day her 6-year-old daughter, Sydney, died in a hot vehicle. Her familybelieves the little girl, searching for a craft from church, crawled into the family's Buick Enclave and died of vehicular heatstroke.

Tragically, the Alpharetta, Georgia, family's loss has been followed by hundreds of others. The previoustwo yearshave seen the most children lost in a similar span in this gruesome fashion, 54 and 53deaths, respectively, in the United States.

This year, COVID-19 appears to havebrought its own impact to bear, with more children dying of heatstroke having gotten into vehicles on their own vs. being left there almost alwaysunintentionally, experts say by an adult. The assumption is that vehicles are more likely to be parked at home, often unlocked, rather than driven to, say,an office. Thirteen children, ages 10 months to 4 years old, have died so far this year in a hot car, according to KidsandCars.org. Since 1990, almost 1,000 have died of vehicular heatstroke.

Sydney Stanley died in a hot vehicle on August 22, 2010 in Alpharetta, Ga.(Photo: Family photo)

After she lost her daughter, Stanley became an advocate, working with the nonprofit group, KidsandCars.org.

I wanted to be sure that another child didnt pass awayto heatstroke. I wanted to be sure that another family didnt have to go through this. So now my mission is to have every car installed with a child detection device, Stanley said Tuesday during a webinar, which brought together advocates, lawmakers and representatives of companies offering their owntechnological solutions.

More: Automakers: Technology to fight deaths of kids in hot cars will be standard by 2025 model year

More: Kids are dying in hot cars at an alarming rate; safety agency tweets for awareness

Last year, automakers pledged that rear seat reminder systems would be standard equipment on almost all passenger vehicles sold in the United States by the 2025 model year. Industry groups noted that individual automakers are free to go even further and do sofaster if they choose.

Safety advocates, however, have blasted the pledgeassimply inadequate, noting alsothat it would be voluntary and unenforceable. They want systems that detect the presence of children, not just remind someone to check the back seat,and can alert the driver after he or she has left the vehicle. They point to unmet goals, such as whenGeneral Motors pledged in 2001 to roll out sensor technology by 2004 "so sophisticated that it can detect motion as subtle as the breathing of an infant sleeping in a rear-facing child safety seat.

When asked about the issue last year, GM, which has defended its focus on safety,explained that"systems that accurately and reliably detect children in vehicles have not been widely deployed across the industry due to continued challenges with the accuracy of sensing systems given the broad number of vehicle/seating configurations and the varied positions of children in vehicles.

The issue has received congressional attention, with legislation passing the House. However, something similar may not have enough support in theSenate despite interest, according to discussion during the webinar.

U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., added his voice to Tuesday's presentation, describing the need to act as a moral obligation.

We have the technology to prevent this kind of heartbreak, we have an obligation to use it. My heart goes out to whoever might be affected by these tragedies, but my message goes to the manufacturers. The Hot Cars Act that Ive introduced would make mandatory a moral obligation that you have to do the right thing and all of us should raise the alarm and support this legislation," Blumenthal said.

Experts have emphasized that children dying in hot cars is almost always unintentional, although some parents have faced criminal charges. The families involved range across racial, educational and socioeconomic backgrounds.

That describes whatJanette Fennell, founder of KidsandCars.org, has seen in the years that she has been an advocate on the issue.

"All it takes is a simplechange in routine when parents are totally sleep-deprived and stressed. Everyone who has had children knows that that first year of a childs life were operating in a bit of a fog, and because that is simply a fact, I know as a country we can do more to protect our littlest, precious babies," she said.

Fennell and others called the cost of adding child detection technology inconsequential to the price of a new vehicle, ranging from an extra $10 to $40.

Regulators have emphasized education, encouraging parents never to leave children alone in a vehicle and to even place items, such as a purse, in the back seat as a wayto prompt a check before leaving.They have noted also that because of the length of time it takes the U.S. vehicle fleet to turn over, it would be years before newtechnology would be installed in a majority of vehicles, which is one reason for the educational push.

"Make it a habit to check your entire vehicle front and back before locking the door and walking away. Train yourself to park, look, lock, or always ask yourself, 'Where's baby?"according to information from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

Heatstroke can beginwhen the body temperature reaches 104 degrees. It can alsohappen quickly, as a vehicle's interior temperature can increase almost 20 degrees in 10 minutes, according to experts. A cloudy day is not a defense against vehicular heatstroke.

Contact Eric D. Lawrence: elawrence@freepress.com. Follow him on Twitter: @_ericdlawrence.

The Free Press asked candidates up and down the ballot for their positions on a host of issues. Enter your address to see what the candidates on your Aug. 4 ballot had to say. Because the districts that these candidates run in can be very specific, you will only see an accurate ballot if you enter your full address. Your information, address and e-mail address if you enter one, will not be shared.

Read or Share this story: https://www.freep.com/story/money/cars/2020/07/29/kids-hot-cars-death-child-detection-technology/5529311002/

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More vehicles are sitting parked during coronavirus and they're a risk to kids - Detroit Free Press

[The Future of Viewing] Samsung Innovative Sound Technologies, Powered by AI – Samsung Newsroom South Africa

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa 24 June 2020 Now is the age of home entertainment and high-quality audio provides the finishing touch to the best of these experiences. The concept of the modern home goes way beyond being merely a residential space; it has become a place for relaxation, for recreation and for quality time with others. At the recentre of this change is the near-three-dimensional content experiences granted by todays ultra-large, ultra-high-definition, ultra-fine pixel TVs.

With its 2020 QLED 8K TVs and AI sound technologies, Samsung has raised the bar for TV audio experiences. Object Tracking Sound+ uses AI-based software to match the movement of audio with movement on-screen; Active Voice Amplifier (AVA) tracks the users audio environment; and Q-Symphony creates a more realistic, three-dimensional sound.

Samsung Newsroom sat down with the sound developers of Samsung Electronics Visual Display Business to learn more about their extensive capabilities and the journey to fostering innovation in sound.

(From left to right) Youngtae Kim (Sound Lab), Jongbae Kim (Sound Lab), Yoonjae Lee (Sound Device Lab) and Sunmin Kim (Sound Lab)

Object Tracking Sound+: Reading the Room for More Realistic Audio Experiences

Action movies with amazing sound arrangements provide the most realistic experiences when experienced at movie theatres. This is because movie theatres have multi-channel speakers with 3D sound placed on almost all the walls (including the ceiling), as well as around the screen. Compared with a two-channel sound that features speakers only on the left- and right-hand sides, the multi-channel speakers in a movie theatre deliver a more refined sense of realism. So how can this realism be recreated in the home? Samsungs sound developers came up with Object Tracking Sound+ technology, in which sound follows movement onscreen through six speakers built into the TV.

Thanks to this technology, a videos audio follows the action on-screen in real-time. When a car moves from the left to the right-hand side of the screen, so will the sound it makes; and when a heavy object drops from the top to the bottom of the screen, so will the audio.

When developing the 2020 QLED 8K TVs, Samsungs TV developers increased the number of QLED TV speakers from two to six to realise a sound that can mimic the action. By placing two speakers on each side of the screen, as well as on the top and bottom, we enabled the dissemination of sound in all directions from a total of six speakers, explained Jongbae Kim. The distance between the two main speakers has been widened as much as possible, and the additional speakers have been installed in order to maximise sound across all axes to be as three-dimensional as possible. For example, we placed speakers on the upper side of the screen to enable the movement of sound in a vertical direction for a more immersive sound experience. Additionally, Kim highlighted how, despite the complex nature of a TV structure that includes six embedded speakers, the team managed to keep the design of the TV slim and minimal.

In order to ensure audio will follow on-screen movements accurately, it is important to understand the original intentions of content creators. The role of a sound engineer is to increase the consistency between the action onscreen and its accompanying audio track when mixing. The location information of sound in a piece of video content, including sound panning information, is subsequently audio-signalled into the audio channel by the sound engineer something we must be able to track in order to reproduce the location and movement of a contents audio accurately, noted Jongbae Kim. Our Object Tracking Sound+ technology analyses the location information contained in these audio signals as originally placed during mixing. This means the TV can then effectively distribute the sound amongst its six speakers by distinguishing between sound orientations and whether or not the audio source is on-screen, off-screen, close-up or distant.

AVA: Intelligent Noise Detection to Enhance Voice Clarity

When that crucial scene in the show you are watching is overwhelmed by mixer sound or an important breaking news report is obscured by loud thunder, the act of reaching for the remote to adjust the TVs volume can come too late. This is why the team developed their AVA technology, which recognises exterior noises and increases the volume of voices in content accordingly if surrounding conditions become too loud.

The way it works is intelligent. The TVs sound sensor, attached to the bottom middle of the TV, takes in audio from the content onscreen as well as its surrounding environs. AI technology then compares the volume levels of the two types of sound, and if external sounds are found to be louder than that of the TVs content, it will selectively raise the TVs volume. The system does not have one set definition of noise, explained Sunmin Kim. It considers any elements that disturb the enjoyment of content as noise. When exterior sounds persist above a certain decibel level, that is when the system registers it as noise.

However, AVA technology does not just raise the volume of the TV when it recognises a louder environment, as this would only contribute to a boisterous room experience. The system harnesses AI to keep sound effect and background audio levels consistent and to only raise the volume of voice audio, highlighted Sunmin Kim. Our research showed us that the majority of content is dialogue-heavy, so we believe that enhancing the delivery of dialogue would be most beneficial to aid comprehension.

Q-Symphony: Creating a Multi-Dimensional Soundscape

One of the key elements to achieving a realistic sound during content playback on a TV is three-dimensionality, which encompasses both horizontal and vertical audio characteristics. Until recently, these perspectives had been being developed separately by the TV and Soundbar teams. However, with the inclusion of upper side speakers on Samsungs 2020 QLED 8K TVs, the team developed an all-inclusive solution that utilises the capabilities of both the TV and the soundbar in perfect harmony. Q-Symphony is a feature that plays audio using both the TV speakers and the soundbar at the same time, and as an industry-first achievement, the Q-Symphony technology was even recognised with a Best of Innovation Award at CES 2020.

The core of Q-symphony, which manages sound playback harmoniously using speakers with different characteristics, is the technology that follows the sound playback rules which are determined in advance and exchanges the necessary information between the TV and the soundbar when connected. This approach allows for a superior reproduced sound experience, explained Yoonjae Lee. A key element of the technology is a special algorithm that we created which divides and harmonises sounds seamlessly between the TVs speakers and soundbar.

During development, the challenge arose regarding the quality of dialogue reproduction. When both the soundbar and the TV speakers played dialogue simultaneously, the sound quality was noticeably diminished. However, the sound development team were able to resolve this issue by separating the main soundtrack, including dialogue, from the entire signal and assigning the different tracks to the TV speakers and soundbar respectively. In the 2020 QLED 8K TV range, the voice signal is extracted and removed from the sound being reproduced by the TVs embedded speakers, which are then assigned to play ambient sound signals such as sound effects, explained Lee. The soundbar then reproduces the main sound involving any dialogue. With this technology, Q-Symphony harnesses the advantages of both TV speakers and the soundbar in order to deliver the best, and most harmonious, sound experience to users.

Working Together to Develop the Perfect Sound Experience

The sound development team agreed that realising the addition of speakers, the new placement of speakers and the AI harmonisation with the soundbar on the 2020 QLED 8K TV range was possible because of close coordination with a variety of other teams. When developing new TVs, all areas need to be in sync with their innovations, noted Youngtae Kim. We came together in suggesting various solutions to overcome each technological hurdle with an open mind.

Youngtae Kim (left) and Sunmin Kim introduce the innovative sound technologies of the 2020 QLED 8K TV range

The sound development team has always been and always will be dedicated to developing the best possible audio experiences for users. As well as working with Samsungs Audio Lab based in the U.S. for the future audio technology, the team also works with Samsung Researchs R&D Centers, universities and start-up experts around the world. We want to bring about sound experiences that are as natural and as real as possible, explained Youngtae Kim. To achieve this, we will continue to work hard to understand the end-to-end process of the sound and realise sounds in our TVs.

Samsungs sound innovation is paving the path forward. In the future, we will bolster the use of AI so that users do not even need to use a remote control to find the perfect audio balance when enjoying their favourite content, said Nivash Ramsern, Head: Visual Display at Samsung South Africa. As time goes by, TV installation environments, lifestyles and age groups will be diversified. We want users to enjoy the sound of their content as intended, regardless of content type or listening environment.

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[The Future of Viewing] Samsung Innovative Sound Technologies, Powered by AI - Samsung Newsroom South Africa

Hurricane Hanna: Live Webcams & Streams to Watch Landfall – Heavy.com

Hurricane Hanna is expected to make landfall in Texas this afternoon or early evening, just south of Corpus Christi. Of course, with hurricanes, forecasts can change so its a good idea to watch the storm on radar if youre in the region. Hanna is a Category 1 hurricane with winds of about 80 mph. Heres a look at live streams and webcams showing the storm as it makes landfall.

This first stream is from CBS 19, showing local news KIII in Corpus Christi. This will include live coverage of damage in the area and other news as the storm makes landfall just south of Corpus Christi.

LIVE COVERAGE: Hurricane Hanna moving into Texas coastHurricane Hanna is expected to make landfall in Texas, south of Corpus Christi as a category 1 storm. You can read more about the story HERE: https://www.cbs19.tv/article/weather/watch-live-hanna-is-a-category-1-hurricane-strength-this-morning-update-july-25-7-am/503-cf24fc1f-ab03-408a-b450-8f32baaa14ef NOTE: This is live coverage from our sister station KIII in Corpus Christi.2020-07-25T14:27:35Z

The storm is forecast to make landfall in the afternoon or early evening, CNN reported.

The stream below is a webcam from Corpus Christi, Texas.

Hanna Live from Corpus Christi, TXWebcam from the city of Corpus Christi, TX2020-07-11T11:43:14Z

Next is a beach cam from South Padre Island.

HURRICANE HANNA LIVE SOUTH PADRE ISLAND TEXAS SURF AND BEACH CAMSPADRE CAM is live 24/7 and tours SpaceX Boca Chica Launch Pad, the Starship construction area, and the beaches of South Padre Island. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqgSVV36wNI STARSHIP CAM is live 24/7 in 4K and currently overviews the Starship assembly area at SpaceX Boca Chica. Best cam for desktop or large screen viewing. Cam is located on South Padre Island, 6 miles away. Visibility and clarity is relative to atmospheric conditions. Midday heat causes heat mirage effect, best viewing is morning and evening, with night viewing also possible. https://youtu.be/rCnl4IZOPe0 STARSHIP ZOOM CAM is live 24/7 and currently zooms onto Starship assembly area at SpaceX Boca Chica. Best cam for mobile viewing. Cam is located on South Padre Island, 6 miles away. Visibility and clarity is relative to atmospheric conditions. Midday heat causes heat mirage effect, best viewing is morning and evening, with night viewing also possible. https://youtu.be/wTDiD965A_s SPADRE CAM is live 24/7 and tours SpaceX Boca Chica Launch Pad, the Starship construction area, and the beaches of South Padre Island. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqgSVV36wNI *** LATEST SPACEX NEWS https://twitter.com/SpacePadreIsle *** NEW ONLINE STORE! MOST PRODUCTS CUSTOMIZABLE! https://www.zazzle.com/store/spadre *** ROAD CLOSURE UPDATES http://www.cameroncounty.us/space-x/ *** FAA NOTAMS https://tfr.faa.gov/tfr2/list.html *** WEATHER FORECAST https://www.weather.gov/bro/ *** CHECK OUT OUR FAVORITE ASTRO-NUT, EVERYDAY ASTRONAUT AT: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC6uKrU_WqJ1R2HMTY3LIx5Q STARSHIP CAM is located on South Padre Island, 6 miles away from Boca Chica Launch Pad. Visibility and clarity is relative to atmospheric conditions. DIRECTIONS TO SEE STARSHIP https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H3yPQkL9qpU SPADRE CAM is located on South Padre Island, 6 miles away from Boca Chica Launch Pad. Visibility and clarity is relative to atmospheric conditions. SUBSCRIBE for frequent updates from SpaceX Boca Chica, launch viewing information and important local insider tips for those traveling to South Padre Island to film or view launches. SPADRE CAM views the SpaceX Starship at the Boca Chica Launch Pad and Starship construction area, and the beaches of South Padre Island. Enjoy free continuous live streams and recordings of all upcoming launches, Starship launch schedules and the latest SpaceX Boca Chica news. Check SPadre Youtube channel for frequent video updates from Boca Chica with closeup views of activity. FIRST TEST LAUNCHES and landings of the SpaceX "Starship" orbital prototype may begin soon! South Padre Island is the closest viewing area for launches, check https://www.SPadre.com for hotels, launch dates and area information. Make plans and book your hotel as soon as launch date is announced, as these will be the largest events by far in SPI history with worldwide interest and massive crowds for this incredible historic milestone in space flight! Check back for more videos of the progress and launch dates of the first Starship and the Boca Chica Spaceport. THE BEST PLACE TO WATCH launches is on South Padre Island. Boca Chica beaches will be closed. The southern tip of SPI is county owned Isla Blanca Beach Park, and is the closest possible viewing area. A new waterfront ampitheater has already been built for public viewing of launches. It is a short walk on the beach from most hotels to Isla Blanca, some beachfront hotels will have excellent views from south facing units. If you are unable to make it for a launch, you can view it live on the Starship Cam. All launches will be recorded and uploaded to this youtube channel. STARSHIP TEST LAUNCH DATES will have little advance notice, only a general testing period of several days, but we will post any information on launch dates on https://www.SPadre.com as soon as it becomes available. Starship Cam hosted by South Padre Surf Company: https://www.southpadresurfcompany.com2019-06-18T22:55:24Z

The stream below is from South Padre Island, North Beach. It shows the beach, and then a live radar.

Hurricane Hanna Cam South Padre Island North Beach Texas WebcamSubscribe for more! Stay tuned and safe!2020-07-25T11:29:52Z

This live stream is also from different webcams at South Padre Island.

Hurricane Hanna 2020 Live From South Padre IslandLive feed from several LIVE HD Cameras on South Padre Island, Texas of the storm surge and landfall of Hurricane Hanna. LIKE MY CONTENT? Please Subscribe Click https://bit.ly/subnh Then ring the BELL so you don't miss a video or LIVE stream! DISCLAIMER: This video description may contain affiliate links. If you click on one of the product links, I may receive a small commission. This is to help support my channel and allows me to continue to make videos. Thank you for your support!2020-07-25T14:54:33Z

And this live stream is from Bayou Vista, Texas.

LIVE Tropical Storm Hanna Boats Railroad Birds Galveston TexasLive stream AXIS cam with lots of action facing the Bayou Vista, Texas Low Clearance bridge. BNSF trains frequently pass by the railroad while bay fishing boats cruise the canal. Great bird watching with stunning sunsets.2020-05-13T22:09:59Z

The City of Corpus Christi has a live hurricane dashboard that you can view here or in the embed below.

If youre in the Corpus Christi area, you can view a map of power outage updates from AEP here.

Here are some links to additional webcams:

As of 10 a.m. Central, Hanna was located 75 miles ENE of Port Mansfield, Texas and 85 miles SE of Corpus Christi, Texas,according to the NOAA. It has maximum sustained winds of 80 mph and is moving west or 270 degrees at 7 mph. Minimum central pressure is 978 MB or 28.88 inches.

NHC noted:

At 1000 AM CDT (1500 UTC), the center of the eye of Hurricane Hanna was located by reconnaissance aircraft and NOAA Doppler weather radars near latitude 27.1 North, longitude 96.3 West. Hanna is moving toward the west near 7 mph (11 km/h), and this motion should continue through this morning. A gradual turn toward the west-southwest is expected by late afternoon and tonight, and that motion should continue through Sunday. On the forecast track, the center of Hanna should make landfall along the Texas coast within the hurricane warning area by late afternoon or early this evening.

Data from the NOAA Hurricane Hunter aircraft and Doppler weather radars indicate that maximum sustained winds have increased to near 80 mph (130 km/h) with higher gusts. Some further strengthening is possible before Hanna makes landfall later today. Rapid weakening is expected after Hanna moves inland.

Hurricane-force winds extend outward up to 25 miles (35 km) from the centerand tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 90 miles(150 km).

Reports from the NOAA Hurricane Hunter aircraft indicate that the minimumcentral pressure is 978 mb (28.88 inches).

Hanna could produce 6 to 12 inches of rain with some isolated amounts up to 18 inches through Sunday night in south Texas and into some Mexican states. The upper Texas coast and Louisiana coasts might see three to five inches of rain. There is also concern for storm surges in some areas.

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Hurricane Hanna: Live Webcams & Streams to Watch Landfall - Heavy.com

SpaceX May Fly A First Full-Size Prototype Of Its Mars Starship Rocket Later This Week Says Musk – Forbes

Starship and Super Heavy would be the biggest launch system in history.

Elon Musk has said that SpaceXs latest Starship prototype may fly for the first time this week, as the company continues its efforts to get the ambitious spacecraft up and running ahead of planned flights to the Moon and Mars.

Starship is SpaceXs proposed spacecraft to transport up to 100 humans at a time or maybe more to the Red Planet. The company has been rapidly building prototypes of the giant steel rocket at a test site in Boca Chica, Texas, with the goal of eventually finding a design that works.

Multiple iterations have come and gone so far, with several explosions along the way. But in a tweet yesterday, Tuesday, 21 July, Musk said the latest version SN5, or serial number 5 will attempt to fly later this week. That will be preceded by a static fire test at some point.

The SpaceX CEO did not go into any more details, but its thought this will be a hop test up to an altitude of 150 meters. That would be comparable to the companys flight of its Starhopper prototype last year but this will be the first flight of a full-size Starship prototype.

According to Business Insider, SpaceX received an FAA licence for suborbital flights in May this year, meaning Starship prototypes could later fly up to tens of kilometers above the ground before coming back to land safely on landing legs.

The final Starship design will launch atop a reusable Super Heavy booster. Together the two vehicles will use 41 of SpaceXs innovative Raptor engines, towering a combined 120 meters above the ground bigger than any rocket in history. Starship, for its part, measures 55 meters tall.

Ultimately the company is hoping to launch Starship to space for the first time in the coming year, with an uncrewed mission to Mars in 2022 followed by a first human launch to Mars in 2024. That is an ambitious timeline that has left some sceptical, but crucial to getting near that goal will be getting these full-size prototypes flying as soon as possible.

SpaceX is also in a competition with three other ventures the Blue Origin-led National Team and Dynetics for a NASA contract to conduct a crewed lunar landing in 2024. This contract is the first time NASA has really taken Starship seriously, a major show of support for the spacecraft.

Musk, however, has said previously that he believes Starship and Super Heavy could entirely replace the companys existing fleet of Falcon rockets. Getting a full-size prototype flying would be a major step towards that goal.

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SpaceX May Fly A First Full-Size Prototype Of Its Mars Starship Rocket Later This Week Says Musk - Forbes

Normal People’s Paul Mescal Had The Best Reaction to Emmy Nomination – elle.com

With the glitz and glamour of awards season feeling like a thing of the past - exaggerated by the Coronavirus lockdown, which makes it seem like a live event hasn't taken place in a decade - the Emmy nominations for 2020 have been announced.

Saturday Night Live's Leslie Jones hosted the nominations reveal on Tuesday, with the help of Laverne Cox, Josh Gaad and Tatiana Maslany. Jimmy Kimmel will host the actual ceremony on September 20, but what form the show will take - due to the pandemic - is currently unknown.

Among the many nominees for TV's biggest night were some real treats - especially for British and Irish actors - as well as some disappointing snubs.

One of the best reactions to a nomination came from Paul Mescal, whose breakout role as the enigmatic chain-wearing Connell Waldron in Normal People, has landed him a best actor in a limited series nod.

The 24-year-old shared his reaction on Instagram, sharing a screengrab from the 12-part BBC Three series of Connell crying with the simple-yet-effective subtitles: *Sobs*.

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The Irish actor said the picture was representative of his 'actual face right now', before paying tribute to his co-star Daisy Edgar-Jones, who surprisingly did not receive a nomination for her portrayal of Marianne opposite Mescal.

'This only exists because of you and your extraordinary talent,' Mescal captioned the picture.

Edgar-Jones also shared a picture of Mescal with the show's director Lenny Abrahmson, who also was nominated, saying she 'could not be more proud of these two utterly incredible people'.

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'Working with you both has been one of the greatest joys of my life,' she wrote in a post which has received an overwhelming number of comments from fans of the show outraged that she was left off the nomination list.

Other nomination highlights include Zendaya receiving her first Emmy nod for Euphoria - which Cox practically squealed as she announced live on TV as too did Unorthodox's Shira Haas. Jennifer Aniston receiving her first nomination since Friends for The Morning Show, Olivia Colman for The Crown, Billy Porter for Pose, and Watchmen and Succession receiving multiple nods.

Black actors, such as Kerry Washington, Tracee Ellis-Ross and Regina King, also earned a record number of nominations, though the list is still largely dominated by white actors.

Outstanding Lead Actor In A Comedy Series

Don Cheadle - Black Monday

Anthony Anderson - black-ish

Ted Danson - The Good Place

Michael Douglas - The Kominsky Method

Ramy Youssef -Ramy

Eugene Levy - Schitt's Creek

Outstanding Lead Actor In A Drama Series

Steve Carell - The Morning Show

Jason Bateman - Ozark

Billy Porter -

Brian Cox - Succession

Jeremy Strong - Succession

Sterling K. Brown - This Is Us

Outstanding Lead Actor In A Limited Series Or Movie

Hugh Jackman - Bad Education

Jeremy Pope - Hollywood

Mark Ruffalo - I Know This Much Is True

Paul Mescal - Normal People

Jeremy Irons - Watchmen

Outstanding Lead Actress In A Comedy Series

Tracee Ellis Ross - black-ish

Christina Applegate - Dead To Me

Linda Cardellini - Dead To Me

Issa Rae - Insecure

Rachel Brosnahan - The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

Catherine O'Hara - Schitt's Creek

Outstanding Lead Actress In A Drama Series

Olivia Colman - The Crown

Zendaya - Euphoria

Jodie Comer - Killing Eve

Sandra Oh - Killing Eve

Jennifer Aniston - The Morning Show

Laura Linney - Ozark

Outstanding Lead Actress In A Limited Series Or Movie

Kerry Washington - Little Fires Everywhere

Cate Blanchett - Mrs. America

Octavia Spencer - Self Made: Inspired By The Life Of Madam C.J. Walker

Shira Haas - Unorthodox

Regina King - Watchmen

Outstanding Supporting Actor In A Comedy Series

Andre Braugher - Brooklyn Nine-Nine

William Jackson Harper - The Good Place

Alan Arkin - The Kominsky Method

Sterling K. Brown - The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

Tony Shalhoub - The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

Mahershala Ali - Ramy

Kenan Thompson - Saturday Night Live

Daniel Levy - Schitt's Creek

Outstanding Supporting Actor In A Drama Series

Giancarlo Esposito - Better Call Saul

Bradley Whitford - The Handmaid's Tale

Billy Crudup - The Morning Show

Mark Duplass - The Morning Show

Nicholas Braun - Succession

Kieran Culkin - Succession

Matthew Macfadyen - Succession

Jeffrey Wright - Westworld a

Outstanding Supporting Actor In A Limited Series Or Movie

Dylan McDermott - Hollywood

Jim Parsons - Hollywood

Tituss Burgess - Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt: Kimmy vs. The Reverend

Yahya Abdul-Mateen II - Watchmen

Jovan Adepo - Watchmen

Louis Gossett Jr. - Watchmen

Outstanding Supporting Actress In A Comedy Series

Betty Gilpin - GLOW

D'Arcy Carden - The Good Place

Yvonne Orji - Insecure

Alex Borstein - The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

Marin Hinkle - The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

Kate McKinnon - Saturday Night Live

Cecily Strong - Saturday Night Live

Annie Murphy - Schitt's Creek

Outstanding Supporting Actress In A Drama Series

Laura Dern - Big Little Lies

Meryl Streep - Big Little Lies

Helena Bonham Carter - The Crown

Samira Wiley - The Handmaid's Tale

Fiona Shaw -Fiona Shaw

Julia Garner - Ozark

Sarah Snook - Succession

Thandie Newton - Westworld

Outstanding Supporting Actress In A Limited Series Or Movie

Holland Taylor - Hollywood

Uzo Aduba - Mrs. America

Margo Martindale - Mrs. America

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Normal People's Paul Mescal Had The Best Reaction to Emmy Nomination - elle.com

Hippy In the Mikvah – Lubavitch.com

Hasidism Beyond Modernity: Essays in Habad Thought and History

Naftali Loewenthal

London: The Littman Library of Jewish Civilization, 2020

A Dynamic Tension

If everyone has a story, an academic is someone who can spend a lifetime refining and retelling the same story, honing its details, sharpening its message. In this groundbreaking book, Professor Naftali Loewenthal, a lecturer in Jewish studies at University College London, asks us to consider Chabad through the lens of postmodernism, thereby gaining a fresh perspective on its development as a movement.

At this point, it would be fair to ask what Loewenthal means by postmodernism. If classical thinking consists of constructing meaningful, distinct categories as a means of describing life and modern thinking consists of deconstructing those categories as false and inadequate, postmodern thinking rejects the either-or forced choice of traditional vs. modern, replacing it with an and-also frame. Loewenthal describes this as a feminine mode of thinking, an ability to synthesize and reconcile opposites rather than being forced to choose between them.

In the books introduction, Loewenthal describes his own journey with postmodernism. His maternal grandparents were of Polish Chasidic background, while his fathers family was from Frankfurt; as he puts itthe tug between the Yiddish and German Jewish cultures. Over time, while exploring the varied and rich perspectives of Jewish thinking, he came to embrace traditional Jewish observance. But that presented a conflict for him: as an academic, he was free to think critically about Jewish studies, while as an observant and believing Jew, he might feel constrained as to what he could write in good conscience. He considered leaving the field entirely. In a private audience with the Rebbe, he presented his quandary: should he continue working on a degree in Jewish studies or pursue another career pathway?

The Rebbe encouraged me to continue with the doctorate. I blurted out, But what about the heresy? The Rebbe answered: You should write all the footnotes you need to write. And thenwith a broad smileyou should do teshuvah (p. 15).

Here, the Rebbe affirmed the value of his honest academic explorationa critical analysis with no foregone conclusionswhile also asserting that it was possible for him to remain faithful to his principles and loyal to his beliefs and his community. Similarly, Loewenthals wife, Kate, was encouraged to continue with her academic career as a lecturer in psychology while raising a Chasidic family.

Loewenthals ability to navigate contradiction perhaps makes him uniquely suited to see how seemingly conflicting values within Jewish and Chasidic life can co-exist in dynamic tension and even flourish as a result.

Hippy in the Mikvah

Loewenthal begins building the case for considering Chabad as a postmodern, rather than a traditional, community by looking at Chabads embrace of the non-observant. On the one hand, as in all Chasidic groups, there is a great emphasis on traditional adherence to Jewish practice. At the same time, in stark contrast to other communities, Chabad Chasidim did not try to maintain their authenticity by cutting themselves off from those who do not think of themselves as orthodox. On the contrary, Chabad leaders emphasize that every Jew is holy and that even one mitzvah, on the part of any Jew, could tip the balance of the world toward redemption.

The Rebbe encouraged me to continue with the doctorate. I blurted out, But what about the heresy? The Rebbe answered: You should write all the footnotes you need to write. And thenwith a broad smileyou should do teshuvah.

Loewenthal highlights the tension this attitude creates by sharing an anecdote about a Chabadnik who befriended a young Jewish spiritual seeker, inviting him to immerse in the local mikvah. A Vizhnitz Chasid, who was a member of the Stamford Hill community, expressed discomfort at the thought that his son might encounter someone with a ponytail and tattoos in the mikvah, particularly since this young man might frame the experience in terms of similar practices he had experimented with in India. Was not a mikvah meant to be a sequestered bastion for Jews seeking a higher measure of holiness and spirituality? Yet, to the Chabadnik, the hippy-in-the-mikvah was the ultimate expression of Judaisms accessibilityevery Jew could immerse themselves in the experience of spiritual purification. Over time, this thinking has come to pervade the Orthodox world, with outreach slowly becoming accepted as a community norm.

Finding the Feminine Voice

Another theme that Loewenthal traces is the development of the role of women within Chabad. Traditionally, formal education for women was frowned upon in both the Chasidic and larger Orthodox worlds, though there were always exceptional women who were knowledgeable. Jewish schools for women emerged only in the early twentieth century, in large part as a response to the Haskalah (Jewish Enlightenment), which threatened to destroy the fabric of Orthodox society.

Sara Schenirers Beis Yaakov movement in Poland, founded in 1917, was the first widespread system of formal Jewish education for women. Yet, simultaneously, a parallel movement was occurring within Chabad, which was perhaps even more radical. The sixth Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, and his successor, the Rebbe, promoted womens overt participation in Torah study and their activism within the Jewish community. Strikingly, this included the study of Chassidic textsand even the Talmud, both long considered exclusively male bastions. In other words, Chabad women were educated to be, not only supportive wives and devoted mothers who would uphold the traditional home, but full participants, actively engaging and encouraging their family in every aspect of Chasidic life, bolstered by their personal relationship with the Rebbe and their own knowledge of Torah.

Indeed, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak stated in the name of his grandfather (who lived 1833-1882), that in the study of authentic Chabad Chasidism, there is no difference between a son and a daughter. Loewenthal provides a fascinating account of a young womens study group founded in 1937, in Riga, called Ahot Hatemimim. In many ways, its curriculum paralleled that of Tomchei Temimim, the Chabad yeshiva, founded by Rabbi Yosef Yitzchaks father. The rigor of the demands upon the young womenboth in terms of intellectual sophistication as well as communal leadership and responsibilitywere astounding for its time:

The members of the Riga Ahot Hatemimim group were expected not only to study but to spread Hasidic ideals and other observance of practical commandments. They were given the task of organizing the translation of discourses into Yiddish and their dissemination, as well as of campaigning for the observance of the laws of family purity. Thus spiritual study was combined with practical activism (p. 290). The Rebbe, on at least one occasion, listened to the students recite a discourse by heart and instructed a young member of the group on a method of spiritual meditation (p. 291).

Unfortunately, most of these students died in the war, and the ambitious Ahot Hatemimim study regimen never took root in the same way in America. Still, we see that womens familiarity with Chassidic texts continued to grow over time, and their role in shlichutChabads outreach workevolved, so that they were not simply serving in a role that supported the work of their husbands, but, with the encouragement of the Rebbe, came to view themselves as activists in their own right.

The Postmodern Faces the Future

Perhaps most boldly, Loewenthal addresses the issue of Chabad messianism head-on: its evolution, the ensuing confusion, and a suggested resolution. The last years of the Rebbes life were marked with an ever more overt effort to prepare the world for the ultimate redemption. Many came to believe that the Rebbe would usher in this era, leading them through this experience as he had led their spiritual growth for more than forty years. There was little consideration of how Chabad might continue without the physical presence of the Rebbe. The thought was simply unthinkable.

Yet the unthinkable happened, creating a conflict that touched the essence of Chasidism itself: the relationship between Rebbe and Chasid. The relationship might continue spiritually, but on a physical, practical level, Chabad Chasidim were forced to become their own leaders. Loewenthal talks movingly and honestly about how Chabad has managed to continue, even grow, since the Rebbes passing, despite the fact that no successor has been appointed, noting that the majority of the emissaries today embarked on their mission after the Rebbes passing. He ends his discussion with this anecdote:

In 1994, a few weeks after the passing of Rabbi Menachem Mendel, the chairman of Agudas Chassidei Chabad, Rabbi Avraham Shemtov, visited London. While there he gave an inspiring talk about the future of Habad and its view of the Jewish people, the world, and the messiah to a school assembly in the Lubavitch Senior Girls School. After the talk, two 15-year-old girls were talking. One said; I understand: Moshe Rabenu [Moses our Teacher] died, and the Jews still went into the Land of Israel. The other responded, Yes, but they had Yehoshua [Joshua]. We need a Yehoshua. The first girl answered: Dont you understand? We are Yehoshua (p. 382).

Make no mistake, this book is not an easy read. As noted in the beginning, this is the synthesis of a lifelong academic program of research with all the footnotes. Loewenthal has dug deep into the heart of Chabads philosophy (and some discussions were too complex to be referenced in this review). Yet, his work is destined to be more than another dusty tome read only by a select cohort of colleagues in his field. Throughout the book, he maintains his humanity, a personal voice that compromises neither his objectivity nor his convictions. The observations of the scholar are considered side-by-side with the insights of school girls. There is no more moving testament to the challenge and the resilience of a postmodern movement; the prior categories exploded, the either/or thinking rejected, while the nucleuspresent since the inceptionis retained.

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Strokes often deadly but gene therapy offers hope to rebuild critically damaged brain cells – Genetic Literacy Project

When you think of a typical meal in the US South, you will likely recall the rich, hearty dishes that have immortalized themselves in the food culture of the Southern States. Fried chicken, mashed potatoes, gravy, macaroni and cheese; its all mouth-watering stuff, but of course there is a catch. Foods like these are loaded with fats and, as a result, calories. A diet heavy in such dishes can have a detrimental impact on your health and wreak havoc on your heart and circulatory system.

The CDC has highlighted the fact that, as a result of such diets, various forms of heart disease kill more Southerners than any other disease. One such example can be found in the fact that Southern Counties record a much higher death rate for diseases such as strokes than the rest of America. Strokes are fast acting and deadly, occurring every 40 seconds in the United States, claiming a life every four minutes. Thats 140,000 deaths a year, the third highest total from any disease. Globally, strokes are an epidemic and the second highest cause of death.

While a satisfying cure remains elusive, advances in biotechnology are offering new hope to the millions of people who experience strokes.

What is a stroke?

A stroke is triggered when a blood vessel in the brain gets blocked or bursts. Striking when the blood supply to part of the brain is cut off, a stroke deprives brain cells (neurons) of their critical supply of oxygen. If neurons go without oxygen for more than a few minutes, they start to die by the millions, so it is critical to act fast if you see any signs of onset. Typically a patient will exhibit distinct physical symptoms such as facial drooping, inability to raise arms and slurred speech, and the stroke usually occurs in one of two ways. During an ischemic stroke, the blood supply is stopped by a clot in a blood vessel, which accounts for roughly 85 percent of cases. A hemorrhagic stroke, in contrast, occurs when a blood vessel within the brain becomes weak and bursts.

Regardless of which scenario occurs, a stroke poses a serious threat to the health of a patient. A constant blood supply is the single most essential component in keeping the brain operational. Every cell within the body relies on oxygen from the blood in order to make energy and function, and the brain is a very oxygen-hungry organ. Despite its relatively small size, your brain requires 20 percent of your total oxygen supply. The damage can, therefore, be severe and irreversible if the blood supply to the brain is cut off for more than 10 minutes. For this reason, it is essential that current stroke therapies are administered quickly, but many stroke victims are still likely to suffer long-term consequences that can take years to correct. Consequently, scientists work tirelessly to find better therapies for stroke patients.

Treatment shortfalls and arduous recovery

The need for new and innovative therapies for stroke patients is driven by limitations in currently approved medical interventions. There are two current drug regimens used to treat strokes. Anticoagulants such as warfarin break up existing bloodclots, preventing the most common types of strokes. Antiplatelets such as clopidogrel (Plavix) can be used to help prevent blood clots from forming altogether. But neither one of these drug types repairs the brain damage often associated with strokes.

Additionally, surgery can be performed to treat brain swelling and help prevent further bleeding, but the lingering problem is that patients are still often left with long-term issues after suffering a stroke. Recovery can be a long and arduous process because of the difficulty the brain has in replacing the cellular connections that are lost when neurons die as a result of a stroke. When the cells die, the functions they are responsible for are lost. Regaining those functions often involves a long course of reablement therapies aimed at teaching the brain to build new connections and re-learn skills that were lost after a stroke.

Why gene therapy provides promise

Research indicates that in many instances, a brain can heal itself after a stroke. Cells that are damaged are not beyond repair. They can regenerate. Researchers in the field are pushing for pharmaceutical options to help speed up this regeneration of the lost network of brain cells. This is where gene therapy could make a real difference. Gene therapy offers scientists the tools required to genetically reprogram cells to help speed up the regeneration process during stroke recovery.

The use of gene therapy is still very much in its infancy, with a lot of research underway to ensure the technology can be implemented safely and effectively. Direct administration of DNA into the brain offers the advantage of producing high concentrations of therapeutic agents in a relatively localized environment. Gene transfer also provides longer duration of effect than traditional drug therapy. Recent studies have shown a lot of promise.

In one such study, researchers at Penn State University developed a gene therapy platform using a gene called neurogenic differentiation 1 (NeuroD1). The study, which was conducted on mice, investigated the potential of using a retrovirus to deliver NeuroD1 directly into the brains of mice that had suffered from a stroke. Researchers found that the therapy converted glial cells into the neuronal cells that are critical to regenerating lost brain tissue. Mice treated with this novel gene therapy not only lost less brain tissue but also showed a significant improvement in motor function. According to the leader of the research team, Prof Gong Chen:

The biggest obstacle for brain repair is that neurons cannot regenerate themselves. Many clinical trials for stroke have failed over the past several decades, largely because none of them can regenerate enough new neurons to replenish the lost neurons. I believe that turning glial cells that are already present in the brain into new neurons is the best way to replenish the lost neurons.

In another study from Florida Atlantic University, a research team explored the potential of using a protein called granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) to give cells in the brains of mice the genetic push they needed to trigger regeneration after stroke. The results were, once again, very positive, with treated mice showing an improvement in prognosis after stroke. The cells were more resistant to damage-induced death and this significantly improved behavioral functions in treated mice.

This therapy provides another promising avenue, but study co-author Prof Howard Prentice emphasized the need for further investigation:

Future research will need to focus on uncovering the complete mechanisms by which GCSF retains the ER and mitochondrial homeostasis.

While Prentice underscored the preliminary nature of this research, the data generated so far indicate gene therapies are extremely promising avenues for improving the lives of stroke patients. And just last month, a team at the University of San Diego Medical School released a study showing that just a single treatment that inhibits a gene known as PTB resulted in the disappearance of symptoms associated with Parkinsons disease and other neurodegenerative impairments.

Its my dream to see this through to clinical trials, to test this approach as a treatment for Parkinsons disease, but also many other diseases where neurons are lost, such as Alzheimers and Huntingtons diseases and stroke, said Xiang-Dong Fu, head of the research team. And dreaming even bigger what if we could target PTB to correct defects in other parts of the brain, to treat things like inherited brain defects?

The positive nature of Xiang-Dong Fus outlook is something we can all feel inspired by. At present, the road to recovery for stroke patients is long and their quality of life can suffer. But we have the potential to kick-start that recovery and help the brain rebuild the precious connections that enable stroke victims to lead healthier lives. For now, theres no easy answer; preventing a stroke remains a better option than treating and recovering from one. But the constant influx of advances in gene therapy could provide a quicker route to repairing the severe damage when it does occurdramatically boosting the quality of life for millions of people.

Sam Moxon has a PhD in regenerative medicine and is currently involved in dementia research. He is a freelance writer with an interest in the development of new technologies to diagnose and treat degenerative diseases. Follow him on Twitter @DrSamMoxon

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Strokes often deadly but gene therapy offers hope to rebuild critically damaged brain cells - Genetic Literacy Project

AGC to Complete the Acquisition of MolMed on July 31, 2020 – NBC Right Now

SEATTLE, July 27, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --AGC Biologics, a Global Biopharmaceutical Contract Development and Manufacturing Organization (CDMO), has announced that they will acquire the majority of the share capital of Molecular Medicine S.p.A. ("MolMed") on July 31, 2020. MolMed is a biotechnology company focused on research, development, production and clinical validation of cell and gene therapies for the treatment of cancer and rare diseases. AGC Biologics is now one of the very few CDMO's in the world offering both plasmid production and end-to-end cell and gene therapy services.

Cell and gene therapy is an innovative and rapidly growing therapeutic field that aims to treat diseases that do not have adequate treatments to date. Approximately 1,000 clinical trials are underway worldwide, with some products receiving market authorization in the last few years and approximately 50 new therapies expected to be authorized by 2030. Thanks to its two commercially authorized facilities, MolMed offers GMP services for the development and production of cell and gene therapies. MolMed brings deep experience and expertise in providing development and GMP manufacturing services for viral vectors and genetically modified cells, from the preclinical phase through commercial demand.

"While we work hard to take care of each other and our customers during this very challenging and uncertain time, it's also important that we ensure the continued growth of our company," says AGC Biologics CEO Patricio Massera. "AGC Biologics is committed to continuously expanding our offerings and growing our capacity to serve all the needs of current and future customers. We are very pleased to be adding MolMed and its great cell and gene therapy capabilities and track record to AGC Biologics' global CDMO service offerings."

About AGC Biologics:AGC Biologics is a leading global Contract Development and Manufacturing Organization (CDMO) with a strong commitment to deliver the highest standard of service to clients and partners. The company currently employs more than 1,000 employees worldwide. AGC Biologics' global network spans three continents, with cGMP-compliant facilities in Seattle, Washington; Boulder, Colorado; Copenhagen, Denmark; Heidelberg, Germany; and Chiba, Japan.

AGC Biologics offers deep industry expertise and unique customized services for the scale-up and cGMP manufacture of protein-based therapeutics, from pre-clinical to commercial mammalian and microbial production. Integrated service offerings include plasmid (GMP pDNA) manufacturing, cell line development, bioprocess development, formulation, analytical testing, antibody drug development and conjugation, cell banking and storage and protein expression, including the proprietary CHEF1 Expression System for mammalian production. Learn more at http://www.agcbio.com.

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AGC to Complete the Acquisition of MolMed on July 31, 2020 - NBC Right Now

McEnany can’t say why there’s FBI building money in the coronavirus stimulus bill – CNN

"So, this was part of the President's priority of updating the FBI building, keeping it in DC, and it's been one of the things that's been mentioned that's in this bill and it's a part of one of the President's priorities and it's been a priority for several months," she said during an appearance on CBS News.

Asked again what that provision was doing in the coronavirus bill, McEnany couldn't say, but said it is "not a dealbreaker."

President Donald Trump said later Wednesday that a new FBI building has been in the works "for many years," and he thought it was "crazy" that they would consider moving it to the suburbs of Virginia or Maryland.

"I'm very good at real estate, so I said we'll build a new FBI building, either a renovation of the existing or even better, we'll get a new building. So we have that in the bill, it should stay," Trump told reporters at the White House ahead of his departure for Texas.

Pressed by a reporter on Tuesday over the funding, McConnell responded by saying he hopes that anything not directly related to Covid-19 will be stripped out before a new relief measure is enacted.

The Kentucky Republican was not aware the FBI provision was in the bill but then moments later said the White House "insisted that be included."

A number of Senate Republicans said they opposed the funding and pushed administration officials Tuesday during their private lunch over its inclusion, which members argued wasn't even related to coronavirus.

Asked by CNN's Kaitlan Collins about the fact that Republicans don't want it in the bill, Trump said: "Then Republicans should go back to school and learn. We need a new building."

McEnany said the President's priority is unemployment benefits, not the FBI building funding.

"Well, it's in the bill, the President's made clear that this is what he wants to see. It's not a deal breaker, what the priority here is unemployment benefits as the President said and that is the ultimate priority," she said Wednesday, adding that the President "fought hard" for a payroll tax cut and that unemployment benefits being extended are "paramount."

Democrats have long alleged Trump's interest in the FBI building -- which sits across from the Trump Hotel on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, DC -- are financial.

CNN's Clare Foran, Ted Barrett and Lauren Fox contributed to this report.

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McEnany can't say why there's FBI building money in the coronavirus stimulus bill - CNN

These women’s coronavirus symptoms never went away. Their doctors’ willingness to help did. – NBC News

The frightening symptoms began in early March, when Ailsa Court of Portland, Oregon, suspects she caught the coronavirus from someone at work. More than four months later, she still has shortness of breath, achiness in her lungs, and a strange tingling in her calves.

But doctors have downplayed Courts concerns as her health problems have dragged on. At one point, her primary care doctor suggested that perhaps she was just stressed because of the economy, she said.

And during a visit to an urgent care center in May when she feared she might be having a stroke or other neurological problem because she was having memory loss and a crippling migraine, in addition to chest tightness and numbness in her legs a physician rolled his eyes at her, Court, 35, said. Her issues were nothing more than acid reflux, he told her in a dismissive tone, plus maybe a vitamin deficiency.

The doctors diagnosis infuriated Court, a commercial makeup artist, who felt a male patient who went to urgent care with the same set of health concerns would have been taken more seriously.

Gaslighting is the word Ive been using repeatedly, she said, referring to the psychological tactic of making a person second-guess whether something they know to be true is real. Im so ill and some people are telling me this is a figment of my imagination. It truly feels like a nightmare.

Court is not alone. Across the country, many coronavirus survivors with long-lasting symptoms, particularly women, are dealing with dual frustrations: debilitating health conditions that wont go away, and doctors who tell them the issue might be all in their heads.

Despite their oath to do no harm, medical professionals judgment can be inadvertently altered by deeply ingrained unconscious biases, experts say, and the hysterical female patient has long been a dangerous stereotype in medicine.

While there are no studies on how female coronavirus patients are treated compared to male ones, past research reveals a disturbing pattern. Women who are in pain are more likely than men to receive sedatives instead of pain medication; women with the same type of pain as men who go to an emergency department have to wait longer to be seen; and women are up to three times more likely to die after a heart attack than men as a result of unequal care.

In addition to gender, race and ethnicity are major contributors in the type of medical care people receive: Data show that Black patients in acute pain are 40 percent less likely than white patients to receive medication, and Latino patients are 25 percent less likely than white patients.

And while income, education and other socioeconomic factors explain some differences in health outcomes for minorities, experts believe those alone dont account for all disparities including the significantly higher rate of maternal mortality among Black women in the United States. They point to implicit biases on the part of health care providers as one explanation.

Alisa Valds, 51, an Albuquerque, New Mexico, novelist who, along with her 19-year-old son, Alexander, has been sick since mid-March, has been told by doctors that her problems were a mental issue, despite what she says are very real physical complications of her illness, including emergency surgery to remove her gallbladder. The doctors, she said, have been minimizing me as a woman, minimizing me as a Latina.

Nobody is going to come right out and say that theyre discriminating against you for those reasons, she said. So what do I have to go by? Intuition, instinct, past experience. The attitude of certain providers. The way they look at you. The way they dont look at you. The way they shrug you off.

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Valds symptoms have included extreme burning in her digestive tract, unbearable pain in her sternum and upper back, and a loss of appetite. She feels doctors biases have influenced the way they treat her son, too: When she took him into the emergency room two months ago because his heart was racing, she said she was stunned when doctors automatically assumed his heart rate must be elevated because he was on drugs, which he has never taken.

Other coronavirus survivors say it is hard to parse out whether their gender or race factored into the response they got from doctors. All they know is they have had their symptoms written off.

Nobody is going to come right out and say that theyre discriminating against you for those reasons.

Adrienne Crenshaw, 38, of Houston, who is Black, says she has not witnessed explicit racism or sexism during the multiple trips to the emergency room that she has made since she got the coronavirus in mid-June. She has had shooting pains around her heart, skyrocketing blood pressure and tingling in her arms and legs, and has gone to the hospital several times worried she might be having a heart attack.

Doctors have prescribed anti-anxiety medications to Crenshaw, a bartender and former fitness competitor, despite her insistence that her symptoms are not a result of anxiety. Her father died of the coronavirus July 10 but she has learned not to mention that to her medical providers, since it usually prompts them to suggest her problems are a manifestation of grief and stress.

On one trip earlier this month, she overheard a doctor talking about her to his team with disdain, but she didnt know why.

He said, The girls perfectly normal, theres nothing wrong with her, she said. And in my head, Im like, Im not perfectly fine. I dont just go in the ER to take a room up.

The medical community as a whole has not ignored these so-called coronavirus long-haulers. Health care providers throughout the United States have been working to figure out why they are not getting better, and a handful of post-COVID clinics have sprung up across the country for patients who are having neurological and physical difficulties months after they first got sick.

And in recent weeks, to the relief of long-haulers, top public health officials have recognized that COVID-19 symptoms can last for lengthy periods of time. On Friday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention acknowledged in a report that as many as a third of individuals who were never sick enough to be hospitalized are not entirely better up to three weeks after their diagnosis. Meanwhile, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nations top infectious diseases doctor, has said more research is needed on individuals who appear to be suffering from a post-viral syndrome.

Experts say there are many reasons why doctors do not have solutions for patients experiencing prolonged complications from the coronavirus, starting with the obvious: The virus has not been seen before, and they are learning about it in real time.

Dr. Jessica Dine, director of the advanced consultative pulmonary section at Penn Medicine and a pulmonologist who has been treating patients whose symptoms have not let up, said even if a clinician has not seen a set of symptoms associated with the coronavirus before, there are ways to show patients they are still being heard.

The first step is to recognize that these symptoms are real, said Dine, who along with her colleagues, has seen patients with ongoing respiratory issues, as well as many of the problems cited by the women interviewed in this story: tingling and numbness in their hands and feet, heart rate and blood pressure fluctuations, and extreme fatigue and dizziness.

The frustrating part for the patient and the clinician is, we dont know if this is going to get better and when."

The frustrating part for the patient and the clinician is, we dont know if this is going to get better and when, she said.

Carrianne Ekberg, 37, a social media consultant in Gig Harbor, Washington, said she has not received that kind of sensitivity from her health care providers. She tested positive for the coronavirus April 1 and still has times when the shortness of breath and back pain she experienced when she first tested positive return. She also still has days where she is so fatigued, she cant get out of bed. But doctors have said there is nothing they can do for her and have suggested perhaps she caught another virus on top of the coronavirus or is suffering from anxiety.

I know theyre probably under a lot of stress and seeing a lot of patients, but its so easy to just write, Youre probably going to be okay, this seems to be normal, dont worry about it, lets talk again in a few months, keep me posted, she said. That is the type of response I think COVID survivors want to hear, not you have another virus or you need to seek mental health help because youre probably crazy.

To combat unconscious biases that can affect treatment, clinicians typically are given protocols to follow checklists to run through to make sure they dont miss a diagnosis, said Dr. Melissa Simon, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology and the director of the Center for Health Equity Transformation at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. When someone goes into the emergency room with chest pains, for example, there is an exhaustive list of laboratory tests that need to be ordered and vital signs that need to be checked to run through possible diagnoses.

With the coronavirus, and the problems it is causing long term, there is not yet a protocol to follow, Simon said.

We are constructing that list and that differential as we are literally flying the airplane, she said.

Still, it is within a patients rights to ask a doctor why they arrived at the conclusion they did, or to inquire what other diagnoses were ruled out, she added.

Simon said it did not surprise her that women with long-term coronavirus symptoms were having a hard time getting doctors to believe them.

There are long-standing biases that are omnipresent, she said.

And while its hard when a coronavirus patient is already stressed from being sick, we have to acknowledge that what the patient is telling us is real, and we have to seek to understand how best to address it, she said.

Court, the Oregon makeup artist, has been hesitant to contact doctors again after they dismissed so many of her symptoms. Her situation has been compounded by the fact that she never got a positive COVID-19 test: When she first got sick in March, several days after close contact with a woman at work who was sneezing and coughing and had just returned from Italy, then a coronavirus hot spot, her doctor repeatedly refused to give her a test, saying the state did not have the testing capacity. By the time Court arranged to pay for one out of pocket from a private company one month later, the result was negative; she is still certain that she, as well as her husband and two kids, had the coronavirus nonetheless.

The rest of Courts family has since recovered, but she lives in a state of unknown with her health. Some days, she loses her breath doing household activities, or gets a fever that tops 100 F; on other days, she feels OK. This makes it difficult for her to commit to work. A runner, she is no longer training for a half-marathon like she was before she got sick, and now finds herself panting even from a walk in the woods with her family.

I have to remind myself Im not making this up.

But what has been most frustrating to her is that doctors have doubted her so many times that she has started to doubt herself. Her husband, a former Army combat medic, has been a reality check, reminding her how severe her symptoms are and how many nights she has feared she will die in her sleep.

I have to remind myself Im not making this up, Court said.

She feels the political debates across the U.S. over the coronavirus are making it even harder for patients to be believed.

Everybody is in this state of questioning reality, she said. From the get-go, this country has been gaslit about COVID, and now on an individual level, patients are being gaslit.

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These women's coronavirus symptoms never went away. Their doctors' willingness to help did. - NBC News

Misleading Hydroxychloroquine Video, Pushed by the Trumps, Spreads Online – The New York Times

In a video posted Monday online, a group of people calling themselves Americas Frontline Doctors and wearing white medical coats spoke against the backdrop of the Supreme Court in Washington, sharing misleading claims about the virus, including that hydroxychloroquine was an effective coronavirus treatment and that masks did not slow the spread of the virus.

The video did not appear to be anything special. But within six hours, President Trump and his son Donald Trump Jr. had tweeted versions of it, and the right-wing news site Breitbart had shared it. It went viral, shared largely through Facebook groups dedicated to anti-vaccination movements and conspiracy theories such as QAnon, racking up tens of millions of views. Multiple versions of the video were uploaded to YouTube, and links were shared through Twitter.

Facebook, YouTube and Twitter worked feverishly to remove it, but by the time they had, the video had already become the latest example of misinformation about the virus that has spread widely.

That was because the video had been designed specifically to appeal to internet conspiracists and conservatives eager to see the economy reopen, with a setting and characters to lend authenticity. It showed that even as social media companies have sped up response time to remove dangerous virus misinformation within hours of its posting, people have continued to find new ways around the platforms safeguards.

Misinformation about a deadly virus has become political fodder, which was then spread by many individuals who are trusted by their constituencies, said Lisa Kaplan, founder of Alethea Group, a start-up that helps fight disinformation. If just one person listened to anyone spreading these falsehoods and they subsequently took an action that caused others to catch, spread or even die from the virus that is one person too many.

One of the speakers in the video, who identified herself as Dr. Stella Immanuel, said, You dont need masks to prevent spread of the coronavirus. She also claimed to be treating hundreds of patients infected with coronavirus with hydroxychloroquine, and asserted that it was an effective treatment. The claims have been repeatedly disputed by the medical establishment.

President Trump repeatedly promoted hydroxychloroquine, a malaria drug, in the early months of the crisis. In June, he said he was taking it himself. But that same month, the Food and Drug Administration revoked emergency authorization for the drug for Covid-19 patients and said it was unlikely to be effective and carried potential risks. The National Institutes of Health halted clinical trials of the drug.

In addition, studies have repeatedly shown that masks are effective in curbing the spread of the coronavirus.

The trajectory of Mondays video mirrored that of Plandemic, a 26-minute slickly produced narration that spread widely in May and falsely claimed that a shadowy cabal of elites was using the virus and a potential vaccine to profit and gain power. In just over a week, Plandemic was viewed more than eight million times on YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram before it was taken down.

But the video posted Monday had more views than Plandemic within hours of being posted online, even though it was removed much faster. At least one version of the video, viewed by The Times on Facebook, was watched over 16 million times.

Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter deleted several versions of the video on Monday night. All three companies said the video violated their policies on sharing misinformation related to the coronavirus.

On Tuesday morning, Twitter also took action against Donald Trump Jr. after he shared a link to the video. A spokesman for Twitter said the company had ordered Mr. Trump to delete the misleading tweet and said it would limit some account functionality for 12 hours. Twitter took a similar action against Kelli Ward, the Arizona Republican Party chairwoman, who also tweeted the video.

No action was taken against the president, who retweeted multiple clips of the same video to his 84.2 million followers Monday night. The original posts have since been removed.

When asked about the video on Tuesday, Mr. Trump continued to defend the doctors involved and the treatments they are backing.

For some reason the internet wanted to take them down and took them off, the president said. I think they are very respected doctors. There was a woman who was spectacular in her statements about it, that shes had tremendous success with it and they took her voice off. I dont know why they took her off. Maybe they had a good reason, maybe they didnt.

Facebook and YouTube did not answer questions about multiple versions of the video that remained online on Tuesday afternoon. Twitter said it was continuing to take action on new and existing tweets with the video.

The members of the group behind Mondays video say they are physicians treating patients infected with the coronavirus. But it was unclear where many of them practice medicine or how many patients they had actually seen. As early as May, anti-Obamacare conservative activists called the Tea Party Patriots Action reportedly worked with some of them to advocate loosening states restrictions on elective surgeries and nonemergency care. On July 15, the group registered a website called Americas Frontline Doctors, domain registration records show.

One of the first copies of the video that appeared on Monday was posted to the Tea Party Patriots YouTube channel, alongside other videos featuring the members of Americas Frontline Doctors.

The doctors have also been promoted by conservatives like Brent Bozell, founder of the Media Research Center, a nonprofit media organization.

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Misleading Hydroxychloroquine Video, Pushed by the Trumps, Spreads Online - The New York Times

When Coronavirus Struck the Salton Sea – The Intercept

When Alexis Rodriguez laughs too hard, she sometimes gets such a bad cough that she needs to use her inhaler. Its been this way for the 29-year-old since she was first diagnosed with asthma as a child. Her symptoms typically rear up in the spring, when the high desert around Californias Salton Sea starts to warm, and the dust begins to blow.

But Covid-19 was something else.

This is probably the worst breathing issue that Ive ever had, Rodriguez said. The virus spread to her lungs and caused pneumonia, which sent her to the hospital. Its like youre just struggling so bad. Just to get a good full breath of air.

Covid-19 hit her family this June, spreading quickly from her older brother, to her sister and her young child, to her dad and then finally to Rodriguez. She got the worst of it.

Alexis Rodriguez, right, with the printed mask, and her family members, all of whom contracted Covid-19, at their home in El Centro, Calif., on July 10, 2020.

Photo: Alex Welsh for The Intercept

Respiratory illnesses are no stranger to the Latino communities who live around Californias largest lake, the Salton Sea. Asthma rates here are some of the highest in California, with air quality routinely failing to meet federal and state standards. Thanks in part to the states omnipresent water wars, the water in this desolate, former vacation destination is rapidly drying up, salinating the lake, and releasing decades-old contaminants into the air.

The community already beset by an environmental disaster is now facing a pandemic of the worst proportions. Residents and activists, who have long fought for more funding and pollution mitigation, say the area was already at a steep disadvantage for health care. Now the largely agrarian community has found itself in the middle of a perfect storm of environmental neglect, poverty, andthe coronavirus.

As Covid-19 cases resurge across the U.S., the numbers have been stark in the Golden State. Heralded for fast-moving lockdowns that helped thwart maxed-out hospitals at the beginning of the crisis, California is now breaking single-day case records.

The communities near the Salton Sea are some of the states hardest hit. To the north, the Eastern Coachella Valley has the largest number of coronavirus cases and deaths of any of Riverside Countys districts and Riverside has the second highest number of Covid-19 cases in the state, aside from Los Angeles. Across the lake to the south, adjacent Imperial County has also emerged as a Covid-19 hotspot, with the highest death rate in California. The main hospital there is so overrun, theyve turned to using portable military-style tents in the triple-digit heat. Nearly all admitted patients are suffering from Covid-19.

Covid is a leech. It thrives in these conditions, thats why youve seen the spike here.

Covid is a leech. It thrives in these conditions, thats why youve seen the spike here, said Luis Olmedo, executive director of Comite Civico del Valle, a veteran environmental justice group based in Imperial Valley. We experience it everyday. People are dying, getting sick, and having permanent scarring.

Oasis and Mecca, two of the gritty towns that dot the receding banks of the Salton Sea, were once aptly named. Created by accident in 1905 after a failed levee dumped fresh water from the Colorado River into the formerly bone-dry basin, the sea was a true desert wonder. In the mid-20th century, it became a family resort, appealing to residents looking for a break from the hustle of Los Angeles, a three-hour drive to the West. Vacationers came for water sports and to fish the stocked corvina.

In the 1970s, there was a dramatic shift. Runoff from neighboring farmland that flowed untreated into the sea, paired with swiftly salinating waters due to limited new water supply, led to mass fish die-offs. Algae in the lake, feeding off the decay, turned the water freakish shades of green and red. Then a pungent smell began.

The view from the south shore of the Salton Sea on May 11, 2018.

Photo: Alex Welsh

But nothing exacerbated the issue more than the 2003 approval of a multimillion-dollar transfer of water to San Diego: the largest farm-to-urban water agreement in U.S. history. It diverted water from the Colorado River that was previously available for use in the valley, dwindling runoff to the lake. Critics say the benefits from the deal havent trickled down. The water barons in the region the wealthy farmers who hold original water claims in the valley were equally opposed to the transfer. About 500 farms control the rights to nearly 3.1 million acre-feet a year of water from the Colorado River. Contrastingly, nearly a quarter of Imperial County lives in poverty. Per capita income from 2018 was approximately $17,500, according to the latest census figures.

Many Imperial Valley residents are tied to a massive agriculture sector thats responsible for producing the majority of the U.Ss winter crops.

I like to call it the last plantation. You have enormously wealthy white farmers and you have really poor people, said Malissa McKeith, a lawyer at the nonprofit advocacy group Citizens United for Resources and the Environment. She fought for years against the water transfer agreement, pushing for at least a quarter billion dollars to be set aside to build hospitals and increase medical services for future environmental impacts on residents, to no avail.

The water loss, now exacerbated by increasingly warm temperatures due to climate change, has all but determined the Salton Seas destiny. It will keep shrinking, and the toxic dust laced with arsenic and fertilizer will be more and more exposed. The lake has already retreated a football fields length in parts, revealing crumbling banks made of petrified barnacles and dead fish exoskeletons. Its littered with dead birds, recognizable only by their residual feathers.

For McKeith, its unsurprising how hard Covid-19 has hit the community, considering the particulate matter that continues to blow from the sea.

Youre starting out with people who have such compromised respiratory systems, she said. This situation may finally wake people up to the environmental Chernobyl they created, by allowing so much water to go to rich communities without addressing the Salton Sea.

After responding to a call deemed a highly possible case of Covid-19, firefighters in El Centro, Calif., transport a patient experiencing pain and an elevated heart rate on July 17, 2020.

Photo: Alex Welsh for The Intercept

Nearly 50 percent of Riverside County and 84 percent of Imperial County are Hispanic, according to state and census estimates. Many Latino communities in the counties lack access to basic health care and have health conditions such as asthma, hypertension, diabetes, and obesity. Families frequently live together in multigenerational homes. Many also work in essential jobs as farm pickers, prison workers, and nurses. Most cant afford to take sick leave, let alone move elsewhere.

Research has linked polluted air which Latinos in the U.S. are more likely to breathe than white people with a higher likelihood of death from Covid-19. Exposure to poor or cramped living conditions and comorbidities are also believed to exacerbate infection rates and worsen outcomes. In California, the risk to Latino communities is clear. Latinos make up an outsized portion of Covid-19 cases, accounting for 55.6 percent of cases and 45.2 percent of deaths in the state, despite being approximately 39 percent of the population.

Latinos make up an outsized portion of Covid-19 cases in California, accounting for 55.6 percent of cases and 45.2 percent of deaths.

Anna Rosas, 34, a registered nurses assistant who works the night shift at the El Centro Regional Medical Center in Imperial, feels pangs of guilt over the death of her husband (and high school sweetheart) Luis Rosas.

I cant help, you know, to maybe feel that it was my fault, she said.

As a health care professional for the past 13 years, Rosas had a heightened awareness of Covid-19s spread in her community. She washed her hands, wore masks, and limited her outings. My husband would make fun of it. He would be like, Oh, well, when you come home from work, Im gonna have to hose you down, she said.

But by the time she joined her sister-in-laws Mothers Day celebration on May 10, along with six other close family members, she was feeling ill.

When Rosas later tested positive, she isolated herself in her home, pushing Luis and their 8-year-old son to move in with his sister, who at the time was living with her girlfriend, her parents, and her brother in a three-bedroom apartment. Within a week, nearly the entire family had symptoms.

While Rosas was able to avoid the hospital, her sister-in-law and mother-in-law were later admitted and intubated.Rosass 33-year-old brother-in-law died at home. After three weeks in the ICU, her husband also passed away. He was 37 years old.Her husbandhad weight and heart issues, as did other members of his family.

I wish I would have definitely isolated myself, coming to work and not coming home. Because, me being a worker at the hospital, I wish I really definitely would have done that, Rosas said. Its hard though. Ive never been separated from my husband in my life.

Riverside County only knows the Eastern Coachella Valley exists because its on a map, said Maria Pozar, a stay-at-home mother in the tight-knit unincorporated community of North Shore. Located just off the banks of the Sea, the neighborhood consists largely of mobile homes. At least 84 people there have contracted Covid-19.

Pozar is considered the unofficial mayor of the town, a role she stepped into when mothers at the sewing classes she taught began voicing concerns about their kids frequent nosebleeds attributable to the sea. Now shes concerned about the increase in Covid-19 cases, which she blames on the countys decision to reopen too early. Riverside County voted unanimouslyon May 12 to approve a plan for reopening businesses, despite evidence of growing cases in the Eastern Coachella Valley. Two weeks later, cases more than tripled. Imperial County similarly moved to reopen in early June, despite having the highest rate of Covid-19 cases in the state at the time.

We dont know whats under the sea. What we do know, is we dont want it exposed.

The viruss attack on the southern California desert communities has rubbed salt in festering wounds of inequality.

The government has a responsibility to take care of everyone, said Olmedo of Comite Civico del Valle, who grew up in Imperial Valley. We need to be able to stabilize the exposed area [around the sea]. Were not talking about natural dust from undisturbed areas. This has been a sump for industrial waste, and municipal waste. Theres no way to sugarcoat this. Its been a site for a military proving ground. We dont know whats under the sea. What we do know, is we dont want it exposed.

Gov. Gavin Newsom visited the Salton Sea area in 2018, agreeing that the region was at its tipping point. In June, the state legislature appropriated $47 million to help the Salton Sea. Some, including Olmedo, view the moment with a glimmer of hope.

Luis Olmedo, executive director of Comite Civico del Valle, at Red Hill Bay by the Salton Sea on July 10, 2020.

Photo: Alex Welsh for The Intercept

In order for residents to survive amongst the bleak dregs of the lake, Olmedo said he and others must let go of past resentments, accept that the water has been sold, and focus on mitigating the two main crises now facing the region: climate change and Covid-19. That means working in tandem with some of the government officials that locals have long felt were against them, being viewed as laborers and little more.

We have a 100-year-old playbook here where the pioneers came here and they found Imperial. Clearly those of us who are Latino, Mexicano, and Native American, we never really had any power. It was stripped away from us. So we have these carried-over sentiments. But now we have these bigger issues that affect everyone, Olmedo said. This crisis that is here, is in the center of our community and nothing else matters.

This article was supported bytheEconomic Hardship Reporting Project.

Correction, July 28 4:03 p.m. EST:This piece has been updated to clarify the terms of the 2003 water transfer agreement between Imperial Valley and San Diego.

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When Coronavirus Struck the Salton Sea - The Intercept

Louie Gohmert tests positive for coronavirus, according to reports – The Texas Tribune

U.S. Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Tyler, has tested positive for the new coronavirus, Politico and ABC News confirmed Wednesday morning.

Gohmert, who spends ample time on the U.S. House floor without a mask, was one of several Texas officials scheduled to fly to West Texas this afternoon with President Donald Trump, Politico reported. He reportedly tested positive for COVID-19 during a pre-screen at the White House.

Gohmert, 66, was one of several lawmakers who participated in a hearing of the House Judiciary Committee that also took place Tuesday. He walked around the hearing room and outside without wearing a mask.

The Republican lawmaker has been known for speaking at length with Capitol colleagues while not adhering to social distancing guidelines. Last month, he told CNN that he was not wearing a mask because he was getting tested regularly for the virus.

I dont have the coronavirus, turns out as of yesterday Ive never had it, he said in June. But if I get it, youll never see me without a mask.

Gohmert also raised eyebrows in March after returning to the Capitol despite potential exposure to the virus at the Conservative Political Action Conference. Though he said at the time he was cleared by a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention physician to resume Capitol business, other lawmakers who attended the conference, including U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, opted to self-quarantine.

Several other members of Congress have tested positive for the deadly respiratory virus. Kentucky Republican Rand Paul tested positive for the virus in March and later recovered. Florida Republican Reps. Neal Dunn and Mario Diaz-Balart have also contracted the virus.

Texas, however, has recently become a hotspot for the coronavirus, with the state having some of the highest case counts in the nation.

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Louie Gohmert tests positive for coronavirus, according to reports - The Texas Tribune

Global Coronavirus Cases Surge, Stinging Even Places That Seemed to Have Control – The New York Times

Mr. Inslee, a Democrat, and the states secretary of health, John Wiesman, also announced masks will be required in all common spaces, like elevators, hallways, university housing and hotels, effective July 25.

Currently, masks are required in public spaces when people cannot main social distance.

The new restrictions were announced after the state reported a steady rise in new infections. By the end of last month, the seven-day average of new infections in the state was 538, according to a New York Times database. By Wednesday, that number was 920.

Starting July 30, indoor dining at restaurants and bars will be allowed only for members of the same household, according to the statement from Mr. Inslees office. Others can dine outdoors or place to-go orders.

Restaurants must also close gaming and social areas, the statement said. And indoor service at bars will be prohibited.

Occupancy at indoor movie theaters, currently at 50 percent, will be reduced to 25 percent.

Starting Aug. 6, the size of wedding ceremonies will be limited to either 30 people, or 20 percent of the facilitys indoor occupancy, whichever is smaller. Wedding receptions, though, will be prohibited.

The number of people allowed at gyms, fitness studios, indoor pools and tennis facilities will also reduced, starting July 30.

The current moratorium on evictions, Mr. Inslee said, will be extended until Oct. 15. Details on that will be released shortly, he said.

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Global Coronavirus Cases Surge, Stinging Even Places That Seemed to Have Control - The New York Times

Novavax coronavirus vaccine will be made at Texas facility if successful – The Texas Tribune

Need to stay updated on coronavirus news in Texas? Our evening roundup will help you stay on top of the day's latest updates. Sign up here.

A biotech production facility in College Station could begin manufacturing hundreds of millions of doses of a COVID-19 vaccine as early as next year.

As part of a $265 million contract with the federal government, the Texas A&M University System Center for Innovation in Advanced Development and Manufacturing which is owned and operated by Fujifilm Diosynth Biotechnologies has been tapped to mass-manufacture a vaccine candidate that is still undergoing testing. That vaccine, which is being developed by the little-known Maryland company Novavax, is one of six candidates the federal government has put billions of dollars behind as part of its Operation Warp Speed, which is pursuing an aggressive timeline for mass-distributing a coronavirus vaccine.

President Donald Trump, appearing Monday afternoon at a North Carolina Fujifilm facility where the vaccine candidate is being developed for clinical trials, praised the progress of the Novavax vaccine and of other therapeutics.

We will have it delivered in record time, he said.

If clinical trials for the Novavax vaccine prove successful, the bulk production will be moved to the College Station facility which is quite the place, the president said Monday starting next year. The federal dollars will pay for equipment to significantly expand the facilitys production capacity. As many as 80 new hires are also expected.

W. Jay Treat, Texas A&Ms chief manufacturing officer for the Center for Innovation in Advanced Development and Manufacturing, said although the federal contract does not specify a certain number of doses that his facility must produce, he is optimistic that the figure could be in the hundreds of millions. And if Novavax doesn't prove successful in clinical trials, he expects the facility could pivot to begin producing a different vaccine.

If all goes well, Treat said, "I think we might have the capacity here to provide enough [doses] for the U.S. There may even be excess capacity."

Novavax, which has never brought a vaccine to market, received the federal governments largest-yet vaccine contract of $1.6 billion earlier this month. A total of about $4 billion has been invested in companies pursuing vaccines.

According to the World Health Organization, Novavaxs vaccine is still in relatively early stages compared with competitors. Researchers began testing the vaccine in 130 humans in May and expect to report preliminary results by the end of this month. By contrast, Moderna has already found promising results from its early phase trials and launched a trial this week that will enroll 30,000 human participants across the country.

Researchers across the globe are pursuing 166 COVID-19 vaccine candidates, but only about two dozen vaccines are currently being tested in humans, according to the World Health Organization. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approves less than 10% of drugs that undergo clinical trials for public use.

And developing a vaccine against any new infectious disease is a challenging, time-consuming project. Researchers have outlined an optimistic 12- to 18-month timeline on developing a vaccine against the new coronavirus; that would mark the fastest vaccine development in history.

Officials with the A&M System, as well as Fujifilm, praised the federal governments decision to entrust production to the Texas facility, which was founded with such a project in mind.

John Sharp, chancellor of the Texas A&M University System, called the project a triple win: for the A&M System, for Fujifilm and for the nation.

The A&M System facility was founded in 2012 as one of the U.S. governments three national biosecurity centers, intended to develop and produce drugs that would fight pandemics and bioterrorist threats. The U.S. government decided to make an investment in domestic production facilities in the wake of the 2009 H1N1 influenza, not wanting to be reliant on other countries for vaccines in times of crisis.

Fujifilm, a photography, medical equipment and biotech corporation, now owns and operates the facility, but the federal contract runs through the A&M System as part of its long-standing partnership with the federal government on such projects.

The facility has done some work for the government, on drugs for Zika and other diseases, but the coronavirus vaccine will be its first large-scale government contract, Treat said.

Disclosure: The Texas A&M University System has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

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Novavax coronavirus vaccine will be made at Texas facility if successful - The Texas Tribune

29 new coronavirus cases have been reported in maine – Bangor Daily News

The BDN is making the most crucial coverage of the coronavirus pandemic and its economic impact in Maine free for all readers. Click here for all coronavirus stories. You can join others committed to safeguarding this vital public service by purchasing a subscription or donating directly to the newsroom.

This story will be updated.

Another 29 cases of the coronavirus have been reported in Maine, health officials said Wednesday.

Wednesdays count brings the total coronavirus cases reported in Maine to 3,866. Of those, 3,457 have been confirmed positive, while 409 were classified as probable cases, according to the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention reports.

New cases were reported in Androscoggin (1), Cumberland (13), Hancock (5), Kennebec (1), Oxford (2), Penobscot (1), Waldo (2) and York (4) counties, state data show.

The agency revised Tuesdays cumulative total to 3,837, down from 3,838, meaning there was a net increase of 28 over the previous days report, state data show. As the Maine CDC continues to investigate previously reported cases, some are determined to have not been the coronavirus, or coronavirus cases not involving Mainers. Those are removed from the states cumulative total.

No new deaths were reported Wednesday, leaving the statewide death toll at 121. Nearly all deaths have been in Mainers over age 60.

So far, 385 Mainers have been hospitalized at some point with COVID-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus.

Meanwhile, 17 more people have recovered from the coronavirus, bringing total recoveries to 3,336. That means there are 409 active and probable cases in the state, which is up from 398 on Tuesday.

A majority of the cases 2,159 have been in Mainers under age 50, while more cases have been reported in women than men, according to the Maine CDC.

As of Tuesday, there have been 162,028 negative test results out of 167,429 overall. Just under 3 percent of all tests have come back positive, the most recent Maine CDC data show.

The coronavirus has hit hardest in Cumberland County, where 2,029 cases have been reported and where the bulk of virus deaths 68 have been concentrated. It is one of four counties the others are Androscoggin, Penobscot and York, with 545, 141 and 633 cases, respectively where community transmission has been confirmed, according to the Maine CDC.

There are two criteria for establishing community transmission: at least 10 confirmed cases and that at least 25 percent of those are not connected to either known cases or travel. That second condition has not yet been satisfied in other counties.

Other cases have been reported in Aroostook (31), Franklin (45), Hancock (23), Kennebec (160), Knox (25), Lincoln (33), Oxford (51), Piscataquis (3), Sagadahoc (43), Somerset (34), Waldo (62) and Washington (7) counties. Information about where another case was reported wasnt immediately available Wednesday morning.

As of Wednesday morning, the coronavirus has sickened 4,361,013 people in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands and the U.S. Virgin Islands, as well as caused 149,260 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University of Medicine.

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29 new coronavirus cases have been reported in maine - Bangor Daily News

NASA’s Perseverance rover signals new era in Mars exploration – Spaceflight Now

NASAs Perseverance rover is lifted during launch preparations at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Credit: NASA JPL/Christian Mangano

NASAs Perseverance rover will depart Cape Canaveral Thursday on a $2.7 billion mission to Mars, carrying with it the first interplanetary aircraft, sophisticated instruments to search for signs of ancient life, and drill to core samples for eventual return to Earth.

Building on past discoveries at the Red Planet, the nuclear-powered robot will aim to become NASAs ninth mission to land on Mars, and the first since the Viking landers of the 1970s charged with seeking evidence of life.

NASAs Perseverance rover the centerpiece of the agencys Mars 2020 mission is set for launch Thursday from Cape Canaveral during a two-hour window opening at 7:50 a.m. EDT (1150 GMT). A United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket will fire the spacecraft away from Earth with a relative velocity of24,785 mph, or about 11 kilometers per second.

Thats enough speed to break free of Earths gravitational grip and speed toward Mars, aiming for the point in space where the Red Planet will be Feb. 18, 2021, the Mars 2020 missions designated landing date.

Preparations for the launch have continued despite some slowdowns due to the coronavirus pandemic. The Mars 2020 mission must launch before mid-August, or else face a costly two-year delay until the next time Earth and Mars are in the right positions in the solar system.

Nearly a decade in the making, the Mars 2020 missions rover weighs more than a ton and hosts seven scientific payloads, a robotic arm, the Ingenuity Mars Helicopter, 25 cameras, and the first microphones to record sound on the Red Planet. NASA says the Mars 2020 mission is the most advanced robotic explorer ever sent into deep space.

A prime science goal of NASAs Perseverance rover is to search for biosignatures, markers left behind in Martian rocks by microbial life forms, assuming they existed. But for the first time, if all goes according to plan, scientists will be able to analyze rock samples gathered by Perseverance in modern laboratories on Earth.

This is the first time in history where NASA has dedicated a mission to what we call astrobiology, the search for life, said NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine.

Were doing transformative science, said Matt Wallace, the Mars 2020 missions deputy project manager at JPL. Really, for the first time, were looking for signs of life on another planet, and for the first time were going to collect samples that we hope will be part of the first sample return from another planet.

But the scientific payoff to that elusive question will have to wait at least a decade, once samples drilled from Martian rocks by the Perseverance rover come back to Earth. The rover itself carries instrumentation to help scientists choose which rocks to sample, but will not have the ability to confirm on its own whether life ever existed on Mars.

The mission objectives of our effort are to explore the geology of our landing site, to look for signs of biosignatures from the past, said Adam Steltzner, chief engineer on the Mars 2020 mission at NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory. We are not a life detection mission. We are looking for signs of past life on the surface of mars. Also, signatures that mars was habitable, and to the degree that is still habitable, where it might be habitable. Our third objective is to prepare a returnable cache of samples, and then fourth is to prepare for future human exploration.

In partnership with the European Space Agency, dozens of rock and soil specimens gathered by the Perseverance rover will be sealed and tagged for return to Earth.

Assuming Perseverances mission is a success, and funding and technical plans remain on track, NASA and ESA could launch missions as soon as 2026 with a European-built Mars rover to retrieve the specimens and deliver the material to a U.S.-supplied solid-fueled booster to shoot the samples from Mars into space.

A separate spacecraft provided by ESA will link up with the samples in orbit around Mars, then head for Earth before releasing a NASA re-entry capsule containing the Martian material to complete the first round-trip interplanetary mission no earlier than 2031.

Then scientists will get to work analyzing the samples. They will look for chemical signatures in the core samples that might suggest life once existed on Mars.

Among other objectives, NASAs two Viking landers carried instruments to search for signs of life on Mars when they landed on the Red Planet in 1976. But the robotic landers did not produce any verifiable confirmation of life, andMars missions since Viking have followed the trail of water, seeking evidence that the Red Planet once harbored environments that could have supported basic life forms.

After the dual successes of the Viking landers, NASAs next mission to the Martian surface was Mars Pathfinder, which deployed a small rover just 26 inches (66 centimeters) long named Sojourner in 1997. That mission proved NASA, and more specifically engineers at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, could build mobile robots to explore the Red Planet.

Next came the larger Spirit and Opportunity rovers, which landed at two different sites on Mars in 2004.

Spirit and Opportunity together established that Mars truly was habitable, that it had abundant water on the surface in many forms, in the forms of large lakes, small lakes, flowing rivers, even hot springs, said Jim Watzin, director of NASAs Mars exploration program. So with that knowledge in hand and the experience that we gained in operating the Spirit and Opportunity, we went and developed what has been our flagship to date, and thats the Curiosity rover.

Curiosity carried a more comprehensive set of instruments to Mars, including a drill to collect pulverized rock samples and deliver the material to a miniaturized laboratory. Curiosity launched in 2011 and landed inside Gale Crater on Mars in August 2012, and found rock layers at the landing site that formed in a lake that dried up billions of years ago.

The rover also discovered organic carbon a building block of life inside Martian rocks, and detected that ancient Mars had the right ingredients to support living microbes.

Curiosity is still operating today and slowly climbing higher on Mount Sharp, a 3.4-mile-high (5.5-kilometer) mountain towering above the crater floor.

Amid the series of rover missions, NASA also dispatched two successful stationary landers to Mars.

The Phoenix lander touched down on the northern polar plains of Mars in 2008 and dug into the soil to find water ice just below the surface. NASAs InSight spacecraft arrived on Mars in 2018 to measure the planets seismology and probe its internal structure.

NASA says it spent more than $2.4 billion to design, build and prepare the Mars 2020 mission for launch. With the money budgeted to operate the rover during the trip to Mars, and for around two Earth years (one Mars year) after landing, the total mission is expected to cost around $2.7 billion.

The 2,260-pound (1,025-kilogram) Perseverance rover is about 10 feet (3 meters) long, 9 feet (2.7 meters wide), and 7 feet (2.2 meters) tall.

The rover is mounted on a rocket-powered descent stage that will lower the robot to the Martian surface. That, in turn, is cocooned inside an aerodynamic shell and heat shield to protect the rover during entry into the atmosphere of Mars, when temperatures outside the spacecraft will reach 2,370 degrees Fahrenheit (about 1,300 degrees Celsius).

A cruise stage is attached to the Mars descent vehicle to shepherd the spacecraft along the 300-million-mile (nearly 500-million-kilometer) journey to the Red Planet. The carrier module will jettison before arriving at Mars and burn up in the Martian atmosphere.

The entire vehicle weighs about 9,000 pounds, or nearly 4.1 metric tons, on top of ULAs Atlas 5 rocket, according to a NASA spokesperson.

While any space launch has some risk, landing a spacecraft on Mars is a hazardous proposition. About half of all missions that have attempted to land on Mars have failed, although NASA has succeeded five consecutive Mars landing attempts.

NASAs Perseverance rover is the third mission to Mars to launch this month, following the July 19 takeoff of the Hope orbiter developed by the United Arab Emirates in partnership with scientists at three U.S. universities. On July 23, China launched its Tianwen 1 spacecraft, an all-in-one mission consisting of an orbiter, lander and rover.

The Hope and Tianwen 1 missions are the first probes from the UAE and China to head for Mars.

We welcome more nations taking trips to mars and studying it and delivering the science and sharing the science with the world, said Bridenstine, who became head of NASA in 2018 after his nomination by President Donald Trump. Thats what science is all about, of course, its a very uniting kind of thing.

Bridenstine said he did not see NASA as in a competition with other nations for Mars exploration.

This is our ninth time to go to mMars and land softy and do robotic experiments and discovery, he said. So weve been doing this now for decades successfully, and of course, this mission is, by far, the most sophisticated (Mars) mission ever. So I dont see it as a competition, but certainly we welcome more explorers to deliver more science than ever before, and we look foward to seeing what it is that theyre able to discover.

Orbiters from the United States, the European Space Agency, and India are currently flying around Mars and observing the planet from above.

All three missions will arrive at the Red Planet next February, with the UAEs Hope spacecraft and Chinas Tianwen 1 spacecraft swinging into orbit around Mars. Several months later, Tianwen 1 will release its lander in a bid to descend to the Martian surface and deploy its rover.

If successful, China would become the second country to land and operate a mobile robot on Mars, after the United States.

The Perseverance rover will aim for a direct approach to Mars, heading straight into the planets rarefied atmosphere next Feb. 18. Around 10 minutes before reaching the upper edge atmosphere, the spacecraft will shed the cruise stage that will have guided the rover toward Mars since its launch.

The rovers 14.8-foot-diameter (4.5-meter) heat shield will take the brunt of the energy during the crafts plunge into the atmosphere of Mars. While temperatures outside the heat shield reach more than 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit, small thrusters will adjust the angle of the vehicles trajectory, allowing it to control lift and begin navigating toward its landing site.

Around four minutes after entering the atmosphere, the spacecraft will unfurl a 70.5-foot-diameter (21.5-meter) supersonic parachute at an altitude of about 7 miles, or 11 kilometers. Perseverances parachute is stronger than the one used on Curiosity, and the Mars 2020 mission will employ a new technique to deploy the chute based on the crafts position relative to the target landing site, rather than using a timer.

That will result in a more precise landing, NASA says.

Roughly 20 seconds after deploying the parachute, the heat shield at the bottom of the spacecraft will drop away, allowing a downward-facing guidance radar and cameras to start seeing the Martian surface.

The atmosphere of Mars is much thinner than Earths, so a parachute by itself is unable to slow the spacecraft enough for a safe landing. The rovers descent stage will release the backshell and parachute around 1.3 miles (2.1 kilometers) above Mars. Eight throttleable thrusters will further slow the rovers descent from about 190 mph (306 kilometers per hour) to a speed of near zero just 66 feet (20 meters) above the surface.

During this time, advanced guidance software loaded into the rovers flight computer will begin searching for a smooth place to set down. The new capability, named terrain relative navigation, was developed since Curiositys landing in 2012 and will be used on Mars for the first time with Perseverance.

It works by comparing imagery taken in real-time during descent with a map of steep slopes, boulders and other hazards pre-loaded into the computer using pictures captured from Mars orbiters. If the rover sees it is heading for dangerous terrain, it will adjust its path to reach a smoother area.

Finally, a bridle will lower the one-ton Perseverance rover to the surface of Mars using a technique called the sky crane, which engineers invented and demonstrated on the Curiosity rovers landing in 2012. Once the rovers six wheels touch Mars, the bridle will be cut and the descent stage will fly away to crash a safe distance away.

That all happens millions of miles from Earth, when it takes minutes for a radio signal to travel between the planets at the speed of light. That leaves no opportunity for human input once the descent begins.

Its basically a controlled disassembly the whole way, Wallace told Spaceflight Now. Its, by far, the highest risk phase of the mission still, and we had the good fortune on Mars 2020 to have leveraged the system that we designed on Curiosity.

So not only we do have the testing behind us on this system that we did before we launched and landed Curiosity, we have the Curiosity flight itself, and all the telemetry that came back, he said. And it performed extremely well during that mission. Then we did a whole lot of additional testing to launch this spacecraft.

Still, no guarantees, Wallace said. Our hearts will still be beating hard when we get to that point in the mission, but I do think its an advantage that we have. This is not a first-time landing system as we had on Curiosity.

The Perseverance rover will target a landing inside the 28-mile-wide (45-kilometer) Jezero Crater on Mars, home to an ancient river delta and lake that scientists believe filled the crater some 3.5 billion to 3.9 billion years ago. Scientists hope to find signatures of ancient life in the rocks and sediments deposited in the dried-up delta.

Perseverance is designed to land as close to the delta deposits as possible.

To get down onto the crater floor right on top of the delta, we need to do better than weve ever done before, Steltzner said.

Once the rover is on Mars and powers up its science instruments, one of its first tasks will be to place NASAs Ingenuity Mars Helicopter onto the surface. Perseverance will release the rotorcraft from a carrier on its bellyonto the ground, then drive away to a distance of at least 330 feet (100 meters) before the helicopter flies for the first time.

Ground controllers will program the helicopter to perform a series of test flights during a planned 30-day campaign.

The helicopter will fly autonomously, without real-time input from ground controllers millions of miles away. The drone carries two cameras, and telemetry from the helicopter will be routed through a base station on the rover. The Perseverance rover might be able to take pictures of the helicopter in flight.

For the first time ever, were going to fly a helicopter on another planet, Bridenstine said. In the future, it could transform how we do planetary science on other worlds, and eventually it could be a scout so we can figure out where we need to send our robots.

NASA officials approved adding the helicopter to the Mars 2020 mission in 2018.

The atmosphere at the Martian surface is about 1 percent the density of Earths, limiting the performance of a rotorcraft like the Ingenuity helicopter.

The helicopters counter-rotating rotors will spin between 2,400 and 2,900 rpm, about 10 times faster than a helicopter flying in Earths atmosphere. Developed at JPL with assistance from a company named AeroVironment Inc., the Ingenuity rotorcraft is tiny compared to the Perseverance rover. The solar-powered drone measures just 1.6 feet (0.49 meters) tall, weighs about 4 pounds (1.8 kilograms), and has blades spanning about 4 feet (1.2 meters) in diameter.

While the Ingenuity helicopter is purely a technology proof-of-concept, future rotorcraft could be dispatched to other planets with more sophisticated scientific instruments.

NASA has selected a robotic mission named Dragonfly to explore Saturns largest moon Titan. But Titan has a much thicker atmosphere than Mars, which eases the difficulty of rotor-driven flight.

Debuting a wide array of new capabilities, the Mars 2020 mission is packed with firsts.

Were making oxygen on the surface of Mars for the first time, Wallace said. For the first time we have an opportunity to use autonomous systems to avoid hazards as we land in Jezero Crater, and thats technology that will feed forward into future robotic systems and human exploration systems.

Were also carrying microphones for the first time, he said. Were going to hear the sounds of the spacecraft landing on another planet and the rover drilling into rocks and rolling over the surface of Mars. Thats pretty exciting.

For the first time, were going to have an opportunity to see our spacecraft land another planet, Wallace continued. Weve got commercial ruggedized cameras that weve distributed essentially all over the spacecraft, and they will get high-definition video that well bring back after we land on the surface from the entire landing activity from the inflation of the parachute to the touchdown of the rover.

The Mars 2020 missions development cost swelled nearly $360 million over NASAs original prediction, according to the Government Accountability Office. That was caused primarily challenges with perfecting the devices that will collect, seal and store rock specimens, along with difficulties with instruments.

Along the way, we had plenty of challenges, Wallace said. We had to qualify a new planetary parachute. Thats another first the first time weve done that as an agency in 40 or 50 years.

Kind of late in the game, we were asked to accommodate this little thing called Mars Helicopter, he said. It was well after most of the payloads were assigned to the project, so we had to do a little bit of magic trick to get that onto the rover.

Around the time of Curiositys landing on Mars in 2012, engineers at JPL started assessing options for NASAs next major Mars rover. NASA leadership announced plans for the Mars 2020 mission in late 2012, seeking to recycle designs proven with the Curiosity mission also known as Mars Science Laboratory with a different set of scientific instruments, and the new ability to drill core samples, seal them inside ultra-clean tubes, and drop them onto the Red Planet to be picked up years in the future.

We need to make the sample tubes that we take to Mars cleaner than anything that weve ever done before in space, and cleaner than almost everything we do here on Earth, Steltzner said.Part of the effort to do that involves us hyper-cleaning the sample tubes in which the samples that we take on Mars will be placed, and then placing them into the rover at last possible minute.

Read more about the sampling system in our earlier story.

The sample tubes were installed into the Perseverance rover in May, just before it was closed up inside its aeroshell and mounted on top of the Atlas 5 rocket.

Each tube is sheathed in a gold-colored cylindrical enclosure, providing an extra layer of contamination protection. The tubes will ride to Mars inside the housing, and they will be returned to the sheath once filled with Martian rock samples.

The Perseverance rover will carry 43 sample tubes to Mars, including witness tubes or blanks, which will allow scientists to cross-check rock and sediment specimens returned to Earth for contamination.

The tubes are about the size and shape of a slim cigar, and the Perseverance rover will collect core samples on Mars that measure around a half-inch (13 millimeters) wide and 2.4 inches (60 millimeters) long.

Those samples tubes are part of a Sample and Caching System, which is one of our biggest engineering developments for this mission, Steltzner said. We get to Mars largely like the Curiosity rover got to Mars, but we need to do something very different once were on Mars. We must take these core samples, seal them hermetically and sterilely, and then produce a cache of samples for eventual return to Earth.

The Sample Caching System is a complicated piece of equipment, with 17 separate motors, a rotating wheel containing nine drill bits, and 43 tubes to hermetically seal core samples drilled from Martian rocks.

The rover has a 7-foot-long (2-meter) robotic arm with a coring drill fixed on a 99-pound (45-kilogram) turret on the end. The longer robotic arm will work in concert with a smaller 1.6-foot-long (0.5-meter) robotic manipulator inside the belly of the rover, which will pick up sample tubes for transfer to the main arm for drilling.

Steltzner said the rovers sampling system actually consists of three different robots.

Out at the end of our robotic arm thats the first robot is a coring drill that uses rotary percussive action like we have used similarly and previously on Mars with the Curiosity mission, except rather just generating powder, this creates an annular groove in the rock and breaks off a core sample, Steltzner said.

During each sample collection, the core sample will go directly into the tube attached to the drill.

That bit and the sample tube are brought back by the robotic arm our first robot into the second robot, our bit carousel, which receives the filled sample tube and delivers it to a very fine and detailed robot, the sample handling arm inside the belly of the beast, in which the sample is then assessed, its volume is measured, images are taken, and it is sealed and placed back into storage for eventually being placed in a cache on the surface.

The portion of the caching system inside the rover is called the Adaptive Caching Assembly, which consists of more than 3,000 parts alone.

The design of the drill and sample tubes is intended to preserve the distribution minerals cored from Martian rocks. The system is also intended to collect samples directly from softer soils.

NASA selected seven scientific payloads to ride to Mars on the Perseverance rover in 2014.

Two of the instruments, named PIXL and SHERLOC, are located alongside the coring drill on the robotic arms turret. Theywill scan Martian rocks to determine their chemical composition and search for organic materials, providing key inputs into decisions by ground teams on which rocks to drill.

The Mars 2020 rover also carries the SuperCam instrument,an intricate suite of sensors, including a camera, laser and spectrometers, designed to zap Martian rocks from more than 20 feet (6 meters) away to measure their chemical and mineral make-up, with the ability to identify organic molecules.

Developed by an international team in the United States, France and Spain, the SuperCam instrument is an upgraded version of the ChemCam instrument currently operating on NASAs Curiosity Mars rover.

The instruments mounted inside the Mars 2020 rovers main body include MOXIE, whichwill demonstrate the production of oxygen from carbon dioxide in the atmosphere of Mars, a capability that future astronaut explorers could use on the Red Planet. A Norwegian-developed ground-penetrating radar on the rover named RIMFAX will study the planets underground geologic structure, yielding data on subsurface layers and soil strength which could help designers of larger landers designed to carry people to Mars.

The mission also carries a weather station and 23 cameras the most ever flown on a deep space mission including the first camera on Mars with a zoom function. That camera system, located on top of a mast Perseverance will raise after landing, is named Mastcam-Z and will record video and 360-degree panoramas.

Were carrying about 50 percent more surface payload than Curiosity did, and that was, by far, the most complex thing weve ever done up to that point in time, Wallace said. Were taking this a step further.

The differences between Perseverance and NASAs predecessor Curiosity rover do not stop at the science payload or the Ingenuity helicopter.

The Perseverance roveralso features aluminum wheels with thicker skin and modified treads to avoid damage observed on Curiositys wheels on Mars.NASAs new Mars rover weighs about 278 pounds (126 kilograms) more than Curiosity.

The benefit of another decade of technological advancement since Curiositys launch, and the budding fruits of NASAs partnership with ESA on a Mars Sample Return program, moves scientists closer to addressing the question of whether life took hold elsewhere in the solar system, Bridenstine said.

We are, in fact, trying to find signatures of life, and of course, were interested in finding life itself, Bridenstine said.

While NASA officials are careful to say Perseverance is not a mission to detect life, its launch and landing on Mars will be a big leap forward in the search.

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NASA's Perseverance rover signals new era in Mars exploration - Spaceflight Now

In Praise of Impure Alliances – The Atlantic

Rangel was Black. Buckley was white. Rangel had demonstrated a lifelong commitment to the full equality of Black people. Buckley had repeatedly stood athwart civil-rights advances, yelling Stop! Yet on debate night in 1991, the Democratic representative was the one arguing that the arrest and mass incarceration of Americans caught possessing or selling drugs should continue. And the Reaganite conservative was the one insisting that the human costs of a law and order approach were too steep to bear, citing roughly 800,000 Americans arrested that year.

Lets do what we can for those who are afflicted short of sending them to jail, Buckley said. I want to hear from you whether you want a society based on, say, the Malaysian or the Singapore model in whichand Im not exaggeratingpeople get publicly flogged and they get hanged and they get their fingers chopped off. Is this what you want to do in order to accomplish your aims? he asked Rangel. If not, what is it that you want to do that were not doing already?

Rangel acknowledged that the criminal-justice system has not worked and has not been a deterrent to drug abuse in this country. He added, I still believe that it should be there, because in order to fight this war, you need all of these factors working together. We should not allow people to be able to distribute this poison without fear that maybe they might be arrested and put in jail. In fact, Rangel clarified, if somebody wants to sell drugs to a child, they should fear that they will be arrested and go to jail for the rest of their natural life. Thats what Im talking about when I say fear. Then he suggested that America should tap the generals who won the Gulf War to intensify the War on Drugs. What were missing: to find a take-charge general like Norman Schwarzkopf, like Colin Powell, to coordinate some type of strategy so that America, who has never run away from a battle, will not be running away from this battle, he said. Lets win this war against drugs the same way we won it in the Middle East.

What insights can todays War on Drugs abolitionists take from this story?

First, that in politics and policymaking, neither all good nor all bad things go together. A person might care deeply about racial equality, as Rangel did, yet support a policy that fuels racial disparities. A rival might reject anti-racist politics, even siding with white supremacists on some issues, as Buckley did, while fighting to abandon a ruinous policy that has disproportionately harmed generations of Black people. It is outrageous to live in a society whose laws tolerate sending young people to life in prison because they grew, or distributed, a dozen ounces of marijuana, Buckley wrote to the New York Bar Association in 1995 as part of his ongoing advocacy. I would hope that the good offices of your vital profession would mobilize at least to protest such excesses of wartime zeal, the legal equivalent of a My Lai massacre. And perhaps proceed to recommend the legalization of the sale of most drugs, except to minors. In 1996, National Review joined him, editorializing that the war on drugs has failed, that it is diverting intelligent energy away from how to deal with the problem of addiction, that it is wasting our resources, and that it is encouraging civil, judicial, and penal procedures associated with police states.

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In Praise of Impure Alliances - The Atlantic