TCR Sits Down with Dr. Gretchel Hathaway, New VP of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion – The College Reporter

Photo Courtesy of fandm.edu

By Anna Synakh and Isabel Paris || Copy Editor and Managing Editor

In an email sent out on July 9th, President Altmann introduced Dr. Gretchel Hathaway as Franklin & Marshalls first Vice President for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. She will start her position at F&M on August 20th.

In an interview with The College Reporter, Dr. Hathaway revealed her plans for bettering the campus environment, her concerns, and perspectives on what exactly a liberal arts school such as Franklin & Marshall must do in the fight for equity.

The interview began with Hathaway explaining her thought process behind coming to F&M. She has previously been involved with the college and its culture, as her son is not only an F&M alumni but also one of the founders of the student organization I.M.P.A.C.T. Hathaway stated that she knows first hand that colleges such as ours are crucial in the social justice movement, as these conversations are best held in small classes.

Dr. Hathaway highlighted that in the current climate, no educational facility can remain as is, due to the importance diversity and inclusion plays in the college selection process. Without improvement, schools such as Franklin & Marshall could very well end up with extremely low admission and retention rates, ultimately losing business.

According to the newly elected vice president, F&M must address the issue of inclusion on campus not only through training or one-day programs but also through a school-wide effort. Hathaway emphasized the importance of teaching what diversity means and how broad the concept actually is. She noted that speakers or workshops are not going to solve these issues, but rather that it is an ongoing process to do so. In order for Franklin & Marshall to sustain as an institution of education , Hathaway says we must strive to better ourselves and better the campus. Without this initiative, we will become another institution that failed to acknowledge the pressing social justice issues that surround us.

However, Hathaway does not want nor does she expect to have a utopia for students, faculty, and staff to exist in. When asked what an ideal diverse and inclusive learning environment would look like, she said that there will never be a perfect environment, and rather, we should avoid adopting an attitude of complacency. Hathaway explained, There will never be a college that wont be handling a social justice issue. Whats important is how they are addressing it and discussing it. She continued, saying,We will always have these issues as long as we have a diverse population. Ultimately, Hathaway concluded her answer with her message of constant education and re-education of the people around us. This type of commitment is what will keep an institution enduring rather than make it appear as a seemingly utopian society.

When looking at how Franklin & Marshall can be improved, Hathaway said the first step is to create an environment where people have a voice at the table. She pressed, Even more so, those who have a seat at the table but still feel as though they cant speak at the table. She emphasized that students, faculty, and staff all need to be made aware of and be educated in social justice issues. Hathaway wants to educate those who are not even aware that what they think or say is wrong. She asked, How can you punish someone who doesnt understand what theyre saying is inherently wrong? Her solution is through bringing the community inward and dissecting the culture of the campus. As for the campus community in particular, Hathaway states, Everyone has implicit biases. But she also reassures that biases and prejudices are learned behaviors and can be unlearned.

Throughout the interview, Hathaway was positive about Franklin & Marshalls administration and mentioned her impression that the senior staff is not only ready to understand and learn about [diversity and equity], but to move forward on these issues. She is looking forward to working with them directly and expects that they will fully support changing curriculums and providing a more diverse learning environment regardless of department affiliations.

Listening to Dr. Hathaway, the most important point, it seemed, was that the campus must and will change in the years to come, whether education will be online or in person. She has been working with Union College over the summer and providing diversity training over Zoom, so she ensured that addressing social justice and diversity online will not be new to her and it is very much possible.

Much of the programming Hathaway has offered focuses on encouraging incoming freshmen to understand the basics of social justice, equity, and inclusion, and that the three must play an important role for the community. She stated that HAs will most likely be asked to provide more training on these topics, and orientation will not just feature talk or two on the issues, but rather be built around them. Additionally, she highlighted that such focus on these aspects must not end with orientation; the topics must be revisited throughout freshman year so that the students never stop learning.

Dr. Hathaway concluded the interview by saying that inclusion, equity, and diversity are not about political correctness, but rather social correctness. Offensive actions must not be considered political but taken for what they are, social.

Junior Anna Synakh is a Copy Editor. Her email is asynakh@fandm.edu

Senior Isabel Paris is the Managing Editor. Her email is iparis@fandm.edu

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TCR Sits Down with Dr. Gretchel Hathaway, New VP of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion - The College Reporter

Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market (2020 to 2030) – Analysis and Forecast – GlobeNewswire

Dublin, July 27, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market: Focus on Product, Sample, Technology, Genetic Testing Type, Application Area, Country Data (16 Countries), and Competitive Landscape - Analysis and Forecast, 2020-2030" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

Hereditary genetic testing has grown significantly since the technology was first commercialized, but it is important to quantify that growth and describe future trends. The genome testing industry is proliferating, and its growth is expected to continue at its torrid pace. However, there are significant challenges that may dampen future growth if not addressed.

Our healthcare experts have found hereditary genetic testing to be one of the most rapidly evolving technologies, and the global market for hereditary genetic testing is predicted to grow at a CAGR of 13.59% over the forecast period of 2020-2030.

The unmet clinical needs for better tools to predict, diagnose, treat, and monitor disease are acting as significant factors driving the growth of the sequencing industry. Other factors driving the growth include the increased understanding of the molecular basis of disease, patient demand, industry investment, and regulations that allow marketing of tests without FDA approval.

Despite rapid advanced sequencing industry growth, there are several key issues that are needed to be addressed to facilitate future growth. The relatively high total costs of delivering sequencing test results compared with other technology platforms, and limited coverage by payers, are the key challenges to the growth of this industry. Whole-genome and exome sequencing remain relatively costly requiring initial equipment investment, specialized workforce requirements, and time-intensive variant interpretation.

Within the research report, the market is segmented on the basis of oncology genetic testing, cardiology genetic testing, neurology genetic testing, product, sample, application area, and region. Each of these segments covers the snapshot of the market over the projected years, the inclination of the market revenue, underlying patterns, and trends by using analytics on the primary and secondary data obtained.

Competitive Landscape

The exponential rise in the application of next-generation sequencing on the global level has created a buzz among companies to invest in the products and services of whole-genome and exome sequencing. Due to the diverse product portfolio and intense market penetration, whole-genome and exome has been a pioneer in this field and been a significant competitor in this market.

On the basis of region, North America holds the largest share, due to improved healthcare infrastructure, rise in per capita income, and improvised reimbursement policies in the region. Apart from this, Latin America and the Asia-Pacific region are anticipated to grow at the fastest CAGR during the forecast period.

Growth Drivers

Market Challenges

Market Opportunities

Key Questions Answered in this Report:

Key Topics Covered:

1 Product Definition1.1 Hereditary Genetic Testing1.2 Inclusion and Exclusion

2 Research Scope2.1 Scope of the Study2.2 Key Questions Answered in the Report

3 Research Methodology3.1 Primary Data Sources3.2 Secondary Data Sources3.3 Market Estimation Model3.4 Criteria for Company Profiling

4 Competitive Landscape4.1 Mergers and Acquisitions4.2 Product Launches4.3 Synergistic Activities4.4 Business Expansion Activities and Others4.5 Market Share Analysis4.6 Growth Share Analysis

5 Hereditary Genetic Testing: Overview5.1 Current State of Hereditary Genetic Testing5.2 Market Footprint and Future Potential

6 Market Dynamics6.1 Overview6.2 Impact Analysis6.3 Market Drivers6.3.1 Rising Prevalence of Genetic Disorders6.3.2 Increasing Prevalence of Various Types of Cancer, Globally6.3.3 Increasing Research Funding in the Field of Genomics6.4 Market Restrains6.4.1 Expensive Sequencing Procedures and Their Applications in Medical Treatments6.4.2 High Capital Requirement Hampering the Expansion of Global Reach6.4.3 Stringent Regulatory Standards6.5 Market Opportunities6.5.1 Technological Advancements for Exome Sequencing6.5.2 Rise of Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) Testing Services6.5.3 Massive Scope for Adoption of NGS-Based in Emerging Nations

7 Industry Insights7.1 Legal and Regulatory Framework7.1.1 United States7.1.2 Europe7.1.2.1 Germany7.1.2.2 France7.1.2.3 Italy7.1.3 Asia-Pacific7.1.3.1 China7.1.3.2 Japan7.1.3.3 Australia7.2 Reimbursement Scenario

8 Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market (by Product)8.1 Overview8.2 Kits and Consumables8.3 Services8.4 Others

9 Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market (by Sample Type)9.1 Overview9.2 Tumor Tissue9.3 Bone Marrow9.4 Saliva9.5 Blood9.6 Other Sample Types

10 Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market (by Technology)10.1 Overview10.2 Next Generation Sequencing (NGS)10.3 Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)10.4 Immunohistochemistry (IHC)10.5 In-Situ Hybridization (ISH)10.6 Microarray Techniques10.7 Other Technologies

11 Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market (by Oncology Genetic Testing Type)11.1 Overview11.2 Breast Cancer11.3 Lung Cancer11.4 Prostate Cancer11.5 Colorectal Cancer11.6 Melanoma11.7 Other Oncology Hereditary Genetic Testing

12 Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market (by Cardiology Genetic Testing Type)12.1 Overview12.2 Cardiomyopathy12.3 Aortopathy12.4 Arrhythmia12.5 Other Cardiology Hereditary Genetic Testing

13 Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market (by Neurology Genetic Testing Type)13.1 Overview13.2 Epilepsy13.3 Neurodegenerative Disorders13.4 Neuromuscular Disorders13.5 Other Neurology Hereditary Genetic Testing

14 Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market (by Other Genetic Testing type)14.1 Newborn Screening14.2 Prenatal Screening (NIPT) and Preimplantation Testing14.3 Rare Disease Testing14.4 Direct-to-Consumer Testing

15 Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market (by Application Area)15.1 Academic and Research15.2 Clinical Diagnostics15.3 Drug discovery15.4 Monitoring and Screening

16 Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market (by Region)16.1 Overview16.2 North America16.2.1 U.S.16.2.2 Canada16.3 Europe16.3.1 Germany16.3.2 France16.3.3 Italy16.3.4 U.K.16.3.5 Spain16.3.6 Russia16.3.7 Netherlands16.3.8 Rest-of-Europe16.4 Asia-Pacific16.4.1 China16.4.2 Japan16.4.3 India16.4.4 Australia16.4.5 Singapore16.4.6 Rest-of-APAC16.5 Latin America16.5.1 Brazil16.5.2 Mexico16.5.3 Rest-of-Latin America16.6 Rest-of-the-World (RoW)

17 Company Profiles17.1 Overview17.2 Agilent Technologies, Inc.17.2.1 Company Overview17.2.2 Role of Agilent Technologies, Inc. in the Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market17.2.3 Financials17.2.4 Key Insights About Financial Health of the Company17.2.5 SWOT Analysis17.3 Ambry Genetics17.3.1 Company Overview17.3.2 Role of Ambry Genetics in the Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market17.3.3 SWOT Analysis17.4 Beijing Genomics Institute (BGI)17.4.1 Company Overview17.4.2 Role of BGI in the in the Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market17.4.3 SWOT Analysis17.5 CENTOGENE AG17.5.1 Company Overview17.5.2 Role of CENTOGENE AG in the Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market17.5.3 SWOT Analysis17.6 Eurofins Scientific SE17.6.1 Company Overview17.6.2 Role of Eurofins Scientific SE in the Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market17.6.3 Financials17.6.4 SWOT Analysis17.7 F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd17.7.1 Company Overview17.7.2 Role of F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd in the Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market17.7.3 Financials17.7.4 Key Insights About Financial Health of the Company17.7.5 SWOT Analysis17.8 Illumina, Inc.17.8.1 Company Overview17.8.2 Role of Illumina, Inc. in the Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market17.8.3 Financials17.8.4 Key Insights About Financial Health of the Company17.8.5 SWOT Analysis17.9 Laboratory Corporation of America Holdings17.9.1 Company Overview17.9.2 Role of Laboratory Corporation of America Holdings in the Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market17.9.3 Financials17.9.4 SWOT Analysis17.1 Myriad Genetics, Inc.17.10.1 Company Overview17.10.2 Role of Myriad Genetics, Inc. in the Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market17.10.3 SWOT Analysis17.11 PerkinElmer, Inc.17.11.1 Company Overview17.11.2 Role of PerkinElmer Inc, in Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market17.11.3 Financials17.11.4 Key Insights About Financial Health of the Company17.11.5 SWOT Analysis17.12 Quest Diagnostics Incorporated17.12.1 Company Overview17.12.2 Role of Quest Diagnostics Incorporated in the Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market17.12.3 Financials17.12.4 SWOT Analysis17.13 Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc.17.13.1 Company Overview17.13.2 Role of Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. in the Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market17.13.3 Financials17.13.4 Key Insights About Financial Health of the Company17.13.5 SWOT Analysis17.14 Emerging Companies17.14.1 COLOR17.14.1.1 Company Overview17.14.2 Natera, Inc.17.14.2.1 Company Overview

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

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

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Global Hereditary Genetic Testing Market (2020 to 2030) - Analysis and Forecast - GlobeNewswire

Throwing Baby Jesus Out With the Bathwater – Patheos

Jesus is the most important human being who has ever existed. I miss Him.-Chuck Templeton, former evangelist/atheist

Ive been heavily deconstructing for the past couple of years. Mine wasnt a planned deconstruction. I didnt decide one day that Id put myself through an orderly doctrine by doctrine rethinking of my faith. Mine was more spontaneous than that. You can read more about my overall story here, but the gist of it is this: I started walking around the indoor track at my local gym believing in Hell, eternal conscious torment, and that some of us are saved and others are not. At the end of that thirty minute walk, I could no longer believe in those things. I had an encounter with the white hot love of God that melted away that central piece of my theology and set me free from the fear that kept me imprisoned. The ramifications were endless.

As my theology shifted, the theology of the sermons I preached changed along with it. I was intentionally vague at first because I knew how traumatic it could be to have such a central doctrine fall like a spiritual Jenga tower, but people could tell a difference and began asking questions. Some of my closest friends and coworkers at the church asked some specific questions about sin, hell, and the spiritual state of our LGBTQ+ friends. My friends didnt care for my answers and left the church. Not long after that, my views on the inerrancy of scripture also evolved and many of my spiritual dominoes began to fall in very short order.

I realized early in my deconstruction that I had to at least be willing to reexamine everything I believed without holding back any sacred cows: even Jesus. It was hard for me to even think of maintaining a faith at all apart from Jesus. He was the one constant about my faith. When I originally prayed a sinners prayer as a seven year old and asked Him into my heart hoping to avoid an eternity in Hell, Jesus was there. During my near death experience at age twelve, I encountered Him in a deeply personal way. I had seen glimpses of Him several times in the years since as well. Still though, I knew I had to at least be willing to set my beliefs about Jesus aside to engage in an honest deconstruction of faith.

A surprising thing happened. Jesus wouldnt leave. When church members walked away, He was there. As I worked with the few congregants who remained to stop having church services and start a free grocery market for our low income neighbors in our old sanctuary, I saw Jesus at work even more frequently. And when the church eventually ran out of money and had to shut down, He made it clear that no matter how much my theology evolved, He wasnt going anywhere.

Thats not to say that my beliefs about Jesus never changed. They did. I no longer see Jesus as a mediator between a sinful world and an angry God whose holiness demanded blood. Today, I see Jesus as the best representation of what the love of God looks like in human flesh. I also see Him as offering us a new way to be human by inviting us to follow His way. While I know that my faith will continue to evolve for the rest of my life, Im starting to think that my one constantJesusisnt going anywhere.

Toxic Bathwater

I know that many of you who are deconstructing are doing so because of horrific abuse and trauma that you have endured in settings that proudly proclaimed themselves to be Christian. The most natural reaction in the world would be to throw baby Jesus out with the toxic bathwater. I certainly couldnt blame you for doing that. But while there are many wounded and toxic people out there calling themselves Christians who are causing great pain, there are also many some Christians who love and accept you as you are and have no agenda for your life other than for you to know how loved you are.

Im one of them. And there are many, many more.

Honest deconstruction requires us to at least be willing to give up absolutely every theological construct. But dont be surprised if Jesus just sits down in the shadows of your life waiting for a time when you can be comforted by Him again.

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Throwing Baby Jesus Out With the Bathwater - Patheos

Buddhist Psychology and Spiritual Psychology 100% Online Graduate Programs Announced by Eisner Institute for Professional Studies – Benzinga

Eisner Institute for Professional Studies (EIPS) is proud to announce affordable new graduate programs in Buddhist Therapy and Spiritual Therapy.

Los Angeles, CA, July 28, 2020 --(PR.com)-- The spiritual psychology programs are offered at the MA and Doctorate of Psychology Psy.D. level, and the Buddhist psychology program is offered as a Doctorate of Psychology (Psy.D.).

Don Eisner, PhD, Dean says, "Our programs allow for expansion and integration of a graduate practice by integration various psychotherapeutic and counseling modalities with Buddhist principles and concepts. The programs are particularly beneficial to graduates who are involved in alternative therapies, counseling, life coaching, consulting and teaching.

EIPS understands the needs of students who may be working part or full time. Thus, the 100% on-line program accommodates students who otherwise would need to travel long distances, or give up their current employment.

There is no dissertation or thesis, but rather a capstone. Each program can be completed in two years. There is no residency requirement.

Some of the course offerings are as follows:

Buddhist Psychology and TherapyBuddhist Pathway, Transcendence and Self Actualization, Spirituality and Mental Health, Mindfulness based cognitive behavior therapy Buddhism and Analytic therapy, Intuition and counseling, Applied Cognitive Behavior therapy, Law and Ethics,

Spiritual Psychology and TherapyIntuition and counseling, Shamanism and Spirituality, Spirituality and Mental Health, Law and Ethics, Mind, Brain and Consciousness, Wellness Coaching.

The mission of the Eisner Institute for Professional Studies (EIPS) is to provide high-quality, on-line instruction in the field of psychology at the master degree level, as well as instruction for those who want to learn more about the field of psychology. EIPS is dedicated to promoting a culturally and an intellectually diverse learning environment for students who are educationally qualified and motivated to work independently.

For further information please telephone Eisner Institute for Professional Studies: (818) 380-0185 or visit: http://www.eisnerinstitute.org.

Contact Information:Eisner Institute for Professional StudiesDon Eisner, Ph.D.818-788-6512Contact via Emailwww.eisnerinstitute.org

Read the full story here: https://www.pr.com/press-release/817851

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Buddhist Psychology and Spiritual Psychology 100% Online Graduate Programs Announced by Eisner Institute for Professional Studies - Benzinga

Faith in protest as young people find fervor on the street – Minneapolis Star Tribune

"I can't breathe!'" the crowd chanted, invoking the dying words spoken by George Floyd as a white police officer pressed a knee into his neck.

Kianna Ruff yelled it over and over along with hundreds of fellow protesters as they marched for hours through New York City, a kind of collective mantra that touched someplace deep inside those present.

"I just started choking and I broke down," the 28-year-old activist and minister said. "And I do feel like that that was also a spiritual experience that I've never experienced before."

The demonstrations against police brutality and systemic racism that have raged in the wake of Floyd's killing are often led by young people who find a sense of purpose, ritual and community on the streets. Many involved say the protests deepen spiritual connections and embody familiar elements of traditional faith.

The demonstrators kneel. They observe mournful moments of silence. They break into call-and-response: "What do we want?" and "Justice!" From Los Angeles to New York, Milwaukee to Minneapolis, they stand shoulder-to-shoulder and find common cause in their shared fervor.

"I can say this is liturgy in the street," said the Rev. Jacqueline Lewis, pastor of the Middle Collegiate Church in New York's East Village. "This is church in the street, it is song in the street, it is lament in the street. The tears are in the street."

"When the kids say, 'Black Lives Matter!'" Lewis continued, "that's a prayer."

Americans are becoming less religious in the formal, traditional sense, and the trend is more marked among young adults, according to Pew Research Center surveys from recent years. Young people, who make up a core part of the protesters, are less likely to pray daily, attend religious services or believe in God.

Still, surveys show younger Americans are just as spiritual as their older counterparts, and many have found other expressions of faith outside formal religion.

In its "How We Gather" study, Harvard Divinity School researchers documented wide-ranging spiritual communities for the young ranging from Afro Flow Yoga and dinner churches to public meditation groups.

Fears about the future have also led many to activism. Tens of thousands walked out of schools in 2018 to demand action on gun violence in one of the biggest student protests since the Vietnam era. Inspired by Swedish teenager Greta Thunberg, hundreds of thousands marched worldwide in 2019 demanding urgent action on climate change.

This year that has manifested in the struggle against police brutality and racism.

"All of these issues intersect because they all disproportionately impact Black people," said 19-year-old Aalayah Eastmond, who survived the 2018 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, became a gun-control activist and is now organizing protests against racial injustice with the group Concerned Citizens of D.C.

Her group begins demonstrations with a collective prayer that's inclusive of nonbelievers, she said - the point is closeness and togetherness.

"We stand in a circle and one person just prays for us to one, be safe in the middle of these protests, because they can get very violent. ... And for folks to really feel empowered and moved while they're protesting," Eastmond said.

Nationwide, the demonstrations have tended to be diverse in terms of markers like generation, ethnicity and gender, but Ruff, a graduate of the divinity school at Union Theological Seminary in New York, said community thrives despite such differences.

It's about "being in those groups and feeling that energy, you know, that God wants you there," Ruff said.

"And there's so many people," she added. "Whether they believe what you believe or not, that's not what's important. What's important is the common goal."

During a recent "Buddhists For Black Lives Matter" march in Los Angeles, Tahil Sharma walked with others in a slow, wordless procession whose silence had a similarly powerful effect as the ritual chanting of other demonstrations.

"That march was so different. ... The emotional swelling that we felt of every second passing as we were breathing and praying was a reminder of the seconds of air that George Floyd was gasping for," said Sharma, a 28-year-old interfaith activist born to a Hindu father and a Sikh mother.

Many demonstrations have seen protesters honoring the dead by reciting their names in what resembles a litany.

Another common element is the creation of spaces explicitly or implicitly spiritual in nature and symbolism: In Minneapolis, protesters set up a floral altar memorial at the site where Floyd died, while in Houston, a newly painted mural depicts him with an angelic halo and wings.

"People bring in pictures, flowers, they're burning candles, incense, making music and really kind of creating a physical space where they're holding the spirit of a loved one," said Casper ter Kuile, author of "The Power of Ritual: Turning Everyday Activities Into Soulful Practices."

"There's a really interesting kind of lived religion, as sociologists would call it, on the streets within these protests," ter Kuile said.

In Milwaukee, a Muslims artists' collective recently spent hours painting a mural depicting a family on a sofa under the words: "Our Kids Will Not Be Next," as passing drivers honked horns in solidarity.

"Art is a perfect middle ground for people to unite," said Amal Azzam, the 27-year-old co-founder of Fanana Banana, which organized the event. "Milwaukee is a very segregated city. ... These are the things that help connect the communities."

That's a sentiment shared by Sharma, in Los Angeles, who became involved in interfaith literacy and social justice following the 2012 deadly shooting at a Sikh temple in Oak Creek, Wisconsin.

"When I see that entire world marching with me to fight for the rights of others, I feel I am in prayer," he said. "When we shut down systems of oppression together, acknowledging our differences for a common cause, that's when I know my prayers are being answered."

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Faith in protest as young people find fervor on the street - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Baptisms celebrate son’s and mother’s spiritual bond at Memorial in Metairie – The Baptist Message

By Brian Blackwell, Baptist Message staff writer

METAIRIE, La. (LBM) Mateo Alvarez experienced plenty of fun and games at the 2019 CentriKid summer camp, but in the end also came away with something much greater the gift of salvation.

During an evening worship session at Timber Creek Camp in Polanski, Mississippi, Alvarez, who was 10 at the time, realized the need to confess his sins and stepped forward to publicly declare Jesus as Lord.

The decision just made sense, Alvarez told the Baptist Message. That evening was something I never will forget because that was the day that I shared with everyone there that I am someone who is a new creation in Christ.

Alvarez had completed the churchs foundational course on discipleship and subsequently set a date to be baptized in the spring.

But COVID-19 restrictions on public gatherings interrupted his plan.

Finally, on July 5, Alvarez was able to step down into the baptistery with the double blessing to have his mom, Mary, by his side. She had accepted Christ 20 years ago, but was baptized then under another denominationsdoctrinal beliefs about baptism.

She wanted to follow through in believers baptism an act of obediencesymbolizing her faith in a crucified, buried, and risen Savior, as well as her own death to sin, the burial of her old life, and her resurrection to walk in newness of life in Christ Jesus.

This day allowed for an extra special connection, she said. It reaffirmed we are going to the same place. Not only are we mother and son but brother and sister in Christ.

The baptisms were the first for Memorial Baptist since they stopped meeting for in-person services in mid-March. Pastor Dan Pritchett said the baptisms were an encouragement that reminded him God is moving despite the uncertainty of COVID-19.

The day when we had the baptisms was like a party, he said. How exciting it was to have two people come and say they need to share their faith through baptism.

The congregations enthusiasm for Christ has not been limited to the baptisms.

Since March 12, the church has broadcast its services online, even while gathering for drive-in services in May and worshiping inside their facilities in early June. Technology also has allowed small groups to remain connected through use of the Zoom video conferencing platform.

COVID-19 has not stopped ministry efforts around the community,either. Members have repaired the home of an elderly couple, distributed roses to widows on Mothers Day, helped pay rent for needy individuals and handed out paper towels and toilet paper to neighbors throughout the last several months.

Our members have kept their ears to the ground and been receptive to needs, he said. There is a holy restlessness by our people. We wont be held back and will serve no matter what. People have really sacrificed to give and minister and get the Gospel message out. They understand the opportunities at hand and dont want to miss what God has before us.

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Baptisms celebrate son's and mother's spiritual bond at Memorial in Metairie - The Baptist Message

Psychological and Spiritual Reflections on the COVID-19 Pandemic – Psychiatric Times

COMMENTARY

The COVID pandemic has left many of people in quarantine and/or isolated from friends, family, loved ones and, for some, ourselves. This article will provide reflections on the influence of the pandemic on various components of our psychology and faith.

On an intellectual level, it might be easy for an individual with COVID (or a similar life-threatening disorder) to understand they have a serious illness that might cause death. Yet, mandated isolation or even quarantine may be difficult to conceive, especially for those who are seemingly healthy. Quarantine can foster strong feelings dehumanization and helplessness.

The essence of feeling dehumanized is amplified if one is unable to receive proper treatment, their problems are minimized, or they reacted to as if they are a threat. This could feel like a punishment, and without a clear understanding of the reason for punishment. One could struggle with feeling guilty over past deeds either conscious or not. One would ultimately struggle with feelings of panic, an alarm signal that their body is being threatened. In this state, one might easily feel dissociated or disconnected from their body, loved ones, and life itself.

For many in isolation, they believe they are in quarantine. This sends a message to their body that they are dangerous and infectious. It is important, therefore, that we accurately use the terms, since the words we use and how we think shape our being and responses. Can you imagine the mind of a person that is quarantined who does not have the virus? It can be puzzling, frustrating, and add to the anxiousness and uncertainties.

Here are a few brief interactions demonstrating intense anxiety, uncertainty, and confusion.

Patient 1: I dont want to go around people. I dont want to infect anyone and have that on my conscience.

Patient 2: I'm staying away from people now. I dont know who is who. I dont want to catch anything.

Dr Winfrey: As Im listening to you, it appears you are imagining catching more than the virus. Is that true?

Patient 2: Well, I didnt think of it that way consciously until you pointed it out, but I guess so.

Dr Winfrey: It appears that you feel the danger of others will enter inside you and infect you whether it be COVID or not?

Patient 2: You cant be too careful nowadays.

Theological perspective

Some patients who experience mental agony and uncertainty turn to their religious beliefs to help cope with the COVID pandemic. They may look to passages in the scripture or a faith leader for guidance. The stories in religious teachings and their symbolism may help patients better make sense of their world and their experiences, which may help patients address the anxieties, fears, and guilt.

For instance, we can look to the Genesis narrative of the Fall of Adam and Eve. In the text, Adam and Eve did not see their environment or God as a threat to their life before they ate from the Tree of Good and Evil. Indeed, they were isolated from any threat to their body and mind.

After they ate from the Tree of Good and Evil, they were quarantined, in other words, not allowed in the Garden of Eden until they repented and were healed spiritually, bodily, and mentally.Their behavior changed. They covered themselves with fig leaves. During that time, they were not very close to each other, and they were distant from God. After being quarantined, they continued to struggle, and so goes the essence of the story as the Fall of Man.

What does this passage reveal about ones environment, where they live, learn, heal, work, play, and pray? What if that environment makes them feel the need to quarantine or isolate themselves from God and others? This is no longer the Garden of Eden, and ones body is not protected, which makes our minds vulnerable. In turn, greater vulnerability to ones body weakens ones ability to defend ourselves from infections and other physical insults. Yet, how one frames their experience will influence how they respond. And the nature of ones body will influence their ability to frame their experiences.

Conclusions

Bodily compromises lead to mental compromise as expressed in susceptibility to thoughts of doubt, fear, panic, and the like. The COVID pandemic has caused us to feel unsafe not only in our homes, schools, workplaces, and recreational and religious spaces but also our minds and souls.

Nonetheless, concerns about the COVID-19 virus are legitimate. We can help people understand that their minds processes using representations or symbols, such as those in the scripture. The virus might symbolize danger, feelings of being alien (or seeing others as aliens), among other meanings.

As we continue to live in this COVID world, it is important to ask patients, when we are using the word quarantine, from what are we quarantining? This discussion can help patients put the fears, anxieties, and concerns into perspective.

Dr Winfrey is in private practice in Marlton, NJ. Mr Saafir is Co-founder of The Southern Renaissance and Group 6:22.

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Psychological and Spiritual Reflections on the COVID-19 Pandemic - Psychiatric Times

Being Finnish, spiritually and otherwise – The Boston Globe

In response to I am spiritually Finnish (Opinion, July 17) by Alex Beam (thats Beamanen with the Finnish suffix), I hardly know where to begin.

Being genetically 51 percent Finnish (23andMe says 48.3 percent, but what do they know), I attest to Beams being right on the markka (Finnish currency before the euro). While I agree that the Finns eschew small talk and avoid crowds, they love to talk, just not in person. The cellphone quickly became wildly popular in Finland, not just because Nokia (a Finnish company) made them, but because you could talk while socially distant. Finns speak fast to get in all those lengthy Finnish words, even continuing vocal sounds while inhaling, somehow.

The paradox of being satisfied and depressed simultaneously parallels Finnish humor, which is written in a serious tone or spoken low-key, with a straight face. Just check out Finnish comedian Ismo describing our confusing use of English words or search references to Finland and leaf-raking, after Donald Trumps 2018 statement that Finns keep forests clean by raking the leaves.

Rick Mattila

Hull

Speaking as an actual Finn, Id like to say to Alex Beam that he does not need my permission to drink at home in his underwear. Go to it, and have fun.

Jon Kiparsky

Belmont

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Being Finnish, spiritually and otherwise - The Boston Globe

Religion and Spirituality Books Preview: August 2020 – Publishers Weekly

A modern take on Job, memories of Jewish Salonica under Nazi occupation, and a theologian's musing on the natural world, faith and wonder are among the religion and spirituality books publishing in August.

Nonfiction

August 1

Religion and Sight, edited by Louise Child and Aaron Rosen (Equinox, $32 paper ISBN 978-1-78179-749-5) Sight is both celebrated as a source of revelation and demonized as a road to idolatry. Scholars from many disciplines explore, What do we see and how do we see when we study religion.

The Buddha's Path of Peace: A Step-By-Step Guide by Geoffrey Hunt (Equinox, $32 paper ISBN 978-1-78179-963-5). Hunt presents the life-changing way of the Buddha in the context of contemporary and everyday life, personal experience, human relationships, work, environmental concern and the human wish for peace.

Buddhist Responses to Religious Diversity: Theravada and Tibetan Perspectives, edited by Douglas Duckworth, Elizabeth Harris and Abraham Velez de Cea (Equinox, $32 paper, ISBN 978-1-78179-905-5). Buddhist identities are being renegotiated in the age of globalization, raising questions of religious tolerance and whether only Buddhists can attain nirvana.

Beyond Belief, Beyond Conscience: The Radical Significance of the Free Exercise of Religion by Jack N. Rakove (Oxford Univ., $22.95, ISBN 978-0-19-530581-4). Pulitzer winner Rakove explains why American ideas of religious freedom are more constitutionally significant than many modern commentators understand.

Well, Girl: An Inside-Out Journey to Wellness by Jami Amerine (Shiloh Run, $14.99 trade paper, ISBN 978-1-64352-558-7). Blogger Amerine shares her own wellness routine intended to help Christian women gain confidence in their physical appearance and welcome the love of God.

Exploring Shinto edited by Michael Pye (Eqjuinox, $34 paper, ISBN 978-1-78179-960-4) Scholars delve into the ideas and divinities underlying Shinto, which permeates the religious landscape of Japan and is a major key to the understanding of Japanese culture and society.

August 4

Job: A New Translation by Edward L. Greenstein (Yale, $18 paper ISBN 978-0-300-25524-9). A leading authority on Job offers a major reinterpretation based on nearly half a century of study.

Born to Wonder: Exploring Our Deepest Questions Why Are We Here and Why Does It Matter? by Alister McGrath (Tyndale Momentum, $16.99, ISBN 978-1-4964-3620-7). The Oxford scholar and theologian explores the deepest mysteries of life itself. The experience and examination of wonder fuels much of humanitys creativity and its search for understanding.

Searching for the Messiah: Unlocking the Psalms of Solomon and Humanitys Quest for a Savior by Barrie Wilson (Pegasus, $29.95, ISBN 978-1-64313-450-5). Religious scholar Wilson examines the role a messiah plays in Western culture, tracing it from pre-Christian roots through to modern interpretations of a savior.

The Way of the Monk: How to Find Purpose, Balance, and Lasting Happiness by Guar Gopal Das (Sounds True, $24.99, ISBN 978-1-68364-662-4). Hare Krishna monk Gopal Das follows up Lifes Amazing Secrets with a collection of spiritual and life tools such as diagramming ones passion and mission.

The Buddhist on Death Row: How One Man Found Light in the Darkest Place by David Sheff (Simon and Schuster, $27, 978-1-9821-2845-6). Sheff (Beautiful Boy), spent five years interviewing a convicted killer who converted to Buddhism, and recounts how Jarvis Jay Masters came to learn, to endure, and to live with compassion on death row.

Jesus Politics: How to Win Back the Soul of America by Phil Robertson (Thomas Nelson, $26.99, ISBN 978-1-4002-1006-0). Duck Dynasty star Robertson calls on Christians to use their resources and votes to protect American religious freedoms from socialist policies.

Take Back Your Life: A 40-Day Interactive Journey to Thinking Right So You Can Live Right by Levi Lusko (Thomas Nelson, $28.99, ISBN 978-0-7852-3276-6). Lusko, a pastor, explores ways to overcome personal challenges and mental loops of anxiety and fear, including an action plan, journaling space, and Bible teachings.

Beautiful Community: Unity, Diversity, and the Church at Its Best by Irwyn L. Ince (IVP, $16 paper, ISBN 978-0-8308-4831-7). Ince, a pastor and theologian, argues that the church is at its best when it pursues the biblical value of unity in diversity.

August 11

Mindfulness Through the Stars: A Wellness Guide by Ashley Flores (Mango, $22.95, ISBN 978-1-64250-311-1). An astrology book written by an African-American Latina YouTuber and zodiac expert with a different perspective than Western astrology.

Cleanse Your Body, Reveal Your Soul: Sustainable Well-Being Through the Ancient Power of Ayurveda Panchakarma Therapy by Judith E. Pentz (Mango, $18.95 trade paper, ISBN 978-1-64250-378-4). Psychiatrist Pentz details her travels to Nagpur, India, and what she learned of Ayurvedic Panchakarma detoxicification and rejuvenation therapy.

A Guide to the Thirty-Seven Practices of a Bodhisattva by Ngawang Tenzin Norbu, trans. by Christopher Stagg (Snow Lion, $27.95, ISBN 978-1-55939-491-8). Norbu offers a new translation and commentary to the central Mahayana text The Thirty-Seven Practices of Bodhisattvas.

August 15

Antoine Frdric Ozanam by Raymond Sickinger, Univ. Notre Dame, $38 paperback ISBN 978-0-268-10143-5). Sickinger, history and classics chair at Providence College, unveils the life of an early-19th-century Catholic scholar, and the principal founder of the lay Catholic charity St. Vincent de Paul.

August 18

S. N. Goenka: Emissary of Insight by Daniel Stuart (Shambhala, $19.95 paper, ISBN 978-1-61180-818-6). A biography of S. N. Goenka, one of the most influential meditation masters of the twentieth century.

Dreams of Light: The Profound Daytime Practice of Lucid Dreaming by Andrew Holecek (Sounds True, $18.99 paper ISBN 978-1-68364-435-4). Holecek leads a step-by-step guide to the insights, meditations, and actions that help people realize the dreamlike nature of life.

Emerging Gender Identities: Understanding the Diverse Experiences of Todays Youth by Mark Yarhouse and Julie Sadusky (Brazos, $19,99 paper, ISBN 978-1-58743-434-1). The authors offer a measured Christian response to the diverse gender identities being embraced by an increasing number of adolescents.

Becoming Brave: Finding the Courage to Pursue Racial Justice Now by Brenda Salter McNeil (Brazos, $19.99 paper, ISBN 978-1-58743-447-1). McNeil offers a Christian framework for addressing systemic injustice and challenging the status quo.

August 25

Ancient Jewish and Christian Scriptures: New Developments in Canon Controversy by John J. Collins, Craig, A. Evans, and Lee Martin McDonald (WJK, $40 paper, ISBN 978-0-664-26597-7) The authors delve in to the reasons writings are included or excluded from the canon.

Talking Until Nightfall: Remembering Jewish Salonica, 194144 by Isaac Matarasso, trans. by Pauline Matarasso (Bloomsbury Continuum, $28, ISBN 978-1-4729-7588-1) Matarasso provides a multi-generational account of the Nazi occupation of Salonica, shedding light on the little-known story of the Holocaust in Northern Greece.

Welcoming and Affirming: A Guide to Supporting and Working with Lgbtq+ Christian Youth, edited by Leigh Finke (Broadleaf, $18.99 paper, ISBN 978-1-5064-6498-5). The writers offer concrete Christian tools for dealing with urgent questions about gender, sexuality, mental health and more.

After Evangelicalism: The Path to a New Christianity by David Gushee (WJK, $19 paper, ISBN 978-0-664-26611-0). Gushee, a professor of Christian ethics, offers a way for disillusioned evangelicals, unhappy with the political turn their leaders have taken, to find a relationship with Christ and an intellectually cogent, morally robust evangelicalism.

From Widows to Warriors: Women's Stories from the Old Testament by Lynn Japina (WJK, $18, ISBN 978-0-664-26569-4). Japina delves into the lives of women such as Eve, Ruth, Deborah, and Yael, presenting them as complex, sometimes flawed, fierce or tragic in their messy, yet redeemable, humanity according to the publisher. A look at New Testament women follows in September.

Fiction

August 1

The Soldiers Lady: 4 Stories of Frontier Adventures by Susanne Dietze et al. (Barbour, $14.99 trade paper, ISBN 978-1-64352-605-8). Dietze features four stories of women on Americas frontier forts trying to bring civility and order to stubborn men.

Sea Glass Castle by T.I. Lowe (Tyndale, $7.99, ISBN 978-1-4964-4050-1). In Lowe's tale, single mother Sophia Prescott, still mending from the embarrassment of a highly publicized divorce, returns to her support network in Sunset Cove, S.C.

The Black Midnight by Kathleen YBarbo (Barbour $12.99 paper, ISBN 978-1-64352-595-2) Book 7 in the True Colors series brings a detective out of retirement to see if unsolved murders in Texas might connect to killings in London in 1899.

August 4

A Life Once Dreamed by Rachel Fordham (Revell, $15.99 paper, ISBN 978-0-8007-3539-5) Fordham (Yours Truly, Thomas) portrays a young woman fleeing her secrets. But her new life in a dusty 1880s western town as an old maid schoolteacher is threatened when a man from her past arrives.

Acceptable Risk by Lynette Eason (Revell, $15.99 paper, ISBN 978-0-8007-2935-6). Eason pens a nail-biting adventure of a military journalist whose search for the truth about her brother's death could get her killed as well.

A Dazzle of Diamonds by Liz Johnson (Revell, $15.99 paper, ISBN 978-0-8007-2942-4) An events manager struggles with love and the pressures of a local social matriarch to make the right choice.

August 8

Love and a Little White Lie by Tammy L. Gray (Bethany Aug. 8, $15.99 trade paper, ISBN 978-0-7642-3795-9). When Gray's heroine, skeptic January, takes a job at her aunts church, its a minor deceptionuntil she meets the churchs guitarist and sparks fly.

August 25

Jebs Wife by Patricia Johns (Zebra, $7.99, mass market, ISBN 978-1-4201-4913-5). An Amish woman, who was unable to give her ex-husband the children he desires, embarks on a marriage with the gruff farmer next door.

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Religion and Spirituality Books Preview: August 2020 - Publishers Weekly

All the ancestors of the same nationality? How to expand your consciousness. Tips Professor and spirituality – The Saxon

Image by Lorri Lang from PixabayThe start of the topic

Source: zen.yandex.ru

If all your ancestors of the same nationality

Your pros. No doubt the psychological stability. This man has some conservatism, traditionalist. He will give children to national school and will go to their Church. His strength is in his wholeness. If you think that we belong to one nation, the chosen one, the most typical method of solving problems and behaviour and always adhere to it. In you there is no contradiction. Youre predictable, youre easy to communicate.

Your cons. The narrow-mindedness. You go through life with a template youre the man!. You find it hard to come up with something new. Constantly responding to stress in the same way, you put yourself in the position of the ancient Prussians, who have always fought the same way never yielded to the superior forces of the enemy, for which he was these forces wiped off the face of the earth. But it could be to make diplomatic efforts to bargain or prisoner to surrender and save themselves for centuries.

How to negotiate with the voice of the blood

Find her assistants. Study foreign languages and, through them, digested the thinking of other Nations. Travel and see how other people live, get in their way of life details of the other world the African painted folk rug, Spanish shawls. Listen to the music of different peoples, and not rock and not pop, and the tunes of the Andes or flamenco. Meet read the Vedas or Confucius. Do some yoga. In the end, your thinking lose their narrowness, you will learn to adapt to new conditions and become more creative. And you will be easier to stay close with the younger children. After all, they always go forward, very different from us and often conflict with conservative and closed on one idea moms.

For residents of Luxembourg native speaker of the language. In the family they speak the native dialect, in elementary school, learn German in the middle of moving to French. And in the end, a unique nation with three ways of thinking. When they talk about home, food and fishing, the use of dialect. Talking about trade and repair of cars, switching to German. About art, music and soul talk in French. Knowledge of languages is very stimulating enterprise and intelligence: the Luxembourg income per capita is 3.5 times higher than the European average.

Says Inga Yanovskaya, the master of Tao:

Our personality consists of three parts: the first is the soul that entered the body at birth; the second is the molecular memory of our ancestors encased in the liquid portion of blood; and the third is your personal memory about everything that happened after your birth. Sometimes they are all the same your soul before the reincarnation lived in the same area your ancestors were from him originally, and your blood carries information only about them, and you birth not budge. A man inherits the nationality of his parents.

But most of all in man are mixed a lot of things: soul belongs to one country, the memory of our ancestors memories about others, and their own memory of experiences coupled with intelligence he slips a third tradition. What part of the personality he would be the strongest, depends on his nationality. It may differ from the nationality of all his ancestors and be a complete surprise for the parents.

Someone still strong memories of his immortal soul lives on somewhere in Germany, and a person feels an unexplained attraction to this language and culture, though there is not a drop of German blood. Someone got the bright memory of our ancestors about the desert is it pulls to the East. Someone comes under the influence of previously unfamiliar religions such as Hinduism, and willingly accepts his rules with all national traditions.

On a pure one-nation blood in Europe, it is difficult to speak of the territory it small, it saw war, whole Nations have changed their place of residence, it was divided and rearranged, passed from hand to hand . As recently proved by genetics that studies the structure of the DNA of any two randomly taken Europeans of different nationalities five generations ago was the common ancestor who gave them their genes. National they different, and part of genes in common. What kind of purity of blood?

Our consultant, Valdis Pirags, immunologist, Professor (Latvia)

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All the ancestors of the same nationality? How to expand your consciousness. Tips Professor and spirituality - The Saxon

The Spiritual Register of TM Kalaw The Manila Times – The Manila Times

THERE are two kinds of journalists: the one who lives captivated by the vortex of immediate events, always ready to provide an opinion about the last recent issue; and the one who, somehow immune to the demands of immediacy, tries to keep some distance from the events and makes more calm analysis. Journalist who are enslaved by novelty usually cannot be read after a few days or weeks. What they wrote becomes quickly outdated. But the second kind often provides insights and reflections that can be pleasantly read after many, many years. One of those rare analysts of Philippine society was Teodoro M. Kalaw, an intellectual I have written about several times before.

What attracted me to Kalaw from the beginning was the fact he wrote a very modern travel account in the modernista style that was in fashion in the Spanish-speaking world at the beginning of the 20th century. In the company of the young Manuel Quezon, who explicitly chose him thanks to his encyclopedic knowledge, he did not only make some controversial comments about neighboring Asian countries. He also traveled on the just recently inaugurated Tran-Siberian train, from Vladivostok to St. Petersburg, and even met a very prominent political leader in Moscow. Having read the novels of Leo Tolstoy, Ivan Turgenev and Fyodor Dostoyevsky, he came to realize that the political and social situation was extremely unstable and rightly predicted the Russian revolution a few years before it started. The title of the 1908 book is Hacia La Tierra del Zar (Toward the Land of the Czar) and deserves to be translated into English or Filipino. Kalaw was not the typical bourgeois trying to show off about a trip that very few Filipinos could afford to make: he was an engaged intellectual who observed the reality of other nations to bring lessons to the Filipino people. By observing and analyzing what other countries were experiencing, he wanted to bring some ideas to improve the material life of the Filipino people and eventually become free of United States control.

During 1926 and 1927, he wrote a collection of articles in the most important newspaper of the period, La Vanguardia. Only after the insistence of his wife, the leading feminist Pura Villanueva Kalaw, did he compile the articles and publish them in 1930. There he included one of those texts that Filipinos should remember forever. Let me quote from it at length, in the wonderful translation by Nick Joaquin:

What should you do to contribute to the liberty and felicity of our land?

Find a piece of land, if you dont have any, that you can cultivate and make productive.

Practice a profession, craft or manual job, where you can demonstrate the ability and artistic genius of our race.

Cultivate your intelligence, your ideals, your sentiments, in such a way that they give glory to the good name of our nation.

The title of this article is What Should You Do?

In another one, titled Intolerance, he wrote:

You can have the pretension that your ideas are excellent and its possible they are; what you cannot do is punish others because they have contrary ideas, even if you are convinced that those ideas are bad. One thing inherent in a free government is that there are men involved in the truth but those who believe they have reason on their side cannot be the judges of the unreasonable.

In another one, titled Obey and Hope, he wrote:

One must obey authority, but one must not enshrine despotism, legalize usurpation or perpetuate slavery.

One must hope for welfare and happiness, but through the means of honest work, virtue and perseverance.

To fold ones arms and attribute to government or Divinity all the good or all the bad, is to sanctify indolence, reward loafing, mistake the nature of government, offend the God we adore and declare the futility of individual effort towards improvement.

This is, so far, the more solid criticism of the bahala na attitude I have ever read.

Unlike so many jewels of Philippine literature in Spanish, this book is available in translation. And, if I am not mistaken, the publisher, Anvil, still has some copies. For reasons unknown to me, the translation took out some of the last articles but, anyway, Spiritual Register is one of those rare books whose articles seemed to have been written yesterday despite the fact they are 90 years old already.

I will finish with another wonderful quote:Combat vice, ignorance, indolence, fanaticism and immorality.

Support every civic reform to improve our citizenry.

Choose good candidates for the government and work for their triumph against the bad, the immoral and the inept.

Think as a Filipino.

Feel yourself a Filipino.

Be proud of being Filipino.

Destroy the myth of racial inferiority with meritorious acts.

Next semester I will be happy to teach again Philippine Literature in Spanish at the University of Santo Tomas. Needless to say, this book will be mandatory reading.

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The Spiritual Register of TM Kalaw The Manila Times - The Manila Times

Viewpoint: Bill Barr’s Unconstitutional Campaign to Reelect the President – GovExec.com

Throughout his first year in office, Bill Barr worked overtime to advance the personal and political interests of President Donald Trump, and to alter the structure of American government to confer virtually autocratic powers on the president, in accordance with views that Barr has held for several decades. Now, less than 100 days before the election, the attorney generals focus has narrowed and his methods have become more transparently outrageous: Facing gross mismanagement of the coronavirus pandemic, a diminished economy, and sinking presidential poll numbers, Barr is using the most intrusive and offensive tools he can command simply to extend his and the presidents tenure in office into a second term.

[Anne Applebaum: Trump is putting on a show in Portland]

Most recent and shocking are the unilateral armed invasions of Portland, Oregon; Kansas City, Missouri; Seattle, and, presumably, a number of other American cities soon. There are many reasons to believe that these counterproductive incursions are being pursued not for some legitimate purpose but as political theater, to generate an impression of the country in disorder, of dangerous people supposedly on the attack, and of the Trump administration standing firm against them. These interventions defy the traditional conservative principle of federalism: respecting the leadership of local and state government in maintaining order, with federal assistance generally limited to coordinated action by invitation. The federal actions have also involveda disregard of constitutional rights, and by all indications have been a stimulus for, rather than a solution to, violence.

These invasions echo similar events that took place in Lafayette Square in Washington, D.C., on June 1, when officials from various federal law-enforcement agencies, acting on an order given by Barr, cleared peaceful protesters from the area in the early evening. That action was followed a short time later by the president walking across the park to pose for a picture holding a Bible in front of Saint Johns Church. The episode was roundly condemned, including by former Trump-administration officials, and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff later apologized for allowing himself to be anywhere near it. Barr equivocated about what exactly happened that day, butadmitted to giving the park-clearing order.

[Read: The Christians who loved Trumps stunt]

No less shocking last week was the revelation of the governments attempt to take Michael Cohen back into custody after being released to home confinement for the purpose of minimizing spread of the coronavirus. The governments position was that to avoid being re-incarcerated, Cohen would have to honor a condition of release giving up his First Amendment rights to criticize the president. Judge Alvin Hellerstein found the condition to have been imposed for retaliatory purposes. Althoughthe hearingdid not clarify where this condition came from, at issue is an action of the Bureau of Prisons, which operates under the attorney general. This hearing concerning Cohen followed an earlier effort to violate the First Amendment by an unsuccessful Department of Justice action to enjoin publication of former National Security Adviser John Boltons book, which contained facts embarrassing to the president. The obvious purpose of both efforts was to avoid publicizing information that would highlight the presidents unfitness for office.

Barr has also been vocal in advancing other highly dubious legal positions central to Trumps reelection campaign. One of those concerns the efficacy of mail-in voting, which is used in some form in every state, and is presently the primary means of voting in a number of states. Barr, following Trumps lead, has asserted the claim, bereft though it is of empirical support,that such voting methods are prone to fraud by foreign actors. Trump, meanwhile, relies on such assertionsto reserve judgment on whether he will accept the outcome of the election if he loses.

[Read: Trump could still break democracys biggest norm]

Barr also has spoken up repeatedly, andhis Department of Justice has at times intervened, concerning conduct restrictions imposed on churches in connection with the coronavirus pandemic. In service to Trumps oft-stated desire to get the economy reopened quickly, and also perhaps appealing to religious voters, Barrs actions here again reflect an unconservative disregard for the preeminence of state and local government in addressing public-health issues. Similar efforts to undermine such restrictions have beenrejectedtwiceby the Supreme Court.

A long-standing theme of Barrs termthe perceived unfairness to Trump and his supporters of the FBI investigation of Russian interference during the 2016 campaignhas this spring become for him a nearly constant public-relations effort. Starting in April, during interviews with Fox News and other outlets, andin violation of a clear departmental rule against such public discussion, Barr has offered colorful commentary about alleged outrageous things being unearthed by the largely redundant investigation that he and a team under U.S. Attorney John Durham have been conducting since May 2019.

Among many other angry characterizations, he has described the Russian-interference investigation as one of the greatest travesties in American history, and promised to get to the bottom of it. His recent comments indicate that developments in the Durham investigation can be expected in the next few monthsperfect timing to enhance its possible impact on the election. And Barr has made clear that he will not feel constrained from acting, including bringing possible indictments, for fear ofany resulting impact on the election. The departments now-pending motion to dismiss the prosecution against Michael Flynn, for lies to which he twice pleaded guilty, has been another context in which Barr has attacked the FBIs investigation of Russian interference.

[Read: The billion-dollar disinformation campaign to reelect the president]

From this incomplete list of recent, grossly improper actionsand the fact that Barr, though publicly called out repeatedly, seems hell-bent on securing Trumps perpetuation in officeone is well justified to wonder how this can be happening in America. A partial answer is that Barr has worked hard to render ineffective the departmental norms that were put in place after Watergate, so that he now has much greater leeway to behave as he pleases.

In place of respect for an evenhanded process predominantly conducted by career professionals dedicated to fairness and impartiality, Barr has substituted ad hoc reliance on personal confidants to second-guess or take the place of career lawyers in special situations. In place of a scrupulous avoidance of political interference or personal favor, including a long-standing policy largely curtailing communications with the White House on a range of important matters, he has substituted a willingness to act in inappropriate ways at the presidents bidding. He has joined in the undermining of inspectors general, independent watchdogs created after Watergate. Five inspectors general have been fired recently, with no public objection from Barr and in one instance with his vocal support. And he has done his best to destroy the independent stature of the United States attorneys, who are required by law to be appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate. Barr has engineered the removal of a few of them, some in key offices with cases of special interest to himself or the president, andreplaced them where possible with trusted associates serving in an acting role, and thus subject to instant removal if they fail to do Barrs bidding.

For the nations lead law-enforcement officer to play an overt, hands-on role in advancing a presidents campaign strategy is unheard-of in recent history. Even John Mitchell saw fit to resign as attorney general before taking over the leadership of the Committee to Re-elect the President. Barr, on the other hand, has shown no reticence to use the full force of his powers and then some, including violence and intimidation in violation of the constitutional rights of citizens, as tools in Donald Trumps effort to secure reelection.

There is a suggestion though, in public reactions to recent events, that Barrs use of such awesome powers to advance such an inappropriate purpose may prove a bridge too far. The man whose bullheaded persistence has won him the nicknames Honey Badger and The Buffalo, honoring their indifference to obstacles of any sort, may have persisted right into a course of action that will be his ruin. If America is to remain a free nation, Barrs recent course of conduct had better be more than the body politic will tolerate.

This article was originally published in TheAtlantic.Sign up for their newsletter.

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Viewpoint: Bill Barr's Unconstitutional Campaign to Reelect the President - GovExec.com

150000 dead of coronavirus in U.S.: What monument will they have? – People’s World

A woman passes a fence outside Brooklyn's Green-Wood Cemetery adorned with tributes to victims of COVID-19, May 28, 2020, in New York. The memorial is part of the Naming the Lost project which attempts to humanize the victims who are often just listed as statistics. The wall features banners that say "Naming the Lost" in six languages: English, Spanish, Mandarin, Arabic, Hebrew, and Bengali. What kind of permanent memorial will we build to those lost to the Trump administration's criminal incompetence? | Mark Lennihan / A

We can barely begin to count the multiple overlapping crises in our country right now. You know them all, and doubtlessly youre dealing with some or all of them in your own life. Its a struggle not to feel overwhelmed.

One crisis has to do with epic death, grief, and memory. How many are dying nowboth from COVID-19 and from natural causeswho receive but a short graveside eulogy with only the most immediate family present, if that? Spouses, siblings, children and grandchildren, workmates, and social friendsmost of them must stay home without offering a comforting embrace or shedding a tear together with the other bereaved. Maybe theyll gather on Zoom to share a treasured memory or anecdote and raise a glass.

We have a collective grief to deal with in our land, yet from our highest tribunes all we hear is, This will be over sooner than you know it, nothing to see here, lets get back to work.

A brief experiment with reconciliation

An analogy could be made to the American Civil War, in which over half a million of our people were killed either on the battlefield or in makeshift medical tents and hospitals. Our brief experiment with Reconstruction, a national effort toward a just reconciliation, attempted to make those sacrifices count for something: Freedom, representation, compensation, forty acres.

Much of the Reconstruction program was never enacted. It did not last long, thanks in large part to the pro-Southern impeached but not convicted President Andrew Johnson, who proclaimed, Its over, folks. Too much wanton democracy going on here, time to get back to what were best at. Sharecropping, tenant farming, wage and debt slavery, no voting rights, separate and not equal, lynching, Ku Klux Klan, terrorism, apartheid American-style.

The country did not have enough time or sufficient unified will to properly heal and bind up her wounds, to repair, restore, renew our family, our democracy. Our grief did not go deep enough. So we moved on as a nation, and forgot, and soon some people appropriated our grief.

They built monuments. Not to memorialize the Middle Passage, nor the human auction block, nor the parents separated from their children, the cotton plantation laborers who built a strong economy both South and North, the chain gangs, the forced illiteracy, the false prophets who taught the religion of slavery.

No, their memorials lifted up the trimly uniformed generals on their poised horses, the noble slaveowner patriarchs, the wise legislators of division and contempt, the gallant officers of a traitorous Confederacy, all in the name of tradition, heroism, sacrifice, pride, womanhood, honor. Let all who pass this sanctified place know: This is the new, eternal order of the land. Grieving time is over: Back to your hoes and your kitchen aprons. And to the good ole boys they said, We know life aint always easy, but hey, ya aint Black, right?

And they still tried killing us by the hundreds and thousands and millions. In state penitentiaries, in the mines, sweatshops, factories and fields, in imperial wars, in poverty and disease, all the while our school children pledged unqualified allegiance to all that star-spangled liberty and justice in this bountiful, brave land of the free for all.

Our teachers didnt tell us the whole story, our historians entombed the truths that stared out at them from the sources they studied, our preachers roared that God himself separated the races. Perhaps our poets probed deeper with their emotional paeans, odes, and laments, but they lacked the political power to transcend the catharsis of the valley of death and lead us to new, glorious mountaintop heights.

Monuments of the future

We ride the metaphorical train of life, and one after the other hear the conductor announce the cities we pull into. We watch as signposts announce the names of cities and towns and counties, places we know in our bones we will never pass through again in this life.

It was only a few miles back, around Memorial Day, that our nation marked the tragic milestone of 100,000 dead from the COVID-19 pandemic. Two, three, five, fifty, five hundred, five thousand, ten thousand. How did we get to one hundred thousand in only four months time?

And we know the number was higher, too, with uncounted deaths unattributed to COVID but that surely were. We know, too, how skewed the numbers are, not only toward older people, but toward African Americans, Latinx, and other people of color. Poorer living standards, poorer healthcare, poorer prevention, what else could we expect?

As its so often said, one death is a tragedy, a thousand is a statistic. But each one of those deaths meant something very special to families, neighbors, co-workers, and communities. We cannot erect a monument in the public square to every one of them, but can we sanctify a statistic? Perhaps the Europeans have a handle on this enormity when they place stones in the sidewalk, and plaques on buildings. In this home lived a Jewish family, the Goldbergers, Heinrich, Ida, Sophie, Karl, and Paul, whom the Nazis deported in 1942 to Auschwitz. All perished there, date unknown.

We do have some of that here, with our Holocaust memorials and museums. And we also have several Civil Rights museums and historical sites, as well as the National Memorial for Peace and Justice, otherwise referred to as the National Lynching Memorial, in Montgomery, Alabama.

How will we remember our tens of thousands, now turning into hundreds of thousands, succumbed to a fatal disease that could have been contained with prompt, dedicated, compassionate, science-led policies, but instead was allowed to extrapolate in some modern macabre version of the medieval Dance of Death? It didnt have to be, as our epidemiologists warned us. But in this land of the free for all, it was every man, woman, and child for themselves: Good luck, and God bless. I take no responsibility.

A new milestone

So now we have arrived at a new milestone. One hundred fifty thousand Americans dead. Not from a virus, but from ignorance, neglect, arrogance, superstition, pride, greed, racism, individualism, power-hunger, and willful malevolence.

How do we memorialize these statistics? Do we go back to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall of 58,000+ names, dead, sacrificed on some altar or otherbut we are never told whose altar? Did you support that war? Oppose it? No matter, the names are all here for you to meditate upon as you see fit. No controversy, please, especially not in our nations capital!

That cant work for our eventual coronavirus monuments. We commemorate here the [five hundred thousand? five million?] people in the United States who lost their lives to a terrible worldwide pandemic (2019-20??). May their loved ones find comfort, and the souls of the departed rest in everlasting peace.

No! There must be some accountability, some justice, truth and reconciliation, even some names named! How about something like this?

We memorialize here the [x number of] people in the United States who lost their lives in a terrible worldwide pandemic (2019-20??), the largest number of victims by far of any country on Earth. As U.S. citizens, we take personal and collective responsibility for our inability or unwillingness at the time to recognize the incompetence and heartlessness of the Donald Trump administration to humanely, rationall,y and scientifically coordinate an effective response to this fatal disease. The loyal Trump supporters in the Senate had the opportunity to rid the country of this vain and prideful tyrant, who remains to this day a shameful blot on our history, but opted not to when they had the opportunity in his February 2020 impeachment trial. Although the American people voted Trump out of office in the November 2020 presidential election, and also elected a Democratic Senate, we erect this monument in our public square now as a reminder and safeguard forever of our duty and honor as citizens to never again allow such abuse to happen. May all who stand here in the generations to come remember that democracy depends on active participation and righteous resistance to malfeasance. May we never forget the hard lesson we endured in that deadly hour, and may this monument forever serve to honor those sacred dead the Trump administration sacrificed in the name of greed and power.

A little wordy, maybe; it would require a ton of bronze for that plaque. But thats the spirit of it: We cannot just assume this pandemic is the new normal. Its not, and it must never be.

On Memorial Day weekend, we listed the names of whole cities of 100,000 that would have been wiped off the map if COVID-19 had been concentrated in one place.

Since that time, weve now also surpassed my own birthplace, New Haven, Conn. (a rounded 130,000), and a number of state capitals. I hope the legislators who gather in those Capitol buildings and statehouses take note: Hartford, Conn. (124,000), Lansing, Mich. (115,000), Springfield, Ill. (117,000), Columbia, S.C. (134,000), and Boise, Ida. (146,000). Theyd all have been swept up in a rapture of disease.

On the track to 150,000, weve now also lost McAllen, Mesquite, and Killeen, Tex.; Dayton, Ohio; Fullerton, Orange, Valencia, Torrance, Pomona, and Pasadena, Calif.; Syracuse, Borough Park, Astoria, and East Hampton, N.Y.; Savannah, Ga.; Bridgeport, Conn.; Naperville, Rockford, and Joliet, Ill.; Paterson, N.J.; Clarksville, Tenn.; Hollywood, Fla.; Kansas City, Kan.; Alexandria, Va.; and Springfield, Mass.

As for the next state capital to disappear, Eugene, Ore., is on the death watch, with its 160,000 residents.

Newspapers during the Vietnam War used to published running numbers of dead and wounded as a daily reminder of the human cost of that ill-advised criminal adventure. Naturally, they barely ever mentioned how many times that numbermany millions of Vietnamese, Laotians, and Cambodianswho were killed, maimed, and poisoned by U.S. attacks.

This is one of our ways of never forgetting our shamefully unnecessary human losses, and to what? To another altar of insanitythe Trump presidency.

Sadly, it must be said: Our dead can never rest in peace until new heights of justice flourish throughout the land. May the day come soon!

Like free stuff?So do we. Here at Peoples World, we believe strongly in the mission of keeping the labor and democratic movements informed so they are prepared for the struggle.But we need your help.While our content is free for readers (something we are proud of) it takes money a lot of it to produce and cover the stories you see in our pages. Only you, our readers and supporters, can keep us going.Only you can make sure we keep the news that matters free of paywalls and advertisements.If you enjoy reading Peoples World and the stories we bring you,support our work by becoming a $5 monthly sustainer today.

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150000 dead of coronavirus in U.S.: What monument will they have? - People's World

55 years since the Watts rebellion, how far have we traveled? – Los Angeles Times

In the summer of 1965, my birthday cake was stuck at a bakery across town. My mother couldnt get to it because Watts was on fire, which sent surrounding cities, like ours in the South Bay, into lockdown.

No way could she have known when she placed the order for my fifth birthday that a white highway patrol officer would soon pull over a young Black man for reckless driving and, in the ensuing chaos, arrest him, his brother and his mother. It was a sequence of events that played poorly in a community already bristling at overcrowded housing, low-wage jobs and routine incidents of police brutality.

In those six days of rebellion which some might call a fed-up-rising residents clashed not only with police but also the National Guard. In the end, 34 people lay dead, more than 1,000 had been injured, and tens of millions of dollars in property was gutted.

That smoke lingers, and the people periodically erupt in outrage, as when officers were acquitted in 1992 following the brutal beating of Rodney King, or when George Floyd died after a cop knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes while he lay face down and handcuffed.

As the New York Times columnist Charles M. Blow wrote recently, The lulls you experience between explosive revolts of the oppressed should never be mistaken as harmony. They should be taken as rest breaks.

In the summers of the 1960s and early 1970s, my family could only hope for the best when driving while Black from Los Angeles to New York every other year. We went to reconnect with our East Coast kin.

To guide us, my mother ordered TripTiks from the American Automobile Assn., small, spiral-bound books that outlined the best path. My sense is that my parents asked for directions that expressly avoided the South, out of concern that we might get pulled over by racist highway patrolmen during the turbulent civil rights era.

In a time before major interstate highways, we connected to Route 66 and kept it moving along two-lane highways dotted with bad diners and dimly lighted motels. To pass the time, my mother read my father and me novels, such as The Grapes of Wrath. The AAA TripTiks highlighted points of interest along the way, such as Native communities or petroglyphs, but we flew by them all to make good time.

Once we were safely in New York, our people descended on us in my grandmothers Harlem kitchen. Over the next couple of weeks, we visited family around the tri-state area and in New Castle, Del., and binged on a buffet of delights at Coney Island.

Only on the way back did we slow down to sightsee. We might cruise the pulse of Chicagos Michigan Avenue or down a two-laner through Davenport, Iowa, stalks of corn swaying as if to the tune of for amber waves of grain.

We wound our way up the Black Hills of South Dakota to regard the 60-foot faces of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Teddy Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln blast-sculpted into granite. We strolled around charming Coeur dAlene, Idaho, and heard the church bells peel at noon.

When we entered a restaurant, hotel or curio shop, I secretly watched to see how people received us as a Black family. I cant remember coming across anyone who was unwelcoming.

At the same time, these were the same years when a president, a presidential hopeful John and Robert Kennedy along with three civil rights leaders, Medgar Evers, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, were assassinated.

The tranquil beauty of the United States passing by my window over those summers seemed out of sync with our countrys history of violent bloodshed. I began to perceive the image of America as a glossy brochure for a house, where the best features are well-lighted and captured with a wide lens while flaws, such as lead water, termites and a roof about to cave, were cropped out.

Of all the places we toured, Mt. Rushmore made the deepest impression. At the time, I was ignorant that it was built on stolen Indigenous land by a sculptor with ties to the Ku Klux Klan. I just remember gazing up at those carved faces, particularly Lincolns, farthest to the right, and noting that the pinch in his brow barely hinted at the pressure he faced watching the U.S. become engulfed in a civil war over slavery.

Though Lincoln tried to warn us that a house divided against itself cannot stand, our country has yet to mend its cracked foundation. Too many continue to hold the American brochure aloft, while stubbornly refusing to address the pressing repairs needed to fix the racism, inequality and police brutality.

Recently, I heard a NPR interview with the Rev. Raphael Warnock, the pastor of Ebenezer Baptist, Martin Luther King Jr.s old church in Atlanta. He said that the current moment is not about burning ourselves out trying to squash all racial hate.

I just want to make sure that our city and our state and our country is not too busy to love, he said. And justice is what love looks like in public.

As the 55th anniversary of those fateful, fiery days in Watts approaches, theres no AAA TripTik we can follow to show us a way forward. But I think James Baldwin sagely pointed toward the North Star when he observed: Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced.

Pamela K. Johnson is a writer and filmmaker based in Los Angeles. @pamelasez

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55 years since the Watts rebellion, how far have we traveled? - Los Angeles Times

Dispatches from a Racialized Border: The Invisible Threat – Just Security

(Editors Note: This article is part of a specialJust SecurityRacing National Securitysymposiumedited by editorial board memberMatiangai Sirleaf. Thegoalof the symposium is to render race visible in national security to shift the dominant paradigm toward addressing issues of racial justice.)

We carry the border on our skin, in our language, through our religion. Anyone on the other side of that border whose skin is Black or Brown; who speaks to their loved ones in Spanish, Arabic, Chinese, or Farsi; whose house of worship is a mosque or a temple is readily dehumanized as a national security threat.

While this particular brand of racism is levied by many individuals against migrants (and people wrongly assumed to be migrants based on their race), it is important to remember the ways in which immigration law has constructed and perpetuates racist imaginaries of national security. In turn, migration status (or lack thereof) and national security frames can be used to obscure race, though these concepts are deeply intertwined. This dehumanization of immigrants also has a curious twist: when it comes to conversations about race and racial justice, the migrant experience is oddly invisible.

The border in the minds of most Americans is, of course, the southern border with Mexico. Countless atrocities have been committed there in the name of national security. While these racialized harms have been magnified to an extreme under the Trump administration, they have been perpetuated by Democratic and Republican administrations alike for centuries in the name of keeping the nation safe.

The most horrific of recent abusive immigration policies was the administrations family separation program, analyzed as torture by Beth Van Schaack. In 2018, at least 2,800 children were torn from their parent(s), who had been prosecuted for unlawful entry and were told by Customs and Border Protection officials that, as a result, they no longer had a right to be with their children. This zero tolerance policy specifically targeted families of color fleeing extraordinary levels of violence in El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras. It is not clear what national security goal is served by ripping families apart, or what security threat parents fleeing extraordinary violence pose to one of the wealthiest nations in the world, but that was nonetheless the legal justification for this racist policy.

The law consistently sends a clear message that, at the border, Brown lives do not matter, as they are outweighed by nebulous national security concerns. One stark recent example is the case of Hernandez v. Mesa, decided by the Supreme Court in February. As Steve Vladeck, who helped litigate the case, explained in language from the brief, We argue only that a border patrol agent could not, without any justification, shoot petitioners fifteen-year-old son [Sergio Hernandez] while he hid behind a pillar a few feet into Mexican soil. Yet citing foreign relations and national security implications, the Supreme Court refused to allow Sergios parents to pursue a Bivens claim a lawsuit against the federal officer for violating the U.S. constitution based on this cross-border shooting. Since the Trump administration found that the CBP officer who shot Sergio did not act inconsistently with [Border Patrol] policy or training regarding use of force, it did not prosecute that officer. In other words, the law now tells us that border enforcement officials can shoot across the border to take Brown lives with impunity.

In the face of the coronavirus pandemic, the Trump administration has also invoked national security to close the border to asylum seekers, in violation of our international legal commitments (as analyzed by Oona Hathaway) and with dubious public health justifications. The most recent pronouncement to this end is a proposed new rule issued by the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice on July 9. This rule would permanently enable the executive to bar from asylum and withholding of removal, on national security grounds, applicants traveling from countries where a contagious or infectious disease is prevalent or epidemic. The background to the rule provides a sweepingly broad interpretation of national security, noting that:

the scope of the term extends well beyond terrorism considerations, and national defense considerations as well. The Attorney General has previously determined that danger to the security of the United States in the context of the bar to eligibility for withholding of removal encompasses considerations of defense, foreign relations, and the economy.

Defined so broadly, public health concerns easily fall within the scope of national security and can be manipulated to exclude asylum seekers on grounds that are not explicitly racial but map conveniently onto racial categories.

These are just a few examples of the many uses of national security as a justification for our racialized physical borders. But the racialized border is everywhere, carried with migrants of color and their descendants, as well as with people of color wrongly assumed to be migrants, in the interior of the country, without regard to individual circumstances and accomplishments. The migrant of color is the perpetual outsider, readily transformed into a national security threat. The recent example of racial discrimination against Asian Americans during the coronavirus pandemic demonstrates how easily even a model minority can be shown their place.

How does the law come into play here? For Asian Americans, years of exclusion through immigration law, starting with the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 that was not completely dismantled until the Immigration Act of 1965, instantiated and perpetuated the racialized othering upon which Trump and others now play.

The pandemic also foregrounds a deep and painful irony in the situation of Latinx migrants. As described above, the Trump administration has used COVID-19 as a justification to completely exclude migrants from the Northern Triangle of Central America who are seeking protection from exceptional levels of violence in their home countries. When it comes to detained migrants, the executive has revisited its torturous family separation policy, offering parents a binary choice of remaining in detention with their children in the face of the pandemic or enabling their children to be released by voluntarily accepting family separation.

Yet at the same time, the executive has relaxed the requirements for processing temporary worker visas both in the interior and the exterior; most recipients of these visas are Mexican nationals. Even Trumps most recent Proclamation Suspending Entry of Aliens Who Present a Risk to the U.S. Labor Market Following the Coronavirus Outbreak contains an exception for any alien seeking to enter the United States to provide temporary labor or services essential to the United States food supply chain. Temporary status, yet essential labor; this is a precarious place to reside. This paradox, instantiated and reified by immigration laws that fail to provide sufficient lawful pathways for plentiful low-wage jobs, underpins the permanent labor underclass upon which the U.S. economy depends. On one side of the border, Latinx asylum seekers are a threat to national security; on the other side, Latinx workers are essential workers but disposable people.

These examples present just a handful of recent uses of racialized national security tropes to exclude immigrants. Though anti-migrant racism abounds in history and has grown exponentially under the Trump administration, the migrant experience curiously disappears from the conversation when it comes to racial justice. To be sure, the original sin of slavery must be the first priority in terms of accountability and redress. At the same time, there must be space to expand the conversation around racial justice to include the very real suffering of all migrant communities of color and their hyphenated progeny.

Racialized borders travel with all of our skin, no matter how long ago our ancestors arrived. From African-Americans who were labeled refugees after Hurricane Katrina, to Puerto Ricans who were treated as foreign in the wake of Hurricane Maria in terms of their receipt of federal aid, to second and third-generation Latinx Americans who are told to go back to their home country for speaking Spanish in public, all people of color in the United States are subject to othering as foreign. Our experiences are all intertwined in the history of American racism and the enduring power of White supremacy in the country; addressing each of them completely requires attention to all forms of racial subordination.

What would it mean to have a real conversation about racial justice, migration, and national security? We are so extremely far from this reality at the moment that it is difficult to even imagine what this discourse might look like. I do, however, have a first step to offer: humanization. In order to protect the lives of people of color, they must first be valued as equal to White lives. The law has played a central role in devaluing and dehumanizing migrants, often through a national security frame. It is an open question whether law can be nearly as effective in humanizing all people of color in the United States and at our borders. It is also an urgent question: until the full humanity of all racial minorities is recognized, we will carry the border on our backs.

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Dispatches from a Racialized Border: The Invisible Threat - Just Security

The Racial Equity Index compares racial equity around the US – Fast Company

Minneapolis-St. Paul, the center of the reigniting of the Black Lives Matter movement, has one of the highest rates of prosperity in the United States, ranked sixth among its 150 metropolitan-area peers. But it ranks 149th in terms of racial inclusion, indicating one of the worst racial wealth disparity gaps in the country.

This finding, and other granular details, have emerged as part of the Racial Equity Index, a new tool that allows users to view how 100 cities, 150 metro areas, and all 50 states, perform with respect to racial equity compared with their counterparts. Launched on July 23, its the latest iteration from the National Equity Atlas, the nations most detailed report card on racial equity, which provides evidence for the need to build equitable, resilient, and prosperous new economies. The hope is that this newest release of data can be harnessed by politicians to assess specific problems and craft policy that focuses more precisely on areas of need.

The new data resource takes the form of scorecards, accompanied by visually digestible analysis. The indexs nine specific indicators range from unemployment and median wage to air pollution, commute time, and rent burden (the share of renter-occupied households spending more than 30% of income on housing costs). Scores are generated, from 1 to 100, for each locations performance and for each racial group within that location.

Using the tool, youd discover that Minneapoliss inclusion troubles stem from huge disparities in educational attainment. Youd see that, while 16% of white residents of the area are economically insecure, that rate is 57% for Black residents and 50% for Native Americans.

[Screenshot: National Equity Atlas]Racial equity really is the defining issue of our time, says Michael McAfee, president and CEO of Policy Link, which started building the atlas in 2014 along with USCs Program for Environmental and Regional Equity. We cant tackle it without clear data on who is most impacted, where they live, and what are the most significant issues in their lives.

For McAfee, the tool has rolled out at exactly the right moment, when protesters are still mobilizing across the nation. Data is crucial to concretely showing where the biggest prosperity gaps are, which racial groups theyre affecting, and what their causes are. Now, were in a moment where we can merge our hopes and aspirations with the rigor of really good data, he says.

We live in a moment in which the world has broken open to try to pay attention to issues of racial inequity, says Manuel Pastor, director of the USC program. And I think its useful to have a tool on the shelf that can help you to do something about it.

The index found that no community in America is free of racial inequities, even the highest performing, such as San Jose, California, in the middle of Silicon Valley. There, Black people have the highest college graduation rate yet still have an educational attainment rating thats 23 percentage points lower than white people. It also found that some of the highest-scoring cities have low Black populations, such as Albuquerque, Reno, and Honolulu. Of the 33 bigger cities with the most Black residents, only two of them are in the top 20 for racial equity performance. Among the 25 best regions for prosperity, none are also in the top 25 for racial inclusion.

Pastor calls this a diagnostic tool, in that it shows where policymakers need to move the needle, and what groups need to benefit from policies and investments, all to reach the atlass ambitious end goal of dismantling structural racism on the local level.

McAfee says some localities have already made policy strides using the atlass prior data. It was used by Fairfax County, Virginia, to help establish One Fairfax, the countys plan to advance racial equity and opportunity. It was used by Asheville, North Carolina, which last week announced its approval of monetary reparations for slavery and discrimination for Black residents.

While these examples give McAfee hope, he stresses that data can never supplant conscious leadership. Leaders need to be committed to acknowledging Americas racist past in order to make an effectual change. The problem that this nation has faced is that it has not reconciled with the fact that its democracy and its economy were predicated on stolen land, genocide, and slave labor, he says.

The COVID-19 crisis, he says, has exposed the cracks in a system that was designed to be toxic for Black and brown people and which is now affecting people on a wider scale. He mentions Floridas failing unemployment system, which Republicans admitted was designed badly to purposely keep its users from receiving benefits. Now, it means people cant receive their pandemic relief checks. That is a real-world example of how anti-Black racism ends up impacting white America.

When combined with the fighting spirit of this rare moment, where a diverse coalition of young people are demanding change, the data make McAfee optimistic for changewhich needs to happen in an extensive and sweeping way in order to close up the gaps. Black people can never catch up with white people unless you do something really radically transformative, he says.

Just as the founding fathers had the radical imagination to create something that was as beautiful as this democracy and this economy, but equally as oppressive for some, he says, we can remake it now.

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The Racial Equity Index compares racial equity around the US - Fast Company

Global Ecotourism Market Projected to Reach USD XX.XX billion by 2025- Expedia Group, Priceline Group, China Travel, China CYTS Tours Holding,…

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Global Ecotourism Market Projected to Reach USD XX.XX billion by 2025- Expedia Group, Priceline Group, China Travel, China CYTS Tours Holding,...

Algarve to welcome first Formula 1 Grand Prix | News – Breaking Travel News

The Algarve in southern Portugal has been chosen to host a Formula 1 Grand Prix for the first time this autumn.

The event will take place on the weekend of October 23rd-25th at the Autodromo Internacional do Algarve in Portimao.

The last time Portugal hosted a Grand Prix was 24-years ago at Estoril near Lisbon.

There will be spectators, promised Portugal tourism minister Rita Marques.

We are working on a number of scenarios depending on the health situation.

The capacity of the venue is 100,000, but attendance is likely to be far below the maximum possible.

Additional events and venues were announced after the races in the United States, Mexico, Brazil and Canada were cancelled this year due to the coronavirus.

Joo Fernandes, president of Algarve Tourism, commented: We are delighted and proud of this decision.

Formula 1 has been absent from Portugal for 24-years and it is a prestigious international sporting event that we have been very keen to have back for a long time.

In addition to the projection of the Algarve brand worldwide, the event is expected offer a lifeline to tourism in the region, with organisers hoping it can bring in around 40 million.

More Information

The Algarve is considered Europes Leading Beach Destination by voters at the World Travel Awards.

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Algarve to welcome first Formula 1 Grand Prix | News - Breaking Travel News

Iceland is an outpost of normality amid Covid pandemic – CNN

Reykjavik, Iceland (CNN) It was a casual hug from an old friend and yet it proved to be so traumatizing. I had arrived back in my native Iceland the day before and now armed with a negative Covid-19 test from the airport, here I was in a bustling cafe in Reykjavik.

"Hello you, long time no see!" Two friends greeted me and one gave me a warm embrace but my natural reaction was to step back from them, and I found it hard to keep up a conversation standing so close. Their natural ease, which six months ago would have felt so normal, now felt uncomfortable and stressful. I felt tongue-tied, and my manners and chutzpah seemed to have deserted me.

I mumbled something to my old friends and then went to seek sanctuary in a cup of tea. There I pulled myself together, gathered my thoughts and went back for another round of gossip. And it felt liberating to have normal conversations again.

Iceland has been praised for its handling of the crisis after an initial spike in cases in February. The government then changed tactics, started testing and tracing, closed the borders and introduced restrictions. I suppose you could argue the chances of success are far higher on an island with a population of around 360,000 people. There's been less than 2,000 cases and 10 deaths recorded.

It also helps that Icelanders showed great faith in the government and sat glued to media briefings being provided not by politicians but by chief scientists and the police, following their every advice.

I've joined most of the country in downloading an app that traces your movement. It's designed to help the authorities track and notify anyone that might have been in contact with or been affected by the virus. What follows is testing and possibly quarantine.

All of this has resulted in the people here being able to go about their lives in relative normality. I've been a regular at our popular swimming pools, attended soccer matches, dined with friends and been to parties where the conversation has been dominated more by the recent Will Ferrell Eurovision movie about Iceland than Covid-19.

The bars and restaurants in Reykjavik are full too and there's not a mask in sight. The only reminder that things are not quite normal are the hand sanitizers you find everywhere and the early closing time of 11 p.m., which is usually the time that Icelanders are just getting the party started.

The biggest economic casualty of the coronavirus has been tourism. Last year, almost 2 million tourists visited and that number has now been reduced to a trickle, but the locals have responded by indulging in staycations. Social media feeds are full of spectacular pictures from friends traveling around the island, and hotels and camping sites around the country are full to capacity.

The government is also encouraging this trend by providing every resident with a 10,000 IKR ($74) voucher to spend in restaurants, hotels and attractions.

But as the biggest travel weekend of the summer approaches everyone will be reminded that this is a year like no other. This last long weekend of the summer holidays would normally mean big festivals all over the country -- but with bans in place on gatherings of more than 500 people they are all canceled.

Big events like the Westman Island jht party are off, the first time it has been canceled since WWI. Not even the big volcanic eruption in 1974 stood in the way of that celebration. But, with typical Icelandic optimism, they are already selling tickets for 2021.

There is still a healthy amount of fear and nobody is complacent -- many are worried that people are being too relaxed and that it can only lead to another spike -- especially with the border restrictions easing and more tourists coming in. It's a sign that people here aren't taking their privileged position for granted but also their desire to maintain their way of life.

It hasn't taken me long to adapt to the freedom here, so when I bumped into my cousin who had just arrived from Miami I went in for a hug but much like my first reaction a couple of weeks earlier -- he stepped back.

He also faces stricter rules because he arrived from the US, whose citizens are still banned from entering Iceland, so he had to wait at least five days and get two negative test results before he can give anyone here a hug.

Listening to friends here I'm reminded not only of the ability of this country to cope with adversity but also of Iceland's unofficial slogan: "etta reddast" which roughly translates to "It will all be OK in the end." It's helped us through a global financial meltdown, a volcanic eruption which grounded flights around the world and hopefully it will stay true again for the coronavirus.

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Iceland is an outpost of normality amid Covid pandemic - CNN

Coronavirus Outbreak: Live Updates and News for Jul. 28, 2020 – Bloomberg

A health worker takes a patient's temperature at a Covid-19 testing site in Los Angeleson July 24.

Photographer: Valerie Macon/AFP via Getty Images

Photographer: Valerie Macon/AFP via Getty Images

The U.S. governments top infectious disease expert, Anthony Fauci, said he was cautiously optimistic that the world will have answers about a vaccine by late fall after drugmakers reported progress on their shots. Florida reported a record number of deaths and hospitalizations.

Following a steady rise in cases in tourism-reliant Spain, Madrid reacted with anger to travel curbs imposed by the U.K., which is now considering ways to scale back the rules following the backlash.

Beijing confirmed a new case after going weeks without any, while Hong Kong is considering a delay in legislative elections. Malaysia and Tokyo also saw an increase in cases and Vietnam is battling a flare-up.

Subscribe to a daily update on the virus from Bloombergs Prognosis team here. Click CVID on the terminal for global data on coronavirus cases and deaths.

Madrid is joining other regions of Spain in ordering the use of face masks in public spaces, including in bars and restaurants. Gatherings in the region that includes the Spanish capital will be limited to 10 people, and capacity in eateries will also be reduced.

With more than 8,400 Covid-19 deaths since beginning of the pandemic, Madrid was perhaps the countrys hardest-hit region in sheer numbers, although Catalonia has caught up in infections.

Florida reported a record 186 new Covid-19 deaths among residents Tuesday, bringing the cumulative total to 6,117. Hospitalizations also rose by a record 585 to a cumulative 24,917, according to the health department report, which includes data through Monday. The state reported 441,977 Covid-19 cases, up 2.1% from a day earlier, compared with an average increase of 2.6% in the previous seven days.

The U.K. is considering ways to scale back its quarantine rules after restrictions on trips to Spain provoked a backlash from tourists, airlines and the government in Madrid.

Plans being examined by officials in London include abandoning the blanket rules applying to travel across whole countries in favor of regional restrictions, and reducing the number of days passengers arriving back home in Britain will need to stay in quarantine, according to Transport minister Charlotte Vere.

Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez responded angrily to the U.K. ratcheting up its travel curbs to include popular Spanish holiday islands. He urged the U.K. to find the correct balance based on the data.

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I dont believe they need to stop, but we just need to follow this and see what happens with other teams on a day-by-day basis, Fauci said in an interview on ABCs Good Morning America. After 12 Miami Marlins players and two coaches tested positive for Covid-19, according to ESPN, the team canceled its home opener.

You just have to watch this, it could put it in danger, Fauci said of the Miami team outbreak and the baseball season. Asked if the NFL will have to operate in a bubble, Fauci said thats possible.

Fauci also said he was cautiously optimistic that when we get into the late fall we will have an answer about a vaccine. He agreed with the Food and Drug Administrations guidance that hydroxychloroquine isnt effective against the virus.

Cases have been rising at a higher rate in the Netherlands. The number increased by 1,329 between July 22 and July 28, according to the RIVM Dutch National Institute for Public Health and the Environment. Thats up from 987 added in the previous week.

The reproduction number rose to 1.40 from 1.29 the week before. At the same time, fatalities have risen at a much slower pace - 6,160 as of the latest update on Tuesday, up from 6,124 a month ago, according to data collected by Johns Hopkins University and Bloomberg News.

Health authorities in the Philippines warned that hospitals and infirmaries risk getting overwhelmed as coronavirus-related admissions are rising.

Covid and non-Covid beds are close to 50% capacity nationwide, falling into the Health Departments warning zone, Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire said in a virtual briefing. The Philippines added 1,678 new cases, bringing the total count to 83,673, the second-highest in Southeast Asia.

Greece reintroduced compulsory wearing of masks from July 29 in all stores, banks, doctors surgeries, elevators, hairdressers and beauty salons as well as in all customer service offices of utility companies, Deputy Citizen Protection Minister Nikos Hardalias said.

Irans daily death toll from the virus hit a new high of 235, up from the previous record of 229 on July 21. Total deaths reached 16,147, while the number of infections rose by 2,667 to 296,273.

Russia begun clinical testing of a second potential Covid-19 vaccine, the head of the countrys public health watchdog, Anna Popova, said in an online conference. The vaccine, developed by the Novosibirsk-based Vector lab, is synthetic and therefore should minimize negative reactions, according to Popova.

The lab started Phase 1 and Phase 2 testing simultaneously on Monday, she said. Phase 3 testing of a vaccine made by the state-run Gamaleya Institute in Moscow and the Russian Direct Investment Fund is scheduled to begin in Russia, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates next week.

Hong Kongs government is considering postponing the upcoming legislative elections, the Hong Kong Economic Times reported, after a sudden surge in coronavirus cases raised new questions about the September vote.

Authorities reported 98 local infections on Tuesday, a slight ebb after the city found more than 100 local cases for six consecutive days. Among these local cases, about half -- 50 -- are of unknown origins, showing that hidden chains of transmission are still surfacing.

The Asian financial hub is implementing its strictest-ever social distancing rules amid the growing outbreak. The city will ban all dine-in service at restaurants and public gatherings of more than two people not from the same family starting Wednesday.

People wearing protective masks walk past market stalls in the Sham Shui Po district in Hong Kong, July 24.

Malaysia reported the highest daily increase in new cases in six weeks, days after the government took steps to prevent a resurgence.

The country confirmed 39 new infections on Tuesday, the most since June 15, of which more than half were local transmissions, according to the health ministry. Nineteen of the new cases were found in the eastern state of Sarawak, which is imposing limits on peoples movements from Aug. 1 to 14 to curb the spread.

The European Central Bank extended a de facto ban on banks returning capital to shareholders and urged them to show restraint on bonuses amid the coronavirus outbreak, dealing a blow to some lenders that had lobbied to resume business as usual. Separately, the Bank of England said it will also conduct a review at the end of the year of any plans by Britains biggest banks to pay dividends or resume buybacks.

Both central banks had told lenders in March to conserve capital as lockdowns to combat the pandemic brought the economy to a standstill. While the move was painful for some companies and their investors, the ECB indicated it was a trade-off for unprecedented regulatory relief it had granted them to weather the crisis.

The European Central Bank extended a request that banks hold off on returning capital to shareholders and show moderation in setting bonuses amid the coronavirus outbreak. Nicholas Comfort reports on Bloomberg Surveillance.

The recent uptick in German cases is a major cause for concern and sticking to hygiene and distancing rules remains crucial, according to Lothar Wieler, the head of the nations public health institute. There have been more than 3,600 new cases in the past seven days, taking the total to more than 206,000, Wieler said Tuesday at a news conference. That compares with a daily increase of almost 7,000 at the height of the outbreak at the end of March.

The latest trend in Covid-19 infections is very worrying for me, and for all of us at the Robert Koch Institute, Wieler said.

Spains national statistics agency said the nations unemployment rate rose in the second quarter, with the number of jobless increasing by 55,000 to 3.37 million workers. That pushed up the unemployment rate to 15.33% from 14.4% in the prior three months.

Spain's unemployment rate is going to spike again this year

Source: INE, Bloomberg surveys

Shoppers spurned luxury goods and snapped up disinfectants last quarter as the pandemic shuttered high-end shops across Europe and North America and raised concerns about hygiene. French luxury giant LVMH -- owner of the Louis Vuitton and Christian Dior brands -- reported earnings that missed analysts estimates even as sales in China rebounded. Moncler SpA, known for its high-end ski jackets, also fell short of forecasts.

Reckitt Benckiser Group Plc, the maker of Dettol and Lysol, saw rising demand for its cleaning products lift revenue above estimates. Delivery Hero SE raised its full-year guidance as orders for home food delivery jumped.

Niklas Ostberg, chief executive officer at Delivery Hero SE, discusses the companys record growth in the second-quarter, the impact of coronavirus on his business and the industry and his expansion plans. He speaks on Bloomberg Markets: European Open.

Chinas bat woman lashed out at Donald Trump, saying the U.S. president owes her country an apology as she again denied assertions that the novel coronavirus is linked to the Wuhan lab where she works.

Shi Zhengli, deputy director of the Wuhan Institute of Virology, said in an interview published in Science magazine that she and her colleagues encountered the virus in December last year, when reports of the disease first emerged in the city. She said the lab hadnt seen or studied the virus before that.

Tokyo confirmed about 270 new cases of coronavirus Tuesday, Nikkei reported, citing an unidentified person. Thats more than twice the 131 cases the Japanese capital found Monday.

Aichi prefecture in central Japan, home to companies including Toyota Moto Corp., confirmed 109 coronavirus cases Tuesday, NHK reported in a flash headline, a daily record for the area.

New York health authorities will investigate a Hamptons charity concert opened by Goldman Sachs chief David Solomon and headlined by the Chainsmokers after footage showed crowds of partiers, according to Governor Andrew Cuomo.

Cuomo said he was appalled by egregious social distancing violations seen in videos of the Saturday night event in Southampton. We have no tolerance for the illegal & reckless endangerment of public health, Cuomo said, noting the Department of Health will lead the inquiry.

New York health authorities will investigate a Hamptons charity concert opened by Goldman Sachs chief David Solomon and headlined by the Chainsmokers after footage showed crowds of partiers not social distancing, according to Governor Andrew Cuomo. Su Keenan reports on Bloomberg Markets: Asia.

Masks are back on in Vietnam as the government scrambles to contain an unexpected flare-up in community infections after officials reported 15 new cases in three days from the central coast region.

The startling news, which began on Friday with a suspected case and carried over into the weekend with four new patients, underscored the unrelenting nature of the pathogen. Vietnam had all but claimed victory over the virus, having gone almost 100 days without a new local patient.

Beijing reported one new coronavirus case on Tuesday, its first in 21 days, reflecting the fragility of the Chinese capitals success at stamping out infections earlier this month.

The new case is linked to the outbreak in the northeastern port city of Dalian, where more than 40 people have become infected. The cluster, which first started from a man working at a seafood processing plant, has also spread to other northeastern provinces as well as Chinas southern Fujian province.

The infection threatens to undercut Beijings efforts that brought new cases to zero after a local outbreak that started last month infected over 300 people. Authorities had started to relax restrictions in the capital after aggressive testing and targeted lockdown measures, but resurgences elsewhere in China may now pose a threat to normalization.

With assistance by Mark Schoifet, Iain Rogers, Jinshan Hong, Jake Rudnitsky, Paul Tugwell, Arsalan Shahla, Kathleen Miller, Andre Janse Van Vuuren, Michael Smith, and Thomas Gualtieri

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.

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Coronavirus Outbreak: Live Updates and News for Jul. 28, 2020 - Bloomberg