After falling for months, Covid-19 hospitalizations in the US are nearing April’s peak – CNN

The reason is simple: the US is experiencing a surge in cases, with states such as Florida, Texas and California reporting thousands of new confirmed cases in recent weeks.

Adm. Brett Giroir, an official on the White House coronavirus task force, said on Monday there was "no question we are having a surge right now."

But while President Donald Trump, his allies and some Republican governors have pointed to increased testing as the reason, others have rightly pointed out that hospitalizations are not the result of testing, as testing does not send people to the hospital.

Only a serious illness like Covid-19 would do that.

"As rates of testing increase, we also are seeing increases in three other key indicators that suggest we are seeing a real increase in Covid infections," said Dr. Jeanne Marrazzo, director of the Infectious Diseases Division at the University of Alabama School of Medicine. She cited hospitalization rates, positivity rates, and deaths, which are now increasing in 26 states.

Here's how the coronavirus is affecting hospitals in areas where it is spreading.

Hospitalizations in Florida

There are more than 9,500 people hospitalized in Florida and least 53 hospitals in 27 counties said they had no more beds in their ICUs, according to AHCA data.

Statewide, ICU bed availability stands at 15.98% -- that's "available adult ICU beds," according to AHCA data. On Monday, the available ICU bed count was 18.1%.

For comparison, in New York City, where the pandemic first took hold in the US, officials reported a positivity rate of just 2%.

Hospitalizations in California

California was the first state to issue a stay-at-home order on March 18.

Less than a month later, California Gov. Gavin Newsom said residents had "bent the curve," and the state started to phase out the early stages of its reopening plan in May.

Now, Los Angeles County has surpassed its record for daily hospitalizations for the fourth time in just the past week alone, according to Dr. Barbara Ferrer, the county's public health director.

Statewide, hospitalization rates and those in the intensive care unit are again reaching highs with increases of 1.9% and 0.7% respectively, according to the California Department of Public Health (CDPH).

Meanwhile, California's positivity rate over the past two weeks stands at 7.5%, which is slightly under the state's goal of remaining below 8%, according to CDPH data. More than 6.5 million tests have been performed to date.

"We opened up too soon," Anne Rimoin, an epidemiology professor at the University of California Los Angeles, told CNN. "We didn't have the virus totally under control."

California is fast approaching New York in total number of confirmed cases, and at this rate, could easily surpass New York to have the highest number of confirmed cases in the US.

"Whatever is done, states experiencing these increases in severe illness and with health care facilities under siege need help and a plan B, because plan A, reopening with lukewarm or no adherence to masks or social distancing clearly did not work," Marrazzo said.

Hospitalizations in Texas

Hospitals in Texas are facing an unprecedented wave of hospitalizations -- it is the only state in the US currently with more than 10,000 hospitalizations.

While that number is still comparably low to the record 18,825 hospitalized in New York during the peak of the pandemic, there are fears it could potentially be matched or surpassed at its current rate.

On Monday, President Trump acknowledged that the state, along with Florida, was dealing with a "flare up" in cases.

It's not the second wave -- it's the first

Officials and experts have long warned the public about bracing for a second wave, but the first wave has not truly ended and the spread of the virus has not even remotely been contained, some experts say.

"Some places never experienced an end of a first wave -- certainly in the South, we never really got below a baseline level since April," Marrazzo said. "A real second wave to me would be if someplace that has truly controlled spread, like New York or Connecticut, had another surge."

Marrazzo believes that the surge in hospitalizations can be attributed to one simple thing: The uncontrolled and sustained spread of infection in the community. Until the spread of the virus is contained, the rate of hospitalizations will continue to remain high.

"None of those currently experiencing these worrisome trends ever fulfilled the criteria laid out by the task force, which included a sustained downtrend in the percent positive tests for at least 2 weeks," Marrazzo said.

At least 27 states in the US have paused or rolled back their reopening plans due to the rising rates of infections. The math is simple: more infections will lead to more hospitalizations.

CNN's Ryan Browne, Erica Henry, Randi Kaye, Jason Kravarik, Christina Maxouris, Sarah Moon, Jenn Selva, Sara Sidner, Naomi Thomas, Ben Tinker and Holly Yan contributed to this report.

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After falling for months, Covid-19 hospitalizations in the US are nearing April's peak - CNN

Young artists drew a world where kindness defeats COVID-19 We animated it – UNHCR

Refugee superhero

Nomie, 16, France

This contest caught my attention for its goal to inspire hope and solidarity and for its ability to raise awareness while staying at home. My superhero is a woman inspired by a Sudanese refugee girl walking under the rain on one of your Instagram posts.

My art is not only for this girl but for all refugees, their unique stories, and their courage I admire. My superhero also has a metal leg which at first is an injury but now is her strongest power, as her fears are now strengths.

Nesime, 16, Greece (from Afghanistan)

It is true that the coronavirus is now a part of our lives, but we should not be worried. We should fight together to defeat the coronavirus.

I now live in Greece. People have an image of me in their minds, but I am who I am.

Mukah, 24, Cameroon

The COVID-19 outbreak and the crisis in my country motivated me to participate. My artwork is entitled Ray of Hope. A group of refugees on the left depict those stricken by war.

Through the donations of nations and individuals that care, UNHCR is able to help refugees. This comes to them as a ray of hope for a brighter future and shows that they matter to our world.

Alpha, 25, Kenya (from Democratic Republic of the Congo)

Im a Congolese refugee living in Kenya. I wanted to communicate through my painting that solidarity is the best way to protect the lives of everybody in the world from this pandemic, including refugees.

Maria, 23, Cyprus

The girl in the drawing offers love to the refugee boy. He in turn conveys the love to his father. The father is a doctor and offers his love to a patient suffering from the coronavirus.

Finally, the patient, who is now healthy, offers her love to her daughter, who is the girl who appears in the original cartoon.

Mayu, 16, Japan

My drawing shows two hands joining each other to protect a refugee boy, inspired by the flag of UNHCR. There is a dark sky full of conflicts and viruses in the back. But people have united to form a cage that blocks them.

The boy has a hole in his heart. But the hearts of people all over the world pour down to create a deep blue heart. There are so many he cant hold them. You can also imagine that the boy sends back the love.

The potential of a child is immeasurable.

Faida, 20, Rwanda

Refugees in a camp are looking forward to receiving a heart which symbolizes love.

Just for a moment, love is enough to solve their problems, and that is love which comes from everywhere thats why its coming from the sky.

As countries around the world went into COVID-19 lockdown, many young people reached out to UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, asking if there was a way to help while staying at home. We launched the 2020 Youth with Refugees Art Contest to give them a chance to use their creativity for a good cause. Within two months, we received 2,000 drawings from 100 countries.

The selection of the seven global winners whose drawings have been animated by Japanese studio SPEED inc.was made by a jury drawn from UNHCR high-profile supporters, refugee members of our Global Youth Advisory Council, artists, animation experts and our partners. UNHCR has also awarded five regional prizes, five prizes for cartoons and 20 special mentions. All participants have received a certificate of participation.

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Young artists drew a world where kindness defeats COVID-19 We animated it - UNHCR

COVID-19 Daily Update 7-18-2020 – 5 PM – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

The West Virginia Department of Health andHuman Resources (DHHR)reports as of 5:00 p.m., on July 18, 2020, there have been 226,616 totalconfirmatorylaboratory results received for COVID-19, with 4,922 totalcases and 100 deaths.

Inalignment with updated definitions from the Centers for Disease Control andPrevention, the dashboard includes probable cases which are individuals that havesymptoms and either serologic (antibody) or epidemiologic (e.g., a link to aconfirmed case) evidence of disease, but no confirmatory test.

CASESPER COUNTY (Case confirmed by lab test/Probable case):Barbour (25/0), Berkeley (545/19), Boone(57/0), Braxton (7/0), Brooke (37/1), Cabell (224/7), Calhoun (5/0), Clay(15/0), Fayette (102/0), Gilmer (13/0), Grant (21/1), Greenbrier (76/0),Hampshire (48/0), Hancock (51/3), Hardy (48/1), Harrison (135/1), Jackson(149/0), Jefferson (264/5), Kanawha (489/12), Lewis (24/1), Lincoln (21/0),Logan (43/0), Marion (130/3), Marshall (80/1), Mason (27/0), McDowell (12/0),Mercer (69/0), Mineral (71/2), Mingo (50/2), Monongalia (693/15), Monroe(16/1), Morgan (20/1), Nicholas (20/1), Ohio (174/0), Pendleton (19/1),Pleasants (4/1), Pocahontas (37/1), Preston (89/25), Putnam (108/1), Raleigh(92/3), Randolph (196/2), Ritchie (3/0), Roane (12/0), Summers (3/0), Taylor(29/1), Tucker (7/0), Tyler (10/0), Upshur (31/2), Wayne (147/2), Webster(2/0), Wetzel (40/0), Wirt (6/0), Wood (193/10), Wyoming (7/0).

Ascase surveillance continues at the local health department level, it may revealthat those tested in a certain county may not be a resident of that county, oreven the state as an individual in question may have crossed the state borderto be tested. Such is the case of Cabell County in thisreport.

Please note that delays may be experiencedwith the reporting of information from the local health department to DHHR.

Please visit the dashboard at http://www.coronavirus.wv.gov for more detailed information.

Additional report:

Toincrease COVID-19 testing opportunities, the Governor's Office, the HerbertHenderson Office of Minority Affairs, WV Department of Health and HumanResources, WV National Guard, local health departments, and community partners todayprovided free COVID-19 testing for residents in counties with high minoritypopulations and evidence of COVID-19 transmission.

The testing resulted in 2,300 individuals tested: 559 inBerkeley County (two-day testing event); 717 in Jefferson County (two-daytesting event); and 1,024 Monongalia County (one-day testing event).Please note these are considered preliminary numbers.

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COVID-19 Daily Update 7-18-2020 - 5 PM - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

Space Force unveils its new motto: ‘Semper Supra’ – Stars and Stripes

WASHINGTON The U.S. Space Force on Wednesday took to Twitter to explain publicly elements of the new services delta symbol and unveil its branch motto: Semper Supra.

The official motto for the military branch charged with safeguarding American satellites means always above in Latin, and is meant to represent the role of Space Force in establishing, maintaining and preserving U.S. freedom of operations in space, the service tweeted.

We are building a new service to secure the space domain... the ultimate high ground, Gen. Jay Raymond, the chief of space operations, tweeted Wednesday. Our strategic imperative is to ensure that our space capabilities & the advantages they provide the nation & our joint and coalition partners are always there. #SemperSupra!

The motto is the latest unveiling for the Space Force, which was established in December and will see its first large movement of new troops into the branch in February, when about 2,410 Air Force airmen working in space operations transfer. The service now boasts just 88 official members Raymond, his senior enlisted adviser and 86 second lieutenants commissioned into the service after graduating from the Air Force Academy in April.

The service has previously unveiled its camouflage utility uniforms, its official seal, its service flag, the jobs its troops will perform and its first recruiting video. It has yet to identify what Space Force troops will be called, an official song, dress uniforms or a rank structure. However, a measure within the fiscal year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act approved by House lawmakers on Tuesday would force the service to adopt the Navys rank structure, if signed into law.

The Space Force on Tuesday also tweeted explanations for the services new logo, which features a silver delta symbol surrounding a star representing Polaris against a black background.

The black symbolizes the darkness of deep space, while the deltas outer border signifies defense and protection from all adversaries and threats emanating from the space domain, according to a graphic shared by the service.

The service said silver elements inside the delta symbolize rockets launching and represent the four other Defense Department military services the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps.

The delta symbol has already been featured prominently in Space Force symbology. It is the most prominent feature on the services official seal and flag. Critics were quick to compare the symbols to those of Star Treks Starfleet. But Space Force officials noted the delta symbol has long been used by U.S. military forces, and has been an official symbol of the Air Forces space operators since 1961.

The Space Force is the sixth branch of the U.S. military and the first new branch since the Air Force was created in 1947. It is a separate military service from the Air Force, but operates within the Air Force Department, much as the Marine Corps operates within the Navy Department.

The service is expected to grow to some 16,000 service members in the coming years. Officials said last week they expect to begin transferring some space-focused troops from military services outside the Air Force in 2022 at the earliest.

dickstein.corey@stripes.comTwitter: @CDicksteinDC

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Space Force unveils its new motto: 'Semper Supra' - Stars and Stripes

Purdue innovators receive $1.3 million from Department of Defense for research on traumatic brain injury, Alzheimer’s – Purdue News Service

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. Innovators at Purdue University have received new support as they work to develop solutions to what U.S. military officials call an alarming trend in dementia among wounded soldiers. The same researchers also seek solutions to better treat Alzheimers disease.

The Purdue team, including innovators from several disciplines across the university, received a $1.3 million grant from the Department of Defense for their work in this area.

This project is highly relevant to the military, in that there is an alarming trend in the increasing reports of post-traumatic brain injury (TBI), Alzheimers disease and related dementia among wounded soldiers, imposing enormous emotional and economic burdens on military families, their communities and society as a whole, said Gaurav Chopra, an assistant professor of analytical and physical chemistry in Purdues College of Science, who directs a laboratory in chemical immunology.

Chopra is the principal investigator leading the team, joining forces with Riyi Shi, a co-investigator on this grant. Shi is a professor of neuroscience and biomedical engineering and director of the Center for Paralysis Research in Purdues College of Veterinary Medicine and Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering.

They are working with Purdues Bindley Bioscience Center; Purdue Center for Paralysis Research; Purdue Institute for Drug Discovery; Purdue Institute for Integrative Neuroscience; Purdue Institute of Inflammation, Immunology and Infectious Disease; Purdue University Center for Cancer Research; and Indiana University School of Medicine.

The work involves developing biomarkers and identifying new targets for phagocytic function of microglial cells, immune cells in the brain, in the context of brain injury-related Alzheimers disease and other dementia.

Chopra said brain tissue compression and damage can directly result from exposure to shock waves generated by explosive blasts to which soldiers are routinely exposed in combat and training exercises.

Furthermore, intense combat conditions will also increase the incidence of traumatic brain injury in situations such as severe car accidents or accidental falls from varying heights, Chopra said. Therefore, uncovering the mechanisms responsible for this epidemic that detracts from the quality of life for thousands of veterans could profoundly benefit our soldiers who sacrifice a great deal to ensure our freedom.

The current study will utilize new tools, such as, a pH-responsive Amyloid-beta and TBI-on-a-chip in vitro trauma model, along with well-established preclinical neurodegenerative and blast injury models developed in Chopra and Shis laboratories, to study microglial cell states in the context of TBI-related Alzheimers disease.

Purdue features some of the most prominent trauma investigators and neuroimmunologists from around the world, and we are now merging this expertise together in an unprecedented symbiotic and focused manner to confront the epidemic of post-TBI mental abnormalities. Shi said. By bringing together a highly multidisciplinary team, we intend to not only improve our understanding of the mechanisms, but also diagnoses and treatments of TBI-related neurodegenerative dementia. The potential impacts of this study cannot be overestimated and could lead to immeasurable clinical and societal benefits.

The Purdue team received the grant through the DoDs Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs partnership award program.

The Purdue Institute for Integrative Neuroscience congratulates Gaurav Chopra and Riyi Shi for receiving this prestigious award from the DoD to support their research, which is closely aligned with the institutes strategic initiatives in neurotrauma and Alzheimers disease, said Chris Rochet, director of the Purdue Institute for Integrative Neuroscience.

The innovators have worked with the Purdue Research Foundation Office of Technology Commercialization on numerous technologies. The office is now housed in the Convergence Center for Innovation and Collaboration in Discovery Park District, adjacent to the Purdue campus.

About Purdue Research Foundation Office of Technology Commercialization

The Purdue Research Foundation Office of Technology Commercialization operates one of the most comprehensive technology transfer programs among leading research universities in the U.S. Services provided by this office support the economic development initiatives of Purdue University and benefit the university's academic activities through commercializing, licensing and protecting Purdue intellectual property. The office recently moved into the Convergence Center for Innovation and Collaboration in Discovery Park District, adjacent to the Purdue campus. In fiscal year 2019, the office reported 136 deals finalized with 231 technologies signed, 380 disclosures received and 141 issued U.S. patents. The office is managed by the Purdue Research Foundation, which received the 2019 Innovation and Economic Prosperity Universities Award for Place from the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities. In 2020, IPWatchdog Institute ranked Purdue third nationally in startup creation and in the top 20 for patents. The Purdue Research Foundation is a private, nonprofit foundation created to advance the mission of Purdue University. Contact otcip@prf.org for more information.

About Purdue University

Purdue University is a top public research institution developing practical solutions to todays toughest challenges. Ranked the No. 6 Most Innovative University in the United States by U.S. News & World Report, Purdue delivers world-changing research and out-of-this-world discovery. Committed to hands-on and online, real-world learning, Purdue offers a transformative education to all. Committed to affordability and accessibility, Purdue has frozen tuition and most fees at 2012-13 levels, enabling more students than ever to graduate debt-free. See how Purdue never stops in the persistent pursuit of the next giant leap at purdue.edu.

Writer: Chris Adam, cladam@prf.orgSources: Gaurav Chopra, gchopra@purdue.edu

Riyi Shi, riyi@purdue.edu

Photo Captions:

Gaurav Chopra (left) and Riyi Shi, professors at Purdue University, have received new support as they work on research for traumatic brain injury and Alzheimers disease. (Image by Ed Lausch, Lausch Photography) A publication-quality photo is available at https://www.purdue.edu/uns/images/2020/chopra-brain.jpg

Researchers at Purdue University and Indiana University School of Medicine are developing biomarkers and identifying new targets for phagocytic function of microglial cells, immune cells in the brain, in the context of brain injury-related Alzheimers disease and other dementia. (Image provided) A publication-quality photo is available at https://www.purdue.edu/uns/images/2020/chopra-biomarkers.jpg

Journalists visiting campus: Journalists should followProtect Purdue protocolsandthe followingguidelines:

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Purdue innovators receive $1.3 million from Department of Defense for research on traumatic brain injury, Alzheimer's - Purdue News Service

Letters to the editor – 07/23/2020 | Your Viewpoint – chagrinvalleytoday.com

Tell the whole truth

Journalisms first obligation is to tell the truth.

I am the guy you put on the front cover of the July 16/17 edition of the Times and determined to be against mask wearing by noting the following: Some people are following the mask mandate in Cuyahoga County while others are not.

I am angry, angry for the lack of integrity in actions by your publication. Professional journalism, as I understand it, involves presenting and confirming facts (unless in an OP/ED). Even a criminal facing court or a famous person is given the courtesy of responding with a statement to an upcoming publication. According to the American Press Institute, journalisms first obligation is to the truth, with an allegiance to citizens, while relying on a professional discipline for verifying information. You did no fact checking and did not ask me for a comment in response to your intended photo or caption.

So here are the facts: I was not wearing a mask at the time the photo was taken, I was riding my bike until moments before, and was in compliance with CDC social distancing guidelines. The caption did not mention that because I was not provided the opportunity to comment.

I understand and support freedom of the press. I do, however, believe in reporting facts and proper follow up by reporters. Had your team checked their facts I would not have been singled out and used as an example by your paper with your opinion of what was happening in that moment.

This is not about wearing or not wearing masks, social distancing, or following CDC guidelines, this about checking facts on such a controversial topic, or any topic for that matter, if you choose to put someone in your publication.

Please remember that truth, accuracy, objectivity, impartiality and fairness are fundamental to codes of ethics for good journalism. I am sure you can do better.

Alex Chavez

Chagrin Falls

Ohioans, grow up

I have listened to most of Gov. Mike DeWines press conferences since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic.I didnt vote for him, but I approve and appreciate his leadership on this issue. Mature adults understand the need for certain regulations and limits, and in my opinion Gov. DeWine has treated Ohioans as mature adults from the start. He has given science-based reasoning for his orders.Wearing a mask is uncomfortable, wed rather not wear one, but mature adults see the need and comply.

Some Ohio adults apparently are immature, they defied the reasonable order to mask-up and they balk at the request to do so now. Some threw tantrums at the Ohio Statehouse, even spitting on reporters.Gov. DeWine lost his capable and caring director of the Ohio Department of Health because of their menacing behavior. Like teenagers, maybe these protesters felt they were grown-up enough and dont need to be told what to do.So, Gov. DeWine has lately been giving reasonable recommendations instead of orders.Now community spread is increasing, COVID-19 cases are rising. Gov. DeWine delivered a heartfelt and logical plea last week that I would summarize like this:Ohioans, grow up dont make me ground you.

Kathleen O. Webb

Munson Township

Chester needs stability

The tenure of Chester Township Trustees Joe Mazzurco and Ken Radtke has witnessed some of the highest employee turnover in the past 20 years, and it is not exclusively about competitive wages.

We have seen a parade of Mazzurco/Radtke Road Department supervisors come and go. The most recent was paid almost double the salary of his predecessors.He did not leave for financial reasons.

Concern and eyebrows were raised when Mr. Mazzurco and Mr. Radtke hired Trustee Frank Kolks wife for the assistant fiscal officer position. She did not leave for pay equity reasons, please read her letter of resignation.

The universal secretary resigned, but not for financial reasons.Mr. Mazzurco, Mr. Radtke and ousted Fiscal Officer Craig Richter created this job, and it was a poor decision. This position will no doubt now be filled with a part-time staffer, as it should have been previously.

Others have resigned for a myriad of reasons, none of which involve salary, with the exception of the Chester Township Fire Department.

In September of 2018 the firefighters and EMS staffreceived a $5 per hour across the board pay increase. In May of 2019, Chester Township residents passed a $1 million levy to respond to the Chester Fire Department demand that without the levy, firefighters will continue to leave.

Two of the firefighters who aggressively campaigned for the new full-time positions and successfully completed polygraph testing, psychological assessments, FBI/BCI background checks and extensive pension physicals before starting full-time, have already resigned.

William J. Bulman, hired on March 22 resigned June 3 and Ryan C. Zittkowski hired on March 23, resigned July 1, 2020,wrote identical template statements: I am pursuing an opportunity that offers a fair market wage, competitive workweek, reasonable time off and the protection of a union contract.

If the Chester Township Fire Department cannot offer a fair market wage, competitive work week, reasonable time off, and the protection of a union contract, maybe we should return to privatization or seek possible countywide regionalization of fire and emergency medical services.

Judy K. Zamlen-Spotts

Chester Township

Pepper Pike just fine right now

The Beech Brook rezoning project spear-headed by Bryan Stone of Axiom Development and fully supported by Mayor Richard Bain is fascinating in that for months both men have failed to comprehend why opposition to rezoning exists. Mayor Bain is quoted as saying; I think a lot of the objections relate to the development plan and not necessarily the rezoning. In keeping with that mindset, for months Mr. Stone has been scrambling, reportedly talking to residents for feedback, adjusting and then readjusting his development plan to try to win over a majority of voters come November.

From the very start, however, the opposition to rezoning Beech Brook has made its objective clear; no rezone. Mr. Stone has apparently not heard the many voices nor seen the countless yard signs letting it be known that bulldozing the 68-acre mostly pristine property in favor of more retail, more offices and the three homes per acre lots that would come with voter approval of rezoning Beech Brook is simply not acceptable no matter what the development plan contains.

In fairness to Mayor Bain, when hes not touting how great the Axiom development would be to visit and enjoy the amenities to be offered he has mentioned that he believes more commercial development for Pepper Pike is, in general, a good thing. As he puts it, A monoculture is a very unstable ecosystem.

Increasing the commercial to residential ratio in Pepper Pike may be considered a good reason to rezone Beech Brook under some circumstances, but this is far from being a valid reason today.First, Pepper Pike is not a monoculture. Pepper Pike is predominately residential but there is already plenty of commercial activity at the Lander Circle area. Also, our city is not unstable by any means as evidenced by our growing $12 million rainy day fund accumulated over just the past few years resulting from an already increased tax base and excellent management from Mayor Bain and Pepper Pike City Council.

The plain truth of the matter is that Mr. Stone is asking the citizens of Pepper Pike to simply do him a favor. There is absolutely nothing in it for the citizens of Pepper Pike to vote to rezone unless they enjoy witnessing a grotesque destruction-construction project resulting in an eyesore for the remainder of time.

Saying no to rezone is the only sensible response unless our civic leaders are able to provide a compelling reason to dramatically alter this entire section of Pepper Pike such as demonstrating financial distress that tax revenues from such a development could cure. Until then, asa resident of Pepper Pike for a majority of my life since 1959, I can confidently say that so long as we continue to elect competent and conscientious mayors and council members like the ones we have today, there will be no need to rezone any property for multi-use purposes. Pepper Pike is just fine as is and will be for a long time to come.

Kevin L. String

Pepper Pike

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Letters to the editor - 07/23/2020 | Your Viewpoint - chagrinvalleytoday.com

The Observer’s 2020 primary election recommendations – YourObserver.com

Recommendations for Manatee and Sarasota county commission and school board seats will appear July 29. Recommendations for the Sarasota City Commission, Sarasota County sheriffand Sarasota County Charter Review Board will be published the following week.

Over the next three weeks on this page, the Observer will present its recommendations for the upcoming primary elections. The official election day is Tuesday, Aug. 18.

Many newspapers have discontinued the practice of recommending candidates. We are not following the crowd. We continue to believe that one of the many and important roles of our newspapers is to advocate on the editorial/opinion page Note: only on the opinion page for candidates who stand for, first and foremost, individual liberty, the U.S. Constitution, limited government, low taxation and regulation, entrepreneurial capitalism and causes that advance those ideas for individuals and the betterment of the community.

Likewise, to a great extent, we view elections as referenda on the performance of incumbent office holders.

Were they good stewards of taxpayer dollars?

Do their voting records and core values reflect the liberty philosophy of defending and expanding peoples freedom or of expanding government and constricting freedom?

Are they advocates for taxpayers or the government?

Are they individuals of good moral character and values? Are they trustworthy?

These are among the criteria that go into our recommendations.

At the same time that elections are referenda on incumbents, we also believe in candidates who challenge or disrupt the status quo for the right reasons.

We know experience is invaluable. A county commissioner or legislator who has spent four or six years in office is likely to be far more knowledgeable about and effective than a newcomer at navigating government and the world of special-favors politics. But at the same time, incumbents often drift into becoming defenders of the government establishment. We embrace the disrupters who embrace the freedom philosophy and challenge the status quo.

Candidates: Jim Boyd; John Manners Houman

This is not a serious race.

Almost two years ago, Boyd completed eight years in the Florida House, representing District 71 (western Manatee County). In his final term, his legislative peers elected him speaker pro-tempore, the second-in-command of the House leadership. You dont reach that position unless you have demonstrated effective leadership among your fellow lawmakers.

More importantly, Boyd spent his eight years in the House as an advocate for taxpayers a dependable lawmaker for fiscal restraint and low taxes.

As the owner/CEO of Boyd Insurance and Investment Services in Bradenton, Boyd also worked as an ardent proponent of reforming Floridas auto insurance laws for consumers. This meant going against Floridas trial bar and frivolous lawsuits.

Boyd is the third generation of Manatee County Boyds to have served in the Legislature. His grandfather served in the House in 1940s, and his uncle, the late Wilbur Boyd, served in the House and Senate in the 1960s and 1970s. Prior to serving in the Legislature, Boyd was elected to the Palmetto City Council, serving terms as mayor and vice mayor.

Boyds opponent, John Manners Houman of Thonotossa in Hillsborough County, is a frequent candidate for state offices, albeit so far unsuccessful. In 2016, he lost to then-Democratic Rep. Daryl Rouson for Senate District 19; in 2018, he lost in the Republican primary to Sen. Tom Lee for Senate District 20.

Just to give you an idea of how lopsided the race, the amount of campaign contributions a candidate raises is a telling indicator: Boyd has raised $272,625; Houmans contributions total a $2,500 loan from himself.

Suffice it to say, ultimately electing Boyd would be good for all voters the citizens of District 21 and Florida in general. Given his experience in the House, if elected to the Senate, you can expect Boyd to rise to important leadership positions in the Senate, much like his predecessor, outgoing Senate President Bill Galvano.

We recommend: Jim Boyd

Candidates: Donna Barcomb; Fiona McFarland; Jason Miller

Of all the Republican races on the regions ballots, this one is probably the most watched.

Although there are three candidates vying for the nomination, the race essentially pits Donna Barcomb, a longtime Sarasota civic and community leader and small business owner, against Fiona McFarland, a 34-year-old newcomer to the community who has the credentials of Naval Academy graduate, Navy officer veteran, McKinsey & Co. consultant and daughter of a prominent national Republican and former high-level Trump administration official, K.T. McFarland.

The third candidate is Jason Miller, a deep-rooted Sarasotan (St. Martha School and Cardinal Mooney High graduate) who became a lawyer, served eight years as an assistant state attorney in the 12th Judicial Circuit, is a major in the Army JAG Corps Reserves and now heads litigation with the Najmy Thompson law firm.

For a telling insight into this race, just look at the money. Heres what the candidates have raised as of early July:

Of McFarlands 467 contributors, 52% list an out-of-state address. Of Barcombs 270 contributors, 94% list a Florida address.

The job of a state representative pays $30,000 a year.

Lets cut to the quick: This race is about one candidate seeking to begin her political ascendancy and another who has a three-decade record of service to Sarasota.

And yet, when you hear these two candidates speak on the issues and how they would address them philosophically and practically, there is little that separates them. They are strong free-market, low-regulation, low-taxation conservatives, believers in constitutional liberty, who also embrace Gov. Ron DeSantis efforts to clean up Floridas environment.

Both are qualified candidates, knowledgeable on the wide variety of issues they likely would confront. Indeed, this region and all of Florida would be better off having both of them serving in the Legislature. Unfortunately, only one can win the Republican nomination for the District 72 seat.

Here is what makes the difference for us: Sarasota Memorial Hospital and the Sarasota Memorial Healthcare System would not be in existence as an independent hospital and would not be the highly rated hospital that it is today were it not for Donna Barcomb. Whats more, her record of service to the community over the past 30 years has been extraordinary.

McFarland has made an issue of Barcombs voting in favor of raising the hospitals millage rate while serving as an elected member of the hospital board. What McFarland doesnt share is the context.

Barcomb ran for the hospital board somewhat naively and won in 1996. Little did she know as a rookie board member how much distress the hospital was in financially and morale-wise. SMH was consistently losing millions of dollars a year in operations in the late 1990s, with bond-rating agencies lowering the hospitals grade, a move that raised interest rates on the hospitals borrowing and more stress on the hospitals operations.

Whats more, there was public strife between the hospitals then-CEO Michael Covert and the staff, and the hospitals reputation suffered for spotty customer service.

The situation was becoming so grim hospital that board members seriously discussed whether it should sell the institution to a private company. Either thator replace the CEO, increase the hospitals millage rate and attempt a turnaround to remain independent.

Barcomb sided with remaining independent and raising the millage rate. And she was chair of the board when it brought in Dr. Duncan Finlay, a respected Sarasota physician, to replace Covert. Finlay is credited with leading a successful, yearslong effort to improve the hospitals reputation and customer-service ratings.

Then, in 2004, Barcomb was chair of the hospital board committee that recruited Finlays successor, Gwen MacKenzie. MacKenzie in turn recruited David Verinder to be CFO. MacKenzie and Verinder, the current CEO, are largely credited with turning the hospital into the highly rated institution it is today.

At one point in her term as board chair, Barcomb, MacKenzie and Verinder traveled to New York City to meet with Moodys Corp. to discuss the hospitals bond rating. The Moodys representative bluntly told them: Either raise the hospitals millage rate, or Moodys will lower the hospitals bond rating a move that would cost millions in higher interest rates.

McFarland says Barcomb has a saying-and-doing gap in Barcombs position against raising taxes. But when you know the historical context, you can say Barcomb made tough choices 20 years ago that saved and laid the foundation for Sarasota Memorial becoming one of the top hospitals in Florida and the nation and one of the institutional gems of the city.

And she did that after serving years as president of the Southside Elementary School PTA,president of Sarasotas Junior League,head of a statewide Junior League education committee,mother of four sonsand owner-operator of a physical therapy business. Barcomb also is completing her eighth year as an elected member of the Sarasota County Charter Review Board.

All of that demonstrates the kind of passion and commitment to the community that voters want in a legislator.

As for McFarland, there is no question she has the intellect, competence and belief in the liberty philosophy to be an effective legislator. But she made a miscalculation in her quest for the nomination.

McFarland and her husband have been homesteaded residents in Bradenton, which is outside of District 72. They have rented quarters in the district to demonstrate their commitment to Sarasota. But as one longtime Sarasota Republican told us, McFarland underestimates the parochial loyalty Sarasotans have for those who have served the community.

District 72 has been hobbled with two short-term legislators not committed to the seat Republican Alex Miller and Democrat Margaret Good.

The voters in this district deserve a representative who is not looking to advance to the next level. Sarasotans have seen that before. They deserve someone who will stay committed to the district. McFarlands time will come. Barcombs time is now.

We recommend: Donna Barcomb

Candidates: Ed Brodsky (incumbent); Lisa Chittaro

When you examine the 300 contributors (and the $165,900) to the campaign of 12th Judicial Circuit State Attorney Ed Brodsky, you can quickly see it is a long list of respected, accomplished people from all across Sarasota, Manatee and Desoto counties business owners, sheriffs, retired sheriffs, mayors and Democrats.

They would not support Brodsky if they did not believe he deserved or earned their trust.

Brodsky has spent virtually all of his 28-year legal career as a prosecutor in the 12th Judicial Circuit State Attorneys office. With this election, he is seeking his third four-year term as the state attorney and chief prosecutor for the three-county circuit, overseeing 160 employees and $17 million budget.

What matters most to voters, though, is Brodsky and his offices success in helping law enforcement keep the region safe. In the past five years, the total crime rate in Sarasota County has dropped each year; in Manatee, four of the past five years.

Whats more, Brodsky and his office, the regions law enforcement departments, 12th Circuit judges and numerous regional not-for-profit organizations have been among Floridas leaders creating programs that help addicts, homeless, mentally ill and veterans rather than overcrowd county jails.

Brodsky has a respected and qualified opponent in the primary, Lisa Chittaro. She served 15 years with Brodsky as an assistant state attorney. But if elections are indeed referenda on incumbents performance and results, Brodsky has delivered what voters want: a state attorney who enforces the rule of law forcefully and fairly and who pursues innovative programs and strategies with other branches of the legal system to help, rather than merely house, those in need.

We recommend: Ed Brodsky

Candidates: Melissa Gould; Connie Mederos Jacobs; Chris Pratt; Kristy Guy Zinna

Voting for judges is often a puzzle for voters. Such is the case for the Manatee County Judge, Group 4 position.

Judicial candidates cannot take a stand on contentious issues; they are careful to show bias. So the candidates all say the same thing: They will be fair and impartial and follow the law. You take them at their word. But how do your really know?

Then you look at experience. As lawyers, have they spent enough time in the courtroom and handled a wide enough variety of lawsuits to give them the breadth of experience and judgment they will encounter and need as a judge?

In this case, Manatee voters are fortunate to have four well-rounded lawyers in and out of the courtroom vying for the seat. At the same time, you can say voters are somewhat unfortunate: Its a tough choice.

All four candidates have strong, long-time local family roots and admirable records of volunteerism in the community examples: Habitat for Humanity (Connie Mederos Jacobs); delivering groceries to elderly during the pandemic (Melissa Gould); Manatee Tiger Bay board (Kristy Guy Zinna); former little league umpire (Chris Pratt).

Likewise, together they have logged 90 years of courtroom experience in misdemeanor and felony crime cases, family law, criminal defense, civil litigation, animal cruelty, elder law and personal injury law to have the knowledge and wisdom required of a judge. Mederos Jacobs and Pratt have been practicing 30 and 34 years, respectively, while Gould and Zinna each has been practicing 12 years.

To be sure, theres a difference between 30 and 12 years in the courtroom. But when we called on lawyers, judges and law enforcement officials who have seen these candidates in action, the consensus tilted the scales toward Gould and Zinna.

Zinna, who has been in private practice for the past seven years, has served on both sides of the aisle in the courtroom as a prosecutor and as an assistant public defender in the 12th circuit. In both, she earned a reputation as a committed hard worker.

Gould has spent the past eight years as an assistant state attorney, prosecuting a broad spectrum of misdemeanor and felony cases. Prior to the state attorneys office, Gould also gained experience in Michigan in civil litigation, with business and contract law, consumer protection, employee discrimination andprofessional malpractice.

The difference between Gould and Zinna? This is what we repeatedly heard: Gould has the edge the legal intellect, always prepared, committed. But its not just her courtroom experience, we were told. Gould earned a Master of Law from the University of Cambridge in England, and prior to moving to Bradenton, she taught family and constitutional law at Oakland University in Michigan.

We recommend: Melissa Gould

Go here to read the rest:

The Observer's 2020 primary election recommendations - YourObserver.com

Q&A with U of A President Bill Flanagan – The Gateway Online

While campus remains primarily online with only research and some staff working in-person, one person is there consistently hosting Zoom meetings, planning, and hoping for a campus that will return to normal.

Since July 3, Bill Flanagan has assumed the role of University of Alberta president and vice-chancellor, and is settling into his new role.

Flanagan is the 14th president of the U of A and replaces David Turpin, who served from 2015 to June of this year.

The Gateway interviewed Flanagan about his priorities for the U of A, how he will resolve to ensure the university is a diverse and equitable institution, and how leading the largest university in Alberta marks a special occasion for him and his family.

Interview responses have been edited for clarity and length.

Flanagan: Its been about 15 days [laughs]. I feel deeply honoured to have this opportunity. I know its a challenging time for the university. Many have asked me if I knew what I was getting into [laughs]. Of course the scale of the challenge has scaled dramatically over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic but I still remain very excited to have this opportunity to join such a vibrant community.

Ive been impressed by the students I have engaged with so far while in my role. Obviously, I havent been able to do so with as many I would like to with COVID-19 going on. Talking to my computer is really beginning to wear on me. I am really looking forward to engaging more with the campus life and other students at the U of A, as soon as we can safely do that.

I came from Queens University a university half the size of the the U of A and in a smaller community than Edmonton. I was worried how it would be to work at a university in a more urban setting with a larger population of students. I have to say that I thought it would be more unengaged. That has proven to be quite the opposite! Students seem to be engaged and committed to all the U of A stands for. They are talented and make it known too. Our students are so socially engaged and engagement is not a challenge at all even in the constraints of what we are dealing with right now.

Ive loved learning about all the wonderful things going on and meeting the staff, faculty, and researchers helping to drive innovation forward.

I was born in Edmonton and grew up in Lacombe and Stony Plain and my parents were proud graduates of the University of Alberta. So the U of A was sort of coursing through my veins. I know how much of a role the U of A played in my parents lives and I never got to attend it since I decided to go out east to university. But now I am here, just like they were! It feels special to me to now be the president of such an important university for the province and indeed the country.

I am humbled to play my small role in serving this university. A university that is going through challenging times, but also one of great opportunity. The U of A has always played a vital role in Alberta and now we will continue to help out.

I served as dean for 14 years and I helped explore new opportunities at the faculty with more online learning and expanding enrolment. So I think I have a lot of experience in being within an academic leadership role. Of course this is a much bigger university but I think some of the complexities I dealt with as dean will really help me in my new role.

An enormously important role. I think universities around the world have such an important role to play in advancing discussions of equity, diversity, and inclusion (EDI). I know that the University of Alberta has made a major commitment in EDI initiatives with an EDI strategic plan which is really quite unique among Canadian universities; particularly in its ambition and scope of what it is attempting to undertake.

I will reinforce the universitys commitment to EDI in everything that we do.

We have a really diverse student population at the U of A with students from across Alberta and beyond. It is crucial the university reflects that in all that it does.

The U of A has also undertaken, with great success, efforts to increase and incorporate Indigenous knowledge and teaching in the university. I think the U of A has been a leader in Canada in terms of Indigenization and its commitment to both the faculty of native studies and weaving native studies into the fabric of everything we do at the university. We are steadily increasing the numbers of our Indigenous students and giving support to them to enable them to thrive.

I want to build on all of these initiatives at the U of A and I welcome student engagement. I know students care deeply about contemporary issues, and they have such an important role in these discussions and moving those discussions forward.

The Black Lives Matter movement and all the recent protests have shown we have so much more to do. There is all so much more we can do to ensure the university meets its ambitions about equity, diversity, and inclusion.

Students have, really, since time immemorial played an important role in driving social change including at the University of Alberta. I know there is more I can do. I look forward to engaging with students. We all have a role to play.

Freedom of expression is absolutely inherent at the university in what we do. It really only means anything when it is freedom to express views that you might not agree with. Freedom of expression does not really mean anything if it is freedom to agree with me. Freedom of expression is only meaningful if it is the freedom to disagree with me. There is no question that is an inherent part of what we do at a university. Without that vigorous exchange of ideas we would be diminished.

I know the U of A has a thoughtful commitment to freedom of expression; a policy that was carefully developed and one that reflects an ongoing commitment to freedom of expression.

At the same time, we have the commitment to our students to provide the very best learning environment that we can a supportive one where students can thrive. Yet, this environment cannot be one where students are shielded from disagreeable thoughts because these can be sometimes inherent and challenging discussions we have at a university campus. Although we are committed to the best possible learning environment to our students, this means exposure to diversity of views. One of the best skills you can gain at university as a student is the ability to grapple with diverse views that may not be your own, to challenge your own views, and indeed challenge the views of others.

The Gateway: For many students campus sexual violence remains a prevalent problem, especially with complicated reporting pathways, lack of awareness and resources. For several years now there have been calls by Students Union executives and student councillors to hire a campus sexual assault coordinator while other universities have a similar position. How is the issue of campus sexual violence going to be approached while under your presidency?

I certainly look forward to learning more about this and the supports that are available at the U of A.

Having an appropriate support system in place for our students is absolutely fundamental to the success of our students and their safety. I know there is heightened concern about campus sexual assault. It is imperative we provide a safe learning environment, one free of any suggestion of sexual violence.

We need to have processes in place where students feel they can bring their concerns forward and that they will be dealt with effectively, expeditiously, and fairly. We need to have a university with support for survivors. We have to have the student at the centre of our support model which is implemented university wide.

I commit to looking at our current resources available to students and to ensuring they are comparable to those other students across post-secondary institutions in Canada have access to. This is not an issue we can afford to make any missteps on. It is simply too important to our students and the wellbeing of our campus.

The Gateway: COVID-19 has changed the fabric of the university. Instead of over 40,000 undergraduate students commuting to campus and learning together, you have 40,000 different classrooms across varying neighbourhoods, cities, and countries. How will the U of A continue to develop community while Fall term remains mostly online?

This is a great challenge for us. My concern is particularly with first-year students entering post-secondary. It is such a formative time in a young persons life and an opportunity to develop networks of support and community while discovering new things about oneself. Plus, university is so much fun! You try things, you meet people, and enjoy this wonderful experience obviously it cant all be about academics; intellectual engagement isnt the only reason you come to university [laughs].

We are thinking as hard and creatively as we can in order to think of ways we can develop that sense of community and development within the constraints of COVID-19. In terms of classes, our faculty are hard at work over the summer to come up with new ways to deliver classes online in the fall to enable successful and engaging learning.

We are also thinking of other ways to engage with first-year students and the greater campus community. We will are hoping to have a number of campus activities with social distancing and appropriate health measures to reduce risk. Of course, the majority of events will be online. We also want to engage international students who are online who also need a flavour of campus life at the U of A. We will continue to provide opportunities for students to link with other students to get a semblance of connection. I miss being on campus and seeing everything happening. I miss looking out my window and seeing an engaged campus. We all hope to return to that as soon as we safely can.

All health services remain available to our students. Indeed if students are on-campus or in Edmonton and need to see someone in-person, that can be arranged. Much of our resources where possible have moved online. I would encourage students to explore those options.

University of Alberta for Tomorrow, our vision to ensure the U of A is organizationally and fiscally prepared for the future of post-secondary in Alberta. That is my major priority for the next two years and I am hoping that in the next five years we will have some great results to report, not only in the restructuring process but also seizing opportunities for growth in the future.

Its unusual for a president to suggest such a massive plan for changes even before they have taken office I did the first townhall in June before my term officially commenced. I rather quickly have put together this ambitious plan that is historic, I think, for the university.

I recognize it is going to be challenging to enact the plan. We will very much have to engage the entire university community in order to succeed. This will address the fiscal challenges we are experiencing now and will try to create strategic challenges for the university.

I want to make clear our signature research areas are where we excel. These areas reflect important fields where the U of A is making incredible contributions and changing the world. They even foster greater research and interdisciplinary study. Changing those is not on the table when discussing academic restructuring or service excellence transformation. That will continue and not be changed. In fact, I hope to deepen the signature research areas so their work can continue.

The larger picture of University of Alberta for Tomorrow is reducing our administrative costs and restructuring our institution to position it for better financial results to better enable our teaching and research to excel. Those two areas are crucial to the university and the ones we most care about.

I very much want to continue the goals and strategic vision that For the Public Good lays out. I was impressed by that document from the start. It shares a strong direction for us. If anything, University of Alberta For Tomorrow will enable us to pursue what was laid out in For the Public Good. I really commend former president David Turpin, his colleagues, and the U of A community for developing such a robust vision for the future.

Here is the original post:

Q&A with U of A President Bill Flanagan - The Gateway Online

India, US need to sit down on negotiating table for free trade agreement: Piyush Goyal – The Financial Express

After concluding a quick trade deal, India and the US need to sit down on the negotiating table for working towards a more sustainable, robust and enduring partnership in the form of a free trade agreement (FTA), Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal said.

For the FTA, the minister said, India is willing to work with an open mind, with a willingness to open markets with a corresponding opportunity for Indian businesses in the US.

I believe we have a quick trade deal which has some of the pending matters built up over the last couple of years which we need to get out of the way quickly. We are almost there. I think another couple of calls and we should be able to solve that out.

Post that, as was already intimated to the US Congress, the US and India need to sit down on the negotiating table, I do not know if that can be done before the (US) elections or post the elections, but we need to work towards a much more sustainable, a much more robust, a much more enduring partnership in the form of a FTA, he said in a webinar of US-India Business Council.

Goyal said that both the countries should also look for a preferential trade agreement (PTA) which can include 50-100 products and services.

While in a PTA two trading partners eliminate or significantly reduce import duties on a limited number of goods traded between them, in a FTA the countries remove duties on maximum number of products.

We believe we should also look at an early harvest in the form of a PTA, so that we can rather than waiting for the gains of a FTA, which may take severalyears to conclude, we could look at an early harvest of maybe 50 or 100 products and services, where we can engage with mutual trust and open spirit. So that the partnership between the US and India can kick start much faster, he added.

India and the US are negotiating a limited trade deal with a view to ironing out differences on trade issues to boost economic ties.

India is demanding exemption from high duties imposed by the US on some steel and aluminium products, resumption of export benefits to certain domestic products under the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP), and greater market access for its products from sectors such as agriculture, automobile, automobile components and engineering.

On the other hand, the US wants greater market access for its farm and manufacturing products, dairy items and medical devices, apart from cut inimport duties on some information and communication technology products.

The US has also raised concerns over trade deficit with India.

Further the minister stated that the government is taking several steps to further improve the business climate to attract investors.

He said businesses are looking for a stable and predictable policy environment, fair play, ease of doing business, better infrastructure in terms of logistics, utilities, and common facilities required for manufacturing firms.

By enlarge industry and business wants to be left alone, wants freedom to operate and is willing to commit itself to work within the framework of a countrys laws. And I think India is working towards making all of these enablerswhether it is ease of doing business, whether it is improving our competitive edge, bringing down logistics cost, making it easier to get approvals. All of this typical needs of business which we in government are trying to address, he said.

He added that there is an opportunity and a trust deficit available globally and India is willing to fill that gap in the international supply chain as a trusted partner.

Talking about formulation of the single window clearance process, he said a team is working on this by understanding the needs of businesses, their pain points and requirements.

We are understanding industry pain points and their requirements. We are trying to create such a genuine single window, and not a window behind which it opens to 10 doors. It is a herculean task, will take some time but I assure you that we are committed to make it happen, the minister said.

To begin with one of the first things that on a pilot basis, the government is going to release very soon is a GIS based land bank availability across the country, he said adding we have identified in six states a few hundred thousand hectares of land and we are actually going to offer you a Google earth view of particular lands available for industry to buy. Taking it forward from there so much so that my intention is that a person sitting in Iceland should be able to not only locate the land he wants but also pay for it and buy it.

I will give you a simple example of how I am explaining it (single window process) to my own officers. I said look at the common application form that a student who applies to US university has to fill up. Its eight universities, one form, small supplement to each, he added.

The minister also said that India has become self-sufficient in ventilators and I shortly be starting export of ventilators.In March, the government banned export of ventilators in wake of the coronavirus outbreak.

The US remained Indias top trading partner for the second consecutive fiscal in 2019-20. According to the data of the commerce ministry, in 2019-20, the bilateral trade between the US and India stood at USD 88.75 billion, as against USD 87.96 billion in 2018-19.

The US is one of the few countries with which India have a trade surplus. The trade gap between the countries has increased to USD 17.42 billion in 2019-20 from USD 16.86 billion in 2018-19. In 2018-19, the US had surpassed China to become Indias top trading partner.

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India, US need to sit down on negotiating table for free trade agreement: Piyush Goyal - The Financial Express

What Is the ‘Alt-Left’? For Starters, Not a Thing | WIRED

Hours after a rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, organized by white nationalists, turned deadly, President Donald Trump blamed "many sides" for the violence that transpired. Three days later, at an impromptu press conference at Trump Tower, the president doubled down on this message, condemning groups "on both sides" of the fighting. What about the alt-left that came charging at, as you say, at the alt-right? the president said.

Many people know the phrase alt-right, a term coined by white nationalist Richard Spencer to describe the white nationalist movement. But "alt-left" is a term that's recently floated around in various corners of the internet. It gained some popularity earlier this year, when violent riots erupted in Berkeley, California, during protests over an appearance by former Breitbart editor Milo Yiannopoulos at UC Berkeley.

White nationalist David Duke defined the term after President Trump referenced it Tuesday.

Fox News' Sean Hannity and InfoWars' Paul Joseph Watson have also offered their own definitions.

Ultimately, the intent seems to be to frame alt-left as the opposite of alt-right and create a false equivalence between groups on the far ends of the right and left. But here's the thing: No left-wing group has ever called itself the alt-left. And the groups smeared by the alt-left label don't include anything like the heinousness of overt white supremacism that has increasingly defined the alt-right.

Originally posted here:

What Is the 'Alt-Left'? For Starters, Not a Thing | WIRED

What Is Alt-Left? Here’s What You Really Need to Know

On Tuesday, President Donald Trump launched a passionate defense of white supremacists who attended a rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, arguing that there was blame to be found on both sides.

Trump, who made the remarks during a press conference that at times became hostile, attempted to shift some of the blame to what he called the alt-left. For many people, it was the first time theyd heard the phrase usedat least from someone of Trumps stature.

What about the alt-left that came charging at, as you say, the alt-right? Trump asked. Let me ask you this: What about the fact they came chargingthat they came charging with clubs in their hands, swinging clubs? Do they have any problem? I think they do.

The idea of trying to create an alt-left to compare to the much-criticized alt-right likely makes sense from Trumps apparent perspective. It creates an equal foil to share the blame of the shocking violence in Charlottesville. But is there really such a thing as the alt-left?

Theres no such thing as the alt-left. To understand why, you first need to understandthe extremist movement within the Republican party.

The idea of the alt-right is largely credited to Richard Spencer, a white nationalist. The so-called alt-right became a force in the Republican Party and overwhelmingly supported Trump in his quest to be president. The term alt-right took hold in the late 2000s, shortly after President Barack Obama took office.

Heres what theSouthern Poverty Law Center, which has extensively tracked the movement over the years, defines the alt-right as:

The Alt-Right is a loose set of far-right ideologies at the core of which is a belief that white identity is under attack through policies prioritizing multiculturalism, political correctness and social justice, and must be preserved, usually through white-identified online communities and physical ethno-states.

The group found its identity on the internet and was cultivated websites such as neo-Nazi outlet the Daily Stormer and Breitbart News, the website formerly run by Trump adviser Steve Bannon.

READ MORE:

There is no equivalent organized movement on the left that espouses extremist views comparable to those held by members of the alt-right. Instead, the idea of the alt-left is frequently used by far-right Fox News pundit Sean Hannity to describe more radical liberals and Trump opponents.

Also, unlike the alt-right, alt-left wasnt coined by members of the movement, but rather, its used as an insult against people who oppose far-right ideologies.

Oren Segal, the director of the Anti-Defamation Leagues Center on Extremism, told CNN that the idea of an alt-left is a made-up term.

While there are radical members of the left, the idea of an alt-left is incorrectly conflated with the antifa (anti-fascist) movementmembers of which have been seen at protests at Trumps inauguration and other events.

Antifa, which sits on the extreme far-left of the political spectrum, is a decentralized network of people from varying degrees of political leanings. Their goal is to oppose what they see as fascist elements in society, including the alt-right. Antifa activists have at times engaged in violence, which has made them a villain in the eyes of some right-leaning groups and a thorn in the heel of many Democrats, who do not want to be associated with their more provocative methods and do not appreciate the black cloud the group puts over otherwise peaceful protests.

Antifa does not hold cohesive political views beyond opposing fascism, which makes it far different from the alt-rights pro-white, bigoted platform.

Essentially, Trump is trying to create a foil for the alt-rightwhere many of his most vehement supporters have planted their flag.

By trying to create the idea of a just-as-radical side on the left, it lends credence to his argument that there is blame on both sides for the violence that erupted in Charlottesville. Also, its an easy way to charge up supporters.

On Tuesday night,Hannity backed up Trumps statements during his press conference by continuing to push the alt-left narrative,implying that the counterprotesters in Charlottesville were part of the alt-left.

The people that provoked this, yeah Ill agree, they were white supremacists, they are the ones who are most responsible, Hannity said. This brings out a morally justifiable anger in peoplepeople who are that ignorant. But it does not give these alt-left protesters, doesnt give people of good conscious even, the right to attack them, punch them, hit them, et cetera.

READ MORE:

Yes. The term has begun spreading among those who have spoken out in support of Trump or the alt-right. Here are some examples:

Given how powerful the term is in creating a false equivalency between the alt-right and fringe extremists on the far left, you can expect to hear much more about the alt-left in the future. Just remember: It doesnt really exist.

*First Published: Aug 16, 2017, 4:22 pm

Andrew Wyrich is the deputy tech editor at the Daily Dot. Andrew has written for USA Today, NorthJersey.com, and other newspapers and websites. His work has been recognized by the Society of the Silurians, Investigative Reporters & Editors (IRE), and the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ).

Originally posted here:

What Is Alt-Left? Here's What You Really Need to Know

Why the Alt-Left Is a Problem, Too | Vanity Fair

Internet clickbait promotes mental tooth decay, squirting syntheticcontroversy out of a can of Reddi-wip, but an article by Eileen Jones on January 9 went out of its way to swirl it on extra thick. HeadlinedAGAINST MERYL STREEP, the indictment declared, Meryl Streepsspeechifying at the Golden Globes was the worst thing to happen sinceTrumps election. Hoo-kay. If Donald Trump speaks Jerkish, accordingto retired novelist Philip Roth, Joness broadside was written inSnarkish: That I should live to see the day when Meryl Streepsspeechifying at a Hollywood awards show is admired as solemnly anddiscussed as fervently as Lincolns second inaugural address is apersonal nightmare. Lectured by Streep! And about how her and all herHollywood pals, decked out in everything that costs the earth andsparkles in the spotlight, are among the true victims of Donald TrumpsAmerican authoritarianism! Streeps chastising of Trump in heracceptance speech at the Golden Globes was derided as a sniffy displayof royal hauteur, as if her ladyship had gotten her blue sash in atwist. The way she condemned the performance of Donald Trump when hemocked disabled New York Times reporter Serge Kovaleski, as if Trumpwere up for a rival Golden Globes Award and had disgraced the ScreenActors Guild, was truly righteous, wasnt it? Shes so classy, isntshe?

Such derision of liberal Hollywood pietiesJones ripped Streep forbeing the sweetheart of Hillary Clintons faux-feminist pantsuitnation is familiar gargle from right-wing hucksters such as radiohost Laura Ingraham, the author of Shut Up & Sing: How Elites fromHollywood, Politics, and the Media Are Subverting America. But heresthe twist: Eileen Jones is no righty coveting a rotation spot in the FoxNews greenroom. She teaches film at Berkeleyand you know what itslike at Berkeley, radical fervor springing from every hairfollicleand her Streep denunciation was published in Jacobin, whichbills itself as a leading voice of the American left, offeringsocialist perspectives on politics, economics, and culture.Disillusionment with Obamas presidency, loathing of Hillary Clinton,disgust with identity politics, and a craving for a climacticreckoning that will clear the stage for a bold tomorrow have created akinship between the alt-right and an alt-left. Theyre not kissincousins, but they caterwaul some of the same tunes in different keys.

The alt-right receives the meatiest share of attention in the media, asit should. Its powerful, vicious, steeped in neo-Nazi ideology,nativist white supremacy, mens-rights misogyny, and Ayn Rand capitalistbermensch mythos, and it heralds a conquering hero in the White Housein President Donald J. Trump, while the former executive chairman of thevenereally right-wing Breitbart News, Steve Bannon, functions as despotwhisperer, trickling Iago-ish poison into Trumps receptive skull. Thealt-left cant match that for strength, malignancy, or tentacled reach,but its dude-bros and purity progressives exert a powerfulreality-distortion field online and foster factionalism on the lib-left.Its outlets include not only Jacobin but also the Intercept, one ofwhose co-founders is the inexhaustible Glenn Greenwald, lawyer, author,journalist, and crucial conduit for Edward Snowdens stolen N.S.A. datato The Guardian; Web sites such as Truthdig, Consortiumnews, and NakedCapitalism; and anomalous apostates such as Mickey Kaus, a formercontributor to liberal percolators of ideas and opinions such asWashington Monthly, the New Republic, Harpers, and Slate, who migratedsideways and down to the right-wing Daily Caller, did a temporary hitchas a columnist for the Breitbart bughouse in 2016, and serves as atweeting defender of Trumps proposed wall. Other busy beavers onTwitter include Michael Tracey, Freddie deBoer, Mark Ames, ConnorKilpatrick (a Jacobin contributor), Jeremy Scahill (journalist andIntercept co-founder), and similar fun guys. A Tumblr site devoted toTrumpian Leftism captures the intellectual flavor of theirtemperaments. One of the alt-lefts political darlings is Tulsi Gabbard,a progressive congresswoman from Hawaii who met with thenpresident-elect Donald Trump in Trump Tower and was rumored to be underconsideration for a Cabinet position, and its quixotic preacher-man andnoble leper is Cornel West, once an orator at every social-justiceconvocation who got so uncoiled by his rancorous contempt for Obama andcast adrift into the hazy fringes of the alt-leftsee Michael EricDysons definitive autopsy, The Ghost of Cornel West, the NewRepublic, April 19, 2015that in 2016 he supported the Green Partycandidacy of Jill Stein, that stellar mind.

VIDEO: Steve Bannon, the Shadow President

It was Jill Stein who said Hillary might be the greater evil in a Trumpmatchup (Hillary has the potential to do a whole lot more damage,get us into more wars), a sentiment shared by actress Susan Sarandon,who told an interviewer she believed that Clinton was more dangerousthan Trump because she was more hawkish and better able to ram heragenda through Congress. In words I suspect Sarandon wishes she couldreel back, she discounted the threat level posed by a Trump presidency:Seriously, I am not worried about a wall being built . . . . He isnot going to get rid of every Muslim in this country. She speculatedon another occasion that a Trump win might hasten the revolution. Thelefts romance with revolution has always been a reality-blinder, thisthermodynamic belief that things need to get bad beyond the breakingpoint so that people will take the vape pens out of their mouths, riseup, and storm the Bastille. But the history of non-democracies andauthoritarian personality cults shows that things can stay bad and getworse for a long time, leaving unhealable wounds. Maos China, forexample. Putins tubercular Russia.

See the original post here:

Why the Alt-Left Is a Problem, Too | Vanity Fair

Netflix launches shuffle button that plays a random show for viewers who dont know what to watch – The Sun

NETFLIX has surprised some users with a 'shuffle' button that chooses something to watch for indecisive viewers.

Testing for this feature actually began last year and now it seems more users have been given a chance to try it.

Netflix told the New York Post that this surprise rollout was just a second round of testing for the feature.

Like with all tested features, we don't yet know if the 'Random Play' button will be considered popular and successful enough to be rolled out to all forms of Netflix.

Reports suggest the shuffle button is now showing up for both TV shows and films.

Previously, it was only said to be appearing as a 'Random Episode' button when users were already watching a TV series.

1

This feature would be very useful for fans of any TV series they've watched multiple times and want to watch again.

Or it could be used if you just want Netflix on in the background whilst you're doing other things.

It may even stop arguments about what film you should watch.

At the moment, the button is appearing for some Netflix users on Samsung and Fire TVs.

However, it's not said to be featured on Apple TV or via Amazon Firestick.

Netflix fans have taken to Twitter to applaud the feature and a lot of people who don't have it seem to wish they did.

Use Netflix on a computer or laptop? Try these useful shortcuts

Here are some handy keyboard shortcuts...

EXPENSIVE NITE INParents' anguish as Fortnite addict son spends $20,000 savings on Twitch

OUT OF THIS WORLDMind-blowing Nasa footage shows clearest EVER view of Mars surface

SEXY LEXYAmazon's Alexa getting users hot under the collar during lonely lockdown nights

I-SIGHTiPhone Photo Awards winners are so incredible they put your snaps to shame

BURNER PHONEHackers can now make phone chargers destroy your phone or set it on FIRE

CAR-AZY! Jaguar creates 'contactless screen' that knows where you'd press BEFORE you do it

In other news, Twitter has just experienced its largest and most dramatic hack.

Snapchat is testing anew explore featurethat could make it a lot more similar to TikTok.

And, WhatsApp users are beingwarned about modified versionsof the app that could leave them vulnerable to hackers.

How often do you watch Netflix? Let us know in the comments...

We pay for your stories! Do you have a story for The Sun Online Tech & Science team? Email us at tech@the-sun.co.uk

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Netflix launches shuffle button that plays a random show for viewers who dont know what to watch - The Sun

Jordan Martinook: Everyone will be going into the series full go, ready to rock. – Canes Country

Jordan Martinook has proven to be a leader for the Hurricanes on and off the ice. Although he had a down year after dealing with a few different injuries throughout the season, he proved to be a vital voice and beacon of energy for the Canes.

Now, more than ever, the Hurricanes will need to rely on Martinooks voice and energy if they plan to generate their own force heading into the bubble postseason.

Martinook spoke to the media over Zoom following Tuesdays practice.

On coming into the playoffs healthy and rested: You look at just going into the playoffs last year, a lot of guys were banged up and that first series you get nicked up pretty good too. Everybodys healthy now. Need to keep it that way for the next week and half to two weeks and I think everyone will be going into the series full go, ready to rock.

On getting to playoff level in a short time span: Every team is in the same position as we are. Its about getting yourself as prepared as possible in these two to three weeks. Trying to make that one exhibition game count as much as it can. We are all at square one. Its basically whoever can adapt the quickest. Its going to be a lot of mental work. You got to keep each other happy. Lifes going to be different in the bubble so keeping everyone happy and sane and trying to put everything you got into it.

On getting the team to a good energy level: Our practices have been more vocal than before the stoppage, so I think guys are aware that we are going to need everybody to talk and create their own energy. Its going to be different when youre scoring goals or if theres a big hit and its just us that are cheering. The crowds in the playoffs grab momentum for you so its going to take some guys out of their comfort zones. To be able to scream and create that energy is going to be something for our team that we need.

On the league potentially censoring on-ice language over broadcast: Stuff happens quick, things get said that, when theres a full building, the cameras and microphones dont pick up. I dont think its going to change the way it is and obviously they made that five second delay just so they can keep it PG for everybody, but its the playoffs. Theres going to be a ton of emotion and the vocal side of the game is part of it.

On feelings when the return was announced: Everyone stayed pretty optimistic throughout the whole thing. When we were getting into the middle of June to late June you were getting a little worried that timelines werent going to work, but when youre hearing they can push next season back, youre hoping that you can somehow finish it because you put in six to seven months of work. For it to all not mean anything... I think that doesnt sit well with anybody when you put so much work into a season and it just gets taken away from you. I think everyone is pretty happy that it got worked out and obviously were hoping everyone can stay safe and not have any setbacks here.

On seeing the testing results from the league having only two positives: Obviously with our team, were doing our part, but we all have friends on other teams. You have players you played with around the league so as much as you are trying to keep your team safe, the hockey community is a pretty tight knit community no matter which team youre on. Obviously, our team, first-and-foremost, we want to keep everybody safe, but knowing that if you do something to jeopardize your team going into this bubble, you can jeopardize others. Nobody wants anyone getting sick. In the playoffs, you want the best of the best and if somebody were to get sick it kind of diminishes that. We want everyone to stay healthy and just try and keep it as high quality as we can.

On being away from family: My family didnt come back to Raleigh with me so Ive been doing this for two weeks. You have your hard days and FaceTime is a big thing. Im lucky I have that now. I havent seen my wife or my son for two weeks. Its definitely hard. Luckily, we got a good team where everybody just keeps doing a lot of things together to keep your mind off of it, but it doesnt make it any easier knowing that if we keep this thing rolling for two or three rounds, youre not seeing them for a month and a half. Its definitely hard and you think about it. Im getting choked up a little bit just thinking about it, but it is what it is. You dont get a chance to win a Stanley Cup every year. Ive been around for six years and Ive been in the playoffs once. If you get a chance to go for it and this is the sacrifice you have to make, so be it.

On expectations for life in the bubble: Well try to get outside and throw a football around, play some spikeball, but its going to be different. Obviously Im a personable guy. I like to be around people and so far theyve said you got to be in your room. Its kind of like lockdown. Its as good as you make it and were going to try and make it the best possible bubble we can.

On bringing anything interesting into the bubble: Not really. I have a board game, called Super Tock, its a fun little four person board game. I dont know if I should be saying that. Well just make sure were sitting six-feet apart playing the game. Wash our hands, sanitize, wear a mask. All that stuff.

On bubble messing up game-day routines: For the first two games we are at noon, so I think thats almost an advantage. You just wake up, you eat and then you go play. I feel like that day where we are playing at eight is the one thats going to test us a little bit. Even during the season, when you have a pregame skate and you have all this stuff, the eight oclock games, they drag along. It throws a wrench into your nap, it throws you for a loop, youre eating at a different time. It just kind of pushes everything back. In the bubble, youre going to have even more time in your room, but were all professionals. We know how to get ourselves ready. Those games mean a ton so youre going to be able to get ready for those.

On resetting mentally to prepare for playoffs after long pause: At the end of Phase 2, the guys were almost to the point of Okay, were just out here skating. You just want to get ramped up. When we did start training camp, theres been a ton of energy throughout our team so youre just trying to not peak too early. Youre just trying to gradually ramp up your intensity for these next two to three weeks. When we do hit the ice against the Rangers, we want to be firing on all cylinders but I think nobody will really know how intense its going to be till the puck drops.

On Morgan Geekie: We got to keep him rolling. He was very hot there before the pause. Im telling him to shoot as much as he can during practice, thats for sure.

On concerns over ice quality: Whenever youre playing that many games on a sheet of ice, its going to be pretty beat up. Throughout all this, though, everyone is on the same thing. The Rangers are on the same ice as us. They have to deal with it and we have to deal with it. It is what it is and luckily for us, we have the noon game so that should probably be the best time for the ice. Well see how it goes.

Excerpt from:

Jordan Martinook: Everyone will be going into the series full go, ready to rock. - Canes Country

National View: ‘War on drugs’ only perpetuated the problem it was trying to solve – Duluth News Tribune

While efforts are being made to change the current system of public safety in our country, there is more that needs to be addressed. One area that needs attention is the negative effect drug arrests have on the Black community.

Substance abuse has plagued our society for decades. Though many are negatively affected by addiction, certain groups have been adversely affected by the policies put in place to stop it.

The war on drugs was implemented in the 1970s by President Richard Nixon to stop the drug trade and curb substance abuse. The initiative was expanded by President Ronald Reagan in the 1980s when severe penalties for drug-related crimes were created.

According to the Federal Bureau of Prisons, these policies led to a very significant rise in incarcerations. There were 50,000 arrests for non-violent drug crimes in 1980; in 1997, there were 400,000 arrests. Unfortunately, this did not seem to do anything to curb the distribution and use of narcotics. Instead, the war on drugs perpetuated the problem it was trying to solve.

You see, the majority of the arrests were members of the Black community. According to the Drug Policy Alliance, nearly 80% of people in federal prison and around 60% of people in state prison for drug offenses are People of Color. Furthermore, punishment for drug violations tends to play out in other areas that further impact an individuals quality of life. Child custody, voting rights, business loans, employment, student aid, public housing, and other public assistance are regularly denied to people with criminal drug convictions.

Due to these factors, many incarcerated individuals are faced with challenges after they serve their sentences. This can motivate some to utilize the illegal drug trade to support themselves and their families. It also contributes to financial stress and other factors that can lead to substance-abuse issues. While we cannot blame systems entirely for the actions of people, it is hard to deny these factors are extremely influential.

It can be argued that reducing drug trafficking and abuse was not what the war on drugs accomplished. The initiative did more to further marginalize demographics already left at a disadvantage due to the socioeconomic climate that exists in our country. The consequences of this play out in the present and are clear evidence of the systemic racism that is so prevalent in American society.

We are currently on the verge of what looks to be a monumental change. The Black Lives Matter movement has gained unprecedented support, and individuals from all demographics are starting to form a unified front. As steps are taken to eradicate systemic racism, it is essential to look at current laws and policies that disproportionately affect the Black community. The way we deal with non-violent drug crimes and low-level possession charges is a perfect example.

If our country continues to fill its courts and prisons with drug charges, then systemic racism will never end. It is not that Black people use more drugs; they are just more harshly punished. It is time to make a change that focuses on empowering individuals as opposed to imprisoning them. This transformation can begin with sweeping changes with the way we handle low-level drug charges. Lets help people instead of punishing them for having substance-use disorder.

Cori Buck of Newport, Oregon, is a certified nursing assistant who worked more than four years at a drug and alcohol rehabilitation center. She is a regular contributor to the health website addicted.org. She wrote this exclusively for the News Tribune.

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National View: 'War on drugs' only perpetuated the problem it was trying to solve - Duluth News Tribune

As the War on Drugs Relentlessly Grinds On, Overdose Deaths Relentlessly Mount – Cato Institute

When the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced last January that drug overdoses in 2018 declined by 4.1 percentfrom70,237in 2017 to 67,367in 2018many in the press took that as asign of possible progress in Americas longest war, the war on drugs. However, adeeper look at the data painted avery different picture.

The CDC report stated:

The ageadjusted rate of drug overdose deaths involving synthetic opioids other than methadone, which include drugs such as fentanyl, fentanyl analogs, and tramadol, increased from 0.3 per 100,000 standard population in 1999 to 1.0in 2013, 1.8in 2014, 3.1in 2015, 6.2in 2016, 9.0in 2017, and 9.9in 2018. The rate of drug overdose deaths involving heroin increased from 0.7in 1999 to 1.0in 2010, then increased to 4.9in 2016 and 2017. The rate in 2018 (4.7) was lower than in 2017. The rate of drug overdose deaths involving natural and semisynthetic opioids, which include drugs such as oxycodone and hydrocodone, increased from 1.0in 1999 to 3.1in 2009, then increased to 4.4in 2016 and 2017. The rate in 2018 (3.8) was lower than in 2017 The ageadjusted rate of drug overdose deaths involving cocaine increased from 1.4 per 100,000 standard population in 1999 to 2.5in 2006, then decreased to 1.3in 2010 and 1.5in 2011. From 2012 through 2018, the rate increased on average by 27% per year to arate of 4.5in 2018. The ageadjusted rate of drug overdose deaths involving psychostimulants with abuse potential, which include drugs such as methamphetamine, amphetamine, and methylphenidate, increased from 0.2in 1999 to 0.8in 2012. From 2012 through 2018, the rate increased on average by 30% per year to arate of 3.9in 2018.

While deaths attributed to prescription opioids continued to decline, deaths attributed to heroin overdoses levelled off and those attributed to fentanyl and its analogs continued to increase. Also making abig comeback were deaths related to psychostimulants, such as cocaine and methamphetamine. These data should have been enough evidence to prevent policymakers from cracking open the champagne bottles.

The CDC recently issued its preliminary report on 2019 overdose deaths and the news isnt good. There were roughly 71,000 overdose deaths, anew record. These data predate the COVID-19 crisis, so we can expect matters to get even worse.

Speaking to reporters about the preliminary report, Robert Anderson, who oversees the mortality data for the CDC said, We got it to stall out abit. Now we need to grab on again and not let this get away from us.

This should come as no surprise. A2018 study by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh found overdose deaths have been growing exponentially since at least the late 1970s and show no sign of deviating from the trend line. The particular drug predominating as the cause of death has changed from time to time, but the death rate marches on relentlessly. Therefore, even if the aggregate overdose data stalled abit in 2018, the underlying forces fueled by dangerous black market drugs that result fromdrug prohibition continue unabated.

One bright spot in the preliminary data: overdoses declined in Vermont, Massachusetts, New York, New Hampshire, and Rhode Islandstates where harm reduction strategies have gained some traction.

Until drug prohibition ends expect overdoses to continue following the tragic trendline.

More here:

As the War on Drugs Relentlessly Grinds On, Overdose Deaths Relentlessly Mount - Cato Institute

Austin, Texas, Just Voted to End the Drug War – The Nation

Jos Garza is running for district attorney in Travis County, Texas. (Courtesy of Jos Garza campaign)

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On day one, we will end the prosecution of low-level drug offenses here in Travis County, announced district attorney candidate Jos Garza, at a February forum on criminal justice reform in Austin. We will end the prosecution of possession and sale offenses of a gram or less.Ad Policy

That may have sounded to some like a bold statement, but Garza argued it was the rational response to a broken system.

On Tuesday night, voters in the state capital of Texas and the surrounding county agreed. Garza, a former federal public defender, immigrant rights activist, and executive director of the Texas Workers Defense ProjectProyecto Defensa Laboral, swept to victory over Travis County District Attorney Margaret Moore in a closely watched Democratic primary runoff election. And the successful challenger signaled that he is ready to act. We know that 60-percent of all people arrested and charged with drug possession through traffic stops are people of color, he told reporters. So, it is time to end the war on drugs in this community to begin to unwind the racial disparities in our criminal justice system.

Garza won 68 percent of the vote to 32 percent for Moore, who, as The Austin Chronicle noted earlier this year, had been under fire on many fronts for her perceived insufficient commitment to true justice, particularly for women survivors of sexual assault. The Chronicle endorsed Garza as a candidate who would bring to the office a demonstrable commitment to equity. MORE FROM John Nichols

With the party nomination secured in an overwhelmingly Democratic county, Garza is positioned to further demonstrate that commitment as one of the most high-profile members of the emerging class of county prosecutors who are prepared to upend old ways of thinking about law enforcement and the achievement of justice. Hell join Chicagos Kim Foxx, Philadelphias Larry Krasner, and San Franciscos Chesa Boudin as part of a movement to transform how cities and countries across the country address public safety issues. The movement is growing! observed Boudin, as he celebrated the victory by Garza, who ran with strong support from unions, Austin Democratic Socialists of America, the Working Families Party, and Senators Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren.

The Texan summed up the thinking of the movement during the course of a campaign in which he told voters, Our system doesnt have to be broken. We have the power to fix this. And we have a right and a responsibility to demand that it be fixed.

What distinguished Garza is his determination to move quickly and decisively to take on the gravest injustices.Current Issue

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Take his response to questions about capital punishment. The Death Penalty is morally and ethically wrong, does not serve as a deterrent, has proven to be applied arbitrarily at best, and comes at tremendous financial costs, the candidates platform states. As District Attorney, I will not seek a death sentence. I will also review all post-conviction death penalty cases to ensure that there are no forensic, evidentiary, or legal issues that should cause the conviction to be called into question.

Or his response to questions about police violence. Prosecutors must play a key role in holding police accountable and ensuring that officers who commit misconduct are not allowed to continuously harm communities, asserts Garza, who began his list of commitments on the issue by promising, We will never take donations from police organizations. We deserve a DA unbought by those they are responsible for holding accountable.

Or his response to questions about prosecuting the powerfulincluding corporate CEOS. No one should be above the law, no matter how rich they are or just because of their job title. We will use our resources to investigate and prosecute the powerful actors in Travis County who have harmed the publiclandlords who exploit immigrants, police officers accused of misconduct, and corporate heads who take money from the poor will no longer have a free pass in Travis County, reads his platform. Instead, the Travis County District Attorney Office will actively investigate and prosecute powerful actors who have abused their positions.

Garzas vision of the DAs office as a platform for pursuing economic, social, and racial justice was especially profound when it came to stopping the damage done by a war on drugs that for too long has been facilitated by Democratic and Republican prosecutors.

In a set of commitments for how he would run the DAs office in a county where the population is nearing 1.3 million, Garza explained:

The revolving door of justice for people with substance abuse issues is a waste of time, money, and prosecution resources. The latest medical research on addiction suggests that treating drug use as a public health issue, as opposed to a criminal justice issue, is a more effective approach to reducing harm and promoting public safety. Nevertheless, our jails and prisons are filled with people who have done nothing more than suffer from addiction.

As a result, this office will seek to pursue policies that reduce the number of people in jails and prisons for drug-related offenses. We also have a responsibility to prevent deathssafe injection sites and harm reduction programs are key to keeping our most vulnerable alive.

Unless there is evidence that a person poses a danger to the community, I will not prosecute sale or possession of a gram or less of narcotics. For possession or sale of larger amounts of narcotics, my office will consider all appropriate diversion programs so that person may avoid a conviction if they are not a danger to the community.

For decades, politicians of both parties and their amen corners in the media fostered the fantasy that filling prisons would make communities safe. Elected prosecutors mounted reelection campaigns that highlighted their conviction rates and their willingness to pursue the harshest sentences.

Even as evidence of policing abuses, prosecutorial misconduct, systemic racism, and the absolute failure of mass incarceration mounted, too many prosecutors in too many places responded with incremental reforms that changed little.

Too many prosecutors refused to change course and recognize that the system is not working.

Garza knows there is something wrong with a system in which the majority of our resources are spent locking-up people struggling with substance abuse and our DAs office has not reduced the number of people we send to prison. And he knows there are smart alternatives. The research is clear: prisons do not reduce recidivism, says the candidate Travis County voters has just nominated. In fact, rehabilitation programs run outside of prisons consistently outperform those run in prison when it comes to keeping people out of jail.

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Austin, Texas, Just Voted to End the Drug War - The Nation

Upstate drug trafficking investigation leads to the indictment of 39 people – WYFF Greenville

Upstate drug trafficking investigation leads to the indictment of 39 people

50 pounds of methamphetamine, five pounds of heroin, and others drugs were seized, officials say.

Updated: 6:23 PM EDT Jul 22, 2020

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LATEST ON THIS MULTICOUNTY ROUNDUP. >> The Reporter: THESE SEIZED DRUGS AND WEAPONS PILED ON TABLES ARE THE RESULT OF OPERATION GROUNDHOG DAY. SPARTANBURG COUNTY SHERIFF CHUCK WRIGHT SAYS SEVERAL AGENCIES IN THE UPSTATE PLAYED A ROLE IN THE ALMOST TWO-YEARLONG INVESTIGATION. >> WE GOT 57.3 POUNDS OF METHAMPHETAMINE, 5.3 POUNDS OF HEROIN, SOME MARIJUANA AND FENTANYL, AND 92 GRAMS OF COCAINE WAS SEIZED. >> The Reporter: WRIGHT EXPLAINED HOW THE DRUGS AND WEAPONS WERE SEIZED 6789. >> WE WERE DOING TIPS AND WORKING PEOPLE WHO, WHEN WE CATCH THEM, SAY, HEY, I CAN FIND YOU SOME MORE DRUGS. SO IT WAS JUST BASICALLY WORKING BACKWARDS AND DOING JUST BASIC SIMPLE POLICE WORK. THE REPORTER: SOUTH CAROLINA ATTORNEY GENERAL ALAN WILSON SAYS THIS WAS AN INVESTIGATION OF AN ALLEGED HEROIN AND METHAMPHETAMINE TRAFFICKING ORGANIZATION IN THE UPSTATE. WILSON ADDED, QUOTE, ALL THE AGENCIES INVOLVED ARE COMMITTED TO FIGHTING HAND TRAFFICKING OF DRUGS SUCH AS METHAMPHETAMINE, HEROIN, AND FENTANYL TO THE CITIZENS OF OUR STATE. >> YOU KNOW, I KEEP TELLING YOU, PEOPLE ALWAYS SAYING, YOU'RE NEVER GOING TO WIN THE WAR ON DRUGS. MIGHT NOT, BUT THAT AIN'T GOT ANYTHING TO DO WITH THE FIGHT WE'RE GOING TO BRING TO IT. THAT AIN'T GOT A DOGGONE THING WITH THE FIGHT WE'RE GOING TO

Upstate drug trafficking investigation leads to the indictment of 39 people

50 pounds of methamphetamine, five pounds of heroin, and others drugs were seized, officials say.

Updated: 6:23 PM EDT Jul 22, 2020

A drug trafficking investigation in the Upstate has led to the indictments of 39 people.South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson says the investigation, called "Operation Ground Hog Day," targeted an alleged heroin and methamphetamine trafficking organization operating in the Upstate. Spartanburg County Sheriff Chuck Wright says more than 50 pounds of methamphetamine, five pounds of heroin, and others drugs were seized.Wright says the team was able to round up a lot of the drugs through tips and basic police work. He says several agencies in the Upstate played a role in the nearly two-year investigation."I keep telling you, people always saying 'you're never going to win the war on drugs,''' said Wright. "Yeah, I might not, but that ain't got anything to do with the fight we're going to bring to it. That ain't got a daggum thing we're going to take to it."Wilson says these indictments show that all agencies involved are committed to fighting the trafficking of drugs.

A drug trafficking investigation in the Upstate has led to the indictments of 39 people.

South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson says the investigation, called "Operation Ground Hog Day," targeted an alleged heroin and methamphetamine trafficking organization operating in the Upstate.

Spartanburg County Sheriff Chuck Wright says more than 50 pounds of methamphetamine, five pounds of heroin, and others drugs were seized.

Wright says the team was able to round up a lot of the drugs through tips and basic police work. He says several agencies in the Upstate played a role in the nearly two-year investigation.

"I keep telling you, people always saying 'you're never going to win the war on drugs,''' said Wright. "Yeah, I might not, but that ain't got anything to do with the fight we're going to bring to it. That ain't got a daggum thing we're going to take to it."

Wilson says these indictments show that all agencies involved are committed to fighting the trafficking of drugs.

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Upstate drug trafficking investigation leads to the indictment of 39 people - WYFF Greenville

The time Charles Oakley dumped a bottle of liquor on a Raptors teammate – ProBasketballTalk

Nuggets forward Jerami Grant answered every basketball and bubble question during a recent interview by discussing Breonna Taylor.

Several other NBA players have followed his lead.

Harris, asked about Russell Westbrooks social-justice shirts, via Paul Hudrick of NBC Sports Philadelphia:

Nothing against the T-shirts, but we want to make sure that [Kentucky attorney general] Daniel Cameron arrests the cops and officers involved with Breonna Taylors death, Harris said. Thats all Ive got to say.

Before another reporter could be called on, Harris repeated the message.

Thats going to be my answer for every question for Daniel Cameron to step up and do whats right. Thats the only message Ive got today.

Harris then politely thanked the media on the call and walked off.

McCollum, via Jamie Hudson of NBC Sports Northwest:

Weve been very proactive with our conversations and phone calls. We actually did a Zoom call with Breonna Taylors mother a few days ago to get more information on everything that is going on, everything that has happened. I want to go on the record saying that [Kentucky Attorney General] Daniel Cameron is in position to arrest the cops who are responsible for killing Breonna Taylor and still has not done that, so hes the one who is in the position to potentially do that. So we want to continue to uplift people like Breonna Taylor who are victims and havent received the proper justice that they are due.

I think basketball is secondary, McCollum said. Its our job, obviously and we have a responsibility to fulfill those obligations, but its also our job to fulfill and protect our neighborhoods, and protect the people who look like us, and come from places like us, and dont exactly have the same voices that we do. I think thats something that has been on all of our minds. Weve been very proactive about it.

Smart, via Adam Himmelsbach of The Boston Globe:

Before we start, guys, my answer is going to be Justice for Breonna Taylor, Smart said. Thats going to be my answer for everything, so Im just letting you guys know that now. Justice for Breonna Taylor.

A reporter asked Smart if that would be his response to a question about the teams defense, and Smart said that it would, replying, Justice for Breonna Taylor.

Chris Forsberg of NBC Sports Boston:

Melissa Rohlin of Sports Illustrated:

When Caruso was asked about being on the brink of playing in his first postseason, he responded by bringing up Taylor.

Im just going to respond with, We need justice for Breonna Taylor, Caruso said. Thats going to be my response to the rest of the questions if theyre basketball-related and not pertaining to me and my sisters wedding.

Just got information from the rest of the players who are trying to stay united with the message, Caruso said. This is one way we can control it from inside the bubble. It seems to be an important thing. Its been four months since it happened that she was murdered in her sleep and nobody has been held accountable.

Grants press conference prompted a major breakthrough. The Nuggets made a far stronger statement than practically every other large corporation:

A billion-dollar company posting Arrest the cops who killed Breonna Taylor is no small matter. NBA players uniting to bring attention should only advance the cause even further.

I salute these players for speaking up. They have a platform, and this is important.

I also appreciate that the common refrain has been Justice for Breonna Taylor rather than Arrest the cops who killed Breonna Taylor.

As I wrote when Grant raised the issue:

Taylor was killed in her own home by Louisville police in March. Police were executing a no-knock warrant based on the stated suspicion she was aiding her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, in selling drugs. Its disputed whether police announced themselves before using a battering ram to enter the apartment. Walker said he and Taylor were asleep when the incident began. Walker, a licensed gun owner, called 911 and fired at what he says he believed to be intruders. The police returned fire, and Taylor was fatally shot.

None of the three officers involved in the shooting Brett Hankison, Jonathan Mattingly and Myles Cosgrove have been arrested. Only Hankison was fired.

What happened to Taylor was a travesty, and the injustices are vast.

Crackdowns on drugs have led to extreme state violence. No-knock warrants and even knock-and-announce warrants executed in the middle of the night put everyone involved at too much risk. Judges approve warrants with too little oversight.

The politicians who enact these anti-drug laws should be held accountable. The police who order these extreme tactics should be held accountable. The judges who wantonly allow it (and the police officers who take advantage with deceitful warrant requests) should be held accountable.

But the officers at Taylors apartment shouldnt necessarily face criminal charges just for carrying out their jobs as the system called for. Hankison allegedly shot recklessly, and if he did, he should face charges. If any of the three officers did something illegal, they should face charges. But the weight of a failed system shouldnt fall on the individual officers who follow the rules of that system. The officers were put in an impossible situation fired upon by someone who very reasonably mistook them for intruders. At that point, the police had some right to defend themselves. Just as Walker had some right to defend himself and Taylor in her own home.

Taylors death was a tragedy.

The people who created the system that led to her death should be held responsible. And the system should be changed.

The War on Drugs should be completely re-assessed. No-knock warrants should be eliminated. Warrants should be given more scrutiny before being granted.

Getting justice for Breonna Taylor goes much higher than arresting these three cops.

Link:

The time Charles Oakley dumped a bottle of liquor on a Raptors teammate - ProBasketballTalk

Breaking News – MTV’s "Decoded" Returns for a Monumental New Season Focused on "Decoding the Police" with Host Franchesca Ramsey -…

MTV's "Decoded" returns for a monumental new season focused on 'Decoding the Police' with host Franchesca Ramsey

The six-part miniseries is set to premiere today, Tuesday July 21 on the MTV Impact YouTube and MTV Decoded Facebook channels

Today, MTV News is launching a brand new season of the hit digital series, "Decoded," with six weekly episodes hosted by Franchesca Ramsey. Given the age of social justice reform and the rise of the #BlackLivesMatter movement, the entire season will be focused on "Decoding the Police."

Each episode will tackle a different dynamic of the American police system, from dispelling the notion of good cops Vs. bad cops, the truth (and lies) of the "War on Drugs," and what defunding the police might actually mean in a nation deeply reliant on its police system--one that negatively impacts persons of color at disproportionate rates.

"Despite today's current climate, it's been really inspiring and encouraging to see so many people sharing past episodes of 'Decoded' to start conversations about Black Lives Matter and police violence. By focusing our newest season entirely on policing, I'm really hoping we're able to help people better understand the movement to Defund the Police and make our communities safer for everyone," said Ramsey.

The new season premieres Tuesday, July 21st on the MTV Impact YouTube and MTV Decoded Facebook as well as MTV News social channels.

About Decoded:

"Decoded" is tackling the most important social issue of our time: Defunding The Police. In this six part mini-series, we'll look at the myths and realities that keep our system of policing in power and show what alternatives beyond the police could make our communities safe for everyone.

See the original post here:

Breaking News - MTV's "Decoded" Returns for a Monumental New Season Focused on "Decoding the Police" with Host Franchesca Ramsey -...