Five years after New Horizons flyby, scientists assess next mission to Pluto – Spaceflight Now

A composite of enhanced color images of Pluto (lower right) and Charon (upper left), taken by NASAs New Horizons spacecraft as it passed through the Pluto system on July 14, 2015. This image highlights the striking differences between Pluto and Charon. The color and brightness of both Pluto and Charon have been processed identically to allow direct comparison of their surface properties, and to highlight the similarity between Charons polar red terrain and Plutos equatorial red terrain. Pluto and Charon are shown with approximately correct relative sizes, but their true separation is not to scale. Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute

Five years ago, NASAs New Horizons spacecraft barreled by Pluto for a high-speed encounter that gave humanity its first fleeting close-up look at the distant world, finding glaciers and mountains of water ice. Scientists are now planning how to go back.

New Horizons flew within 7,800 miles (12,550 kilometers) of Pluto on July 14, 2015, more than nine years after departing Earth on a speedy trajectory that made the spacecraft the fastest ever launched up to that time.

The mission snapped numerous images, revealing unexpected geologic activity on Pluto, craggy mountain ranges made of hardened water ice, dune fields containing frozen methane, the largest glacier in the solar system.

The New Horizons mission is the first to visit the the Kuiper Belt, a ring of small, icy worlds beyond the orbit of Neptune. After zooming past Pluto, the largest world in the Kuiper Belt, the plutonium-powered spacecraft journeyed farther from the sun and flew by a peanut-shaped object namedArrokoth on Jan. 1, 2019.

Arrokoth is a billion miles beyond Pluto, and scientists say evidence suggests the two lobes that make up the 22-mile-long (36-kilometer) object likely formed near one another soon after the birth of the solar system 4.5 billion years ago, then merged together at a relatively slow relative velocity. That would make Arrokoth a primordial world that likely has remain unchanged for billions of years.

New Horizons continues deeper into the outer solar system, conducting long-range observations of other objects in the Kuiper Belt and measuring the behavior of the solar wind at ever-farther distances from the sun.

I think the solar system literally saved the best for last with Pluto, wrote Alan Stern, principal investigator for NASAs New Horizons mission. Of course, Im a little biased as we all are on New Horizons but I cant think of a more beautiful and scientifically richer way to have completed the first era of the reconnaissance of the planets, which NASA started in 1962 with the first visit to any planet Venus.

In a matter of a few hours, New Horizons gathered sharp views of Plutos mountains and apparent ice flows, observed its tenuous atmosphere, and imaged Plutos five moons, including its largest companion Charon.

It took 16 months to transmit all the Pluto system data back, but by late 2016, the entire haul of precious data was here on Earth, Stern wrote. Now, after five years of work to analyze those data, our appreciation and understanding of Pluto and its moons just continues to multiply.

Data beamed back by New Horizons indicated Pluto likely harbors a subsurface ocean of liquid water, a highly unexpected discovery. A glacier-filled basin named Sputnik Planitia contained icy cells that appear to be turning over in a process called convection, evidence that parts of the Plutos surface are being regenerated through active geologic processes.

New Horizons also discovered two mountain peaks on Pluto that have deep central pits. They may be signs that volcanoes have erupted on Pluto, but instead of spewing out hot lava, they would have likely discharged slushy, viscous cryoflows of water.

But New Horizons only got a quick look at Pluto, and scientists are eager to send another mission to orbit the distant world. Such a mission would cost billions of dollars, and NASA is awaiting a recommendation from the National Academies ofSciences, Engineering, and Medicine on what robotic planetary missions the agency should begin developing in the next decade.

The National Academies planetary decadal survey is expected to produce its report in 2022. NASAs policy is to follow the decadal surveys recommendations on which flagship-class planetary science missions the agency should pursue next.

The top two priorities in the last planetary decadal survey report, released in 2011, were a Mars Sample Return mission to collect samples for return to Earth, and an orbiter to visit Jupiters icy moon Europa. Those concepts evolved to become NASAs Perseverance rover, scheduled for launch later this month, to gather the Martian samples, followed by joint U.S.-European missions launching later in 2020s to bring the specimens back to Earth.

The Europa mission concept eventually became the Europa Clipper mission, which NASA is developing for launch as soon as 2024.

NASA has funded 11 planetary mission concept studies for consideration by the next decadal survey panel. The list includes a robotic lander to Mercury, a flagship Venus mission, a network of probes to study the moons geology, a long-lived lunar rover that could drive more than 1,000 miles across the moons surface, and missions to Mars, asteroids, Saturns moon Enceladus, Neptune and its moon Triton, and Pluto.

Carly Howett, a member of the New Horizons science team from the Southwest Research Institute, led the concept study for a potential orbiter that could fly to Pluto. With an estimated cost of $3 billion not including launch expenses the mission concept has been named Persephone, wife of Pluto and queen of the underworld in classical mythology.

We want to go back and explore the Pluto system and the Kuiper Belt, Howett said June 1 in a presentation to NASAs Small Bodies Assessment Group, a community of scientists with research interests in asteroids, comets and the Kuiper Belt. Of course, New Horizons did a great job of exploring the Pluto system in 2015, and I was on that mission but it was just a single encounter.

An orbiter would see more of Pluto than New Horizons, and would be able to track changes on Plutos surface and in its atmosphere over time.

The biggest challenge in developing a mission to orbit Pluto is getting there, Howett said.

A lot of the work that we did was looking at the trajectories, and how we get there, she said in a presentation of the Persephone mission concept study May 27. Most of the instrumentation has already been used So a lot of our processing and a lot of our time was spent looking at how to get there and how to operate.

New Horizons was a flyby mission, so it didnt need to slow down when it reached Pluto. In order to slip into orbit, a spacecraft will need to reduce its velocity enough to allow Plutos gravity to capture it.

That requirement means a Pluto orbiter, like the Persephone concept, will have to fly at a slower speed than New Horizons, which took more than nine years to reach Pluto.

Trying to get into the Pluto system at sort of the quickest time available is a difficult problem, Howett said June 1. Because Pluto is a long way away, you want to get there quickly, which means going fast. But the faster you go, the more you have to slow down So theres this tradeoff between how you launch and how quickly you go versus how quickly you need to slow down.

The Persephone concept outlined by Howetts team, which included scientists from several universities and research institutions, would carry up to 11 science instruments and a large tank of xenon fuel for an electric propulsion system. The plasma thrusters, which are more efficient than conventional rocket engines, would allow the spacecraft to more efficiently brake into orbit around Pluto, then adjust its trajectory around Pluto and its moons for at least three years of scientific observations.

The plasma thrusters would also allow the spacecraft to fly by a Kuiper Belt Object on the way to Pluto, and potentially depart Pluto to visit another target in an extended mission, Howett said.

The high power demand of a complex suite of cameras, a radar, spectrometers and other sensors plus the electric propulsion system will outpace the power requirements of any robotic deep space mission to date. While New Horizons carried a single power generator fueled by plutonium called an RTG a mission like Persephone would need four or five plutonium generators, according to Howett.

Pluto is too far from the sun to allow a spacecraft to produce electricity with solar panels.

This is a huge spacecraft, Howett said.

The easiest way to fly a probe to Pluto is to use the strong gravity of Jupiter, the solar systems largest planet, to slingshot the spacecraft into the outer solar system. The New Horizons mission used such a gravity assist maneuver with Jupiter, and a future Pluto orbiter will likely swing by Jupiter, too.

That means mission planners will have to factor in Jupiters position relative to Earth and Pluto. After 2032, Jupiter moves into a more unfavorable alignment.

Fundamentally, it means that in order to get to the Pluto system in under 20 years you need to launch before 2032, Howett said.

If the mission took off during the next launch opportunity in 2033, it would take nearly 30 years to reach Pluto. Travel times would only approach 20 years again in the 2040s, according to a chart presented by Howett.

You have to wait about a decade before Jupiter comes into phase enough that you can get there on the order of sort of 20-to-25 years, she said. So in order to get to the Pluto system, you really need to launch before 2032, otherwise theres this 10-year time of flight penalty.

Whats more, those lengthy travel times assume the Pluto orbiter launches on a huge rocket. Howett said the spacecraft concept from the Persephone study would require a launch on a new version NASAs Space Launch System with an enlarged upper stage and evolved strap-on boosters, a configuration NASA calls the SLS Block 2.

The first SLS test flight, using a more basic configuration, is currently scheduled in the second half of 2021. An SLS with the enlarged four-engine upper stage could debut a few years later, but the SLS Block 2 with evolved boosters is not expected to fly until the end of the 2020s, at the earliest.

And even the SLS Block 2 couldnt do the trick by itself. A high-energy upper stage, like United Launch Alliances Centaur stage, mounted on top of the launch vehicle would need to give the Pluto orbiter an additional boost.

We need the kind of the oomph of an SLS Block 2, with a Centaur kick stage, Howett said. Thats basically the biggest rocket we can fly with the biggest kick stage we can find.

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Follow Stephen Clark on Twitter: @StephenClark1.

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Five years after New Horizons flyby, scientists assess next mission to Pluto - Spaceflight Now

READY, FIRE, AIM: Laughter is the Best Medicine – Pagosa Daily Post

Whenever my Readers Digest magazine arrives in the mail, I immediately open it to the section called Laughter is the Best Medicine. (I subscribe to the large print edition because the jokes are so much better in large type.)

Heaven knows, we could use the best medicine right about now. And I mean, a hefty dose of it. (No person has ever died of an overdose of laughter, according to a recent article in The New York Times.)

Which is probably why our US President, Donald Trump our Comedian-in-Chief has been developing a hit comedy show (Late Night with The Donald) during this difficult period in the nations history, aided by a team of zany comedy writers including Steve Mnuchin, Mike Pence, William Barr, Mike Pompeo, and Ben Carson known among Washington DC insiders as The Riot Squad.

The President knows whats good for us. A hearty guffaw. Thats what we desperately need.

Not hydroxychloroquine. Not some poorly vetted, rushed-to-the-market pharmaceutical vaccine. Just some good old fashioned belly laughs.

On his show last week, The Donald posed in the Oval Office (aka the Boffo Barn) pretending to endorse a line of grocery store items manufactured by Goya Foods. The selection totally cracked me up: Red Kidney Beans, Adobo seasoning, White hominy, Coconut milk, and Chocolate wafers. A priceless color-blind selection if weve ever seen one. Hilarious!

Comedy on the Late Night with The Donald show, featuring his Goya Foods sketch.

The Comedian-in-Chief even talked his daughter, Ivanka, to get into the act, by having her pose in her living room with a can of Goya brand Black Beans. We rarely see Ivanka join her father in a comedy routine, but in this case, her timing and delivery were spot-on. Her choice of props Frijoles Negros really tickled my funny bone. LOL! Perfect choice, given all the laughter currently surrounding the Black Lives Matter movement.

Ivanka Trump and a can of Goya Foods Black Beans.

The joke was immediately picked up by half a dozen lesser-known American comedians Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Fallon, Seth Meyers, Trevor Noah, Jimmy Kimmel, Bill Maher several of whom totally missed The Donalds humor and assumed (mistakenly!) that the President was actually endorsing Goya products, when everyone knows the Trump family wouldnt touch a Mexican-sounding food item with a ten foot pole. (Especially not Frijoles Negros, for heavens sake.)

Late Night with The Donald has seen a crazy collection of comedy writers come and go over the past couple of seasons we can remember some of the side-splitting gags dreamed up by James Comey, John Bolton and Robert Mueller, for example but the current crop of contributors have really learned how to work with shows host, and deliver up the medicine weve all been dying for.

And speaking of dying and medicine and laughter Theres been significant research lately coming from the Centers for Disease Control finally explaining why laughter is, indeed, the best medicine. Many years ago back in the days of Bob Hope and Burns & Allen the CDC published several studies showing that aspirin was actually the best medicine. Then they got some different scientists onboard, and we were told during the heyday of comedians like Jackie Gleason and Lucille Ball that penicillin was the best. Along comes Rodney Dangerfield and Richard Prior, and the CDC changed its tune once again, and claimed that Valium was the best. (Well, it was pretty good, but maybe not the best.). Another batch of comedians arrived like Jim Carrey and Chris Rock and the CDC went through a difficult phase where they were confused about which medicine really was the best. (Too much Valium?)

Now that the President has shaken up the CDC and given the boot to some of the straight-laced yahoos who were running that show under previous administrations, were finally getting some clinical studies long-awaited! that show, definitively, that people who laugh at least twice a day have a reduced tendency to sneeze. Its long been known that a sneeze allows evil spirits to enter the body, hence the tradition of saying God bless you, whenever someone sneezes. (I even say it to myself, if no one is around.) Weve all heard the expression, Thats nothing to sneeze at which actually means, Thats nothing to laugh at thus clearly demonstrating the medical connection between sneezing and laughing.

Personally, I think the future looks wonderfully bright, now that some of our leading politicians are actually trying to look like clowns. The way things are headed, America is going to die laughing!

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READY, FIRE, AIM: Laughter is the Best Medicine - Pagosa Daily Post

‘Heroes Health’ mental wellness app launched by School of Medicine and UNC Health – UNC Chapell Hill

The UNC School of Medicine and UNC Health have launched the Heroes Health Initiative to help support the mental health of first responders and health care workers during the COVID-19 global pandemic. The app is available through the App Store/Google Play Store in the United States, free of charge to first responders, health care workers and their organizations.

For individual health care workers, the Heroes Health app delivers short mental health self-assessments each week and displays symptom summary reports to help them better understand the state of their own mental health and changes over time. The app also provides links to immediate support and mental health resources, emphasizing free and low-cost services.

Individual health care workers who choose to participate in the initiative download the free Heroes Health app to their iOS (Apple) or Android-compatible smartphone. Each week, the app notifies workers that a brief mental health symptom assessment is available and evaluates symptoms in key domains such as sleep, stress, anxiety/worry and sadness/depression.

Immediately after completing the survey, workers can view a summary report of their symptoms and trends in their symptoms over time. The app also provides links to get immediate crisis support and other mental health resources, e.g., to improve sleep and stress. This resource list focuses on apps and services that are either free or offered at reduced costs to health care workers. The UNC-Chapel Hill website also lists mental health resources and discounts for health care workers on goods and services. Heroes Health receives no financial benefit or support from the goods or services listed.

For health care organizations that partner with the Heroes Health Initiative, the app provides a way to perform proactive worker outreach and the aggregate data necessary to identify times when/areas where more worker support is needed. Developed by the UNC Institute for Trauma Recovery, Google Cloud and volunteers across Alphabet, the universitys Heroes Health app and its launch was made possible by generous support from donors including One Mind, The Rockefeller Foundation, Bank of America, Lauder Foundation and individuals.

The initiative helps the organization support its workers in several other ways. First, anonymous group-level summaries and trends in the mental health of workers in the organization, for different types of workers and units, are shared with unit and organizational leaders each week, to help them identify times/organizational areas that would benefit from additional support.

In addition, worker feedback on organizational communication and support to workers are provided to leadership each week, providing a valuable opportunity for workers to be heard during very stressful times. Finally, workers have the option to confidentially share their individual mental health summaries with an organizational mental health worker. This provides the organizational mental health worker with the opportunity to contact workers having symptoms to offer thanks and support, a conversation, or help setting up an appointment with a mental health professional. For workers in organizations partnering with Heroes Health, the contact number for this mental health support worker is also listed in the app, so that they can contact them for confidential support and resources.

The Heroes Health Initiative was founded by UNC School of Medicine physician Dr. Samuel McLean, research vice-chair in the Department of Anesthesiology and an attending physician in the Department of Emergency Medicine. As a practicing emergency physician and COVID-19 unit worker, and a COVID-19 survivor who contracted COVID-19 and infected two of his family members, McLean understands firsthand the great challenges COVID workers face.

First responders and health care workers are facing a lot of challenges right now, McLean said. There is the personal risk of severe illness or death. Much worse, there is the anxiety and fear of infecting loved ones. This an even greater challenge for first responders or health workers who live with someone particularly vulnerable to COVID-19. Its important to give first responders and health care workers a simple, quick way to regularly check in on their mental health and immediately find resources. It is also important to provide organizations with tools that help empower them to care for each other.

From his work as an NIH-funded researcher, McLean had experience performing smartphone-based mental health assessments from thousands of trauma survivors. He contacted a close collaborator, Ron Kessler, McNeil Family Professor at Harvard Medical School, and the two of them designed a brief smartphone-based assessment, using well-validated questionnaires, to assess key domains affecting COVID-19 workers, including sleep, stress, anxiety/worry and sadness and depressive symptoms. McLean also enlisted a team of other collaborators who worked to develop the project, including:

McLean needed a technology partner to help build the app for the initiative. Alphabet the parent company of Google was a natural choice since McLeans lab was already using Google Cloud. Volunteers from Google and X (Alphabets moonshot factory) donated their time to develop the app, and Google Cloud is providing free credits from their academic research program. The Heroes Health app is built on Google Clouds implementation of the FDAs open-source MyStudies platform, allowing it to scale based on demand.

Technical support was also provided by the Boston Technology Corporation. The app, which is operated by UNC School of Medicine, is HIPAA compliant and takes advantage of Google Clouds robust security and privacy protections to protect user data.

Heroes Health is the first initiative to focus on the mental health of COVID-19 health care workers, who are under extreme pressure in this pandemic. Our volunteers were honored to be able to support such a worthwhile and important initiative, said Obi Felten, head of getting moonshots ready for contacts with the real world at X.

National mental health and brain health research nonprofit One Mind has supported McLeans ongoing trauma research work, including the AURORA study. One Mind has been helping to raise financial support for the Heroes Health Initiative.

Health care workers are working long hours in highly contagious environments, often without adequate safety equipment, and are expected to make life-saving decisions while deprioritizing their own health and the health of their families, said One Mind President Brandon Staglin. These demands place an enormous amount of stress on the physical and mental health of COVID-19 health care workers. Heroes Health will provide mental health support for our frontline caregivers and is an important demonstration of how private sector innovation is essential in our response to the pandemic.

The Rockefeller Foundation has also been a key supporter.

Health care workers show up every day to battle COVID-19 and keep us all safe. Its grueling work, said Zia Khan, senior vice president of innovation at The Rockefeller Foundation. The Rockefeller Foundation, having supported public health innovations for over 100 years, is proud to join with Google and One Mind to support the UNC School of Medicine as they launch Heroes Health to extend mental health support to these frontline workers.

As a community and country, it is important to come together to support those on the frontline taking care of our citizens with coronavirus, said Bank of America North Carolina Market President Charles Bowman. It was an easy decision to partner with The Rockefeller Foundation to fund an application of this type that will be valuable now and in the future to ensure health care workers can self-monitor and have access to the support and services they need and deserve.

The public can contribute to the ongoing support and national availability for Heroes Health by donating via its fundraising page.

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'Heroes Health' mental wellness app launched by School of Medicine and UNC Health - UNC Chapell Hill

Ironton native returning home to practice medicine – The Tribune – Ironton Tribune

By MacLean James

For The Ironton Tribune

Born into a family of doctors, Michael Basedow never really doubted that he would follow in their footsteps.

Both his parents, William and Arlene, own their own practice in Ironton. His brother and sister, Joey and Sara, are currently in their postgraduate residencies and plan to finish within the next year.

Basedow finished medical school at Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine in Erie, Pennsylvania in 2017, and went on to complete his residency in Columbus at Doctors Hospital, which he finished this year. He will soon be joining his parents at their clinic as a family doctor, with an emphasis on musculoskeletal medicine and osteopathic manipulation treatment.

He sees a big need for more doctors to come to the Tri-State. It is an underserved area, and often patients will have to travel out of town to receive the care they need.

Its important for that care to be more accessible.Basedow is hoping that more young professionals and doctors will choose to return and build up their services and practices here.

But he is starting his practice during unprecedented times.The COVID-19 pandemic has brought along many challenges to the medical field. It is something he has been dealing with since March and believes will continue until at least the end of this year or longer.

The Basedow Family Clinic is currently offering telehealth services to help combat the virus, and will continue for the foreseeable future.

Basedow looks forward to serving the people he knows in the place where he grew up.

When I went to medical school I didnt exactly know what specialty I wanted to go into, he said. But spending some time with my mom and dad at their office and doing rotations with them, I got to see that patient connection they have. Its a more personal thing with a family medical doctor as opposed to specialists, who you might see only once or twice and thats it. As a family doctor you get to follow them along, sometimes from birth until death. You can get to know them pretty well. Its that personal relationship that made me gravitate toward family medicine.

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Ironton native returning home to practice medicine - The Tribune - Ironton Tribune

Discover why Antojai Quantum Reiki is the Future of Medicine – Yahoo Finance

NEW YORK, NY / ACCESSWIRE / July 20, 2020 / 2020 has been a rollercoaster of a year, with Covid-19, to civil uprising across the country. You can say this year has not turned out as planned, stress is high since Quarantine began; people are turning to therapy, psychotherapy, tarot readings, mediation, prayer, anything to get their mind off of their present circumstances. There is another wave of healing that people are coming into the revelation of, it's called "Quantum Reiki". Reiki is a form of preventive care that has been trending for almost a century. It's a non- invasive medicine that allows a person to reach a profound state of wellness and healing through understanding and experiencing energy exchange. Each treatment is personalized as Reiki incorporates a balanced approach between the mind, body, spirit and the lifestyle of the person. It delivers life changing results to those who are suffering from a multitude of ailments.

If you are looking for a safe space to allow yourself to be transformed from the inside out, look no further, "Antojai Ascension Academy'' is the place you need to be. World renowned Shaman Axel is the person that will be the missing piece to your life, he is a lifelong shaman with a continuance of experience. At the age of 30, self made global entrepreneur Axel Carrasquillo, has completely changed the trajectory of his life by using these specific practices. Axel suffered a traumatic event that left him paralyzed with life with nowhere to turn, suffering from a severe case of PTSD, he wanted to find an alternative to life. None of the traditional methods worked, so Axel went on a quest to find something that will allow his consciousness to be renewed, with a new sense of freedom. With many years of searching, his thirst for life was quenched with the birth of Antojai Quantum Alchemy", Axel healed himself of PTSD within just 8 months. The results were real, he found the missing key to the quest, and now it was time to share what he learned with the world around him.

Axel began growing his network into a global phenomenon, with a 100% success rate, his new method with incorporating the collective consciousness within a person, and bridging the gap between all parts of each person helped usher in a new movement. Axel, like so many people, was suffering in silence, until he found that without treating the root we will still have the symptoms. "I founded Antojai Ascension Academy, an online global academy that teaches holistic practitioners how to modify traditional methods with Quantum consciousness theory, and advanced energy medicine. I have worked on cases like fibromyalgia, depression, and anxiety, and over 100 symptoms with great success" states Axel.

True healing of the body and soul takes a level of diving into the subconscious mind and pulling out the necessary things that need to be healed. Energy medicine has been around for thousands of years, it was developed in 1922, and not updated or modified for almost 100 years. In less than 2 years, Quantum Reiki is now being practiced in 122 out of 195 countries with over 100,000 people healed from their current state of illness.

"Applying Anojai Quantum Reiki has been the most enlightening and introspective journey I have ever pursued in my entire life! It is an ongoing process though through Quantum Reiki, I have been healed of the addictions that once plagued my daily life!! The transformation was incredible, words cannot describe. I now know my true purpose in life as I aspire to help others with Quantum Reiki, the way it has helped me. This is the way to the Source. Thank you so much!!" - Leviathan AltSpaceVR

Story continues

"I was drawn to shamanic healing last year and discovered Antojai on the web. After months of putting it off, I finally booked an appointment! I have to say that both sessions were phenomenal and powerful. I can't really describe it in words! So much grand healing and changes within me and my reality. Master Axel is a magnificent and astounding human that is so very gifted. His energy and approach to you and each session is with great care and insight. I truly appreciate him and his abilities! Always such good vibes!! Thank you so much!!!" - Jourdan Rae.

"The research and work being done by this organization and the academy are game changers for energy workers and healers. My life is never going to be the same. Thanks to Antojai, I've been realigned with my purpose." - Jacob Zufelt.

As I previously mentioned, the stresses of quarantine and Covid-19 has affected numerous kinds of people suffering from all kinds of stressors. To adjust to this new reality, Axel has embraced the power of digital tools, "I am a 30 years old global liberator that revolutionized the Reiki Holistic Medicine practice, it only took me three years to make a flourishing company. It works, the proof is in the results" Remarks Axel. Freedom awaits on the other side of your obedience, no more carrying around baggage from the past, your mind, body, and soul awaits your decision. Quantum Reiki works, allowing your subconscious to be healed with the necessary tools you will need. If you want to learn more information on Shaman Axel or more information on Antojai Ascension Academy check out the website below! Healing awaits you, the decision is yours!

To find out more about Axel's Quantum Reiki & Antojai Alchemy method, you can check out his websites antojai.us and antojai.org

CONTACT:

Paula Henderson646-736-2071phendersonnews@gmail.com

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Discover why Antojai Quantum Reiki is the Future of Medicine - Yahoo Finance

Medicine shortages in the EU: causes and solutions | News – EU News

Parliament had already called for better traceability of research and development costs, public funding and market expenditure to make medicines more affordable in a resolution adopted in 2017.

The Commission issued guidelines to tackle shortages due to the coronavirus outbreak in April. It called on member states to lift export bans and avoid stockpiling; increase and reorganise production; ensure optimal use in hospitals by reallocating stocks; consider alternative medicines; and optimise sales in pharmacies.

The report calls on the Commission to address the issue of medicine availability and accessibility and import dependency in the upcoming EU pharmaceutical strategy.

It is expected to propose measures to help improve and accelerate access to safe and affordable medicines, support innovation in the EU pharmaceutical industry, fill market gaps (for exampled new antimicrobials) and reduce direct dependence on raw materials from non-EU countries.

MEPs are expected to vote on the report during the September plenary session.

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Medicine shortages in the EU: causes and solutions | News - EU News

COVID blame unfounded, undermines good work in government, medicine – Press of Atlantic City

Responding to a crisis such as the coronavirus pandemic requires staying focused on what could be done differently and better, rather than assigning blame for what turned out to have been mistaken.

That is the whole basis for science developing a strong hypothesis, implementing it while watching for where its weak, and then making a new stronger proposal based on what was discovered in the attempt.

New Jersey and New York had the misfortune to be the earliest, biggest COVID-19 hotspot in America, so their elected officials and medical communities had to fight the virus with little specific understanding of how to reduce its spread or treat the illness it causes. That plus dense populations often in close quarters ensured high numbers of cases and deaths.

Much was learned that is benefiting the southern and western states where this initial wave of coronavirus now has spread and surged. The need to protect vulnerable populations such as the elderly and those with underlying conditions is well understood. When to use ventilators, oxygen supplements and even how to position patients turned out to be different than pre-pandemic practices. All this will help reduce coronavirus mortality.

If those other states are paying sufficient attention, theyll also see that simple, honest and transparent messaging more effectively encourages people to behave in ways that slow the spread of the virus.

There is still a lot of confusion in New Jersey over what the government is ordering, advising and enforcing. This is partly a product of four months (and counting) of emergency rule by Gov. Phil Murphy, whose daily pronouncements are complicated, changeable and incomplete.

The latest, for example, is two-week quarantines for travelers to New Jersey from (as of Tuesday) 22 states experiencing growing COVID case-loads (but still a fraction of New Jerseys peak). Thats obviously not enforceable, so its an advisory one made knowing that few will follow it. If the real purpose was to remind people that other places might now pose more risk of contagion than New Jersey and to act accordingly, saying that clearly would have been better.

Even the esteemed infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci has learned the hard way that honesty and clarity work better. At the end of April he tweeted that masks were not effective in preventing COVID-19 in the general public, adding, Seriously people stop buying masks! He wanted to prevent people from snapping up the virus-blocking N-95 masks that medical personnel needed and had trouble getting. Later it turned out the virus mainly spreads by droplets that can be reduced by people wearing regular cloth masks, so he strongly urged their use indoors and in close proximity. Some trust and effectiveness was lost.

For the rest of this year everyone will be figuring out how to live and work with a contagious virus that can only be slowed, not stopped. Mistakes will be made and much more will be learned.

Everyone has done a generally good job. Everyone is getting better at this. The goal of keeping health and economic destruction to reasonably tolerable levels looks doable.

There is no basis for trying to blame COVID deaths on governmental or health officials for decisions made with insufficient information and often under pressure and time constraints. The eventual coronavirus spread, development of vaccines, almost certain mutation of the virus and ultimate death rates and economic slump wont be known or even reliably estimated for months, maybe years.

Officials are trying their best to balance the publics conflicting desires for a little less disease and a little more normal life completely legitimate but competing and even conflicting desires. Dont blame them. Let them focus on doing their best in their challenging work.

And people shouldnt blame themselves if their actions result in a less than optimal health or personal finance outcome in this historic global crisis. So much is beyond their control.

Lets try see what could have been done better and resolve to do better going forward. Then look ahead for what else can be improved. The path out of the pandemic and economic slump is in that direction.

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COVID blame unfounded, undermines good work in government, medicine - Press of Atlantic City

Three new COVID-19 cases in Medicine Hat over the weekend – CHAT News Today

Cypress County has totalled 30 cases, all recovered.

The province now has confirmed 9,587 total cases throughout the pandemic. There are currently 1,109 active cases and 8,308 Albertans have recovered. Thats an increase of 250 and 115, respectively.

There are currently 86 Albertans in hospital, an increase of 18 since Fridays update. Of the 86 in hospital, 17 are in ICU. The death toll is up three to 170.

The province completed 23,530 tests in the past 72 hours.

The South Zone has a total of 1,513 cases 1,381 recovered, an increase of 14, and 119 active, an increase of 20.

There are eight people in the zone in hospital, an increase of four. There is currently one person in ICU in the South Zone, and there have been 13 deaths.

The County of Forty Mile has eight total cases, two active cases and six recovered.

The MD of Taber has 19 total cases, seven active and 12 recovered.

Special Areas No. 2 has five active cases.

Numbers are unchanged in Brooks, where there have been 1,121 total cases 1,109 are recovered and three are active. Brooks has recorded nine deaths. The County of Newell is showing a total of 23 cases two active and 21 recovered.

The County of Warner has 47 total cases. There are now five active cases and 41 recovered. There has been one death in the county.

The City of Lethbridge has a total of 88 cases. Of those, 38 are listed as active and 50 recovered. Lethbridge County has 17 cases, 10 active cases and seven recovered.

The figures on alberta.ca are up-to-date as of end of day July 19, 2020.

Dr. Deena Hinshaw, Albertas chief medical officer of health, will provide an in-person update on Tuesday.

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Three new COVID-19 cases in Medicine Hat over the weekend - CHAT News Today

What we know of Covid-19 now: Updated symptoms, modes of transmission, immunity and complications – The Indian Express

Written by Abhishek De, Edited by Explained Desk | New Delhi | Updated: July 21, 2020 1:20:13 pm Coronavirus (Covid-19) Symptoms, Treatment: A health worker speaks with a child at an isolation center for Covid-19 at CWG in New Delhi

Coronavirus (Covid-19) Symptoms, Treatment: What began with a handful of infections in the Chinese city of Wuhan last December, has now spread to over 216 countries, with cases of the novel coronavirus infection crossing 14 million worldwide, including more than 6 lakh deaths.

While initially animal-to-person spread of the disease was suspected, by January, person-to-person spread of the virus was reported around the world. In the first week of March, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared Covid-19 a pandemic, triggering unprecedented national lockdowns, upending economies and stretching healthcare systems to the brink.

However, even after seven months, scientists are still to come to a conclusion on the source of the virus, how the disease is transmitted, why some cases are more severe than others and whether people who have recovered from Covid-19 can get it again.

Till now, 12 symptoms of the virus have been identified by the US health protection agency Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Last month, the agency included congestion or runny nose, nausea, and diarrhea as possible indicators of the infection.

The list already included fever or chills, cough, shortness of breath or difficulty breathing, fatigue, muscle or body aches, headache, new loss of taste or smell and sore throat. They may appear 2 to 14 days after exposure to the virus.

Recently, in several countries, including India, children have often shown some symptoms associated with a rare illness called Kawasaki disease about 2-3 weeks after getting infected with coronavirus. These symptoms include rashes and inflammation. Last month, the World Health Organization (WHO) termed this new illness as multi system inflammatory disorder.

The WHO recently updated its brief on Modes of transmission of virus causing COVID-19 and formally acknowledged evidence emerging of the airborne spread of the novel coronavirus. In the brief, the WHO has formally acknowledged the possibility that the novel coronavirus can remain in the air in crowded indoor spaces, where short-range aerosol transmission cannot be ruled out.

However, the WHO still maintains that transmission through respiratory droplets when an infected person coughs, sneezes, talks, or sings is still understood to be the primary mode of transmission of the virus.

It also mentions another type of transmission called fomite transmission. It refers to transmission through infected surfaces such as doorknobs, elevator buttons, handrails, phones, switches, pens, keyboards and, if not disinfected, even a doctors stethoscope.

Researchers across the world are studying whether antibodies developed by the body in response to the virus can provide permanent immunity. A new study by Kings College London has found that those recovering from Covid-19 may have antibodies for only a few months.

Upon analysing the immune response of more than 90 people, the researchers found that antibody levels peaked about three weeks after the onset of symptoms and then started declining. Thus, the findings suggest that people can become reinfected just like the common cold and other kinds of flu.

Meanwhile, Dr Randeep Guleria, director of AIIMS and one of the experts leading the countrys novel coronavirus disease response, has also said cell-mediated immunity, an immune response that does not involve antibodies, may also be protecting the body.

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While initially Covid-19 was thought to be just a respiratory infection, patients were now suffering from strokes and neurological disorders, including inflammation, psychosis and delirium, and some have also complained of weakness after weeks.

Lung damage, known as lung fibrosis, and blood clots in the pulmonary artery Pulmonary Thrombo Embolism or PTE have also been seen in persons who have recovered from very severe cases of the disease. A study by University College London researchers revealed 43 patients who suffered either temporary brain dysfunction, strokes, nerve damage or other serious brain effects.

Besides, Dr Guleria also said medical examination of patients with severe illness showed that even months after recovery, their lungs continued to be in bad shape, and they required oxygen at home.

According to the World Health Organisation, there is no evidence so far that pets or animals can transmit the disease to humans even though several dogs and cats in contact with infected humans have tested positive for Covid-19.

It has been found that ferrets appear to be susceptible to the infection and it has been found that both cats and ferrets were able to transmit Covid-19 to other animals of the same species.

Recently, minks raised in farms have also been detected with the virus. In a few instances, the minks that were infected by humans have transmitted the virus to other people. These are the first reported cases of animal-to-human transmission.

To date, there are no specific vaccines or medicines to prevent Covid-19 and the drugs being used only help reduce the viral load. The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted emergency-use authorisation for antiviral drug remdesivir while the UK government has approved the use of a low-cost, widely used steroid dexamethasone.

India has also authorised off-label use of immuno-suppressant drug tocilizumab and convalescent plasma therapy on specific groups of patients apart from oxygen or mechanical ventilation. Moreover, India has also been using hydroxychloroquine as a prophylactic drug.

Besides, India is also using Favipiravir for Covid-19 treatment. Last month, Glenmark Pharmaceuticals launched the drug under the brand name FabiFlu, making it the first oral Favipiravir-approved medication in India for the treatment of Covid-19.

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What we know of Covid-19 now: Updated symptoms, modes of transmission, immunity and complications - The Indian Express

Global Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) for COVID-19 Market 2020 | with COVID-19 Pandemic Analysis & Future Growth Analysis by Top Key Players |…

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The contents of the Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) for COVID-19 market includes the market definition, target audience influencing and being influenced, market drivers, restraints, opportunities, and challenges. The Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) for COVID-19 market is segmented into{ Taking medicine, For injection }; { COVID-19, }along with this major segmentation the report also includes sub-segments of the market to understand the market on a deeper level. The report highlights the futuristic scopes and the alterations needed for the market development.

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Why Sox are ready to take next step: A ton of pitching potential – NBC Sports Chicago

The White Sox are heading into the shortened 2020 season with the same expectations they had back when they thought theyd be playing a 162-game schedule: to leap out of rebuilding mode and into contention mode.

Their ability to do it this year could well hinge on an extraordinarily talented, though plenty unproven, group of young pitchers.

Lucas Giolito broke out in a huge way in 2019, transforming himself from the pitcher with the worst numbers in baseball into an All Star and the no-doubt ace of the South Side starting staff. On Opening Day a year ago, the White Sox were coming off a 100-loss campaign and Giolito was facing legitimate questions about his place in the teams long-term pitching plan. On Opening Day this year, hell be leading the pitching staff on a team with postseason expectations.

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What I see from him is an ability to be an ace, new White Sox starting pitcher Dallas Keuchel, who has a Cy Young Award and a World Series ring on his resume, said of Giolito. Hes every bit of a horse that youd want at the top of the rotation. Hes got all the intangibles you want in a quality major league pitcher that can do it for years to come.

What I see in him is what I had in myself. Until you get over that mental edge and push through and have that first good year, you cant really say too many things out loud. But its the inside that really counts, because youre pushing yourself every day.

The question now becomes how many additional young arms can join Giolito in emerging as championship-caliber major league pitchers. The White Sox have no shortage of them, and baseballs months-long layoff allowed time for several of them to make recoveries from Tommy John surgery, giving the team a deep pitching staff heading into the 60-game sprint to the postseason.

The biggest questions surround Dylan Cease and Reynaldo Lpez, who both finished 2019 with some nasty looking numbers. Ceases results, a 5.79 ERA in 14 starts, can be easily chalked up to him dipping his toes into major league waters for the first time. Lpez, however, seemed to switch places with Giolito, going from the status of the teams best starting pitcher in 2018 to a woefully inconsistent 2019.

But the White Sox are confident one season will not tell the entire story for either young pitcher, both of whom they see as having front-of-the-rotation potential.

Cease is frequently raved about for having remarkable stuff, and he showed it off at times last season. His finest outing was probably also a pretty good encapsulation of his entire rookie year, when he dazzled for much of his 6.2 innings in Cleveland, striking out 11 batters, only to wind up tagged for four runs. But while he had a tendency to have a brief stretch in each outing define his day for the worse, his performances were often solid when looked at as a whole. And considering he was facing big league bats for the first time, there was a lot to like about what the future holds.

RELATED:Yasmani Grandal getting younger White Sox ready for 'playoff mode' all season

Lpez, meanwhile, had even brighter flashes of brilliance, even if they were fewer and farther between. He struck out 14 Detroit Tigers in April and grabbed a complete-game, 11-strikeout win over the Indians in September. After a mostly dismal first half, he vowed hed be a better pitcher after the All-Star break and was just that, with a 2.13 ERA in his first six starts of the second half.

Of course, thats not to paint over the more glaring bad results. He still finished the season with a 5.38 ERA and 35 home runs allowed. The good news? Theres a compelling reason to believe in a Giolito-style turnaround for Lpez in 2020.

Giolito made his transformation, in large part, because of a revamp of his mental approach to pitching. The bad moments that were happening early in his outings would snowball until he had given up a large number of runs, hits, walks or all three. That's not the case anymore. Lpez has spent the last few months, dating back to spring training, talking about his own mental overhaul from the offseason that included talking with the White Sox eam psychologist. Now, he says, hes in a much better place mentally, better able to shed the effects of a bad result. Who knows how much it will do to lower his ERA, but the White Sox saw just last year how big a difference that kind of approach can make.

Sometimes, as players, we are struggling with our thoughts, especially nervous thoughts when something goes wrong. And for players thats one of the bigger challenges, get over it, keep moving forward. Its not always easy, Lpez said through team interpreter Billy Russo. I used to think one of the most important things for us, especially for me, was just the physical part of the game. I was wrong. That was one of the reasons I kept failing. Because I wasnt prepared mentally to face those situations, to face those thoughts.

I realized that, and that was one of the reasons I stayed here in the U.S. during the offseason and why I approached the team psychologist to work with that, to try to enhance my mind and get rid of all that other stuff and to deal with it in a way I could use it as an advantage and not a disadvantage of my game.

How that is going to help me, its already helping a lot and that is going to help me a lot going forward because now I know how to deal with different situations, now I know how to be prepared for different situations, and thats a big difference for me. Im a better player because my mind is stronger and prepared for situations.

While Giolito and Keuchel provide reliability at the top of the rotation, teams need more than just two guys to form a pitching staff capable of winning a championship. And though Michael Kopech is a big part of the teams long-term planning, he decided not to play during the 2020 season. That means the fate of White Sox pitching this season could rest on Cease and Lpez even more than it already did.

Fortunately, theres no need for those two to feel too much pressure, though. As mentioned, the layoff allowed for some full-season reinforcements, three more guys who fall into the category of young pitching that has the White Sox primed to make their leap into the realm of baseballs contenders.

Most notable among that trio is Carlos Rodn, whos been around for a while but is still just 27 years old. Like Lpez, his past few seasons have featured plenty of flashes of brilliance, but consistency has eluded him. The bigger hurdle hes had to climb is health, and numerous injuries have derailed his attempt to settle into the role of the front-of-the-rotation arm his No. 3 draft pick status had the White Sox hoping hed be.

Rodn has looked good in Summer Camp, and hes as realistic about his situation as anyone. Kopechs decision not to play this year might make Rick Renterias decision an easier one when it comes to a six-man rotation, and Rodn could get a chance to make regular starts for the entirety of the shortened 2020 campaign. With just one year after this one before hes scheduled to hit free agency, Rodn knows he needs to show the White Sox that he can still be the huge part of their pitching future they longhoped hed be.

"I feel like there's some stuff I need to prove," Rodn said. "The last few years have not gone the way I wanted them to, obviously. It's kind of unfortunate, injuries and underperforming. This 60-game season, I feel like it will do a lot for guys. Not just me, but other guys around the leagueor on this team wherever, can prove themselves in those 60 games, and I think it will do a lot."

RELATED:Why it's unlikely Garrett Crochet will pitch for the White Sox in 2020

And then there are the two other Tommy John recoverers behind Rodn, Dane Dunning and Jimmy Lambert, who have also shown well during Summer Camp. Whether theyll have their shot at the big leagues depends, probably, more on how the other six starters on the team perform. But unlike last year, when Rodn went down and the White Sox trotted out a parade of ineffective options like Odrisamer Despaigne and Manny Bauelos in an attempt to plug the hole, there is legitimate depth this time around. So at the very least, even if Dunning and Lambert dont end up making big-time contributions to this years club, they provide depth that makes the White Sox stronger.

Dunning, especially, could still emerge as a prime piece of the long-term puzzle on the South Side. Rick Hahn talked about Dunning potentially being in the mix to be a part of last years Opening Day rotation before arm injuries did away with that idea. Should any one of the arms after Giolito and Keuchel falter in a season where every game means something, Dunning could get his shot.

And theres even more on the way, though its unlikely that prospects like Jonathan Stiever and Garrett Crochet who were both named to the White Sox taxi squad Tuesday will reach the majors this season. Still, it shows the White Sox are truly built for the long term. Once the contention window opens, the goal becomes not letting it close too soon. And even if Rodn departs after 2021 or Keuchels time on the South Side ends with his current contract or further augmentation is needed, the White Sox can make that happen from within as well as from outside the organization.

But this year, the potential is there. The White Sox have the young pitching talent to form a menacing staff, but there are a lot of questions to answer first. If the answers are positive ones, then look out. This team could be the AL Centrals most balanced.

I really do love the mix of pitching that we have here, veteran starting pitcher Gio Gonzlez said. I think we have plenty of fire arms. I've been very impressed with Dylan Cease. I think Cease's arm is incredible with how he gets the spin behind the ball.

Then you've got your Lucas Giolito, and then Lopey. I had Lopey and Lucas when I was in Washington, and I got to see that firsthand. This rotation kind of fills in all the blanks for all the ones that you have to question whether he's too young or he's too old for this.

I think the White Sox did a great job with mixing it all together for the young guys and definitely some of the veteran guys that can kind of take the load off with the thinking process.

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Why Sox are ready to take next step: A ton of pitching potential - NBC Sports Chicago

Our nation is at risk – The Spokesman-Review

Many thanks to Jeff Rayburn for his concise and timely letter (Without free speech, fascism; July 8, 2020). I, too, am genuinely concerned about the many, divisive issues facing our country today.

The COVID-19 pandemic, racial diversity, political ideology, cancel-culture including speech suppression, statue removal, history revision and a small, but loud, number of activists of all kinds have caused terrible divisions in our national fabric. Far-left Trump haters have taken over the media and social platforms; far-right fanatics have turned into survivalists recognizing no authority but their own. No longer can we have reasoned, thoughtful discussions.

The tenor in our society is now so infected with political correctness and wokeness that I fear for the survival of our nation as we have known it. Can we not say, enough is enough, start respecting differences of opinion and quit demonizing someone just because they do not agree with us?

John Kittel

Spokane

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Our nation is at risk - The Spokesman-Review

Former head of Navy says military should focus on winning wars rather than ‘political correctness’ – Telegraph.co.uk

The former head of the Royal Navy has said the military should focus on winning wars rather than "political correctness" after a ban on words like manpower.

Admiral Lord Alan West, former First Sea Lord, made his comments after it was reported that the First Sea Lord Tony Radakin had ordered sailors to stop using terms such as unmanned" and "manpower" so as female recruits do not feel excluded.

Lord West, 72,said that whilepeople have to be "very careful with words"because "in this very politically correct world it has a relevance", he hoped that most of their (the Navys) attention is being paid at the moment to ensuring we have sufficient ships, weapons and men to prevent war and if there is a war, to be able to fight and win.

"Those things seem to me merit a huge amount of attention and it seems that quite often we're focusing more and more on things like the RAF changing its uniform and all those soft things, which are lovely, but they don't actually help you when a war comes along."

It comes after the Chief of the Defence Staff warned that the Armed Forces must stamp out its "laddish" nature, as he warned he found the militarys culture really worrying.

General Sir Nick Carter also wrote a letter to all personnel where he said that while we talk a genuinely good game, more needed to be done to deal with racism in Britain's Armed Forces.

It follows on from a review last year which concluded that the forces were led by a "pack of middle-aged white men" resulting in unacceptable levels of bullying, sexism and racist behaviour.

The report, by Air Marshal Michael Wigston, was commissioned after a 17-year-old female soldier was allegedly sexually assaulted by six male personnel.

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Former head of Navy says military should focus on winning wars rather than 'political correctness' - Telegraph.co.uk

Extreme Conformism in the Media: An Interview with Norbert Bolz – Telos Press

The following interview was conducted by Alexander Wendt on July 5, 2020, and originally appeared in German on Tichys Einblick on July 13, 2020. Translated by Russell A. Berman.

Alexander Wendt: Professor Bolz, the costs of the coronavirus pandemic are still unknown, but they will surely leave deep scars for years to come. Will our society return from post-materialism to a society with hard materialist concerns with numbers and balance sheets?

Norbert Bolz: Even before the coronavirus crisis, I had doubts as to whether the notion of a post-material society made much sense. To my mind, the post-material term only makes real sense as a description of digitalization and the rise of information technology. But the superstructure that is usually meant by post-material seems to me to be mainly a substitute for religion, and it never had the real significance for society that many ascribe to it.

Q: So the crisis wont change much?

Bolz: It will have a salutary impact to the extent that it will lead many people to focus on fundamental concerns: health, safety, and the basic functions of the state that guarantees these matters. We are returning to a Hobbesian understanding of the state. During the recent wonderful decades, we did not have to worry much about the need to protect our security. That has changed.

Q: What does it mean for public communication if we start talking more about Gross Domestic Product and less about gender identities?

Bolz: We may soon be facing materialist distribution struggles, with open conflict between utopianists and realists, as has been the case in the United States for several years. Up to now, public discourse in Germany has been dominated nearly exclusively by a milieu distorted by affluence. In the post-coronavirus era, we may find that that rhetoric will be ratcheted down. There are two different cultures in Germany: idealists from the ivory tower and others who have to earn money. Up to now, the idealists have been in charge of the public debate. A paradigmatic example of this kind of windbag is the acting chair of the Social Democrats, Kevin Khnert. He studied nothing, completed nothing, and has no real knowledge of anythingbut he speaks well and knows how to present himself. On the other side, there are engineers, natural scientists, and entrepreneurs who do not speak in public because they never learned how, and public speaking is not part of their self-understanding. Until now they have more or less accepted the fact that they barely play a role in the public debate. But I think it is quite likely that they will develop a greater interest, now that it has become a matter of the real economic consequences of the crisis, at least to participate in the social debate and not to leave the field to the big talkers.

Q: What do you see happening in the United States?

Bolz: It is remarkable that in the United States, political correctness is even crazier than here, but there is also a free opposition camp. Talk radio reaches a large public there and gives many a chance to participate in public discussion. Twitter plays a larger role as well.

Q: Canadian author Jordan B. Peterson has evoked the so-called intellectual dark web. That is his ironic designation for a platform where he can talk with the neurologist Sam Harris and entrepreneurs like Eric Weinstein without the limitations of political correctness. Is something like that possible in Germany too?

Bolz: A while ago I made reference in a tweet to the intellectual dark web, where interesting discussions really do take place. In Germany, too, there are plenty of interesting, nonconformist minds. So far what is missing is money, the economic support that is needed to establish a sustainable public platform.

Q: Actually the classical media ought to provide a platform like that for open debates, if only out of self-interest. Why doesnt that happen?

Bolz: This ought to be their job. I can only explain the extreme conformism in the editorial offices of most media through the very similar socialization of all journalists. There is no longer much difference between the private and the state-financed media in the discussion of most political topics. This sort of conformism is fatal, especially in this period in which all the political parties pretty much say the same thing, with the exception of the AfD [Alternative for Germany].

Q: What do you read?

Bolz: I used to appreciate Die Welt a lot. It bothers me that there too one now finds the hymns of praise for Angela Merkels great political leadership. If I want to read about German domestic politics, then I feel best turning to the Neuen Zrcher Zeitung. It offers a perspective that is distinctly different.

Q: The private media are calling for state subventionsabove and beyond the sixty million euros already committed to support newspapers. Are we facing a statist structural transformation of the public sphere?

Bolz: I cant say much to that. I can only pray that it doesnt happen. When it is a matter of the existence of ones own place of work, some media companies are evidently willing to sell their souls. I can even understand that. But the results would be terrible.

Q: In the context of the pandemic, scientists have had a clearly stronger influence in politics and media. Some virologists suddenly appear to be more important than members of the cabinet or leading editors. What does this mean for public debate?

Bolz: I am not able to judge the competency of the virologists who now appear widely in the media. During the pandemic, in general I appreciate the scientists and politicians who honestly concede that they still do not know enough. But as for wide swaths of the humanities: many are sinning against Max Webers exhortation against using the lecture as an opportunity to sermonize.

Q: Who is doing that?

Bolz: For example, Ottmar Edenhofer from the Potsdam Institute for Research on Climate Change. He is very proud to be the actual author of the papal encyclical Laudato si on climate questions as well as the key advisor for the climate policies of the German government. There are plenty of representatives of sociology, political science, psychology, as well as law who would love to appear in media debates as leading advisors. A real casting takes place: your chances to appear are best if you provide exactly what the editorial boards want on a specific topic. The fact that these academic opportunists appear more and more has become a big problem for academia.

Q: Do you see a chance that a new generation of scholars might break through this conformism?

Bolz: I am not particularly optimistic that a future generation of humanists and social scientists can break through the strictures of paternalism and conformism. People worry about their careers, and state control is becoming ever stricter. The result is opportunism scholarship. Thats why I place my bet more on thinking outside of the institutions.

Q: You recently left this academic world through retirement. Was that a painful departure?

Bolz: I am enjoying my freedom, which includes, among other things, the fact that no one can threaten me with disciplinary action. I can send out my missives on Twitter and place them in other select media channels. Otherwise I am experiencing what Goethe once described as the privilege of age: the gradual withdrawal from public visibility.

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Extreme Conformism in the Media: An Interview with Norbert Bolz - Telos Press

Kimberly Marlowe Hartnett: MacDowell rebranding is about respect – The Union Leader

WHEN I first worked for newspapers and the Associated Press in New Hampshire in the 1970s, there was an interlude when the accepted style was: Ms. Smith (who prefers that designation)... Ive since told many disbelieving students about this bumpy construction. I use it to make the point that language drives change, and while the getting-there is usually awkward, the arrival is worth it.

I think of this getting-to-Ms. process when I read opinions along the lines of the New Hampshire Sunday News editorial, Wokefulness: A colony by any other name (7/12), which criticizes a decision by the board of the MacDowell Colony, the renowned writers retreat in Peterborough, to drop Colony from its name. The reasoning, according to the board member quoted, is that colony can convey a sense of hierarchy and exclusion.

There are two sets of reasons to shift our language. There are those official changes we need to make because the terms are already widely understood to be outdated and offensive a team called the Redskins, for example. And there are those cases in which we change because the language is one immediate way that all of us can model respect and point to where we want to go in the future.

Adding Ms. to the title-choice list and shoving girl offstage in favor of woman for adult females were signs of such respect. The changes did not sweep away sexism, but were among the many small, important steps taken to move away from systemic gender discrimination of the workplace and beyond. The colony change falls into this category.

This language-tidying work feels to some like reactive political correctness, and they cant say the new phrases without rolling their eyes. In the 90s I had a newsroom colleague who always mimed quotation marks when using the term person of color in conversation. (This stopped when irritated young reporters began making the same air quotes whenever they described a person as white or elderly or dead.)

I often hear folks decry language police or insist Im too old to change. Yes, it takes time to unlearn the muscle memory of language. As a person who has spent most of my life wrangling words and whacking my way through weedy paragraphs in search of clarity, I too still stumble over language changes.

But opting out of this evolution is, at the very least, lazy. Worse, such recalcitrance adds to the fissures in our society that widen and split open.

The editorial opines that the real problem with MacDowells decision is not the word in question, but with people trying to out-do each other in wearing their linguistic sensitivity or wokefulness on their sleeves. That misses the point. The MacDowell decision is an effort to be respectful, to move away as the sun sets on an old empire and its class and racial divisions. As with every other shift toward more thoughtful language, it is a small apology that other, bigger changes are overdue.

Kimberly Marlowe Hartnett is an author and editor in Manchester.

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Kimberly Marlowe Hartnett: MacDowell rebranding is about respect - The Union Leader

Are we there yet? – Dothan Eagle

In the current clamor of certain elements of the populace rioting for socialism, it seems appropriate to provide a short lesson in history, a subject many colleges and universities have long since assigned to the dust bin. Apparently the hammer of political correctness has driven these learned havens from teaching such for the fear that it might offend someone because they feel left out of the process. History is vital. Without it, we cannot know who we are or where we are. Living in the now is chaos. Does that appear familiar?

Many years ago, about the time our founding fathers were shaking off the shackles of bondage, Alexander Tyler, a professor at the University of Edinburgh, wrote about the fall of the Athenian Republic over 2,000 years before that time. He concluded that a democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves largesse from the public treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates promising the most benefits from the public treasury with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy, always followed by a dictatorship. Call that socialism, the precursor to communism. The average age of the worlds great civilizations has been 200 years. These nations have progressed from bondage to spiritual faith, from spiritual faith to great courage, from courage to liberty, from liberty to abundance, from abundance to selfishness, from selfishness to complacency, from complacency to apathy, from apathy to dependency, from dependency back to bondage.

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Are we there yet? - Dothan Eagle

The Great College Depression Begins: Three Ohio Tales – Forbes

A gate with a historic marker is shown on the Ohio University campus in Athens, Ohio. (AP ... [+] Photo/Joe Maiorana)

Major newspapers like the New York Times and Washington Post are writing stories about how Covid-19 is devastating universities and towns surrounding them, particularly in Flyover Country, that part of America located away from the Atlantic or Pacific Coasts where media, business and political elites too often think most of the great minds and wisdom of our nation are found. The Times, for example, recently focused on the University of Akron, and Ohio University, where I reside. Let me speak briefly about three universities in the Buckeye State, including those two.

These schools are getting clobbered financially. Enrollments have been falling for years, so the schools were already in tenuous financial shape before Covid-19. The University of Akron in 1989 had 28,967 students; 30 years later, in fall 2019, it had 17,743, 38.7% fewer. What this fall: maybe 15,000? Moreover, early in this century, Akron went on a huge building splurge including a large fancy stadium, unsuccessfully hoping to attract students, but instead incurring a huge debt burden. Complicating things, another large state school, Kent State, is but 13 miles (16 minutes) away.

As Inside Higher Ed put it, Akron recently had a bloodbath. It fired 97 full-time professors, some tenured, after another 21 had already resigned or retired. This continued a major program retrenchment begun in 2018. Whole disciplines are being decimated, no doubt ending several majors. Meanwhile, of course, the school still subsidizes intercollegiate sports with more than $20 million annually, justly infuriating the faculty.

Conference rival Ohio University (OU) is the oldest Midwest university, with a gorgeous campus including 200-year-old buildings. Reeking in tradition, it inspired David McCulloughs recent best seller, The Pioneers, and is the school where Lyndon Johnson proclaimed his Great Society. A selective admission school with a decent-sized (by state school standards) endowment, OU over the past decade ignored the basics (maintaining high academic standards), lowering entrance requirements to maximize enrollments, while emphasizing political correctness regarding things like sustainability and diversity. A flight to quality in higher ed hurt schools like Ohio University that lowered high academic standards. Huge budget woes have forced it to let roughly 400 staff go, including a good number of faculty, vast numbers of supporting workers, but absolutely no, to my knowledge, high priced administrators, nor have any sizable cuts come to the $20 million plus athletics subsidy required so OU can compete annually in the Last Resort Bowl or its equivalent.

Wright State University in Dayton has had the most perilous decade of all. A new university, founded only in 1967, it grew substantially and by 2011 had 18,275 students; in fall 2019, the number had declined by 32% to 12,423, Wracked by internal dissent, in February 2019 the faculty went on a 20-day strike severely hurting the institution. Its finances have been extremely precarious. Founded originally as a branch of both Ohio State and Miami Universities, both schools are within about an hours drive of the Wright campus, as is the University of Cincinnati. Do you need four major public universities within an hour of Dayton, a city with fewer residents than 100 years ago, which also has a fine private school (University of Dayton) as well as a large community college (Sinclair)?

My guess is something important will happen regarding minimally one of these colleges. Ohio University, academically the highest quality, better endowed, and more geographically isolated from competing institutions, will likely survive, possibly even flourish if it renews its previous emphasis on excellence. Wright State is extremely vulnerable to merger into one or more surrounding institutions. Some sort of merger or increased cooperation between Akron and Kent State also seems likely. Some observers go further, predicting remote learning and alternatives to traditional degrees (like coding academies) may doom most vulnerable American universities.

Ohio is probably fairly typical. The short term prognosis is: Highly unpredictable, but with falling enrollments, rising expenses (money for masks, testing, etc.), loss of athletic revenue, declining state subsidies, falling endowment income and donor grants, half-filled dorm rooms, declining international enrollments, etc. -very bad financial outlooks, even for elite schools suffering smaller enrollment loss. Some low-cost community colleges, however, may actually gain enrollments. But Covid-19 will kill off some schools.

My latest book is Restoring the Promise: Higher Education in America.

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The Great College Depression Begins: Three Ohio Tales - Forbes

Why police shouldn’t stop using the term ‘Islamist terrorism’ – Spectator.co.uk

The Times has revealed today that counter-terror police officers are considering dropping the term Islamism to describe terror attacks motivated by Islam. If it feels like weve been here before, we have. Ever since Islamist terror hit the West in September 2001, the circular debates over the correct way to describe terrorists has been a near-constant distraction.

In 2014, precious time and energy that could have been used to save the lives of innocent aid workers, journalists, religious minorities and civilians living under the jackboot of ISIS or indeed stopping hundreds of our own citizens joining the frenzy was instead spent debating whether or not we should call the group Daesh, or the un-Islamic State.

Unsurprisingly, this parochial debate did not exactly strike fear into the hearts of terrorists. One told the journalist Graeme Wood:

Were happy to have you discussing whether to call us Daesh, ISIL, or ISIS' As long as youre talking about that, he said and not about theology, politics or military operations - we know youre not taking us seriously.

It is more apparent to terrorists than us that these conversations, though well-meaning, have little benefit to the actual business of countering terrorism.

Which brings us to ideology, and the attempt by police to ban the term Islamist. Islamism is the particular name for a political ideology which seeks to establish an Islamic state. Its adherents range from those working within democracy to those willing to murder civilians to achieve this aim.

According to critics of the word, 'Islamism' should be dropped because it conflates religious belief with terror. But the term Islamism, rather than Islamic is intended to draw a distinction between the political ideology and the religious beliefs of more than two million Brits. It is important though to understand how religion informs the political ideology. Which it does, significantly.

I was present in the police meetings where these issues arose, and was disappointed that the use of the term 'Islamism' was framed in the context of the current discussions on race. This made it near impossible to make a dispassionate case in an entirely separate debate. Islamism is not just a made-up term, or a relic of a more racist past to be expunged like a statue or American Football team name. It is a necessarily precise and accepted term to describe the ultimate objective of both al-Qaeda and, as the name suggests, Islamic State.

When innocent people are gunned down in European capitals and minorities are persecuted in the Middle East, it is of the utmost importance to understand why this is happening. We need to know that we are not simply dealing with a band of malcontents or the vulnerable, but a distinct and coherent violent programme which, as repugnant as it may be, should be respected and understood as an opponent.

The authorities are being led to believe that there is discontent over the use of the term Islamism, but they must also be aware that any backlash over its use risks being dwarfed by the response to its abandonment.

The public wants to see effective counter-terrorism operations, and they want to know that some effort is being made to challenge the ideology behind the violence. How can they possibly have any confidence that the authorities are tackling Islamism, if they wont even name it?

Our institutions seem unaware at the moment of just how far they are drifting from the majority opinion as they consciously or otherwise adopt the political leanings and politically correct language of public sector professionals and supposed community groups.

The police have largely escaped the distrust bred by this disconnect, but following a series of failures inextricably linked to political correctness, from Rotherham to the failure to protect public statues, the police risk sailing ever closer to the winds of public resentment.

If they are seen to be withholding the truth over what is still the greatest terror threat to this country, then trust will deteriorate and policing by consent will be undermined.

Just imagine, in the wake of an atrocity (and there will be more) a senior British police officer using a euphemism to explain the murder of our fellow citizens. The resentment these displays can breed should not be underestimated, and the chasm between the public and institutions leaves anger to fill this vacuum.

Perhaps the most overlooked people in this debate are the formidable Muslims standing up to Islamism every single day across the country. Making Islamism more of a taboo than it already is would undo so much of their hard work, and would be a frustrating betrayal of brave men and women who need our support.

If the authorities and experts need to do a better job of communicating the crucial distinctions between the ideology of Islamism and the faith of Islam then so be it, but this is vastly preferable to a sleight of hand to describe the threat we all face together, both Muslims and non-Muslims alike.

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Why police shouldn't stop using the term 'Islamist terrorism' - Spectator.co.uk

Black Lives Matter and the British armys culture war – The Economist

Officers and squaddies march to a different tune

Jul 18th 2020

I ALWAYS GET asked to be a suicide bomber in training exercises, reveals a British soldier of North African descent. The role has its perks: spending an afternoon far away from barked orders, waiting to ambush a passing patrol. But with his fellow troops eagerly wrapping a rag around his head, he found it hard to ignore the profiling. I wouldnt term it abuse, I would term it racial ignorance on a staggering scale. Its a group of people who are naturally attracted to a particular political ideology, and dont want to engage with political correctness.

The armys job is to fight the queens enemies, and the fact that they have often been of a different colour to her is embedded in its culture. A non-white reservist says friends ask him why he wants to fight a white mans war. Once a year his regiment sits down to watch Zulu, a film about a bloody battle between British soldiers and African tribesmen. He says that the atmosphere isnt racist, but you can see how there might be some negative connotations amongst the junior ranks.

Nicola Williams, the Service Complaints Ombudsman, said in December 2019 that incidents of racism are occurring with increasing and depressing frequency. The army is trying to change this, and says of instances of racism The Economist put to it, such as the one above, There is no place for racism in the military and anyone behaving in this way can expect to be disciplined or dismissed. Last month, General Sir Nick Carter, the head of the armed forces, wrote to every soldier to say that the army supports Black Lives Matter (BLM). A few weeks later, central command waived the usual rule that politics is off-limits by letting troops attend BLM protests.

Senior staff hope that supporting BLM will send a positive signal. The young cohort from which the army recruits is more ethnically diverse than the population as a whole. Black and minority ethnic (BME) troops make up 8.8% of the 145,000-strong armed forces, which is in line with the population, but that includes 3,760 Gurkhas, around 1,300 Fijians and other non-white troops recruited from Britains former colonies. So it needs to improve its image among BME people to keep its numbers up.

This new approach also reflects the increasingly liberal views of senior staff in the armed forces. A growing professionalism has raised entry and training standards while making promotion more meritocratic. Once a cadet at Sandhurst, Britains officer-training academy, was a bit like Prince Harry: an Old Etonian, with deep family ties to the army, who was rather dim and prone to using racial slurs (as the young prince did as a Sandhurst cadet in 2009). Nowadays cadets are more likely to share the princes current views on race. The public-school contingent has been reduced to under half of Sandhursts intake. Socially mobile graduates now dominate.

Private soldiers still tend to come from low-income families in white working-class towns where social attitudes are more conservative. A BME soldier describes fellow squaddies as having a hillbillies in the Deep South who voted for Donald Trump mentality. A lance corporal was jailed in 2018 for joining National Action, a fascist group. Later that year a group of soldiers caused outrage after posing for photographs with Tommy Robinson, a far-right activist. Some of the counter-protests to BLM were organised by veterans who claimed to be guarding war memorials from potential vandalism. A black reservist says, Ive been surprised with the amount of people who have come out with the All Lives Matter mantra, and then actually having to sit down with NCOs [non-commissioned officers] and explain the whole situation to them.

The shared conservatism which once helped officers and troops to overcome class distinctions has now gone. There is a growing division in attitudes between commissioned officers, who see liberal reforms as necessary, and squaddies, who think political correctness is destroying the armys esprit de corps and undermining its professionalism. Ive had officers try and tell me about white privilege, sighs one soldier. That doesnt go down well with a bunch of blokes from the north.

Not all officers have moved in line with senior staff. Some allowed troops to attend counter-protests. But under new regulations officers who arent seen to encourage diversity will not be promoted. Anthony King, chair of war studies at Warwick university, thinks that in their drive to support diversity officers might sometimes be seen to promote women and ethnic minorities who had failed to meet the armys own rigorous standards. Independently of any committed racism or sexism on the part of the soldiers, this is bound to generate a reaction, he cautions. A former squaddie says he left the army last year when a female officer was promoted despite failing fitness tests. According to a spokesman, All fitness courses require the same challenges for both men and womenall staff being promoted are expected to pass the relevant tests. The squaddie is unimpressed. The army is just for shit cunts and liberals now, he says.

This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline "Culture war"

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Black Lives Matter and the British armys culture war - The Economist

Reminder of the violence that founded a nation – theday.com

I'd like to add a few additions to your article on the John Mason statue "In Windsor, a former Mystic fixture could be removed from pedestal again," July 11 which is accurate on the whole.

In 1992, Columbus was celebrated for his voyage in 1492. Our local peace group, the Southeastern Connecticut Coalition for Peace and Justice, viewed his voyage as an invasion, not discovery which view has been finally recognized nationally with the removal in New London and around the United States of Columbus statues.

When we learned through meeting with "Wolf" Jackson and other local Pequots about the 1637 massacre, and the statue of John Mason standing on the site of that massacre, our focus changed to the removal of that statue, and in the process educating the local community about the Pequot War. Almost two years of hard work culminated when the Groton Town Council voted to remove the statue.

As you mentioned in the article, people living in that neighborhood now have little knowledge about the horrible massacre which took place in their neighborhood. The "peace tree" and plaque which replaced the statue have not been well-maintained. However, the Pequot tribal members are aware of the apology implicit in the removal of the statue, and are, I believe, relieved that it is not on the site.

Edith Fairgrieve, Dave Silk, Melinda Cole-Plurde, Cal Robertson and I, Rick Gaumer, were the activists involved with Wolf and various Pequots in the struggle to recognize the wrong our ancestors committed in Mystic. We appreciated the willingness of the Groton Town Council to learn from history. Once removed, our group did not express an opinion on the disposition of the statue.

In some ways, the move to a small green inWindsor, surrounded by Colonial-era buildings, corrects the image of the colonists given by various museums Old Sturbridge Village, Old Deerfield, Plimoth Plantation with an obviously war-like violent statue. We all need to know this aspect of our history in this land.

By the way, the day after the Groton Town Council voted to remove the statue, I found out that an ancestor of mine, Nicolas Olmsted, a son of a founder of Hartford, took part in the massacre. In fact, Mason, in his account of the battle, when the battle was in doubt, ordered Nicolas to run through the village with a torch, setting fire to the homes. Many died in the fire or were killed fleeing the flames.

I had never seen the statue until the day before its removal. The horror I felt on that site continues to haunt me to this day.

Finally, concerning the recent commentary by Marcus Mason Maronn,his characterization of Uncas and Sassacus as genocidal butchers, equal to Mason, is wrong. It was Mason who led the killing of up to 700 men, women, children and elders. Both the Narragansetts and the Mohegans, allies of the colonists, were appalled by the slaughter of innocents. The historical record is clear.

Maronn repeatedly refers to the controversy about the statue as pushing some form of political correctness.No, the controversy is a response by those who came to understand Mason's and the colonists' actions, which amounted to attempted genocide.

Rick Gaumer lives in Norwich.

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Reminder of the violence that founded a nation - theday.com