Why nurses are joining the call for policing and prison abolition – Cape Breton Post

As people across North America protested police brutality and racism in late May, three nursing PhD candidates at Dalhousie University saw the need for nurses to take a stand.

So, Keisha Jefferies, Leah Carrier, andMartha Paynter came together to write a letter in early June. The letter called on nurses across the country to join the movement for police and prison abolition.

We feel its really necessary for our profession, if we are truly champions for public health, to confirm that by joining the movement, said Paynter in an interview Wednesday.

In the letter, the three friends highlight the ways in which police and prison are harmful.

In prisons, Black, Indigenous, and people of colour are disproportionately incarcerated and consequently bare what the letter refers to as the horror of prisons: isolation, restraints, infection, and injury.

To seek care while in prison requires compliance with traumatizing security protocols strip searching, observation, violations of confidentiality, the letter said.

The three colleagues believe nursing is a trusted and respected profession with a huge platform to advocate for communities experiencing harm.

Paynter said its also in the nature of nurses to intervene for the sake of their patients whether it was by administering medication or IV fluids.

What were saying is nurses need to adopt political interventions to change the course of social harm, she said.

The nurses also touched on the role of the police in the deaths of DAndre Campbell, who was shot by police in April in Ontario, and Regis Korchinski-Paquet, who fell from a Toronto balcony in May. The letter said the consequences of policing and prison challenge the efforts of nurses to provide care to their communities.

We will not have our work undone by police and prison systems, the letter reads.

The letter said any investment in reforming the police would be futile. Instead, governments should be investing in areas such as housing, education, and social assistance.

Why arent we deeply troubled by how the tables have turned to frankly dump money into policing, when policing does not work to eliminate harm? said Paynter.It actually creates not just harm but death in our communities.

Nurses are not the answer to the issue of policing, according to Paynter. But they can play a role in building public services that maintain the well-being of communities.

When these services are available, Paynter said policing and prisons would become unnecessary.

This is what she expects would happen if drugs were decriminalized.

Last week, the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police released a statement to call on federal lawmakers to decriminalize the possession of small amounts of illegal drugs.

Paynter said the police shouldnt be championed for making the move this late. But if drugs were decriminalized nurses can help keep people safe by facilitating access to safe substances and providing all care thats associated with substance use.

While supporting community-based efforts to abolish policing is a priority for the three registered nurses, their letter also urges nurses in North America to start from within.

(We should) simultaneously be looking inward to see how our profession operates in a way that uses punishment and exclusion and discrimination in its operations, said Paynter.

Paynter gave an example for how nurses can be complicit in oppressing Black, Indigenous, and people of colour.

Nurses are taught to have really racist ideas about pain and policing access to pain relief based on those racist assumptions.

After releasing the letter in June, Paynter said about 1,000 people signed it. It was also translated into French, German, and Spanish.

But when she sent the letter to several nursing organizations across Nova Scotia and Canada, Paynter said she received no endorsements.

Our profession really struggles with divorcing itself from policing even though the evidence is clear that police brutality is one of the greatest infrastructures of systemic racism in this country, said Paynter.

She added that nursing organizations can start their fight against racism by increasing representation of Black, Indigenous and people of colour on their boards.

The letter Jefferies, Carrier, and Paynter wrote was published Wednesday in Public Health Nursing, a peer-reviewed journal.

Paynter said change is happening in policing and the nursing practice, but it needs to continue moving.

I envision nurses as really key leaders in a movement forward where police and prison do not exist.

Nebal Snan is a Local Journalism Initiative reporter, a positionfunded by the federal government.

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Why nurses are joining the call for policing and prison abolition - Cape Breton Post

Art exhibition featuring works by death row inmates opens in Taipei – Focus Taiwan News Channel

Taipei, July 18 (CNA) An exhibit featuring artwork by inmates, some of whom are on death row, opened Saturday at Bopiliao Historic Block in Taipei.

Twenty-two calligraphy works and Chinese paintings produced by 15 inmates are being displayed at the exhibit, titled "Not Who We Were," organized by the Taiwan Alliance to End the Death Penalty (TAEDP).

TAEDP wants to change the public impression of inmates, which is usually fixed at the moment they committed their crime.

"What this exhibit wants to signify is everyone can change," Lin Hsin-yi (), executive director of TAEDP said during the simple opening ceremony.

"Maybe we can't say every death row convict has become a better person, but the possibility of change is always there," she said, urging the government and the public to consider alternatives to the death penalty.

Guests included Beatrice Latteier, deputy director of the Trade Office of Swiss Industries; Chiu I-ling (), secretary-general of Amnesty International Taiwan; and Chen Chun-hung (), director of the National Human Rights Museum (NHRM).

"No scientific evidence has been produced to date to prove that the death penalty acts as a greater deterrence to potential offenders than other severe punishments," Latteier said in her remarks.

While acknowledging that it is a long process for societies to come to see the death penalty as a violation of human rights, Latteier stressed that educational work, debates and relevant projects are important to raise such awareness.

The exhibit is the brainchild of Cheng Hsing-tse (), who spent 14 years on death row accused of killing a police officer in 2002. He was freed in 2017 after evidence showing his innocence was accepted by the high court.

Aside from artwork, the organizer also recreated in the exhibit site a mock prison cell for death row prisoners, which is usually only 4.5 square meters, with a video projection that shows the daily routine of a prisoner inside the cell.

The exhibit will run until July 26, before moving to Miaoli County from Aug. 1-9 and, Tainan City from Aug. 22 to Sept. 3.

According to data from Taiwan's Ministry of Justice, there are currently 38 death row prisoners awaiting execution, with the most recent execution carried out on April 1.

According to a survey released by National Chung Cheng University's department of criminology in February, 77.4 percent of respondents in Taiwan oppose the abolition of the death penalty.

Most other surveys in Taiwan also show popular support for keeping capital punishment as a way to provide justice for the victims and their families.

However, Lin told CNA that poll results vary depending on how survey questions are asked, citing research titled "For or against abolition of the death penalty: Evidence from Taiwan" by Chiu Hei-yuan (), a member of Taiwan's Academia Sinica, published in 2019.

(By Emerson Lim)

Enditem/AW

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Art exhibition featuring works by death row inmates opens in Taipei - Focus Taiwan News Channel

Dog and cat books to read this summer: Pet Connection – GoErie.com

From the story of a SEAL Team dog to "Cats for Dummies," this list can help you settle in for some great reading.

You've created a sourdough starter and baked bread until you don't have any more friends to give loaves to. You've planted a garden. You've learned how to knit. You've binged "Aggretsuko," "Bodyguard" and "Chef's Table." You've watched "Hamilton" three times. Isn't it time you settled down with a great book? Here's what to read, whether your jam is mysteries, cats, photography or dogs of war.

Most military working dogs, aka combat assault dogs, remain anonymous throughout their careers, but one broke out from the pack after participating in a high-level operation. Millions know the name of Cairo, the Belgian Malinois who took part in SEAL Team Operation Neptune Spear, which ended in the death of terrorist Osama bin Laden in 2011. In "No Ordinary Dog: My Partner From the SEAL Teams to the Bin Laden Raid" (St. Martin's Press), Cairo's handler Will Chesney and writer Joe Layden tell the story of Chesney and Cairo's training and careers as well as their love story. (Let's call it what it is.) The action-packed tale begins with Chesney's journey to become a SEAL, how his love of dogs led him to a role as a handler when dogs began to become valued SEAL Team members, their perilous work in Afghanistan, and how injuries separated them and brought them back together. No one should miss this story, so for kids there is "Warrior Dog: The True Story of a Navy SEAL and His Fearless Canine Partner," adapted for young readers.

Mystery writer Laurien Berenson continues her Melanie Travis series with "Game of Dog Bones" (Kensington Books), in which the standard poodle owner/schoolteacher and her family head to New York City to watch poodle maven Aunt Peg achieve the dream of a lifetime: judging the Non-Sporting Group at Westminster. But the occasion is marred afterward when Aunt Peg's nemesis, Victor Durbin, is found dead. Turns out he had a lot of enemies, for a number of good reasons. Travis seeks to nose out the killer before Aunt Peg is charged with Durbin's murder.

I've long thought of myself as a terrible photographer. I took an incomplete in the subject in my college journalism program, and only the advent of smartphones improved my ability to take good pictures I even won an award with one of them! But thanks to Andrew Marttila's new book "How to Take Awesome Photos of Cats" (Running Press Adult), I think I could finally advance from halfway decent snapshots of my pets with a phone camera to actually being able to operate a digital SLR and get great animal shots, both at home and on trips. Even if you're not that interested in photography, you'll enjoy the photos of adorable kittens and cats, but if you really want to take better pictures of your cats, this fun and practical guide will show you how.

Cat lovers will also want to check out three more books about their favorite four-footers. "Catlady: A Love Letter to Women and Their Cats" (Prestel), by Leah Reena Goren, features illustrated essays illuminating the ways cats have influenced the lives or careers of women, the friendships between women and cats, and how cats help make a home.

In "Decoding Your Cat" (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt), veterinary behaviorists have pulled together a guide to why cats do the things they do with information that may surprise and educate even those who consider themselves cat experts.

The third edition of "Cats for Dummies" (For Dummies) by Gina Spadafori, Dr. Lauren Demos and Dr. Paul Pion updates a classic with a new chapter on enrichment for indoor cats, including information on catios; a new chapter on helping community cats, including kitten fostering; and all new and updated medical material.

Finally, in "One Hundred Dogs and Counting: One Woman, Ten Thousand Miles and a Journey into the Heart of Shelters and Rescues" (Pegasus Books), Cara Sue Achterberg goes on an inspiring road trip to rural shelters and rescues seeking an answer to the unending stream of foster dogs that come to her door.

Pet Connection is produced by a team of pet-care experts headed by veterinarian Marty Becker and journalist Kim Campbell Thornton of Vetstreet.com. Joining them is dog trainer and behavior consultant Mikkel Becker.

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Dog and cat books to read this summer: Pet Connection - GoErie.com

Using masks to defeat the Invisible Chinese virus is Patriotic, says Trump, fifteen points behind Biden in the polls – MercoPress

Tuesday, July 21st 2020 - 06:35 UTC We are United in our effort to defeat the Invisible China Virus, and many people say that it is Patriotic to wear a face mask when you can't socially distance

US President Donald Trump promised on Monday to resume televised coronavirus briefings and spoke out in favor of mask-wearing - a marked change of tune as polls show him headed for election disaster.

With only just over 100 days until the election against Democrat Joe Biden, Trump is scrambling to respond to public anger over his troubled months-long handling of the pandemic. Since the virus first hit the United States, Trump has insisted that it will just disappear.

But that sunny claim is now badly strained even among loyal supporters, as they watch COVID-19 cases surge through populous Republican-led states such as Florida and Texas.

More widely, polls show public trust in Trump's management of the crisis tanking.

Throughout, he has sought to deny the seriousness of the problem, an attitude symbolized by his mockery of masks and refusal to back up doctors' recommendations for mass use.

Trump went some way to addressing that Monday with a tweeted picture of himself in a black mask with the presidential seal and a call for patriotism.

We are United in our effort to defeat the Invisible China Virus, and many people say that it is Patriotic to wear a face mask when you can't socially distance, Trump wrote. There is nobody more Patriotic than me, your favorite President!

However, his tweet stopped well short of endorsing calls from some for a nationwide mandate to wear masks in public.

Trump, a lifelong real estate salesman and more recently reality TV performer, said the real problem is that Americans just aren't hearing the right news.

So, likely from Tuesday he will resume the regular evening televised briefings from the White House that he gave until late April, often finding himself accused of giving confusing or misleading information.

I think it's a great way to get information out to the public, he told reporters. We're doing very well in so many different ways.

Trump has great faith in his ability before the cameras. He has transformed the image of the US presidency during his first term with unprecedented streams of press conferences, tweets and rallies.

In an interview with Fox News Sunday, he once again claimed that the virus, which has killed more than 140,000 Americans and caused massive economic disruption, would somehow go away by itself. I'll be right eventually, he said.

But with the virus on the rebound, he finds himself accused of failing to lead.

Biden has opened a double-digit lead in election polls, and an ABC/ Washington Post poll released Friday showed nearly two-thirds of Americans mistrust Trump on the coronavirus.

Trump, nevertheless, appears to be looking forward to his chance to get back to the briefing room podium.

We had very successful briefings. I was doing them and we had a lot of people watching, record numbers watching. In the history of cable television, there's never been anything like it, he said.

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Using masks to defeat the Invisible Chinese virus is Patriotic, says Trump, fifteen points behind Biden in the polls - MercoPress

Person of the week, boos and cheers – Majorca Daily Bulletin

Majorca's Bel Oliver.18-07-2020R.L.Person of the week

... was the now former tourism secretary of state, Majorca's Bel Oliver. While the island's tourism was principally concerning itself with masks and street closures, the tourism industry more broadly was up in arms about revelations regarding the Spanish government's Responsible Tourism Covid seal of approval. It seemed that anyone could apply for this seal and get one without any verification being made that there was compliance. The secretary of state's office was handing them out without checks and controls. The revelation made, and Bel Oliver suddenly had a new job - at the UN's World Tourism Organization. The business with the seal was purely coincidental, Spain's minister for industry, trade and tourism insisted.

For advances finally being made in creating a renewable energy infrastructure in Majorca. Endesa was given authorisation to start the construction of one of two photovoltaic plants near to the power station in Alcudia. The company has already begun construction of a plant in Llucmajor, and more are planned. With grants available to private investors to develop other plants, the hope is that by the end of next year a network will be emerging. There is, however, a problem, and an ironic one at that - the environmental impact. Objections are largely based on what these plants will do for the landscape.

For tourists behaving badly. While all the attention was on Magalluf's Punta Ballena and Arenal's Ballermann, an incident in the Santa Catalina area of Palma didn't attract quite the same level of interest. On Monday evening, a 43-year-old British tourist, who was staying somewhere in Calvia, had found himself in Santa Catalina. Clearly drunk, he was bothering diners and was deliberately coughing. He claimed to have Covid. The National Police were called. He resisted arrest and had to be restrained. He appeared before a court and was eventually released, a test having shown that he was negative for coronavirus.

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Viscosity Modifier Market: Future Forecast Assessed on the Basis of How the Industry is Predicted to Grow 2020-2025 |BASF, The DOW Chemical Company,…

Global Viscosity Modifier Market reports provide in-depth analysis of Top Players, Geography, End users, Applications, Competitor analysis, SWOT Analysis, Revenue, Price, Gross Margin, Market Share, Import-Export data, Trends and Forecast 2025.

Global Viscosity Modifier Market in-depth insights which includes the competitiveness of the trending players. this market report provides a basic overview of the industry including definitions, classifications, applications and chain structure. Analysts have carefully evaluated the milestones achieved by the Viscosity Modifier Market and the current trends that are likely to shape its future. Primary and secondary research methodologies have been used to put together an exhaustive report on the subject.

Leading players covered in the Viscosity Modifier market report: BASF, The DOW Chemical Company, Elementis PLC, Akzo Nobel N.V., Clariant AG, Lubrizol, Functional Products Inc., Nalco, Sea-Land Chemical Company, Soltex, Inc., W.R. Grace, AMETEK Brookfield, Sika Corporation U.S. and More

Get PDF sample copy of this report(Including impact of Covid-19)@: https://www.marketinforeports.com/Market-Reports/Request-Sample/121707

Market Segment By Type:MineralsHydrocolloidsSynthetic polymerOthers

Market Segment By Application:Paints & CoatingsCosmetics & ToiletriesOil & GasOthers

Regional Viscosity Modifier Market (Regional Output, Demand & Forecast by Countries):

North America (United States, Canada, Mexico)South America (Brazil, Argentina, Ecuador, Chile)Asia Pacific (China, Japan, India, Korea)Europe (Germany, UK, France, Italy)Middle East Africa (Egypt, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Iran) and More.

The latest report added by Market Info Reportsdemonstrates that the global Viscosity Modifier market will showcase a steady CAGR in the coming years. The research report includes a thorough analysis of market drivers, restraints, threats, and opportunities. It addresses the lucrative investment options for the players in the coming years. Analysts have offered market estimates at a global and regional level.

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Lovinas Amish Kitchen: Wedding memories and Mothers raisin pie – New Philadelphia Times Reporter

July 15 was our 27th anniversary. Lots of memories throughout the years since Joe and I were married.

This is what my mother wrote in her column in July 1993 about our wedding. Mother wrote, The weather was ideal for the wedding of daughter Lovina to Joe Eicher. Lots of work at such a time.

The Tuesday before the wedding, which was Thursday, July 15, about two dozen women came to help. They baked 90 pies (oatmeal, cherry, raisin, and rhubarb) and made 14 batches of nothings. Didnt really want that many pies, but that number came upon us before we knew or thought of it. Well anyways no worry to run out of pies.

Wednesday about a dozen girls came to peel potatoes, cut up vegetables for the dressing and make potato salad for which I had cooked a twenty-quart cooker full of potatoes.

Also, the tables were set and the last minute cleaning done. Our wash house or shed saw lots of life out there, as all the work was done in there to prepare for the wedding ceremony. Wednesday evening quite a few of our friends came to see the wedding tables, and refreshments were served to the ones that came. It was an enjoyable evening.

Then came the wedding day. We started to fry chicken (300 pounds) at 4:15 a.m. which was served for dinner. Had enough for supper too and also served boneless ham. Our meals consisted of chicken and noodles, gravy, mashed potatoes, dressing, chicken, buttered corn, green beans (which came out of our garden), pork and beans, potato salad, carrot salad, lettuce salad (plenty from the garden), hot peppers, Swiss cheese, fruit salad, tapioca pudding, pies, cakes, nothings, celery sticks, coffee, bread, rhubarb jam, and butter. There were around 18 skillets used to fry the chicken. We cooked three 20-quart cookers of potatoes for dinner for mashed potatoes and two 20-quart cookers for chicken and noodles. In the afternoon we again cooked over 3 twenty-quart cookers of potatoes to be mashed and more chicken and noodles for supper. Also 16 quarts of gravy.

There were 28 women to prepare the meals. We could seat 98 people in the house and 70 in the wash house. The tool shed was cleaned out where the wedding services were held and later used to set up a table for the children for the noon and evening meals. We had quite a crowd here for both meals. Well enough of this for now. What a relief to have it over with.

I have so many precious memories of mother and how much she did for her family.

Joe was called back in to work this week after being laid off since March 23. It sure is a relief to us to have his income coming in again.

Yesterday, son Benjamin turned 21, so he wanted the family to come home for supper.

He ordered out pizza and wings for all of us. What a treat is was! Chips, cheeseball and crackers, and ice cream were also added to the menu. I didnt get time to make a cake and didnt for daughter Lorettas birthday either. With son Josephs birthday coming up next week, it looks like we will have one cake for all the July birthdays. Its almost too much cake for one month if we have three. Benjamin said he wouldnt eat cake anyway, so he didnt care that there wasnt a cake.

Since I am running out of space, I will write about our family gathering at sister Leah and Pauls house next week.

I will share the recipe for Mothers raisin pie. God bless!

Raisin Pie

2 (8-inch) unbaked pie crusts

1 cup raisins

2 tablespoons clear gelatin

pinch of salt

1 cup sugar

1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar

1 cup water

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Use one crust to line an 8-inch pie pan. Cook the raisins with water to cover in a kettle over medium heat until plump and juicy, about 15 to 30 minutes. In a bowl, make a thickening with the gelatin, salt, sugar, vinegar, and water. Pour into the raisin mixture. Cook until the mixture is thick enough to stick to a spoon. Add more sugar if it is not sweet enough for you. Pour into the pie shell. Cover the top with the remaining pie crust and seal and flute the edges. Cut slits in the center for steam to escape. Bake for 30 minutes, until the top is golden brown. Makes 1 (8-inch) pie.

Lovinas Amish Kitchen is written by Lovina Eicher, Old Order Amish writer, cook, wife, and mother of eight. Readers can write to Eicher at PO Box 1689, South Holland, IL 60473 (please include a self-addressed stamped envelope for a reply); or email LovinasAmishKitchen@MennoMedia.org and your message will be passed on to her to read. She does not personally respond to emails.

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Lovinas Amish Kitchen: Wedding memories and Mothers raisin pie - New Philadelphia Times Reporter

Fox News and a dog: The origins of "Jeffrey Epstein didn’t kill himself" – Film Daily

The Jeffrey Epstein saga continues as the son of a judge in the Epstein case was murdered over the weekend. Ghislaine Maxwell is currently in court for her involvement with Epsteins sex trafficking ring and now fears for her life. Back in November 2019 a former US Navy SEAL voiced his opinion on what happened to Epstein in a surprising way on Fox News.

The former US Navy SEAL, Mike Ritland, was on Fox News to discuss the dog who helped US troops raid and kill an Isis leader last week. Before Ritland left the broadcast he had one final PSA: If you dont know what youre doing dont buy a military dog, and Epstein didnt kill himself. Of course, the first part makes sense, but its strange that he would blurt out something about Jeffrey Epsteins death.

Ritlands statement was well before we knew just how deep the Epstein rabbit hole really went. His appearance turned Epstein didnt kill himself into a slogan that spread across social media and eventually became a meme. The Jeffrey Epstein didnt kill himself meme spread across Facebook, Twitter, TikTok, and Instagram.

The Jeffrey Epstein didnt kill himself meme wasnt just isolated to the internet. The meme would be featured on Mardi Gras parade floats, specialty branded beers, cryptocurrencies, holiday-themed merchandise, and would even appear graffitied on Art Basel walls. From a simple segment with a Navy SEAL and his dog, the question of what happened to Jeffrey Epstein grew into the circus that it is today.

Federal prosecutors have tried to discourage the spread of the Epstein murder theory, but have found that it has taken on a life of its own. Some people see the proliferation of this meme as a sign of growing populist sentiment, as well as a growing distrust for the government and elites. Others have pointed out that this may be a way to keep the Jeffrey Epstein story alive within the news cycle.

Its hard to say why Ritland felt it was so important to share his opinion on Jeffrey Epsteins death, but as a former US Navy SEAL he does have a certain amount of authority that gives him credibility. We cant say whether Ritland had some secret insider information, or if he was just stirring the pot, but he has been mostly quiet about his opinion since the Fox News interview.

Regardless of Ritlands opinion, the Jeffrey Epstein conspiracy theories have continued to multiply. After Epsteins death on August 10th, 2019, a Rasmussen poll was conducted and found that only 29% of US adults believed that Epstein killed himself. By January 2020 a new Rasmussen poll showed that number shrank to 21%. Whether this was a direct result of Ritlands appearance on Fox News is hard to say.

What we do know is that as the Jeffrey Epstein case continues to garner publicity and with it a growing number of theories as to whats really going on behind the scenes. With the recent murder of a judges son, we can only assume that those behind the Epstein case are still powerful and still have something to hide.

Its also unclear yet whether Ghislaine Maxwell will provide enough names and evidence for the courts to expand their Jeffrey Epstein investigation. Maxwell has expressed fears that her life may be in danger now that shes detained, and the court has ensured that shes under constant supervision while locked up.

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Fox News and a dog: The origins of "Jeffrey Epstein didn't kill himself" - Film Daily

Bitcoin SV DevCon 2020: Craig Wright wants to make the world better with Bitcoin – CoinGeek

Since he was young, Dr. Craig Wright has been fascinated with coding. In his fireside chat at the Bitcoin SV DevCon 2020 virtual event, Dr. Wright talked about his passion for coding, why he has a very strong drive to make the world better, and the future of Bitcoin.

Dr. Wrights fireside chats are among the events that everyone in the digital currency and blockchain industries awaits eagerly. The latest one didnt disappoint, with Bitcoins creator delving into the technical side of Bitcoin while also sharing more about what drives him.

Dr. Wright started coding when he was a kid, creating games to fight boredom. His love for creating has led him to grow his skills over the years, ultimately culminating in the creation of Bitcoin. Discipline has been one of his core values, he told nChain CTO Steve Shadders.

Dr. Wright is also quite passionate about educating people, saying,

If we want to get past this post-modern, deconstructionist, anti-life and nihilistic view of the world, then we have to have people who are involved and educated. I want to live in a world thats better. That means people who are engaged in society, who are active and understand the issues affecting them.

Dr. Wright also delved into the technical aspects of Bitcoin. On whether we should bring back substring opcodes, Satoshi believes that we may be past that as Bitcoin goes into application stage. Such changes would now affect third parties who are building on the Bitcoin blockchain.

Dr. Wright further revealed why he chose to use Forth language in developing Bitcoin.

Forth is very small and efficient. Its a language Ive used a lot in my past. Its very easy to write good code that you can find the errors and validate the results very quickly. [] If you screw up on Forth, it might work. If you screw up on Java, it might work, but every now and again, you get strange results.

The Bitcoin creator has gone through trying times, both from within the Bitcoin world and beyond, but he says he is still proud about many things that his invention has introduced the world to. One of these is the accelerated pace of adoption in recent years. With the number of applications building on top of Bitcoin rising by the day, its only a matter of time before the world is running on Bitcoin, he concluded.

The thing that makes me happy about Bitcoin is that people are finally starting to get it.

New to Bitcoin? Check out CoinGeeksBitcoin for Beginnerssection, the ultimate resource guide to learn more about Bitcoinas originally envisioned by Satoshi Nakamotoand blockchain.

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Bitcoin SV DevCon 2020: Craig Wright wants to make the world better with Bitcoin - CoinGeek

As other inflation hedges enjoy moment in the sun, bitcoin stays stuck in the doldrums – Yahoo Finance

Investors are increasingly looking to snap up safeguards for their portfolios to hedge against rising inflation a trend that could benefit assets spanning gold to bitcoin.

Indeed, reporting from the Financial Times last week noted that money has been pouring into funds that invest in TIPS (Treasury inflation-protected securities). According to the publication, more than $5 billion has moved into funds invested in the bonds, which aim to protect investors from spikes in consumer prices. Gold is also enjoying a moment, trading up more than 19% since the beginning of the year and recently crossing $1,800 for the first time since 2011.

The thinking among investors is that inflation could pick up as a result of recent monetary policy actions from various central banks. Other factors include a further decline in the price of the U.S. dollar, as noted by the FT's Michael Mackenzie. U.S. consumer prices rebounded in June after three months of declines, the highest increase in more than eight years.

Still, the Federal Reserves' flagship inflation gauge declined to 1.7%, below the Fed's 2% target.

The average expected inflation over the next five years stands at 1.57%, far below the 2.2% post-financial crisis average. The expected breakeven inflation, meanwhile, stands at 1.35%, below the post-recession average of 1.7%. Typically, a rising breakeven inflation rate is associated with a rosier economic outlook among investors. It also can be "interpreted as the inflation rate that market participants anticipate to hold in the future," specifically over five years.

In any case, bitcoin appears stuck in an extended period of doldrums the digital asset has traded within a tight range between $9,000 and $9,300 since the end of June.

2020The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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As other inflation hedges enjoy moment in the sun, bitcoin stays stuck in the doldrums - Yahoo Finance

Freedom in the face of mandates for masks – CatholicPhilly.com

Father Eugene Hemrick

By Father Eugene Hemrick Catholic News Service Posted July 17, 2020

Mandating face masks is unconstitutional and an affront to my freedom. Despite the scientific wisdom of this mandate, some citizens vociferously reject it.

In the book, Habits of the Heart: Individualism and Commitment in American Life, researchers found, Freedom is perhaps the most resonant, deeply held American value.

They further pointed out, In some ways, it defines the good in both personal and political life. Yet freedom turns out to mean being left alone by others, not having other peoples values, ideas or styles of life forced upon one, being free of arbitrary authority in work, family and political life. What it is that one might do with freedom is much more difficult for Americans to define.

What then are we doing with it?

If it is viewed from the standpoint of self-concentration, this leads to self-imprisonment, the opposite of being free. We are social beings meant to encounter others. If people center specifically on self-rights to the detriment of others rights and are dismissive of those others, their genuine self is damaged.

On the contrary, when genuine people assume an importance greater than their own affairs, I-thou relationships, the basis of true love, happen, creating respectful attentiveness to one another.

The best way to beat COVID-19 is to unify. The motto In unity there is strength reminds us of this. Rugged individuals going their own way reminds us of another saying: And divided we fall.

Protesting mandates raises the questions, Does this reflect a lack of in-depth thinking? Do those protesting free themselves from their surrounding environment and go deeply within themselves to learn what their conscience dictates?

Granted, it is difficult to possess an interior life in our chaotic times. The pandemic, however, will be conquered only by thoughtful people with a moral conscience.

Morality is the sum of what ought to be done, the good. The good ought to be done, not because the alternative would be unpleasant or harmful, but on account of its own worth.

Do masks have a worth of their own? Where is the worth in rejecting them? Freedoms worth is the good it ultimately produces for the common good.

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Freedom in the face of mandates for masks - CatholicPhilly.com

US Rep. Bill Johnson: Williams is worthy of Presidential Medal of Freedom – The Tribune – Ironton Tribune

EDITORS NOTE: U.S. Rep. Bill Johnson released the following statement this week, regarding efforts to lead a letter to President Donald Trump urging him to bestow the Presidential Medal of Freedom upon Hershel Woody Williams, of Cabell County, West Virginia:

Now 96 years old, Mr. Williams has not slowed down. He continues to advocate for veterans by speaking with both children and adults. Additionally, he has advocated for countless pieces of legislation to assist veterans and their families to help heal the wounds of war. His 75 years of service and dedication to the legacy of American heroes since returning from the Pacific Theater in World War II is deserving of this prestigious honor.

Williams established the Hershel Woody Williams MOH Foundations Gold Star Families Memorial Monument movement. To date, 60 monuments have been erected honoring Gold Star Families, helping to bring them peace and raising public awareness about the ultimate sacrifice made by their loved ones. He has a goal of placing at least Gold Star Family Memorial Monument in all 50 states.

For more on the life of Williams, see this weekends edition of The Ironton Tribune, in which he was interviewed for our special section on the upcoming 75th anniversary of the end of World War II.

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US Rep. Bill Johnson: Williams is worthy of Presidential Medal of Freedom - The Tribune - Ironton Tribune

Blend into an Immersive Virtual Experience of Art and Freedom at Joaquin Restrepo’s Exhibition "Amor Fati" – Pro News Report

(ProNewsReport Editorial):- Florida City, Jul 20, 2020 (Issuewire.com)Contemporary artist Joaquin Restrepo launched his solo exhibition Amor Fati in the United States to find freedom amid the pandemic. A thematic idea resonating with his immersive art, he is utilizing the freedom of creative choices and expressing his insights through the virtues of the exhibition.

Restrepos work talks about oppression, loving fate, seeing freedom within, and moving forward in the constant volatility of life and existence. Since the beginning of the quarantine, the contemporary artist has relentlessly composed and constructed new contemporary art through which he expresses the dire indispensability of extracting goodness from everyone. Amor Fati is inevitably a virtual exhibition, launched in the times of the pandemic and is an invitation to introspection, to be able to grow in the process and self-knowledge. The vision of the artist shows how we can continue and be better during difficult times through his exquisite art. The exhibition was planned to open to the public during the summer of 2020, at the Lake County Museum of Art in Florida, nevertheless, given the closings of international flights, Restrepo together with the museum decided to reinvent his proposal and present the message of his works in the digital world.

According to Joaquin Restrepo, the present time should be utilized in deciphering the true meaning of freedom and conquer our fears and demons that hold us back from attaining true liberation. From a very young age, Restrepo grew up with a knack for mixing art and technology, two of his great passions, as a way to explore a new world through a universal language. Born in 1984 and at the age of 19, he started his artistic career. His works have been exhibited in the United States, Mexico, Colombia, and Asia.

The Amor Fati exhibition can be visited free through iOS devices (iPhone and iPad) and Android by downloading it from the respective app stores (AppStore and GooglePlay). Visithttps://joaquinrestrepo.com/for more information.

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Blend into an Immersive Virtual Experience of Art and Freedom at Joaquin Restrepo's Exhibition "Amor Fati" - Pro News Report

Freedom School gave area students a voice on issues this summer – The Daily Progress

For five weeks, nearly 70 area elementary school students gathered virtually to read books and learn about civic engagement as part of the University of Virginias first Freedom School.

The free summer program from the Curry School of Education and Human Development was part of an initiative from the Childrens Defense Fund, which created the model for Freedom Schools that includes culturally responsive teaching materials. UVas program is the third such school in Virginia and one of 181 nationwide, according to the defense fund.

The last week of the Freedom School gave students a chance to show off posters made for the Childrens Defense Fund National Day of Social Action. The posters, displayed at their homes, focused on what the students think is important. Many talked about Black Lives Matter, encouraging adults to vote for Black rights. Other posters asked adults to vote for COVID to go away and others supported votes in favor of animal rights and cartoons.

Even if theyre not old enough to vote, they can still have a voice within whats happening, said Johari Harris, an assistant research professor and project director of the Charlottesville Freedom School. They are still very much a part of this movement.

The Freedom School model, which is rooted in the 1964 Mississippi Freedom Summer project, was well-suited to help students incorporate current events, such as the pandemic and protests, into their oral history projects.

[CDF is] very much focused on social movements and empowering students to be like civic actors in their local, state and national community, Harris said, adding that the curriculum also emphasizes cultures and narratives that have been traditionally marginalized.

The UVa team, like other programs this year, had to switch to a virtual model because of the pandemic. Harris said going virtual allowed them to open up more slots for interested students. About 70 students from Charlottesville and Albemarle County schools started the program.

During the five weeks, the students, whom the program refers to as scholars, went on virtual field trips to Monticello and to the Civil Rights Trail and worked on oral history projects. Each morning of the session focused on literacy skills through a live online program. Classes started at 9:30 a.m. daily.

In the afternoons, the scholars had one-on-one sessions with their teachers for tutoring and relationship-building. There also were optional movie nights.

Harris said Charlottesville and Albemarle schools provided the technology and hotspots, if needed, for students. They also had a bi-weekly pickup of materials where families could get school supplies, T-shirts and books.

The Curry School's Center for Race and Public Education in the South partnered with Charlottesville City Schools to bring the program to the area.

Given the events in of August 2017, our colleagues in the center and members of the Charlottesville community thought a Freedom School could serve as a concrete way for the university and local community to collaborate on a project serving children, Derrick Alridge, a UVa professor and director of the center, said in a news release. Grounded in ideals of freedom and social justice, we believe a Freedom School could help bring about healing in Charlottesville and show our collective commitment to advancing civil rights and social justice in our time.

Charlottesville teacher Christen Edwards oversaw the day-to-day operations as the site coordinator.

Harris credited Edwards, the program staff, their partners and the students parents for helping to make the first Freedom School successful.

When there were technology issues, they were working through it, being patient with us and helping their children kind of engage with us, Harris said.

The Freedom School was open to any student in third through fifth grade, and UVa students helped to teach the different sessions.

Its been pretty incredible, Harris said. Speaking as project director, I was a little nervous. It was virtual programming in the middle of a pandemic.

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Freedom School gave area students a voice on issues this summer - The Daily Progress

The Risk of Too Many Freedom of Navigation Operations – The Diplomat

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For the second time since June, a U.S. Navy guided-missile destroyer conducted a freedom of navigation operation (FONOP) in the Caribbean Sea off thecoast of Venezuela last Wednesday. For the first time in three decades, U.S. warships in May conducted FONOPs in the Barents Sea near Russias northern coast. And with increasing regularity, U.S. Navy warships press the envelope of challenging Chinese maritime claims with FONOPs as close as 12 nautical miles from Chinese-claimed territory.

Before a mistake or miscalculation results in an armed clash involving a U.S. naval vessel which could draw the United States into a serious conflict we need to examine the utility of aggressive FONOPs.

The ultimate purpose for any military operation away from U.S. shores ought to be the security and prosperity of the country. Any operation or action contributing to that objective should be given serious consideration, but anything that has an unacceptable chance of harming U.S. interests should be rejected. FONOPs, as currently practiced, are increasing the chances the United States will one day stumble into a war.

Given the expansion in the number of FONOPs against China, the increase in such operations targeting Russia, and the now-expanding operations into South America, the assumption would be that multiple navies are threatening U.S. freedom on the seas. Nothing could be further from the truth.

Civilian maritime traffic worldwide is shared online to give a real-time update of where global trade is taking place on the seas. You dont have to be an expert to look at thelive mapat any time to see that there are no gaps near Russia, China, or Venezuela that would signal the need for a muscular American naval response. No one is threatening to block traffic.

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To the contrary, China and Russia especially are highly dependent on international trade andneedsea traffic to continue unimpeded; they would be the first to lose should either engage in shutting down traffic on the seas.

Like any military organization, it is a necessity to exercise the U.S. Navy to maintain proficiency in its core warfighting skills. They need to be ready, on a moments notice, to defend the United States global interests, to repulse any attack, and to viciously punish any who dare strike us. This level of proficiency allows the U.S. to effectively deter any attack but also provides the muscle to defeat any opponent if deterrence fails.

To maintain this level of deterrence and war-winning capacity, the U.S. Navy needs to conduct regular, prudent global patrols and exercises to maintain warfighting proficiency. Doing so will ensure security and economic freedom for U.S. companies and business interests without unnecessarily provoking adversaries to take action against our interests.

One doesnt have to be an apologist for any foreign power to recognize that continual patrols with powerful warships close to their shores is going to precipitate a response. If the Chinese navy were to challenge U.S. supremacy in the Pacific and Atlantic oceans by building naval bases near the U.S. coast and regularly sailing within 12 miles of U.S. shores, Washington would not passively acknowledge their rights of transiting international waters.

Perhaps more critically, Washington should encourage friendly regional states and allies to enhance their own security via anti-access, area denial (A2/AD) self-defense capabilities. China has become an expert at A2/AD technologiesand has made any attack on its territory or forces to be an expensive and deadly prospect.

The best way the United States can accomplish its objectives in the Asia-Pacific region is to encourage allies and other friendly states to invest much more heavily in their own A2/AD capabilities that would deter China from attempting to take any of them by military force. Doing so places the responsibility for self-defense more heavily on each country where it belongs and less on asking the U.S. Navy and Air Force to underwrite regional security for states that can afford to invest more in their own defense needs.

FONOPs have a place in Americas tool chest, but only if used sparingly and wisely. Relying too heavily on such operations disincentivizes allied and friendly countries from investing in their own defense, placing an unnecessary burden on U.S. forces and increases the risk the United States may one day be sucked into a war it should never have fought.

Get first-read access to major articles yet to be released, as well as links to thought-provoking commentaries and in-depth articles from our Asia-Pacific correspondents.

Daniel L. Davis is a Senior Fellow for Defense Priorities and a former Lt. Col. in the U.S. Army who retired in 2015 after 21 years, including four combat deployments. Follow him @DanielLDavis1.

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The Risk of Too Many Freedom of Navigation Operations - The Diplomat

Napolitano: A brief history of the freedom of speech in America – Daily Herald

I disagree with what you say but will defend to the death your right to say it. Voltaire (1694-1778)

When Thomas Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence, he included in it a list of the colonists grievances with the British government. Notably absent were any complaints that the British government infringed upon the freedom of speech.

In those days, speech was as acerbic as it is today. If words were aimed at Parliament, all words were lawful. If they were aimed directly and personally at the king as Jeffersons were in the Declaration they constituted treason.

Needless to say, Jefferson and the 55 others who signed the Declaration would all have been hanged for treasonous speech had the British prevailed.

Of course, the colonists won the war, and, six years afterward, the 13 states ratified the Constitution. Two years after ratification, the Constitution was amended by adding the Bill of Rights. The first ratified amendment prohibited Congress from doing what the colonists never seriously complained about the British government doing infringing upon the freedom of speech.

James Madison, who drafted the Bill of Rights, insisted upon referring to speech as the freedom of speech, so as to emphasize that it preexisted the government. If you could have asked Madison where he believed the freedom of speech came from, hed have said it was one of the inalienable rights Jefferson wrote about in the Declaration.

Stated differently, each of the signatories of the Declaration and ratifiers of the Bill of Rights manifested in writing their unambiguous belief that the freedom of speech is a natural right personal to every human. It does not come from the government. It comes from within us. It cannot be taken away by legislation or executive command.

Yet, a mere seven years later, during the presidency of John Adams, Congress enacted the Alien and Sedition Acts, which punished speech critical of the government.

So, how could the same generation in some cases the same human beings that prohibited congressional infringement upon speech have enacted a statute that punished speech?

To some of the framers the Federalists who wanted a big government as we have today infringing upon the freedom of speech meant silencing it before it was uttered. Today, this is called prior restraint, and the Supreme Court has essentially outlawed it.

To the antifederalists or Democratic-Republicans, as they called themselves the First Amendment prohibited Congress from interfering with or punishing any speech.

Adams Department of Justice indicted and prosecuted and convicted antifederalists among them a congressman for their critical speech.

When Jefferson won the presidency and the antifederalists won control of Congress, the Federalists repealed the speech suppression parts of the Alien and Sedition Acts on the eve of their departure from congressional control, lest it be used against them.

During the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln locked up hundreds of journalists in the North who were critical of his war efforts. During World War I, President Woodrow Wilson whom my alma mater Princeton University is trying to erase from its memory arrested folks for reading the Declaration of Independence aloud or singing German beer hall songs.

Lincoln argued that preserving the Union was more important than preserving the First Amendment, and Wilson argued that the First Amendment only restrained Congress, not the president. Both arguments have since been rejected by the courts.

In the 1950s, the feds successfully prosecuted Cold War dissenters on the theory that their speech was dangerous and might have a tendency to violence. Some of the victims of this torturous rationale died in prison.

The governments respect for speech has waxed and waned. It is at its lowest ebb during wartime. Of course, dissent during wartime which challenges the governments use of force to kill is often the most important and timely speech.

It was not until 1969, in a case called Brandenburg v. Ohio, that the Supreme Court gave us a modern definition of the freedom of speech. Brandenburg harangued a crowd in Hamilton County, Ohio, and urged them to march to Washington and take back the federal government from Blacks and Jews, whom he argued were in control. He was convicted in an Ohio state court of criminal syndicalism basically, the use of speech to arouse others to violence.

The Supreme Court unanimously reversed his conviction and held that all innocuous speech is absolutely protected, and all speech is innocuous when there is time for more speech to rebut it. The same Supreme Court had just ruled in Times v. Sullivan that the whole purpose of the First Amendment is to encourage and protect open, wide, robust, even caustic and unbridled speech.

The speech we love needs no protection. The speech we hate does. The government has no authority to evaluate speech. As the framers understood, all persons have a natural right to think as we wish and to say and publish whatever we think. Even hateful, hurtful and harmful speech is protected speech.

Yet, in perilous times like the present, we have seen efforts to use the courts to block the publication of unflattering books. We have seen state governors use the police to protect gatherings of protesters with whose message they agreed and to disburse critical protesters. We have seen mobs silence speakers while the police did nothing.

Punishing speech is the most dangerous business because there will be no end to it. The remedy for hateful or threatening speech is not silence or punishments; it is more speech speech that challenges the speaker.

Why do folks in government want to silence their opponents? They fear an undermining of their power. The dissenters might make more appealing arguments than they do. St. Augustine taught that nearly all in government want to tell others how to live.

How about we all say whatever we want and the government leaves us alone?

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Napolitano: A brief history of the freedom of speech in America - Daily Herald

Denver voters will decide if they want to give their city council members more freedom to spend taxpayer money – Denverite

2020, the year of Unexpected Big Things Happening, might help you understand whats behind the push from the citys legislative branch.

If voters allow it, the Denver City Council will gain a little power over the citys purse come November.

The year is a little over halfway over and 2020 has already given Denverites a public health emergency and a movement against racist policing. Covid-19 testing kits, emergency shelters, overtime pay for police officers responding to protests and the weapons they used on protesters all cost money.

Denvers mayor has the sole authority to initiate spending changes mid-year. Also: The mayor and (to a far lesser extent) the Denver City Council decide how to spend our money six months before each year begins. As City Councilwoman Robin Kniech told Denverite last year, Problems do not always run on a budget cycle.

So Kniech sponsored an initiative that would give her and her fellow legislators the power to initiate spending adjustments mid-year in the event of a future public emergency or a windfall from, say, an opioid settlement.

On Monday, the council referred the measure to taxpayers by a vote of 12 to 0 with Councilwoman Debbie Ortega absent.Denverites will see the question on their November 3 ballot.

Mayor Michael Hancock does not support the ballot measure, spokesman Mike Strott said via email. Strott said that the recent unexpected and unprecedented economic volatility demonstrates that mid-year budget changes are irresponsible. While Kniech floated the bill to add nimbleness, Brendan Hanlon, the citys chief financial officer, thinks it will hinder the citys ability to respond to economic challenges.

Brendan Hanlon articulated concerns about the proposal, which include: undermining our conservative budget practices, compromising the citys bond rating, inhibiting accurate forecasting ability and leaving the city vulnerable to revenue volatility, Strott stated. There is also a history of successful collaboration with council on mid-year budget items, as they arise.

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Denver voters will decide if they want to give their city council members more freedom to spend taxpayer money - Denverite

Parkland softball completes day of comebacks with win over Freedom, earns showcase title – lehighvalleylive.com

The first inning wasnt kind to the Parkland softball team on Thursday at Coca-Cola Park.

But the rest of the frames were just about perfect as the Trojans took home the Lehigh Valley High School Softball Showcase title.

Parkland rallied from a 3-0 deficit in the first inning against Northampton to earn a 4-3 semifinal victory.

Following that win, the Trojans kept the comeback magic going, shaking off a 2-0 first-inning deficit to beat Freedom 6-2 in the championship game.

Its definitely great because we didnt have our senior year, Parkland senior catcher Giana Schick said. I got to play with my girls again. And catch for Katie (Zaun). Shes a junior, so that was nice. I didnt get to have that season with her. And we played great.

Schick broke a 2-2 tie with an RBI single in the third inning against Freedom.

Parkland senior left fielder Andrea Thomas then broke the game open in the next at-bat and made it 6-2 with a three-run homer to left field.

For Thomas, hitting a homer at Coca-Cola Park, a place she has frequented as a fan, was very exciting.

This was on my bucket list, Thomas said about playing at the home of the Lehigh Valley IronPigs.

Parkland junior pitcher Katie Zaun took home the tournament MVP award with another strong outing, shutting out the Patriots in the final six innings. After a very impressive first day of the tournament, Zaun held Northampton scoreless in the final four frames of the semifinal on Thursday.

Schick, Thomas and senior third baseman Alison Superka all had a pair of hits in the championship game. Superka had the go-ahead two-run double in the semifinal victory over Northampton.

Freedom junior right fielder Gabby Glick went 3-for-4 in the championship game.

Senior pitcher Juliana Presto added a pair of hits for the Patriots.

This was about JP. She was our only senior in the tournament. And this was about her, Freedom coach Michele Laubach said. At one point, I said to her, were down 6-2, I said, its up to you. Do you want to keep hurling or do you want to play third?' And shes like, Im going to throw.' I said, this is for you.

In between the semifinals and the championship game, there was a senior ceremony featuring more than 60 seniors from the teams that participated in the three-day tournament. Each of the seniors were introduced as they walked alongside their parents and then greeted their coaches at home plate.

I dont think we could ask for anything better than a beautiful three days of the event, said Laubach, who was the main organizer of the tournament. Just today at Coca-Cola Park, it really was a very neat experience.

It was another championship for a Parkland softball program that has won six Eastern Pennsylvania Conference crowns in a row and five District 11 titles in the last six seasons.

Its a great tradition. Im so glad that I got to be a part of it, said Schick, who will play at Manhattanville College in New York. My coaches definitely molded me and set me ready to go to college. We have titles. And its just a great experience with all the girls.

Thank you for relying on us to provide the journalism you can trust. Please consider supporting lehighvalleylive.com with a voluntary subscription.

Josh Folck may be reached at jfolck@lehighvalleylive.com.

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Parkland softball completes day of comebacks with win over Freedom, earns showcase title - lehighvalleylive.com

Let Freedom Ring Wherever the People’s Rights Are Trampled Upon": What We Can Learn From Nelson Mandela Today – TIME

When Nelson Mandela became the first democratically elected president in South African history in 1994, the world looked like a very different place. His election was a symbol of a new birth of freedom around the world. The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1991 and the end of the Cold War had helped spur a democratic revolution not only in South Africa but around the world. Between the start of the 1990s and 2005, the number of democracies on the planet increased from about a third of nations to nearly half. Mandela himself was a global icon not only of democracy but pluralism, and his triumph seemed to spell the end of an era of authoritarianism and ethnic nationalism.

Now, as we celebrate Mandela Day on July 18than international day of servicewe are in the midst of a global coronavirus pandemic, and democracy and pluralism are under attack in every region on earth. From Poland to Turkey, from Russia to Brazil, ethnic nationalism is ascendant, and authoritarian leaders and autocratic regimes are undermining the ability of people to vote, eroding the independence of judiciaries, curtailing freedom of speech and of the press. According to the non-profit Freedom House, we are in the 14th straight year of a global decline in freedom. In America, not only are we suffering from the pandemic, but there is a powerful national movement against racial and cultural inequities, while we have a president who is closer in spirit to the racist apartheid leaders whom we thought Mandela had consigned to the dustbin of history.

When I worked with Mandela on writing his autobiography Long Walk to Freedom, I had a little mantra that I would say to myself: WWNMD? What Would Nelson Mandela Do? Its an excellent guide to life, but not an easy one to live up to. Mandela never took the path of least resistance. Yes, he would compromise, but he wouldnt compromise on his core principle which was achieving democracy for his people. Nelson Mandela was by nature an optimist, but he was as hard-headed as they come. He did not embrace the consoling view of history that, as Martin Luther King said (in a line often quoted by Barack Obama), the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice. For him, justice was never inevitable. If the world was going to bend toward justice, he would have to do the bending himself.

Mandela never saw America as a shining city on a hill. In fact, the president who first used that phraseRonald Reaganregarded Mandela as a terrorist and his government supported the South African apartheid regime during the Cold War. (Mandela was only officially removed from U.S. terrorist watch lists in 2008.) In his unpublished prison journal, written in the 1970s while he was on Robben Island, Mandela said that while he had American friends and supporters, I hate all forms of imperialism and consider the U.S. brand the most loathsome and contemptible. In our many hours of interviews for the book, Mandela told me how, when he was underground in the 1960s, he had sought help for his organization, the ANC, from the U.S. and other Western nations and was always rebuffed. He was well aware of reporting at the time that the CIA had tipped off South African police as to his whereabouts when he was underground. I remember when I was working with him in 1993 there was an evening event in Johannesburg celebrating the end of apartheid with then Vice President Al Gore as the guest of honor. Mandela smiled at me and said, You Americans think you ended apartheid.

Mandela admired Dr. King and followed the American civil rights movement closely. One enormous difference, which Mandela understood better than anyone, was that in South Africa, Black people were a repressed and disenfranchised majority, not a minority. Mandela welcomed the protests led by Dr. King as he would have the Black Lives Matter demonstrations. Mandela organized and led many protest campaigns himself in the 1950s, but it was the Sharpeville demonstration in 1960, in which 69 Black protesters were shot to death by the white police that led him to part ways with Dr. Kings commitment to non-violence. Shortly after that demonstration, he journeyed down to Natal to meet with Chief Albert Luthuli, then the head of the African National Congress (ANC), to argue that the organization needed to embrace the armed struggle. He, of course, opposed the decision, Mandela told me, because he was a man who believed in non-violence as principle. Whereas I believed in non-violence as a strategy, which could be changed at any time the conditions demanded it.

For Mandela, freedom and democracy for his people were the single highest undeviating goal which justified the use of nearly any means to get there. When he visited the U.S. in 1990, shortly after his release but before he became president, he was asked over and over by the American press whether he would renounce violence in his struggle for freedom. He refused to do so. In Atlanta, he was greeted by a small crowd of protesting white supremacists and former members of the Ku Klux Klan. In his speech in Atlanta, he ended by saying, Let freedom ring wherever the peoples rights are trampled upon.

In 1995, President Mandela created the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), which was a public commission to look at the roots of apartheid and racial injustice. That was the Truth part. The Reconciliation part was that people could come forward and confess their crimes and receive amnesty. Many white policemen and security officials did so. The Commission electrified South Africa and became a vehicle for transcending the countrys deep divides. For Mandela, it confirmed his belief that forgiveness helps both the forgiven and the forgiver. Indeed, it was powerful to see the relatives of men and women who were murdered by the old apartheid government forgive their former oppressors.

A handful of American cities like Greensboro, N.C. have had local truth and reconciliation commissions, and now Boston, Philadelphia and San Francisco are planning similar ones. A number of legislators, including Congresswoman Barbara Lee, California, have called for a national TRC to look at the history of slavery and discrimination. The South African example is a powerful precedent for America. A national Truth and Reconciliation Commission coupled with a serious look at the idea of reparations is a way to seek closure on a dreadful aspect of our history. As Mandela used to say, its never too late to do the right thing.

So many people over the years have said to me that its extraordinary that Mandela could forgive his own oppressors. I always smile to myself because I knew how deeply wounded he was by his own past and his suffering. But he understood that as a leader and symbol, he must always project forgiveness, and he never ever failed to do so. He understood that while it was impossible to truly forget the past, we must relinquish its hold over us.

In 1994, I remember driving with him to what would be his office in the Union Buildings in Pretoria, which had been the seat of the old apartheid government. As you drive into the imposing complex, you pass a 10-foot-high statue of J.B.M. Hertzog who was the prime minister of South Africa in the 1930s. Mandela smiled at it as we passed. In 2013, the statue of Hertzog was moved to a remote part of the grounds and replaced by an enormous bronze statue of Nelson Mandela with his arms raised in triumph.

Happy Nelson Mandela Day.

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Let Freedom Ring Wherever the People's Rights Are Trampled Upon": What We Can Learn From Nelson Mandela Today - TIME

Extraction of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) Market Share, Segmentation, Growth, Demand, Trends, Forecast To 2020-2024 – Cole of Duty

The growth of Global Extraction of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) Market is expected on account of many factors, such as an increase in disposable income, increasing international inbound and Extraction of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) and aging demography by 2024.

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Every market intelligence report is based on certain important parameters. It includes a meticulous analysis of market trends, market shares and revenue growth patterns and the volume and value of the market. Market studies are based on methodical researches. This report on Global Extraction of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) Market is also based on a meticulously structured methodology. These methods help to analyze markets on the basis of thorough research and analysis. Generally, research includes information about manufacturers, vendors, products, consumers, research papers and more.

The analysis part mostly includes qualitative and quantitative analysis of markets like business models, market forecasts, market segmentations and other aspects that help in analysis. Every market research study gives specified importance to manufacturers dwelling in that market. A detailed analysis of manufacturers or key players is essential for anyone seeking to jumpstart business in any market. Competitive analysis or competitor study includes detailed information of manufacturers business models, strategies, revenue growth and all the data required that would benefit the person conducting the market research. For new investors and business initiatives market research is a must as it gives them a direction and a plan of action to move forward keeping in mind their competitors.

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Market segmentation is also an important aspect of any market research report. Market segmentation is mostly based on demography, geography and behavior. It helps understand the consumers and their demands and behavior towards a particular product or market. Another important aspect covered in any market research report and is also a part of market segmentation is the regional study of the market. This section focusses on the regions with significant advancements in a particular market. Regional analysis of any market can give a detailed overview of regions which have more business opportunities, revenue generation potential and a forecast of next few years.

By Type

(Powder, Liquid, , , )

By Application

(Medicines and Health Care Products, Food Additive, Cosmetics, , )

For any new business establishment or business looking to upgrade and make impactful changes in their businesses, this particular section in a market report is very important. In this Global Extraction of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) Market report, the region highlighted the most is North America. For many markets this region is of extreme importance. This report gives detailed information of market size and price of this region and other important regions like South America, Asia, Europe and Middle East.

The report on Global Extraction of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) Market, is a comprehensive documentation that covers all the aspects of a market study and provides a concise conclusion to its readers.

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Extraction of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) Market Share, Segmentation, Growth, Demand, Trends, Forecast To 2020-2024 - Cole of Duty