ACSH Advisor Prof. Katherine Seley-Radtke’s War on COVID in Baltimore Sun – American Council on Science and Health

ACSHadvisor Dr. Katherine Seley-Radtke, a professor at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, an expert in antiviral drug development, was featured today in an article in the Baltimore Sun. "UMBC medicinal chemist working on antiviral drugs, a possible alternative to vaccines, for the coronavirus" describes Dr. Radtke'snovel and exciting approach to bringing down SARS-2-CoV, the virus that causes COVID-19. It's a must-read.

Reporter Haley Miller tells us howSeley-Radtkeapplied for an NIH grant in 2016 to study whether certain drugs might be effective against coronaviruses only to have the agency reject the application because 'such viruses as a minimal threat to the United States."

Let's put that one right up there with the Red Sox sale of Babe Ruth to the Yankees in 1920 for $125,000. Of course, because of the virus, neither the Red Sox nor the Yankees are playing baseball, butSeley-Radtke's work may enable the major league, as well as all other sports, to"wait till next year."

After the grant was deniedSeley-Radtke put aside her research and began to work on other viruses, such as Ebola and Zika. Miller writes, "But when COVID-19 swept into the United States in March and escalated into a deadly pandemic, her phone started ringing with demand for the same ideas dismissed just four years ago."

(See Prof.Seley-Radtke's and my opinion piece in the Baltimore Sun about why antiviral drugs may play an important role in controlling COVID-19).

More than two decades agoSeley-Radtkedeveloped potential antiviral drugbelonging to a new class called "fleximers." As the name implies, they are more flexible than standard antivirals.

The virus develops resistance to the drug over time, so you take a drug over and over until the virus figures out youre trying to kill it, and changes its binding site so it is no longer recognized...Our compounds we call them molecular chameleons ours adapt to different environments whereas more rigid drugs cant.

Prof. KetherineSeley-Radtke, July 16, 2020

Why a drug instead of a vaccine? Prof.Seley-Radtkesays, "Weve never been successful in developing vaccines for numerous viruses. Many of us in the antiviral field feel strongly that vaccines wont be the answer."

Indeed, this may be true. Despite enormous effort, no vaccines exist for HIV/AIDS, hepatitis C, or herpes simplex, but all three can be successfully treated with drugs.

Once the coronavirus began to reshape the world the grant money came flowing in.Seley-Radtke was able to pay three full-time student lab workers and collaborate with Cornell University to determine the toxicity ofthe drug in mice.

Seley-Radtkeis now working withEmergent Ventures, a venture capital firm run out of George Mason Universitys Mercatus Center. She was selected"because of antivirals potential to lower the death toll and associated health care costs from COVID-19." She isalso collaborating withHealion Bio, a Maryland biotech, which is developing a new class of antiviral compounds called Healions.

I'm not sure what she does in her spare time.

(Tomorrow: An interview with the professor about fleximers. The science is fascinating.)

See the article here:

ACSH Advisor Prof. Katherine Seley-Radtke's War on COVID in Baltimore Sun - American Council on Science and Health

Manipur drug smuggling case: Cop alleges pressured to favour accused, CM says no one will be spared – The Indian Express

Written by Jimmy Leivon | Imphal | Updated: July 15, 2020 9:12:22 am Manipur Chief Minister N Biren Singh said the government will not spare anyone who is involved in drugs smuggling.

Manipur Chief Minister N Biren Singh Tuesday said the BJP government in the state will not spare anyone who is involved in the 2018 drugs smuggling case. His statement comes a day after an officer in the Manipur Police, Th. Brinda, in an affidavit that she submitted in the High Court of Manipur, alleged that politicians, including a close acquaintance of the Chief Minister, and top police officers were involved in the case.

Our governments war against drugs will continue and no party involved, whether friend or relative, will be spared under the present BJP regime in the state, said CM Biren while refraining from further comments on the allegation levelled by the police officer who is the additional SP of Narcotic Police. The matter is sub judice, it would not be legally proper to comment, he added.

Brinda is facing a suo motu contempt case for her offensive remarks on Facebook allegedly undermining and criticising the judiciary after the alleged drug kingpin Lhukhosei Zhou was granted a three-week bail by the court of Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act in a 2018 drug smuggling case.

Zou, who was then serving as chairman of the Autonomous District Council (ADC), Chandel, was arrested by a team of the Narcotics and Affairs of Border in 2018 from his official quarters at Lamphel reportedly with 4.6 kilograms of heroin powder and 2,80,200 numbers of World is Yours tablets estimated to be worth around Rs 28 crore.

After a year into the trial, the drug lord jumped bail and was pronounced a proclaimed offender. Subsequently, his bail bonds were forfeited after he disappeared in 2019 from JNIMS hospital where he was admitted for treatment of gall bladder stones, high blood pressure and Hepatitis B.

After Zou disappeared from the hospital, he surrendered to the ND&PS court nearly a year later, claiming he was abducted from the hospital by a Kuki-based underground group and taken to Myanmar.

In the affidavit, Th. Brinda said pressure was mounted on her from different quarters, including a person claiming to be a close acquaintance of CM, and top police officers in favour of the accused drug accused.

She said such high-profile persons were looting the state and destroying the youth, and that the governments war on drugs was only eyewash.

In response, the Manipur Police refuted the allegations levelled by MPS Th Brinda as baseless and intended to malign the image of the officers she has named in her affidavit.

The Manipur Police department has been working sincerely and relentlessly in the ongoing war against drugs, the statement by W. Basu, the PRO of the police department, stated.

The department, right from the time of arrest of accused persons of the above mentioned case till the submission of charge sheet has been taking up all requisite legal action to ensure that all the involved accused persons are booked in accordance with the law, said the PRO.

The Indian Express is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel (@indianexpress) and stay updated with the latest headlines

For all the latest North East India News, download Indian Express App.

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Manipur drug smuggling case: Cop alleges pressured to favour accused, CM says no one will be spared - The Indian Express

What You Need To Know About A Roth IRA Now – Forbes

Celebrate more tax-free income with a ROTH IRA in 2020.

Roth IRAs have been around for more than 20 years, and many people may take them for granted. Even modest contributions over time can translate into a substantial amount of tax-free income throughout your retirement. The uber-rich may wish for the tax-free income potential, but they often make too much income to be able to contribute to this type of retirement account. For the rest of us, the responsibility to set up and fund a Roth IRA falls squarely on our shoulders.

Roth IRA BASICS

A Roth IRA is a type of retirement account. Unlike a Traditional IRA or 401(k), you will not receive a tax deduction when you make contributions, but your money will grow tax-free and can be withdrawn tax-free during retirement. (That's assuming you follow a few Roth IRA rules).

The good news for procrastinators is you can contribute to a Roth IRA when you are filing your taxes for the previous year. The sooner the contribution is made, the further into the future, your potential investment earnings will be sheltered from taxation.

For 2020, if you are married and filing jointly, each spouse can make a full $6,000 Roth IRA contribution if they have an AGI (adjusted gross income) of less than $196,000. For singles, that number is a bit lower at $124,000. Contribution limits drop if you earn more than these amounts, and you can't contribute at all if you are lucky enough to make more than $206,000 as a married couple and $139,000 as a single individual. Notice, there is a marriage penalty in play here. I'm just saying.

If your income is close to the threshold limits above, consider saving the $6,000 throughout the year into a regular investment account. Then, take those funds and put the maximum you are allowed into the Roth IRA when filing taxes. I find it is often easier to come up with money over a year's time versus scrapping together a large lump sum at tax time.

Like a fine wine, Roth IRAs get better with age.

There are two ways a Roth IRA gets better as you age. First, there is an allowable catch-up contribution of $1,000, per year, for those who have reached 50 years oldbringing the total contribution to $7,000 per year. On the other hand, the longer you hold a Roth, the more valuable the tax-free growth may become.

A Spousal ROTH IRA can help you become a ROTH IRA Millionaire faster and easier.

Roth IRA for Spouses

Even if your spouse doesn't work, you may still be able to open a Spousal Roth IRA. Whether your life partner is a stay-at-home parent or just between jobs, a spousal contribution will allow your household to contribute to the non-earning spouse. This, of course, assumes you qualify for contributions based on the aforementioned income limits.

Ignore This Benefit: Easy Access to Money

For those of you who are just getting started, tying up money until you retire may scare the crap out of you. What happens if you have an emergency or need money? Roth IRA owners can withdraw their contributions after they have been in the account for five years, for any reason, without owing taxes or penalties. I mention this as a nice, friendly kick in the butt to make sure you get started saving. There is no excuse not to plan for the future. I say to ignore it because if you use this account as a piggy bank, you will likely never accumulate enough wealth to achieve financial independence, let alone maintain a basic standard of living in retirement. Bottom line you can touch the money, BUT DON'T.

To have full access to your "tax-free withdrawal," you need to fulfill the five-year rule. This rule means you can't withdraw your earnings, tax-free, without owing taxes for at least five years from the beginning of the tax year for which you made your first Roth IRA contribution. This applies even if you are older than 59 .

Of course, you can still pull out all of your contributions at any time. If you've been saving for years, and have a substantial Roth IRA, this rule shouldn't really cause much of an issue. On the other hand, if you are starting late, make sure to work with your CPA and fiduciary financial planner on a smart withdrawal strategy so you can potentially avoid unwanted taxation on your Roth IRA distributions.

Double Tax Benefit for Certain People

No, I'm not talking about some tax loophole for the super-rich. For once, there is a tax benefit exclusively for those in the lower tax brackets. As I mentioned above, you don't get a tax deduction when you contribute to a Roth IRA, but you also don't have to pay taxes when you make withdrawals in retirement. (If you follow the simple Roth IRA rules.) That being said, there is an extra tax bonus for low-income workers who are smart enough to make Roth IRA contributions. This bonus comes in the form of the saver's credit. If, in 2020, you make less than $32,500, single, or $65,000 as a married couple, you can potentially receive a tax credit for 10-50% of your contributions to a Roth IRA. This credit is a dollar for dollar reduction of your taxes owed. For those who don't owe taxes, you can receive the credit as a refund.

Can You Become A Roth IRA Millionaire?

Just for illustration, if you were to contribute $6,000 to a Roth IRA from the age of 22 until the age of 70, how much money do you think you would have? You would have contributed $288,000, which is not a small amount of money. Assuming a 10% annual return, your Roth IRA could potentially be worth $5,761,000. Keep in mind; this money can be withdrawn tax-free. If this isn't motivation to start a Roth IRA today, I don't know what is. The earlier you get starting investing for retirement, the more likely you are to become a ROTH IRA millionaire.

There is no better day than today to get started on the road to financial independence. Reach out to a fiduciary certified financial planner to help develop a plan to make sure you are on track for your various financial goals. Whether you are just starting in the workforce or eying retirement, there is always a way to improve your financial health.

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What You Need To Know About A Roth IRA Now - Forbes

How to invest on your own and achieve financial independence Pocketful of Dirhams – The National

For people new to the world of investing, buying stocks can be a scary concept, particularly during periods of extreme volatility.

But according to SimplyFI.org, a non-profit community of personal finance and investing enthusiasts in the UAE, investing does not need to be complex at all. It says the process can actually be quite simple and you can master the basics in a couple of hours.

To help residents achieve this, the group has launched its first guide to investing. Called Index Investing & Financial Independence for Expats, Getting Started Guide, it can be downloaded for free from SimplyFI.org or through their Facebook page.

The group, whose other goal is to help each another achieve financial independence, believes the best way to generate wealth for your future is to put your money in low-cost exchange traded funds (ETFs), and leave it there over the long term.

So what does this new guide teach us? How does a passive investment strategy help secure your financial future? And how can we all go about achieving financial independence?

Host Alice Haine, the personal finance editor of The National, is joined by Elie Irani, the guides main author and a board member of SimplyFI.org, and Sebastien Aguilar, who founded the group in the UAE.

Updated: July 14, 2020 08:52 AM

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How to invest on your own and achieve financial independence Pocketful of Dirhams - The National

Child Trafficking Myths vs. Facts – Save the Children

Child trafficking affects every country in the world, including the United States. Children make up 27% of all human trafficking victims worldwide, and two out of every three identified child victims are girls[i].

Trafficking, according to the United Nations, involves three main elements[ii]:

There is much misinformation about what trafficking is, who is affected and what it means for a child to be trafficked. Read on to learn more about the myths vs. facts of child trafficking.

MYTH: Traffickers target victims they dont know

FACT: A majority of the time, victims are trafficked by someone they know, such as a friend, family member or romantic partner.

MYTH: Only girls and women are victims of human trafficking

FACT: Boys and men are just as likely to victims of human trafficking as girls and women. However, they are less likely to be identified and reported. Girls and boys are often subject to different types of trafficking, for instance, girls may be trafficked for forced marriage and sexual exploitation, while boys may be trafficked for forced labor or recruitment into armed groups.

MYTH: All human trafficking involves sex or prostitution

FACT: Human trafficking can include forced labor, domestic servitude, organ trafficking, debt bondage, recruitment of children as child soldiers, and/or sex trafficking and forced prostitution.

MYTH: Trafficking involves traveling, transporting or moving a person across borders

FACT: Human trafficking is not the same thing as smuggling, which are two terms that are commonly confused. Trafficking does not require movement across borders. In fact, in some cases, a child could be trafficked and exploited from their own home. In the U.S., trafficking most frequently occurs at hotels, motels, truck stops and online.

MYTH: People being trafficked are physically unable to leave or held against their will

FACT: Trafficking can involve force, but people can also be trafficked through threats, coercion, or deception. People in trafficking situations can be controlled through drug addiction, violent relationships, manipulation, lack of financial independence, or isolation from family or friends, in addition to physical restraint or harm.

MYTH: Trafficking primarily occurs in developing countries

FACT: Sex trafficking occurs all over the world, though the most common forms of trafficking can differ by country. The United States is one of the most active trafficking countries in the world, where exploitation of trafficking victims occurs in cities, suburban and rural areas. Labor trafficking occurs in the U.S., but at lower rates than most developing countries.

If you suspect someone is a victim of trafficking, contact the National Human Trafficking Resource Centerat 1-800-373-7888. The confidential hotline is open 24 hours a day, every day, and helps identify, protect and serve victims of trafficking.

Sources:

[i] Give Her a Choice: Building A Better Future For Girls (Save the Children)

[ii]United Nations Office on Drug and Crime

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Child Trafficking Myths vs. Facts - Save the Children

Bill to set out the role of councils in Scots law being considered by local government committee – Holyrood

A bill that would set out the role of councils in Scots law is being considered by Scottish Parliaments Local Government and Communities Committee.

The committee is seeking views on a members bill by Green MSP Andy Wightman that aims to incorporate the European Charter of Local Self-Government into Scots law.

The charter sets out 10 principles to protect the basic powers of local authorities, and their political, administrative and financial independence.

These include that that local authorities should have full discretion to exercise their initiative in any area that is within their competence and that powers given to local authorities shall normally be full and exclusive.

Powers may not be undermined or limited by central or regional authority except as covered for by the law and public responsibilities should preferably be carried out by the authority closest to the citizen, it says.

It also says that local authorities must have adequate financial resources of their own and that finances must be of a sufficiently diversified and buoyant nature to keep pace as far as possible with the real the cost of carrying out their responsibilities.

As far as possible, grants to local authorities shall not be earmarked for the financing of specific projects, it adds.

The charter was created in 1985 by the Council of Europe and ratified by the UK in 1997.

By incorporating it into Scots law, Wightmans European Charter of Local Self-Government (Incorporation) (Scotland) Bill would allow people or organisations to challenge the Scottish Government in court if its laws or decisions were not compatible with the charter.

Launching the consultation, committee convener James Dornan said: Local authorities deliver a wide range of services that are a vital part of our daily lives, from social care and public libraries to planning and street cleaning.

The aim of this bill is to strengthen local democracy by increasing the autonomy of local authorities and enshrining support for local government into law.

The committee are interested in hearing from people across Scotland as to whether they feel this bill will support local government, strengthen the bond between councils and communities and make a practical difference to peoples lives.

We also want to make sure it would have no unintended consequences. We are keen to hear whether the public supports these measures.

We also want to gather thoughts on the financial impact of this legislation, and whether this will have a positive impact on equality and human rights.

The consultation runs until Thursday 17 September 2020.

The Council of Europe is a Europe-wide body that focuses on democracy, the rule of law and human rights.

It is separate from the EU and the UK will still be a member of the Council of Europe after leaving the EU.

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Bill to set out the role of councils in Scots law being considered by local government committee - Holyrood

How to Find the Best Banks in West Virginia Benzinga – Benzinga

Benzinga Money is a reader-supported publication. We may earn a commission when you click on links in this article. Learn more.

West Virginia residents have access to a unique selection of banks, from national to regional. Online banks are also available. Whether you want to open a checking account, establish a college fund or invest with a money market account, theres an option for you. To narrow down your search for a bank, Benzinga has selected the top banks in West Virginia.

Read through to compare your banking options.

$0 to $19 monthly but can be waived

Bank on the go, anytime, anywhere with BBVAs digital banking services. It serves a large client base including personal customers, small businesses, commercial clients and corporate entities. Personal banking customers can access savings and checking accounts, credit cards, lending facilities, mortgages and investments.

Through its global wealth services, the bank also offers a wide range of tailored advice, brokerage services and investment solutions including risk management, wealth planning and trust and fiduciary services.

BBVA takes the hassle off mobile banking with its award-winning mobile app a 6-time award winner of Javelin Mobile Banking Leader. You can deposit checks, view balances, transfer money and set up account activity alerts. You can also enroll into its online banking services and enjoy the convenience of managing your money through the internet. Customers also have access to various loan options including:

Small businesses can also enjoy a host of digital services, including online payroll services, small business insurance, BBVA remote deposit capture as well as merchant services.

Depends on the type of account

Depends on the type of account

BB&T bank helps students attain financial independence with its student checking account thats designed for the student lifestyle. This checking account helps stretch your budget with no direct deposit requirement, no monthly maintenance fee, overdraft protection and a personalized debit card.

Through BB&T bank, personal banking customers can also access lending services, insurance solutions as well as retirement and investing solutions. Small businesses can also access multiple banking options, borrowing solutions, merchant and payroll services, employee benefits and business resources.

BB&T also makes savings your money easy and convenient with its savings account options which include:

Go beyond everyday banking with U by BB&T, its mobile and online banking experience which lets you link all your eligible accounts, monitor your credit score for free and get cash-back earnings by shopping with your card. BB&T clients can also use SunTrust ATMs free of charge for withdrawals.

0.25% to 1.25%

Axos is an online bank that stands out for its award-winning checking accounts that offer low to no monthly maintenance fees, cashback rewards and unlimited domestic ATM fee reimbursements.

The bank has 5 distinct checking accounts each is designed for a specific type of customer. Most of these checking accounts come with unique perks including unlimited check writing privileges, early paycheck deposits, no annual fees and more. Its client base includes personal bankers, businesses and partners, including real estate agents and dealer services.

Personal banking customers can access checking and savings accounts, certificates of deposit (CDs), mortgages, personal loans, refinance options and auto loans. With Axos Bank, you will enjoy industry-leading rates, lower ATM and monthly maintenance fees and agile software to enhance your banking experience.

Axos Bank also takes the hassle off investing with its managed investment portfolios courtesy of Axos Invest a premium automated tool that automates goal-based financial planning, portfolio rebalancing and personalized investing depending on your risk level. No account minimum is required to start investing.

0.10% on balances under $25,000, 0.25% on balances above $25,000

CIT Bank offers its customers an extensive selection of accounts to save with. Theres a savings builder account, premier high-yield savings account, a money market account and more than 5 certificates of deposits including term CDs, no-penalty CDs, jumbo CDs and more.

The savings builder account is particularly popular since it earns you rates 16 times the national average while offering daily compounding interest to maximize your earning potential.

CIT is also a great mortgage lender and it offers term loans to finance your home. Other perks of taking out a loan with the bank include lower down payments, lower monthly payments and up to $525 cashback upon closing your new home loan. CIT Bank has also partnered with LoanCare LLC to offer loan servicing functions to its customers.

CIT Bank also offers stellar business banking solutions and has earned several awards recognizing its small business digital lending technology, including the fintech breakthrough award for best small business lending solution.

Depends on the type of account

Depends on the type of account

City National Bank a highly-rated community bank in the country has been delivering superior financial solutions to customers and businesses in West Virginia for over 60 years. City National Bank ranked No. 1 in customer satisfaction for 3 consecutive years in the north-central region of the country, according to 2018, 2019 and 2020 J.D. Power U.S. retail banking satisfaction study.

This full-service bank offers multiple checking and savings products, low-rate loans, competitive mortgages, home equity lines of credit and wealth management services. City National Banks checking accounts are designed to meet your unique needs and come with perks like multiple overdraft protection options, access to over 90 branches and ATMs, free mobile and text banking and free eStatements.

Its business banking services also meet the needs of small and large commercial customers with various commercial lending options, free business checking and cash management services.

The bank also runs a physicians mortgage program that offers physicians 100% financing on loans up to $600,000 and other fixed-rate loan options with a 5% down payment.

Q: Can I manage my account online?

A: Yes. Once your account is activated, your bank will send an email with information and links to access and manage your account. You can review and update your account, customize your online banking experience, see recent activity and view statements.

Q: What is a SWIFT code?

A: The SWIFT (Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication) code is a unique identification code that some banks, investment managers or broker-dealers may require to complete an international wire transfer.

Naturally, youll need a safe haven for your cash. Opening a bank account is the first step toward keeping your finances organized, whether youre a personal banker or business owner. But theres a catch youll have different banking needs to consider. To maximize your money and limit the amount of fees you part with, conduct thorough research on the account types that fit your needs.

As long as you exercise due diligence, opening or switching up bank accounts should be an easy process. No matter your banking needs, the products from the banks above offer solutions to help you achieve your financial goals.

To determine the best banks in West Virginia, Benzinga analyzed over 100 banks and financial institutions. We gave weight to banks in West Virginia with co-op ATMs and cashback options. We also gave greater rankings to banks which offered the following: checking and savings accounts, online banking, personal loans, mortgages, educational resources and a mobile app.

Excerpt from:

How to Find the Best Banks in West Virginia Benzinga - Benzinga

Lip Care Products Market: Global Industry Valuation 2020| In Depth Analysis, Solution, Industry Influence By 2028 – Cole of Duty

Trusted Business Insights answers what are the scenarios for growth and recovery and whether there will be any lasting structural impact from the unfolding crisis for the Lip Care Products market.

Trusted Business Insights presents an updated and Latest Study on Lip Care Products Market 2019-2026. The report contains market predictions related to market size, revenue, production, CAGR, Consumption, gross margin, price, and other substantial factors. While emphasizing the key driving and restraining forces for this market, the report also offers a complete study of the future trends and developments of the market.The report further elaborates on the micro and macroeconomic aspects including the socio-political landscape that is anticipated to shape the demand of the Lip Care Products market during the forecast period (2019-2029).It also examines the role of the leading market players involved in the industry including their corporate overview, financial summary, and SWOT analysis.

Get Sample Copy of this Report @ Lip Care Products Market Size, Share, Global Market Research and Industry Forecast Report, 2025 (Includes Business Impact of COVID-19)

Industry Insights, Market Size, CAGR, High-Level Analysis: Lip Care Products Market

The global lip care products market size was valued at USD 712.8 million in 2018 and is projected to exhibit a CAGR of 7.2% during the forecast period. Increasing awareness regarding personal care and grooming among female as well as male consumers is a key factor driving the growth. Rising lip care problems, such as darkening, chapping, splitting, and wrinkles caused by sun damage, allergies, dehydration, vitamin and mineral deficiencies, is anticipated to further propel the product demand.Rising awareness regarding the advantages of using lips and skin protection products is expected to continue driving the demand. Rising level of air pollution, fluctuating climatic conditions, and emissions of harmful gases from automobile exhaust contains carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, formaldehyde, sulfur dioxide, benzene, and soot, negatively impact the skin of lip. These factors play a crucial role in expanding the scope of lip care products, which in turn is anticipated to fuel the market growth.

Unhealthy habits such as smoking cigarettes contribute to causing damage to lips, leading to different issues such as darkening, chapping, and wrinkles. This is one of the major factors driving the demand for lip care products. According to the statistics provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), in 2017, in U.S., 14% adults of age 18 and above-estimated 34 million adults-smoke cigarettes. Around 15.85% of adult men and 12.2% of adult women in the country smoke cigarettes. These consumer trends are expected to expand the product scope over the forecast period.Manufacturers operating in the lip care products market invest in R&D activities to offer innovative products in order to cater to the changing consumer demand. Different kinds of raw materials, including beeswax, camphor, essential oils, aloe vera extract, green tea extract, shea butter, and vitamin E to develop organic and natural lip care products. Availability of a variety of products is expected to drive the overall demand in the forthcoming years.

Product Insights of Lip Care Products Market

Non-Medicated lip products was the largest product category, with a market share of more than 65.0% in 2018, as a result of growing demand for grooming products. Over the past few years, increasing spending from millennials on grooming and health and hygiene maintenance has boosted the demand for lip balms and other such products.Moreover, they contain a balanced concentration of ingredients including butters, natural wax, and botanical ingredients in combination with anti-oxidant and anti-inflammatory properties, to cure problems, such as dryness, cold sores, angular cheilitis, and chapped lips.Sun protection lip products is expected to foresee the fastest CAGR 12.8% from 2019 to 2025 due to the rising awareness regarding protection of lips from sun damage. These lip products contain octinoxate, oxybenzone, avobenzone, and cinnimate with active ingredients, such as zinc oxide or titanium dioxide, which is one of the important minerals and act as a physical sunscreen ingredient.Gender InsightsThe female segment held the largest market share of more than 75.0% in 2018. The rising financial independence of working women and overall rise in dispensable income are the factors anticipated to positively influence the growth of the segment. Furthermore, significantly increasing corporate sector coupled with rising beauty consciousness is projected to further boost the growth. Male lip product segment is anticipated to witness the fastest CAGR of 7.6% from 2019 to 2025 due to increasing consciousness among the male population for grooming and personal care products.Distribution Channel InsightsOnline sales channel is expected to be the fastest growing segment, registering a CAGR of 7.6% from 2019 to 2025. High level of convenience and ease of shopping associated with this channel are the factors driving the growth. Online sales channels are expected to serve as a lucrative platforms for the new entrants in the market as they offer global platform without the need for distribution partners, such as dealers and channel partners. Moreover, products sold through these channels are subject to fewer taxes as compared to offline sale in some countries, such as China and India.

The offline distribution channel was the largest segment in 2018 accounting for more than 75.0% of market share. Major retailers including LOreal S.A.; Revlon, Inc.; and New Avon Company are gradually expanding their retail store locations across the globe in order to capture maximum customer penetration. In developing countries, such as Thailand, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Nepal, Vietnam, India, and China, where major part is catered by offline channels including supermarkets, beauty stores and grocery stores.

Regional Insights of Lip Care Products Market

Asia Pacific was the largest market for lip care products, with a revenue share of more than 35.0% in 2018, owing to significantly increasing awareness regarding personal care and grooming products among millennials. South Korea, China, India, and Japan are some of the largest personal care and cosmetics market in the region. K-Beauty trend in one of the major driving factors for the skin protection and cosmetics market. In addition, prominent celebrity endorsement in countries like Korea and India influence consumers, which is expected to further fuel the regional market. Increasing awareness regarding the side effects of sun exposure and the damage caused by UV rays, is projected to drive the demand for sun protection lip care products.North America is expected to remain one of the lucrative markets in near future. The region is expected to witness significant growth over the forecast period, as a result of high adoption of lip care products among millennials in U.S. and Canada. Additionally, rising awareness regarding the advantages of using natural cosmetics among the consumers in these countries is expected to open new growth avenues for the market players.

Market Share Insights of Lip Care Products Market

The market is consolidated in nature owing to the presence of a large number of strong major players including LOreal S.A.; Revlon, Inc.; Pfizer Inc.; Kao Corporation; Avon Products, Inc.; The Himalaya Drug Company; and Beiersdorf AG. Major market players have a large product portfolio as well as customer base for lip protection products. Rising demand for organic products is anticipated to present new entrants and innovative products with lucrative growth opportunities in near future.

Segmentations, Sub Segmentations, CAGR, & High-Level Analysis overview of Lip Care Products Market Research ReportThis report forecasts revenue growth at global, regional, and country levels and provides an analysis of the latest industry trends in each of the sub-segments from 2015 to 2025. For the purpose of this study, this market research report has segmented the global lip care products market report on the basis of product, gender, distribution channel, and region:

Product Outlook (Revenue, USD Million, 2019 2030)

Non-medicated

Therapeutic & Medicated

Sun Protection

Gender Outlook (Revenue, USD Million, 2019 2030)

Female

Male

Distribution Channel Outlook (Revenue, USD Million, 2019 2030)

Offline

Online

Quick Read Table of Contents of this Report @ Lip Care Products Market Size, Share, Global Market Research and Industry Forecast Report, 2025 (Includes Business Impact of COVID-19)

Trusted Business InsightsShelly ArnoldMedia & Marketing ExecutiveEmail Me For Any ClarificationsConnect on LinkedInClick to follow Trusted Business Insights LinkedIn for Market Data and Updates.US: +1 646 568 9797UK: +44 330 808 0580

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Lip Care Products Market: Global Industry Valuation 2020| In Depth Analysis, Solution, Industry Influence By 2028 - Cole of Duty

Ryan Reynolds is confused over whether Meghan Markle is still a duchess, and he’s not the only one – Insider – INSIDER

Ryan Reynolds made an awkward joke about Meghan Markle's royal title, and it shows he's still confused over what to call her.

During his comedy quiz show "Don't" with Adam Scott, the contestants were asked what the duchess' official title was "before she resigned."

The multiple-choice options included the Countess of Cambridge, the Duchess of Wessex, the Duchess of Cornwall, or the Duchess of Sussex.

"Or E, we taped this show seven months ago," Reynolds joked, referencing Markle and Prince Harry's "step back" in January 2020.

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex on their wedding day. AP

The contestant got the answer wrong, saying the Duchess of Cornwall, the title belonging to Prince Charles' wife Camilla.

However, Reynolds was also technically wrong by implying that Markle is no longer a duchess after resigning from her role as a working royal.

Markle became HRH The Duchess of Sussex upon her marriage to Harry in 2018, and he became The Duke of Sussex. The titles were gifted to the couple by the Queen.

However, when they announced they wanted to step back and obtain financial independence, they said they would retain their HRH titles but would no longer use them in an official capacity.

Therefore, Markle is now known officially as Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, or alternatively The Duchess of Sussex.

Reynolds isn't the only one confused by the title change, with several royal fans assuming that since she gave up her HRH title she is no longer a duchess.

"Just a reminder. Meghan is not the Duchess of Sussex any longer. She gave that title up. She is plain old Meghan Markle again because she can not have the Monarch name," one person wrote on Twitter.

Meanwhile, another wrote: "Meghan Markle or Duchess of Sussex? Thought she has already lost her title. Why so much of attention grabbing?"

It's not uncommon for non-working royals to retain their titles. For example, Prince Andrew's ex-wife Sarah Ferguson is still known as The Duchess of York.

Princess Diana's title changed from HRH The Princess of Wales to Diana, Princess of Wales, after her divorce from Prince Charles.

When they resigned, there was speculation over whether Markle and Harry would take the royal family's official last name Mountbatten-Windsor reserved mostly for those who don't use HRH titles.

Although the couple have given their son, Archie, the last name, they have not used it.

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Our Royal Insider Facebook group is the best place for up-to-date news and announcements about the British royal family, direct from Insider's royal reporters. Join here.

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Ryan Reynolds is confused over whether Meghan Markle is still a duchess, and he's not the only one - Insider - INSIDER

Bad Astronomy | Betelgeuse may have merged with a ssaller star – SYFY WIRE

A new study just published shows that, within the past few hundred thousand years, its entirely possible that Betelgeuse ate and digested a whole other star.

This would explain at least one weird thing about it, and we know such stellar mergers can happen, so why not? Its the least strange thing Ive heard about Betelgeuse in the past couple of years anyway.

Betelgeuse is a red supergiant, a massive (roughly 15 times the Suns mass) star thats nearing the end of its short life. Stars like this live for only some millions of years, and Betelgeuse is already about 810 million years old, so it doesnt have much time left. Its already run out of hydrogen in its core to fuse to helium, and is likely fusing helium into carbon, with a thin shell of hydrogen fusing outside of that. This produces prodigious amounts of energy, and the outer layers have reacted to that by swelling hugely (like a hot air balloon getting an infusion of heat); Betelgeuse is well over a billion kilometers in diameter.

Stars like this should rotate extremely slowly. It probably didnt spin very quickly when it was younger and still fusing hydrogen into helium (we call these main sequence stars), and when it expanded into a supergiant it should spin even more slowly if you take a spinning object and increase its diameter itll slow its spin, the same (though opposite) effect as when an ice skater starts a spin and brings their arms in to increase their spin.

But heres the weird thing: Betelgeuse spins rapidly. At its equator it rotates at a speed of about 5 kilometers per second, over four times faster than the Sun does. Betelgeuse is huge, so it still takes decades to rotate once, but that equatorial speed is still anomalously high. It should be more like a few meters per second at most.

The new study looked into a possible answer: a binary merger, where Betelgeuse used to be two stars orbiting each other closely, but merged to form a single star.

This happens a lot. First of all, binary stars are pretty common; half of all stars are in a binary system. Some fraction of those are relatively close together, so they orbit each other relatively quickly. And some fraction of those involve a high-mass star and a lower mass one. Thats the key.

If the more massive star (called the primary star) is more than about 15 times the Sun's mass itll evolve quickly, using up its core hydrogen and evolving off the main sequence, expanding into a red supergiant. If another star orbits it, the primary could swell up so much it engulfs the smaller, secondary star that star will literally be inside the primary. As it orbits, itll feel drag from plowing through the primarys atmosphere, just like when you stick your hand out a moving cars window and you feel air resistance.

That drag will steal energy from the secondary stars orbital energy, and itll start to spiral down towards the primarys core. The orbital energy of the secondary gets transferred to the primarys atmosphere, spinning it up like an eggbeater in a bowl of eggs, and the primary will start to rotate faster.

In some cases that in-spiral may take only five days (!!), or it could take a few thousand years. Either way it happens very quickly compared to the lifetime of either star. As the secondary drops down the gravity of the primarys dense core will start to tear the secondary star apart through tidal forces. Eventually the star is disrupted completely. The hydrogen in the ex-secondary then streams down to the primarys core, where it can be used as fuel, increasing the stars energy output and causing it to swell further.

This is what the new study found! They ran some simulations of massive primary stars (from 15 to 17 times the Suns mass) orbited by a smaller star (from 14 times the Suns mass) to see how the systems evolve. They found that in many cases they can reproduce Betelgeuses rapid rotation, and that it will continue to rotate rapidly like this for hundreds of thousands of years.

Given that Betelgeuse will probably go supernova in 100,000 years, that timescale sounds about right. So if Betelgeuse did start out as a binary, it likely ate its companion just a couple of hundred thousand years ago. If you think Betelgeuse is acting strangely now, imagine how it must have looked back then!

It also makes me wonder. Betelgeuse pulsates, brightening and dimming on a 420-day cycle. This is an upper atmospheric issue (the core is probably not the cause) and I wonder if dropping an entire star into it might have something to do with starting this cycle in the first place. I dont think this would have much to do with the recent extraordinary dimming of Betelgeuse directly, though. Weve seen it go through lots of normal variations before, so this most recent one probably has other (still not entirely understood) causes.

The scientists in the study are working on more complete models of what happens when the binary merger occurs, so itll be interesting to see what they find. It makes me wonder how many other stars we see in the sky have done this. Its funny to think that stars we see and are familiar with may have such auto-gormandizing histories and makes it clear theres still much to learn and understand about Betelgeuse.

Tip o' the dew shield to AstroBites.

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Bad Astronomy | Betelgeuse may have merged with a ssaller star - SYFY WIRE

Astronomers Tell You How and Where to Best View Meteor Showers – HowStuffWorks

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Throughout history, ancient peoples have witnessed meteor showers in awe and attributed special meaning to them. Sometimes they saw these blazing streaks of light as signs that doomsday was nigh; others posit that the star mentioned in the birth of Jesus was actually a comet.

These days, we mostly see meteors for what they are in the eyes of science space debris hitting Earth's atmosphere at suicidal speed. Sometimes, there are just a few strikes here and there. Full-on meteor showers, however, feature dozens or hundreds of glorious streaks per hour.

In many cases, you can't simply step out onto the sidewalk to see meteors, perhaps due to light pollution or physical obstructions like trees or buildings. But if you take the time to select a prime viewing spot, you may be in for the astronomical treat of a lifetime. Picking the best location might take a bit of homework on your part. Here are some tips to get you started, courtesy of two astronomers we talked with.

"Meteors streaming into Earth's atmosphere are best seen after midnight when Earth itself is turned 'into the meteor stream,'" Paul A. Delaney, an astronomy professor at York University, in Toronto, says by email. "As Earth orbits the sun, at any given moment, half of the Earth is 'facing' in the direction of its orbital travel. As Earth spins on its axis, any spot on the surface at local midnight begins to rotate into this forward-facing half of Earth."

With that in mind, he says you'll get your best view of meteors from midnight to 6 a.m. local time. Before that, only the higher altitude meteors will be seen from the ground. If you remember just one thing about meteor viewing, this is it.

The next step in finding a primo meteor shower viewing location? Locating a pitch-black spot.

"It is here you can see many of the fainter meteors," says David Leake, director of the William M. Staerkel Planetarium at Parkland College in Illinois via email. "You don't want to be chased off private property, but if you can find a spot away from direct lighting and away from city light pollution, that's best."

Light pollution refers to excessive light that seeps into the sky from our civilized towns and cities (as seen in this light pollution map). It obscures many of the night sky's natural features, such as the Milky Way, to a degree that many lifelong city dwellers have never glimpsed it.

Meteor showers are no exception. If you live in a major metropolitan area, you may have to venture miles and miles away from the city's orange glow to see meteors in their full glory. You can use websites to find dark places near you.

If that's not option, you can always try closer to home.

"Maybe a nearby forest preserve or park is offering a meteor-watching event," says Leake. He also recommends checking with your local astronomy club for organized viewing activities.

Be sure to use red LED flashlights to preserve your night vision. It can take a half-hour or longer for your eyes to readjust to the dark night skies after you've been exposed to bright white light.

Think you've pinpointed a good, dark viewing location on a map? When you're perusing dark sky map, here's a pro tip: Keep the direction of any nearby cities in mind relative to the location of the celestial event you're hoping to see because even in places that are certified as dark sky areas, you may see the telltale orange glow of cities on the horizon.

If that glow happens to be in the same direction as your meteor shower, it could impact your viewing. And it will almost certainly impact any astro-photography you're hoping to do.

You might also want to get on higher ground.

"Elevation can help," says Leake. "The greater your altitude, the less dust and water vapor you are looking through and the more stars you will see. I would rate darkness over elevation, though, if you have to make a choice."

You don't need fancy equipment to watch a meteor shower. It's more about being prepared to stay out in the wee hours of the morning, with appropriately warm clothes and any other creature comforts you prefer. A reclining lawn chair that folds all the way back will allow you to see as much of the sky as possible without wrecking your neck. You can lie on a blanket in a pinch.

Above all, keep it simple.

"Too many times amateur astronomers are out using their telescopes, trying to figure out what to look at, changing eyepieces, aligning optics, focusing, etc.," says Leake. "Sometimes we forget to just look up! For a meteor shower, you need no equipment but maybe a lawn chair."

While you're watching pieces of space debris smash themselves into oblivion, appreciate the violence of the calamities you're witnessing.

"Meteors are pieces of the universe literally raining down onto the Earth," says Delaney. "They are a wonderful spectacle. They reveal how much material is actually in space and while most of the material is small stuff, occasionally we encounter a larger rock that could potentially be very dangerous to life on Earth (think dinosaur extinction)."

Thus, he says, meteor showers remind us of the shooting gallery in which Earth moves through continuously and how important it should be for astronomers and governments to be on the lookout in space for dangerous rocks.

Light-filled American cities like Los Angeles or New York City aren't great for astronomy events. But there are plenty of darker areas throughout America that are perfect. Here are a few choice spots, according to Accuweather.

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Astronomers Tell You How and Where to Best View Meteor Showers - HowStuffWorks

What will it take to make an effective vaccine for COVID-19? – Chemical & Engineering News

In brief

COVID-19 vaccines are being developed with a previously unimaginable urgency. More groups are working faster than ever before to develop shots that will protect us from the novel coronavirus, and hopefully bring an end to the pandemic. At first glance, the more than 160 vaccine programs seem remarkably similar, mostly focused on inducing immunity to the coronavirus spike protein. A closer look reveals many differences, including the types of vaccine technologies deployed, how the spike protein is modified and displayed to our immune systems, and the kinds of immune responses these different approaches will elicit.

There was a moment, just over 200 days ago, when wed never heard of a coronavirus, when everything we did wasnt shrouded with the specter of COVID-19. We crammed into living rooms, sang, danced, clinked glasses, showed 2019 out the door. We eagerly welcomed the new decade, filled calendars, and planned trips. Hugs and handshakes werent a health threat. Walking past someone in a crowded grocery store wasnt anxiety inducing. Pictures of crowded beaches and bars didnt evoke anger. How the world has changed.

In early January, no one could have known how truly catastrophic this novel coronavirus would be. Yet before this particular virus, SARS-CoV-2, was discovered, a few prescient people had already begun preparing for it. For decades, virologists have warned of an impending pandemic. Were overdue, they said. Some groups even had the foresight to begin developing vaccines for a different coronavirus. Once SARS-CoV-2 emerged, those groups had a template to begin making vaccines for the yet-to-be-named disease, COVID-19.

As the pandemic grew, other companies and academic teams started working on their own vaccines for COVID-19. By early April, more than 100 programs were reportedly underway. Even then, vaccines remained a distant prospect. Amid shutdowns and social distancing, we simply yearned for summer, for a break from the virus. The reprieve never came.

Vaccines, for all intents and purposes, were the backup plan. Now, we need them more than ever.

Without a vaccine, I dont think we can put a lid on this, says Paul Young, a virologist developing a COVID-19 vaccine at the University of Queensland. It will continue to be a fire that rages through the world for quite some time until literally everyone is infected unless we are able to intervene.

For nearly 7 long months, SARS-CoV-2 has pushed us to our limits. By mid-July, the virus had infected more than 13 million people and killed more than 580,000. About a quarter of those recorded cases and deaths belong to the US, a fraction likely to rise as so many Americans seemingly give up on the simple public health precautions that other countries have used to curtail the spread of the virus.

Yet there is cause for hope. In those same 7 short months, scientists have made strides that might normally take 7 years. Companies are beginning large trials with tens of thousands of people this month to see if their experimental vaccines can prevent disease. The pandemic has spurred the fastest vaccine development programs in history. While some groups are pushing to have vaccines available this winter, maybe sooner, others think such timelines are preposterous, and potentially reckless. Many questions remain, but there are two things that nearly everyone can agree on.

First, we need a vaccine to end this pandemic. There is no doubt, says Daria Hazuda, vice president of infectious diseases discovery at Merck Research Laboratories. Given how widespread this is globally I just dont think it is going to go away by itself. Second, scientists are confident that at least one vaccine, and hopefully more, will eventually work. There is every reason to believe that we can make a vaccine against this kind of virus, says Paul Offit, a pediatrician and director of the Vaccine Education Center at Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia. I think it is very likely that we will have an effective vaccine by the middle of next year, he adds.

From that consensus, however, opinions diverge.

On the surface, all COVID-19 vaccine candidates have the same goal: generate an immune response that protects you from the virus. But under the hood, these vaccines use a range of technologiesfrom tried and true to new and untestedto teach our bodies how to defend itself against the virus.

This summer, C&EN interviewed more than three dozen scientists, doctors, and business leaders to illuminate the complementary, and occasionally conflicting, strategies employed by groups developing the most advanced and well-funded COVID-19 vaccines. Theres much to learn still, and more definitive answers will come in time, but we already know the questions we need to be asking to make an effective vaccine.

Heres how we get back to normal.

I. How hard is it to make a vaccine against a virus?

Scientists have devised many ways to protect against an infection. In mid-July, the World Health Organization had counted 23 COVID-19 vaccine programs in clinical testing, and another 140 in preclinical development. This is just an unprecedented effort, every possible vaccine strategy is being used, including ones that have never been used before, Offit says.

The most traditional approach to making a vaccine is to simply use the virus itself, allowing your immune cells to learn how to fight it without you actually having to suffer through the disease. Viruses can either be left alive but attenuatedwhere scientists take all the chutzpah out of itor they can be killed with chemicals and heat that leave them unable to replicate. Historically, some of the most effective vaccines, such as those for measles, polio, and smallpox are attenuated or inactivated vaccines.

Credit: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images

A vial with an experimental COVID-19, vaccine at Novavax ln Gaithersburg, Maryland

Today, the most popular approaches for making new vaccines all focus on isolating the specific part of the virus believed to be most important for immunity. For SARS-CoV-2, that part is incontrovertibly the spike proteinimmediately recognizable in cartoons of the virus as the mushroom-like knobs studding its spherical surface. The coronavirus uses these spike proteins to grab hold of a human protein called ACE2, the first step in an infection. Nearly every COVID-19 vaccine candidate shares the objective of trying to prevent this interaction between the spike protein and ACE2.

Giving our immune cells target practice with a harmless form of the spike protein should allow them to halt the real virus in its tracks. A large number of groups are working on making the spike protein itself, detached from the virus, as the primary vaccine ingredient. Genetic engineering allows scientists to easily copy and paste the genetic code of the spike protein into cells that are optimized to grow in large vats, where they crank out large quantities of the protein. Vaccines for hepatitis B, shingles, and other diseases are made with this approach, which yields whats known as a subunit protein vaccine.

But developing manufacturing processes for any of these more traditional vaccines typically takes months, if not much longer. Making attenuated or inactivated vaccines requires special facilities with extra safety precautions to grow large numbers of the actual virus, while subunit protein vaccines require scientists to optimize cells that can make the viral protein and then patiently wait for the cells to multiply.

Recently, theres been growing excitement for experimental vaccines that take a different and faster route. Based on newer technologies, these vaccines simply contain the genetic code for the spike protein, and come in several forms, including DNA, messenger RNA, and viral vectorswhere a harmless virus is rejiggered into a gene-delivery vessel. But the end goal for all of them is the same: transport the genetic instructions for the spike protein into human cells in order to temporarily turn those cells into spike protein factories. No DNA or mRNA vaccines have ever received regulatory approval, and only two viral vector vaccinesboth to prevent Ebola virushave been licensed for humans.

Without a vaccine, I dont think we can put a lid on this, It will continue to be a fire that rages through the world for quite some time until literally everyone is infected unless we are able to intervene.

Paul Young, virologist, University of Queensland

Frank DeRosa, the chief technology officer of the mRNA company Translate Bio, explains that mRNA vaccines let our own cells make the spike protein just like they would if we were infected with the real virus. These vaccines, along with DNA and viral vector vaccines, allow the spike protein to be trafficked to the cell membrane surface where it is displayed, or else chopped up and presented in pieces to immune cells. You are just letting the body do what it would do normally, DeRosa says. Thats one of the advantages of mRNA.

Gene-based vaccines should also allow the protein to undergo glycosylation, a cellular process of tacking sugars onto the protein in specific patterns, which will give the immune system a more accurate mug shot of the spike protein. These sugar patterns can differ in subunit proteins, depending on the kinds of cells used to manufacture them.

Genetic vaccines have another key advantage: they are breathtakingly fast to design and produce. The only thing that changes significantly between two genetic vaccines is the segment of code being delivered. The manufacturing process for one RNA is a lot like the manufacturing process for another RNA, says Phil Dormitzer, Pfizers chief scientific officer for viral vaccines. The same is largely true for DNA vaccines, and true to a lesser degree for viral vector vaccines. Its why most of the fastest moving programs for COVID-19 are gene-based vaccines.

The current record speed for making a modern vaccine is Mercks viral vector vaccine for Ebola, which took 5 years to design, test, and earn government approval. For COVID-19, many companies say that process could be collapsed into a year or two. Some firms, including AstraZeneca, Moderna, and Pfizer, expect to have efficacy data this fall, and the US government plans to preorder 300 million doses ready for distribution by January 2021.

Those timelines have plenty of skeptics. The notion that we can have something done by the fall is frankly ludicrous, that is just not going to happen, says Kenneth Kaitin, director of the Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development. I would suspect that by this time next year we are still going to be looking forward to when that first vaccine hits the market.

More than 160 vaccines are in the works to prevent COVID-19. Here are the major types of technologies being used to make them.

Attenuated and inactivated virus vaccines

Attenuated virus vaccines contain a living but weakened version of SARS-CoV-2. Inactivated virus vaccines contain SARS-CoV-2 that has been killed with heat or chemicals like -propiolactone or formalin. Several childhood vaccines are attenuated or inactivated virus vaccines.

Subunit protein vaccines

Subunit protein vaccines contain the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, which the virus uses to enter human cells. These vaccines often include adjuvants, which are molecules that stimulate the innate immune system to help simulate a natural infection. More groups are developing subunit protein vaccines for COVID-19 than any other technology.

Viral vector vaccines

Viral vector vaccines use a different virussuch as the adenovirus, measles virus, or vesicular stomatitis virusthat is genetically engineered to carry the gene for the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, which will be made by our cells. Viral vector vaccines for preventing Ebola have recently been approved, but others are still experimental.

Nucleic acid vaccines

Nucleic acid vaccines encode genetic instructions for the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein into DNA, delivered into our cells with an electric shock, or RNA, delivered into our cells via a lipid nanoparticle. These vaccines can be rapidly designed and manufactured, but no DNA or RNA vaccine has been approved for humans.

II. Does the immune system view all vaccines equally?

Most vaccine developers believe that the potential protection offered by these vaccines hinges on teaching our immune cells to make the right kind of antibodies. In theory, antibodies can bind to any part of the spike protein, but only certain ones, the so-called neutralizing antibodies, bind to the spike protein in a manner that prevents the virus from infecting our cells.

Neutralizing antibodies are the most important biomarker to follow in the vaccine studies, and higher the antibody titers, the better, says John Shiver, senior vice president for global vaccines R&D at Sanofi.

You might imagine that the best way to get those high levels of neutralizing antibodies is to simply present the spike protein in its most natural form. But the spike protein is a wily shapeshifter, and many groups think that tweaking the spike protein will be necessary to induce a good neutralizing antibody response.

After the spike protein binds to ACE2, it undergoes a dramatic transformation. A spring-loaded portion of the spike shoots into the human cell membrane and then pulls the virus and cell so close together that their membranes fuse. This allows the virus to spill its genes and guts into the cell, where it begins replicating.

So scientists think there are probably two major ways an antibody can prevent infection: it can either directly block the spikes interaction with ACE2 in the first place, or it can gum up the spikes spring-loaded machinery and impede its fusion with our cells.

In 2016, while scientists were studying the spike protein of a different coronavirus, they discovered that embedding two prolinesthe most rigid of amino acidsin a particular part of the spike helped lock it into the shape that it takes before binding ACE2. Many researchers believe it is crucial to show your immune cells this so-called prefusion form of the spike protein in order to make antibodies that prevent infection. In contrast, if the vaccine teaches the immune system to make antibodies to the postfusion form, the shape the spike protein takes after binding to a cell, those antibodies will bind to the spike too late to prevent infection, says Andrew Ward, a structural biologist at Scripps Research who co-led the study.

Before the pandemic, that double proline mutation, called the 2P mutation, proved generalizable to several coronavirus spike proteins. So when SARS-CoV-2 emerged in early January, researchers were able to quickly add this mutation into the design of a COVID-19 vaccine. The mRNA company Moderna and researchers at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) made a somewhat risky decision to begin manufacturing a COVID-19 vaccine based on the viruss spike sequence and the addition of the 2P mutation without any further experiments, explains Barney Graham, deputy director of the Vaccine Research Center at NIAID.

Since then the 2P mutation has made its way into subunit protein vaccines, mRNA vaccines, and viral vector vaccines. Jason McLellan, the scientist who discovered the 2P mutation, is now looking for other promising ones. His lab at the University of Texas at Austin has tested more than 100 additional mutations, which led to the creation of a novel prefusion spike protein dubbed HexaPro. Its more stable, and, when plugged into an mRNA vaccine, causes cells to make 10 times the amount of spike protein. He says companies making COVID-19 vaccines are already testing HexaPro in lab studies, and his lab is working on further improvement. We are always tweaking, he says. You can kind of do this forever but at some point you just have to pick something and move it forward.

Credit: Jason McLellan

The HexaPro spike protein, invented by Jason McLellans lab at the University of Texas at Austin, contains 6 proline mutations (red and blue spheres) that help stabilize the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein in its prefusion structure. The S1 subunit (transparent white) contacts the human cell and the S2 subunit (colored ribbons) contains the spring-loaded machinery that helps the virus fuse with the cell.

Other groups are making their own unique modifications to the prefusion spike. Scientists at the University of Queensland have made a subunit protein vaccine where the trimer of the spike is held together by what Queensland virologist Keith Chappell calls a molecular clamp. It is gripped at the base, and the top has natural flexibility, he says.

Other groups are forgoing the prefusion conformation in favor of a more natural, functional spike protein. That includes the DNA vaccine company Inovio Pharmaceuticals, which used this approach to elicit neutralizing antibodies in people who got its experimental MERS vaccine.

One of Mercks two viral vector vaccines is based on vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), also used to make the firms recently licensed Ebola vaccine, Ervebo. Unlike the adenoviral vector vaccines under development for COVID-19, which just carry the genetic instructions for the spike protein, the VSV viral vector is designed to display the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein on its surface, where it can be used to enter human cells. It is kind of an authentic presentation, says Christopher Parks, whose lab led the design of the vaccine at IAVI, before Merck said it would test it in humans.

We can make effective vaccines quite quickly. But safety is not something that can be measured in a single time point. It has to be observed over a period of time.

David Dowling, vaccine researcher, BostonChildrens Hospital

Another strategy is to use just a key fragment of the spike protein. It turns out that the most potent neutralizing antibodies made by people who recover from COVID-19 almost always target a particular part of the spike protein. That key section, called the receptor-binding domain (RBD), sits at the top of the spike, where it makes direct contact with ACE2 on human cells. For this reason, some groups are developing vaccines that simply use the RBDeither made as a subunit protein or encoded in mRNA.

RBD-based vaccines could have the advantage of helping the immune system focus on developing neutralizing antibodies to the part of the protein that matters the most. Its also a relatively small part of the large spike protein, which could make these vaccines cheaper to manufacture.

But its small size has drawbacks too. Scientists say we typically develop better immune responses against larger proteins. And researchers are starting to discover neutralizing antibodies that bind to other regions of the spike protein outside the RBD as well, ones that might work by halting the viruss fusion to the human cell, rather than by blocking its binding to ACE2. In general, having neutralizing antibodies to multiple sites should limit the viruss ability to mutate and escape neutralization.

One study in monkeys testing six different DNA vaccines all encoding various versions of the spike protein found that the full-length spike protein induced higher levels of neutralizing antibodies than the RBD. A small study testing four variations of subunit proteins in rabbits found the opposite: the RBD vaccine induced the highest levels of neutralizing antibodies.

The RBD might be good enough. And when you are making a vaccine, you just need to make it good enough, NIAIDs Graham says. But, he adds, we just think it is not quite as good as the whole thing.

Pfizer, which is working with the German mRNA company BioNTech, may be the only group that is hedging its bets by testing multiple vaccines in humans: two encoding the full prefusion spike protein and two encoding the RBD. Although you can do plenty of testing preclinically, some questions you really have to answer in clinical trials, says Pfizers Dormitzer.

If a particular paradigm proves most promising, it will be easy to construct a narrative about why one brilliant group had the right idea all along. You can reason your way into believing that any one front-runner vaccine will rise above the others just as easily as you can convince yourself that one approach is destined for failure. But as it stands, we dont know which vaccines will work the best. Although animal studies can give clues about what wont work in humans, the only way to determine how a vaccine will protect against infection is to test it in people.

III. How will our immune system protect us from the virus?

Key milestones in the rapid design, clinical testing, and funding of vaccines for COVID-19

Jan. 10: The first genome sequence of the novel coronavirus, later named SARS-CoV-2, is posted online.

Jan. 13: Moderna announces plans to develop an mRNA vaccine for the novel coronavirus.

Jan. 23: The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) announces vaccine funding for Inovio Pharmaceuticals, Moderna, and the University of Queensland.

March 16: CanSino Biologics and Moderna dose first volunteers in Phase I clinical trials of their vaccines.

March 17: Pfizer announces partnership with BioNTech to develop and test multiple mRNA vaccines.

March 30: Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) and Johnson & Johnson announce they are committing more than $1 billion to develop an adenoviral vector vaccine for COVID-19.

April 16: BARDA awards Moderna up to $483 million to develop and manufacture its mRNA vaccine.

April 30: AstraZeneca announces it will develop the University of Oxfords adenoviral vector vaccine for COVID-19.

May 11: CEPI commits $384 million to Novavaxs COVID-19 vaccine, its largest investment ever.

May 15: US President Donald J. Trump announces Operation Warp Speed to supply 300 million vaccines to the US by January 2021.

May 18: Moderna announces preliminary Phase I data from its vaccine trial via press release.

May 21: BARDA says it will provide up to $1.2 billion for 300 million doses of AstraZenecas vaccine with the first shots arriving in October.

May 22: CanSino publishes the first peer-reviewed data of a Phase I COVID-19 vaccine trial.

May 26: Merck & Co. says it will develop two COVID-19 vaccines originally designed at Themis Biosciencean Austrian company that it acquiredand IAVI.

May 29: Moderna doses the first volunteers in its Phase II clinical trial of its mRNA vaccine.

June 20: A Phase III trial testing the University of Oxfords adenoviral vector vaccine begins in Brazil.

June 24: The state-owned China National Pharmaceutical Group (Sinopharm) announces plans for a Phase III trial of its inactivated virus vaccine for COVID-19.

June 28: 10 million people have been infected and 500,000 people have died from COVID-19.

July 7: BARDA and the US Department of Defense sign a $1.6 billion contract with Novavax for 100 billion doses of its vaccine.

All these vaccine efforts are grounded in the notion that producing high levels of potent neutralizing antibodies will prevent the virus from infecting our cells. Measuring those antibodies, however, is fraught with challenges, and we dont even know what levels we should aim for.

Methods used to quantify that neutralizing antibody response are imperfect. Researchers infect cells in a petri dish with either a real or artificial version of SARS-CoV-2 to see how much of the virus is blocked with a particular concentration of antibody-containing plasma. The real and artificial methods yield different results. And, although those results have been cited as rationale for moving COVID-19 vaccines into large, late-stage trials, there is no standard for how these measurements should be reported.

For instance, some groups report the level of neutralizing antibody that inhibits 50% of the virus, while others use higher bars of 80, 90, or 100%. If you make antibodies that neutralize 90% of the virus, that may not be good enough, NIAIDs Graham says. You want a neutralization that is 100% effective.

The number you get depends on the specifics of the assay you run, so comparing one companys numbers to another companys numbers is tricky, Pfizers Dormitzer says. Until we really establish what a protective level of antibodies is, the numbers may be a relative yardstick, but they dont tell you if you are going to have protection or not.

So far, companies have been using as their baseline the levels of neutralizing antibodies found in convalescent plasma of people who have recovered from COVID-19. But research shows that COVID-19 survivors make relatively low levels of antibodies, and one small study suggests they might only stick around for 2 to 3 months.

Credit: Brian Stauffer

Such studies suggest that a vaccine that mimics a natural infection is a pretty low bar. Immunity equivalent to natural infection may not be enough for this virus. It might need to be higher, says David Corry, an immunologist and allergist at Baylor College of Medicine.

On average, each coronavirus has a couple hundred spike proteins that it can use to grab onto a cell, so the number of neutralizing antibodies circulating in our bodies likely needs to be much higher than the number of viruses attempting to establish an infection. If the antibody levels are not high enough, we may end up with only partial protectionwhere we still get an infection, and might even be able to spread the virus to others, but would be safe from progressing to the most severe forms of COVID-19 that hospitalize people.

But even determining the level of antibodies needed to lessen the brutality of the disease is not straightforward. A level of antibodies in one person might send them off without any symptoms at all, while the same level of antibodies in another person may still leave them very sick, Scripps immunologist Dennis Burton says.

Some scientists say that partial protection is a fine goal for the first generation of COVID-19 vaccines. If you can keep people out of the hospital, to me that is a tremendous success, says Gregory Glenn, president of R&D at Novavax. Such vaccines could save lives, and in a hypothetical world where everyone is vaccinated, most individuals could deal with mild cases of COVID-19, and society could return to normal.

Although vaccine makers have focused on neutralizing antibodies, this type of immune response might not last forever. In a study of 191 people tested for cold-causing coronaviruses over a period of 19 months in New York City, researchers found that 9 people were infected with the same virus twice, and 3 were infected with the same virus three separate times. We dont know if either natural immunity or vaccines can prevent these kind of reinfections with SARS-CoV-2. One experiment showed that monkeys who were infected with high levels of SARS-CoV-2 were protected from reinfection 5 weeks lateralthough that study comes with the major caveat that monkeys dont develop full-blown COVID-19 in the first place.

Theres reason to believe that other parts of the immune system, such as T cells, may be important for longer-lasting immunity. Scientists found that people who were infected with SARS-CoV-1, the virus that caused the eponymous severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) outbreak in 2003, still had neutralizing antibodies to the virus 2 years after infection, but not 5 years later. In contrast, researchers recently discovered that some people infected with SARS-CoV-1 back in 2003 still have T cells that recognize the virus all these years later.

While antibodies prevent viruses from infecting cells in the first place, T cells can spot cells that are already infected and selectively kill them, thereby halting the spread of the virus. T cells are also better than antibodies at targeting different parts of the virus. Antibodies target proteins on the outside of the virus, which for SARS-CoV-2 is the spike protein. Yet the spike is just one of 27 proteins encoded in the SARS-CoV-2 genome. The other proteins are located inside the virus, or are made by our own cells when the virus is replicating. T cells, unlike antibodies, can learn to spot molecular fingerprints of these proteins in virus-infected cells.

DNA vaccines and viral vectors are better at inducing T cell responses, while subunit protein vaccines primarily induce antibodies. The traditional attenuated virus vaccines that use a live virusand therefore have all those internal proteinsare good at inducing both T cells and antibodies. Every formulation or platform is different, says Surender Khurana, a vaccine scientist at the US Food and Drug Administration. These different platforms can have different kinds of immune responses, and we dont know which immune response is most relevant.

IV. How good is good enough for a COVID-19 vaccine?

Some vaccines, like the one for measles, provide lifelong immunity to nearly every single person who receives them. Others, such as flu vaccines, are needed every year, and even then sometimes only work 30% of the time. For COVID-19 vaccines, the FDA is aiming for something in-between those extremes. The FDAs recently issued guidelines for COVID-19 vaccine development state that the agency expects a vaccine to either prevent disease, or reduce its severity, in at least 50% of vaccinated people.

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What will it take to make an effective vaccine for COVID-19? - Chemical & Engineering News

Is This Roger Stone and Proud Boys Flashing a White Power Symbol? – Snopes.com

In July 2020, U.S. President Donald Trump announced that he would commute the sentence of Roger Stone, a political ally who was convicted of seven felony charges, including witness tampering, lying to congress, and obstruction, in relation to special counsel Robert Muellers investigation.

Shortly after the news broke, a photograph started to circulate online that supposedly showed Stone and members of the Proud Boys flashing a white power gesture at a bar:

This is a genuine photograph of Stone and members of the Proud Boys. Some may argue that this group is merely flashing an OK symbol, but this argument doesnt really hold up, especially when you consider that the Southern Poverty Law Center has designated the Proud Boys as a hate group that espouses white supremacist ideals, and that white supremacists have adopted the OK hand gesture as a symbol of hate.

This photograph was taken around the time of the Dorchester Conference, Oregons oldest Republican political conference, in March 2018. The Willamette Week reported that Stone, who was scheduled to speak at the event, hired members of the Proud Boys to be his private security.

The Willamette Week wrote:

Roger Stonethe former political adviser to Richard Nixon and President Donald Trumpappeared without incident at the states oldest Republican conference last weekend.

But an organizer of the Dorchester Conference in Salem says Stone was so worried for his safety that he enlisted a right-wing group as private security.

Patrick Sheehan, a Dorchester board member who booked Stone, says Stone reached out to the Proud Boysa group notorious for its participation in Portland street brawlsafter reading about violent political clashes in Oregon.

He was worried about getting killed, Sheehan says. He gets death threats constantly.

Photos of Stone drinking with a handful of Proud Boys circulated across social media over the weekend, outraging Democrats.

The photograph of Stone drinking with a handful of Proud Boys mentioned in the Willamette Week article was originally posted by InfoWars host Alex Jones on Twitter on March 3, 2020. The image was captioned: InfoWars Roger Stone joined the @proudboysUSA in Salem Oregon tonight. I joined them in spirit!

This is a genuine image of Stone with members of the Proud Boys in March 2018. Although the meaning behind the OK hand gesture is a bit murky it was, and is still, widely used as a harmless symbol for approval or consent this symbol has been adopted by white supremacists as a symbol of hate.

Heres the Anti-Defamation Leagues explanation of the OK hand gesture as a symbol of hate:

In 2017, the okay hand gesture acquired a new and different significance thanks to a hoax by members of the website 4chan to falsely promote the gesture as a hate symbol, claiming that the gesture represented the letters wp, for white power. The okay gesture hoax was merely the latest in a series of similar 4chan hoaxes using various innocuous symbols; in each case, the hoaxers hoped that the media and liberals would overreact by condemning a common image as white supremacist.

In the case of the okay gesture, the hoax was so successful the symbol became a popular trolling tactic on the part of right-leaning individuals, who would often post photos to social media of themselves posing while making the okay gesture.

Ironically, some white supremacists themselves soon also participated in such trolling tactics, lending an actual credence to those who labeled the trolling gesture as racist in nature. By 2019, at least some white supremacists seem to have abandoned the ironic or satiric intent behind the original trolling campaign and used the symbol as a sincere expression of white supremacy, such as when Australian white supremacist Brenton Tarrant flashed the symbol during a March 2019 courtroom appearance soon after his arrest for allegedly murdering 50 people in a shooting spree at mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand.

And heres how Southern Poverty Law Center described the Proud Boys:

Established in the midst of the 2016 presidential election by VICE Media co-founder Gavin McInnes, the Proud Boys are self-described western chauvinists who adamantly deny any connection to the racist alt-right, insisting they are simply a fraternal group spreading an anti-political correctness and anti-white guilt agenda.

Their disavowals of bigotry are belied by their actions: rank-and-file Proud Boys and leaders regularly spoutwhite nationalistmemes and maintain affiliations with known extremists. They are known foranti-Muslimand misogynistic rhetoric. Proud Boys have appeared alongside otherhate groupsat extremist gatherings like the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville. Indeed, former Proud Boys memberJason Kesslerhelped to organize the event, which brought together Klansmen, antisemites, Southern racists, and militias. Kessler was only expelled from the group after the violence and near-universal condemnation of the Charlottesville rally-goers.

Other hardcore members of the so-called alt-right have argued that the western chauvinist label is just a PR cuck term McInnes crafted to gain mainstream acceptance. Lets not bullshit, Brian Brathovd, aka Caeralus Rex, told his co-hosts on the antisemitic The Daily Shoah one of the most popular alt-right podcasts. If the Proud Boys were pressed on the issue, I guarantee you that like 90% of them would tell you something along the lines of Hitler was right. Gas the Jews.

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Is This Roger Stone and Proud Boys Flashing a White Power Symbol? - Snopes.com

MSNBCs Joy Reid Makes Cable-Network History With the Debut of The ReidOut – Vogue

Count Jonathan Capehart, the openly gay Pulitzer Prizewinning columnist for the Washington Post, as one of those in her corner. Until 2012 they were merely casual acquaintances. Then came the Republican National Convention in Tampa. Each night they would meet at a local Hooters for dinner. Over wingsHooters has great wingsthey spoke for hours while tank-topped, short-shorted waitresses moved around them. Though they shared a similar worldview, Capehart, a regular MSNBC contributor, found Reid more liberal. Since then, the two have been intellectual sparring partners and close friends.

The person who wrote those columns is not the person I got to know sitting across from her at a table in Tampa at Hooters, Capehart says of Reids previous LGBTQ remarks. I dont know that person. I dont know that person who wrote those pieces.

Look, he continues, do you know how many people would be out of my life if I did not, one, learn to forgive and, two, give them the room to evolve?

Over the past few months, Reid has witnessed an entire nations belief system on race radically evolve. Following the killing of George Floyd in May and the worldwide protests that followed, America seems ready, finally ready, to take in the very things shes spoken on for years. Before the hoodie became a menacing totem for the alt-right in Florida, Reid fretted over her childrens clothes. She wasnt worried about other kids. She feared something else.

I think its important to have somebody who looks like you, who can empathize with what you feel, Reid says. For the most part, white Americans have traditionally been very trusting of the police. The police are Barney Fife. Theyre your friend. They get your cat out of a tree.

Im a law-abiding citizen, she continues. Ive never been arrested or committed a crime. But when I see those blue lights, I feel sick. I feel my heart racing. Even though I know I havent done anything wrong, Im afraid of the police. Im successful. I work at a great company. I have health benefits. And Im afraid of the police.

Matthewss swift retirement proved a shock to the network. It also offered a reset. It allowed room for something, someone different in different times. In the months that followed, Reid was one of a series of people who held down the 7 p.m. hour as MSNBC sought out a replacement. But there remained no clear choice.

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MSNBCs Joy Reid Makes Cable-Network History With the Debut of The ReidOut - Vogue

Anti-maskers bring their misinformation to Halifax – Halifax Examiner

Sign-carrying anti-mask protestors chat with bystanders on Sunday. Photo: Yvette dEntremont

The Halifax Examiner is providing all COVID-19 coverage for free.

A dozen anti-mask protesters who gathered on the Halifax Waterfront Sunday afternoon were met by an equal number of mask-wearing counter protesters determined to push back on the messaging.

March to Unmask: Halifax was organized by Sandra Saunders and was part of a nationwide campaign against what the unmasking group is calling an unjustified push for mandatory masks. In addition to protesting masks, one brandished an anti-vaccine and anti-5G technology sign and another noted that Bill Gates wont save you.

Shortly before the 3 p.m. event started, a group of mask-wearing counter protesters showed up on-site with signs of their own. As Saunders spoke to reporters, they began raising their own signs and shaking homemade noisemakers.

Veda Wynters (centre) was one of a dozen mask wearers who showed up to counter Sundays unmask Halifax event. Photo: Yvette dEntremont

Halifax resident Veda Wynters was one of those who showed up to counter the anti-mask group. Sporting a Wonder Woman mask, she said she felt compelled to show up.

I decided to come here after reading all the comments on their (Unmask Halifax) Facebook page that has outdated numbers, incorrect information, conspiracy theories up the wazoo, and we just wanted to represent the saner side of Halifax, Wynters said.

Im immunocompromised. I have severe asthma, I have chronic issues, so if anyone shouldnt need to wear a mask, Im asthmatic. I shouldnt need to wear a mask and yet Im wearing a mask.

One of the other women who joined her added that mask wearing was about compassion for other people and she too felt they needed to push back.

Its not really for your protection, its for other people and it just infuriates me that there are people that wouldnt have that same compassion that all of these lovely people have, she said, gesturing broadly to the people wearing masks around her.

Both groups were generally respectful and calm, with the exception of one man aligned with the anti-mask group. He angrily yelled at a CTV cameraman for not interviewing him and got into a heated yelling match with two mask-wearing teenagers.

In an interview, Saunders said she became involved with organizing the March to Unmask Halifax event because her daughter is asthmatic and works in an industry that recently made them mandatory. She said she wanted to create awareness about what the group claims are the harms caused by masks.

She added that people shouldnt be listening to what mainstream media or the government has to say about wearing them during this pandemic.

We should never, ever be mandated anything, especially a medical device that poses harmEspecially cloth masks. Cloth masks, when you have the moisture from your breath coming out, your C02 is actually your waste product, Saunders said in an interview, pointing to this reporters cloth mask.

Seriously. So its kind of like eating your own poop, man, you know, because seriously the CO2 has virus and bacterial particles that your body is trying to expel and get rid of.

This is not accurate, and contrary to the scientific consensus on masks.

The fact that so few people showed up for a protest against masks was no surprise to Howard Ramos. The former Dalhousie University sociology professor recently took up a new post as chair of sociology at Western University.

Hes worked with the Association of Canadian Studies and their polling with national market research and analytics company Leger. Last week, Leger released a survey that showed 67% of Canadians believe wearing a mask in all indoor public spaces should be made mandatory.

When asked if requiring people to wear a mask in public places is an infringement on their personal freedoms, 70% surveyed disagreed.

The super majority of Canadians believe in the public health practices that have been happening and recognize that weve sacrificed a little bit of our freedom in order to have more freedom, Ramos said in an interview.

Wearing a mask gives us the opportunity to be able to go shopping, to be able to make sure that our friends and relatives and neighbours arent getting sick.

He said there will always be a minority who arent supportive, adding that those who are unsupportive often hold extreme alt-right views.

I think that were importing some of the narrative from the US, and within political views theres always a chunk of the population who prides liberty and libertarian values over other values, he noted.

So to me as I hear about this kind of event its to recognize that yes theres going to be this kind of group of people. Its not new, its something that always exists within society, but its important for us to put it into context that this is a minority of people.

Ramos said public health officials have done a great job, particularly in Atlantic Canada, with informing the public about why theyre implementing various measures in order to protect the health of the community at large.

I think that what ends up happening with a lot of the anti-vaxxers and the alt-right and why they often pair together is because of this prizing of individuality, he said.

If you look at Atlantic Canada, weve done very well because weve embraced the messaging from public health, and its important to remember that this is going to be a long term marathon that were running and that its not over.

On Friday, Nova Scotias chief medical officer of health announced that non-medical masks will become mandatory on public transportation as of July 24.

In a media briefing he stated that evidence around wearing non-medical masks has evolved throughout the pandemic. That evidence now clearly shows that non-medical masks are an effective tool in helping to prevent the spread of COVID-19. He added that before a second wave or resurgence of the virus, we need to normalize mask wearing and make it much more of a habit for Nova Scotians.

Strang also stressed that the vast majority of Nova Scotians are able to wear masks. He said although there are exemptions for medical reasons, there are very few valid medical reasons to not wear non-medical masks and they are primarily related to anxiety.

The Canadian Thoracic Society clearly states that there is no evidence that wearing a non medical mask worsens a chronic lung condition such as asthma or chronic obstructive lung disease, he said.

But I do recognize that for some people with chronic breathing conditions wearing a mask can create anxiety.

He urged people to try and overcome that anxiety by getting used to wearing masks for short periods in a safe environment, such as in the confines of their own homes. He also noted that while people with cognitive or developmental disabilities may also be unable to wear masks, there are very few medical reasons not to.

So if you think about it we have medical professionals that wear masks all day long every day. So what Im asking is that Nova Scotians wear non-medical masks for much shorter periods of time, he said.

Strang described masks are part of a package of personal protective measures that include frequent handwashing, good cough hygiene, physical distancing, cleaning common surfaces and objects, and staying home when youre feeling unwell.

He also encouraged Nova Scotians to seriously think about the role masks play in helping us protect each other, adding that wearing masks in public spaces where physical distancing isnt possible shows that you care about others and are taking a relatively simple step to keep them safe.

Theres a lot of misinformation and downright mistruth being circulated about masks. Wearing a non-medical mask is safe and effective, he said. Our response to COVID-19 has highlighted that in many ways we need to think more about putting others first ahead of ourselves.

Strang also noted that face shields or other types of eye protection are not a replacement for masks as they dont protect others.

Ive seen too many circumstances where people are making choices or organizations are making choices thinking that a face shield, that eye protection, is a replacement for masks, he said. Its not. Where we need to have masks on we need to wear masks. Theres no replacement for them.

Last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in the US called on Americans to wear masks to prevent COVID-19 spread.

CDC reviewed the latest science and affirms that cloth face coverings are a critical tool in the fight against COVID-19 that could reduce the spread of the disease, particularly when used universally within communities, the CDC states in its press release. There is increasing evidence that cloth face coverings help prevent people who have COVID-19 from spreading the virus to others.

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Anti-maskers bring their misinformation to Halifax - Halifax Examiner

Anti-Greta and the challenges faced by young activists | Forge – ForgeToday

In 1962, Bertrand Russell finally responded to Sir Oswald Mosleys letters, which were badgering him into a debate about the merits of fascism. He replied: It is always difficult to decide on how to respond to people whose ethos is so alien and, in fact, repellent to ones own.

Russells words can be reflected in a more recent political tennis match, indirectly concerning Greta Thunberg. There should be nobody who does not know this teenagers name.

She already has proven herself to be articulate, precise and powerful beyond her years, as her 2019 address to the World Economic Forum proves: I dont want you to be hopeful. I want you to panic. I want you to feel the fear I feel every day. And then I want you to act. I want you to act as you would in a crisis. I want you to act as if the house was on fire because it is.

Throughout the past year, she has broken through the political fishing nets designed to keep us immobile and now excels in the fact that, to quote her own book title, No One Is Too Small To Make a Difference.

Like any great thinker or shaker of established norms, there is kickback from the normally politically ambivalent. The vitriolic responses to Greta range between mild-mannered questioning to vicious ableist attacks due to her autism, her being a child and, while not as explicitly, a woman speaking more than is socially acceptable (as any woman ever will confirm).

Like most insults, those that are used most searingly tend to be that which the insulter fears the most; a female child who is deemed lesser due to her medical disability, and who has embarrassed the norms of the right wing establishment. Having no good argument in response, the manner adopted by those who conform to established norms becomes that of Harry Wormwood, the father in Matilda. Matilda has realised he has been mechanically lowering the mileage clock on cars he is about to sell.

Matilda: Daddy, youre a crook. [] This is illegal.

Harry: Do you make money? Do you have a job?

Matilda: No, but dont people need good cars? Cant you sell good cars, dad?

Harry: Listen, you little wiseacre. Im smart, youre dumb. Im big, youre little. Im right, youre wrong. And theres nothing you can do about it.

Greta is doing something about it, and well.

Naturally, there must be a response. Naomi Seibt, a 19-year-old German teenager, spoke on Friday 28 February at a smaller side event of the Conservative Political Action Conference, a prominent right-wing convention in the United States. She is described as the anti-Greta of climate change, and describes herself as a climate realist. Her views have already had to be defended due to being allegedly anti-Semitic. She has described Stefan Molyneaux, an alt-right spokesperson, as an inspiration for his views outside the mainstream. If this isnt enough, Seibt has been hired by the Heartland Institute, and the less said about them, the better.

Her views on climate change are as follows: Today climate change science really is not science at all. [] The goal is to shame humanity. Climate change alarmism at its very core is a despicably anti-human ideology and we are told to look down at our achievements with guilt, with shame and disgust, and not even to take into account the many major benefits we have achieved by using fossil fuels as our main energy source.

It is moments like this I wonder of the nerve of those who use snowflakes as an insult. Much like the phrase victim mentality, the goal is to simply be so obtuse as not to listen or care for anyone else other than oneself, that calling the other side weak is seen as a strength.

The denial of our climate crisis and the fact there is even a climate belief system shows how, for some, engaged debate is simply as useless as Mussolinis hairbrush. The question soon becomes one of overwhelming political fighting. It is another battle of left-wing versus right-wing, progressive versus traditionalist, new versus old. It is hard to ignore how commonplace this is nowadays. You will remember the protests against Greggs vegan sausage rolls last year. At football matches every other week I hear fans frothing with similar rage when the referee gives a free kick to the opposite team. I realise now that its nothing at all about football or pasties.

It is about an attack of the old order by the new. The old order has rejected modern ideas that told them, directly or otherwise, that they and, by extension, their ways of thinking, were wrong.

This fundamental fact must be understood if the progressives are to combat more products of Seibts ilk. To present a new idea that shakes grounded beliefs, one must expect a response that will reach higher levels of depravity depending on the gravity of topic.

The only way to defeat this is to stick to truth harder than ever. Greta Thunberg is doing the work for those who would not, or cannot, speak for themselves, and she is holding to account those who have long hidden from their crimes by sticking to truth. Naomi Seibt, and those like her, do not provide solutions to the problems they find in thinkers like Thunberg.

The negative effects of not calling out their astounding lack of sense and logic, and lending debate to those who have no intention of changing their own ways has been proven tenfold by the two blonde haired fellows in charge across both sides of the pond. It becomes a shouting match that entirely damages the name of intellectual debate, and soon, to paraphrase a famous saying, you will not be able to argue with them, as they will beat you with experience of inarguable incompetence.

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Anti-Greta and the challenges faced by young activists | Forge - ForgeToday

The Return of the Cooch – Bacon’s Rebellion

By Peter Galuszka

Early this past Wednesday morning, Mark Pettibone and Connor OShead were walking on their way home after a peaceful protest in Portland, Ore.

Suddenly an unmarked van pulled in front of them. Men wearing green uniforms, tactical gear and generic signs reading POLICE hustled them into the vehicle. They were not told why they were being detained. After 90 minutes, the badly shaken men were released without being charged.

The episode might sound like the activities of Russian President Vladimir Putin and his little green men who have shown up in places like Crimea and Eastern Ukraine to intimidate and detain people.

But this was Portland, a progressive city that has seen protests for weeks. President Donald Trump has urged federal authorities to move in on cities to restore his sense of order even though city officials in Portland do not want his help and are investigating what is going on.

And, guess who is playing a role in what could be a growing national trend of federal law enforcement performing snatch and grabs of innocent protestors?

That would be Kenneth Cuccinelli, the former hard right, state attorney general and failed gubernatorial candidate. He is now acting deputy secretary of the Trumps Department of Homeland Security.

Cuccinelli may be remembered for angering Virginia women by pushing for mandatory womb ultra-sounds before abortions. He pushed covering up the exposed breast of a woman on the state flag. Worst of all, he harassed former University of Virginia climate professor Michael Mann and demanded hundreds of his emails and other documents because Cuccinelli didnt agree with his research.

After the Portland episode, Cuccinelli told National Public Radio that federal agents had used unmarked vehicles to pick up people in Portland but said it was done to keep officers safe and away from crowds and to move detainees to a safe location for questioning.

The one instance Im familiar with, they were, believed they had identified someone who had assaulted officers or the federal building there, the courthouse. Upon questioning, they determined they did not have the right person and that person was released, Cuccinelli said.

I fully expect that as long as people continue to be violent and to destroy property that we will attempt to identify those folks, he added. We will pick them up in front of the courthouse. If we spot them elsewhere, we will pick them up elsewhere. And if we have a question about somebodys identity, like the first example I noted to you, after questioning determine it isnt someone of interest, then they get released. And thats standard law enforcement procedure, and its going to continue as long as the violence continues.

Some of the federal officers involved in the snatch and grabs are believed to be Customs and Border Protection (CBP), part of Cuccinellis department that are best known for their work in confronting, if not assaulting, suspected undocumented immigrants.

CBP officials acknowledged that at least in one case, they approached a person suspected of damaging federal property, but were turned away by an angry crowd, NPR reported. The customs officials say that the officers uniforms were clearly marked.

There have been calls in Congress for federal officers to wear insignias that clearly designate what their agency is. In some cases, protestors or simply people who happened by have been arrested by individuals dressed in military style clothing and carrying weapons, including assault rifles. But the detainees did not know who they were.

That could be an explosive situation because hard-right, white supremacists tend to head for trouble at demonstrations heavily armed and in combat dress.

There has been a national outcry about what happened in Portland. No wonder.

Personally, it reminds me of my experience reporting from the former Soviet Union. During the Cold War, KGB officials often whisked away protestors drawing attention to the plight of Jewish refuseniks and others.

Later, as unrest swept the country during coups against Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin, new divisions of Ministry of Internal Affairs police and military were formed. They were dubbed OMONs or riot cops. Some were clearly marked; others were not. They even can a mechanized, motorized element known as OMSDONGS.

One wonders if thats the next step for Donald Trump and Ken Cuccinelli.

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The Return of the Cooch - Bacon's Rebellion

What is the deal with ‘woke’ culture and writing letters? – The National

A battle of letters is under way on the broad and bitterly contested theme of justice and open debate and a truce seems unlikely anytime soon. We have been here before many times in previous years, with warriors for and against political correctness and wokeness facing off in prolonged bouts of written and oral sniping.

What makes this new battle slightly different is the moment in which it comes. Calls for racial and systemic justice are ricocheting around the world in the wake of the May 25 death of George Floyd.

The new battle is also significant for the calibre, strength and sheer firepower of the forces ranged against each other. On one side are 150 or so of the worlds leading writers, thinkers, academics and activists. They include JK Rowling, Salman Rushdie, Margaret Atwood, Noam Chomsky, Kamel Daoud and Fareed Zakaria. Most are on the left or centre-left of the political spectrum. They fired the opening shot and it took the form of a three-paragraph exhortation to anti-racism and social justice activists to eschew censoriousness, intolerance of opposing views and blinding moral certainty.

While calling out illiberalism, US President Donald Trump and the radical right, the letter also criticised left-liberals right to demand ideological conformity. The letter went up on the site of one of Americas oldest monthly magazines, Harper's Magazine.

Soon enough, platoons of fighters armed with hashtags and memes began to challenge the letters content and intentions. Within 72 hours, another letter was issued, this time by more than 150 other, slightly less well-known names in academia, the liberal arts, media and NGOs. That letter assailed the famous signatories, many of them white, wealthy, and endowed with massive platforms, and suggested their words reflect a stubbornness to let go of the elitism that still pervades an unwillingness to dismantle systems that keep people like them in and the rest of us out.

The second letter said the first was at best obtuse and inappropriate, and at worst actively racist because it was issued at a time of massive protests for justice. The worlds most famous public intellectuals, it said, were trying to detract from the public conversation about who gets to have a platform. The second letter appeared on a volunteer-staffed site whose stated mission is to confront inequities in coverage and to report on historically ignored communities.

The letters war would be laughable if it were not so consequential. It illustrates three dismal realities of our time.

First, illiberal liberalism can be just as hateful as far-right exclusivism. Contemporary culture on both the far left and the far right seems to suffer from the flaw American critic Lionel Trilling once diagnosed only in conservatism: it does not really express itself in ideas, but in irritable mental gestures which seek to resemble ideas.

Where the far right uses racial slurs or justifies discrimination on the grounds of religion, the far left runs a different grading system. By means of a hyper-conscious regulation of semantics, it ceaselessly looks for evidence of racism, sexism and any other distressing ism in speech. Perceived infractions are dealt with quickly and often very publicly.

Examples abound. When the novelist Margaret Atwood wrote a thoughtful piece for a Canadian paper two years ago, titled Am I a Bad Feminist?, she was accused of being an apologist for rape as a result of her white privilege. British university students tried to no-platform writer Germaine Greer for allegedly transphobic views. In the US, students at a west coast university staged a sit-in when a professor corrected a students spelling of the word "indigenous". Replacing the upper-case I with lower-case was an act of "linguistic micro-aggression", they said.

The best way to defeat iniquitous ideas is to allow them to be scrutinised

Second, the liberal project for meaningful change comes into question every time its supporters make an illiberal attempt to choke off debate. In 2018, Angela Nagle, author of Kill All the Normies: Online Culture Wars from 4chan and Tumblr to Trump and the Alt-right, noted that many people are attracted to progressive politics because they see that the world is unequal and unfair But they quickly find out that this isn't enough. To avoid being purged, she said, they have to learn an ever more elaborate and bizarre set of correct positions on a range of issues.

Indeed, it is deeply divisive to see the whole world only through the prism of power structures. Of course, there is inequality and injustice and, of course, more needs to be done to understand how these structures still stand and what can be done to bring about beneficial change. But a single-focus narrative often does little to build a coalition, or for that matter a fairer system. Instead, it divides and creates space for those who want to sow greater division, using racial and religious difference as tools.

Third, and most important, greater diversity of culture demands more diversity of expression, not less. Refusal to engage with alternative points of view even if contentious does not enable greater tolerance of opposing ideas; it merely makes everyone wary of discussing them. American civil rights activist Martin Luther King used relentless argument to push for equality of opportunity and equality before the law. Nearly a century ago, Mahatma Gandhi was writing about the need to convert an opponent by opening his ears, which was surely a reference to engaging with different points of view.

The best way to defeat iniquitous ideas is to allow them to be scrutinised. And then to be argued and refuted, point by point. It is interesting to note that a leading American site for professional development and training recently warned against woke-washing the workplace. It might create groupthink, it said.

The context of the warning is something that has been dubbed woke capitalism. It takes a fairly predictable form. Companies try to associate themselves with liberal causes by making lofty claims of a social purpose, indulging in rhetorical repositioning and then using their new activist avatar as a marketing ploy. It could be a T-shirt companys change of its iconic animal logo for different endangered species, a razor firm taking a stand against toxic masculinity, or a sportswear manufacturer picking a controversial black anti-racism footballer as the face of its marketing campaign.

Just days ago, it was the announcement by the Washington Redskins American football team that it was retiring its name, which has long been criticised as racist.

But the teams decision is seen to be more about the power of money with lead sponsors threatening to pull funding than a sudden attack of conscience. The other examples are also seen to be mainly about the business of positioning brands to appeal to millennial consumers. That said, it is at least worth celebrating the fact that social consciousness is now considered a marketable quantity.

The culture wars have raged for years and the core question has always remained the same: who gets to tell the story of a country, a society, a people, an event? It is a grand and worthy struggle for a more egalitarian society. But if the objective of both sides becomes control of the debate, it doesnt change the status quo; just who is up.

Updated: July 16, 2020 06:18 PM

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What is the deal with 'woke' culture and writing letters? - The National

What is alt text on Instagram? How to add alt text – Business Insider – Business Insider

In recent years, the social photo platform Instagram has become more friendly to blind and visually impaired users through the alt text feature.

Alt text is a short text description of a photo that's read aloud by a screen reading program. This text is an essential way for the visually impaired to get the clearest image of internet photos, which is why you should add alt text to photos you post on Instagram.

Instagram automatically creates alt text for your Instagram posts through object recognition technology. This determines what's in your photo and passes that on to screen readers. But automatic alt text is highly inaccurate. It doesn't understand the most important part of the photo and lacks the context to explain why you posted a particular photo.

If you manually enter your own alt text when you post a photo to Instagram, your post can be understood and appreciated by the largest possible audience.

Here's how to write and include alt text with your Instagram posts.

Remember that your alt text is describing the photo to someone who may not be able to see the photo, or who has trouble seeing its details. Here are some things to keep in mind:

1. Using the Instagram app on your phone, start to create a post in the usual way.

2. After you select a photo and choose your filter, tap "Next."

3. On the screen in which you add the caption, tag people, and add a location, tap "Advanced 4. Settings" at the bottom, below the option to connect to other social networking sites.

You can find alt text in the Advanced Settings. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

4. In the Accessibility section of the Advanced Settings page, tap "Write Alt Text."

After you tap "Write Alt Text," you'll be able to write a description of the photo. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

5. Write a short description of the photo and then tap "Done"

6. Finish posting your photo in the usual way.

You may go back to existing posts and add alt text.

1. Using the Instagram app on your phone, tap an Instagram post.

2. Tap the three-dot menu next to your photo.

3. Choose "Edit" in the pop-up menu.

Tap the three-dot menu to open the drop-down menu for your post. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

4. If the hashtag menu obscures the photo, tap a different part of the caption to make it go away.

5. In the lower right corner of the photo, tap "Edit Alt Text."

You should see the option to edit your alt text in the lower right corner of an existing Instagram post. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

6. Write a short description of the photo.

7. Select "Done" and then tap "Done" again to save your post.

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NY: Hundreds of free Uber e-bikes coming to WNY for proposed ‘transportation libraries’ – MassTransitMag.com

Jul. 19--When the ride-share giant Uber sold its bike unit in May, the company was left with a difficult problem: tens of thousands of unwanted electronic bikes, worth many millions of dollars.

Uber initially planned to scrap the red bikes, which operated under the brand name Jump. But following international condemnation from bike advocates, a portion are instead coming to Western New York via Shared Mobility Inc., a national transportation non-profit based in Buffalo.

The organization has received 3,000 e-bikes from Uber, it plans to announce Sunday, roughly half of which are already awaiting deployment in an East Side warehouse. Shared Mobility plans to use many of those bikes to build out what it calls "transportation libraries": free, community-led hubs that loan out bikes, e-bikes and scooters, essentially expanding the reach of public transit.

Such programs have been proposed in Chicago and other cities, but this would be the "first of its kind at this size," said Michael Galligano, Shared Mobility's chief executive officer.

"We believe that access to affordable, healthy and environmentally-friendly transportation is a human right," Galligano said. "... This is a huge opportunity to help a lot of people."

While details on the proposed program are sparse, there's little question that some residents in the region could use additional transportation. Twenty-eight percent of city of Buffalo households have no car, according to the most recent Census estimates, and regional planners and transit advocates have long indicated an interest in expanding the area's transit options.

In one 2017 report, researchers with the Partnership for the Public Good, a left-leaning think tank affiliated with Cornell University, concluded that infrequent bus routes in parts of the East and West Sides made it more difficult for residents of those areas to access the region's employment centers. Since then, a growing number of city residents have taken jobs in the suburbs, where public transit runs less frequently, economic geographer Russell Weaver wrote last December.

Even when passengers do have a quick route to work, they often face long walks to or from bus and metro stops -- an issue known in the industry as the "first and last mile problem."

Bikeshare programs, like the Reddy Bikeshare program Shared Mobility already operates, provide some potential fixes to those problems. So too, in theory, do ride-sharing services, such as Uber and Lyft.

But as Shared Mobility envisions them, the new libraries will improve on both these models by providing free access to over $1 million worth of pedal-assist e-bikes, which are easier to power up hills and over long distances.

That could help commuters who work nights or weekends, when buses run less frequently, or who commute to more remote locations, said Lisa Kenney, an advisor on the Greater Buffalo Niagara Regional Transportation Council who is familiar with the proposed project. It's timely now, she added, as many workers return to offices, stores and other job sites amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

"People still need to get to work -- essential workers in particular are often reliant on public transit," she said. "And right now, some people might not be comfortable taking it."

Shared Mobility said it aims to place 1,000 free "micromobility units" across Western New York, including 500 to 600 of the 3,000 e-bikes donated by Uber. The remaining 2,500 bikes will go to the organization's programs in other areas.

The organization is seeking funding from local governments, transit agencies and foundations to cover the proposed program's operations, Galligano said. The exact locations and administration of the hubs will also be determined in partnership with local block clubs, social service agencies and other community organizations.

"There are many questions still as to how this will actually work," Galligano said, "but starting from the beginning, our aim is to launch the library as a community-controlled, community-led initiative."

"Our goal is to better serve disadvantaged communities in Western New York," he later added.

The proposal comes at a time of rapid change in public transit and transportation. New York State only just legalized e-bikes and scooters in April, following months of lobbying from companies like Uber. Buffalo is still developing regulations for the new vehicles. Shared Mobility will conduct demonstrations and gather public feedback to help policymakers understand these new transportation options, said Galligano.

In February, the city of Buffalo and the Congress for the New Urbanism, a national planning group, also proposed the pilot of a "micromobility corridor" on Washington Street, which would add protected bike lanes, new bus loading zones and other features designed to diversify downtown's transit options.

Brendan Mehaffy, the executive director of Buffalo's Office of Strategic Planning, said his department is currently finalizing that proposal and plans to release it within the "next couple of weeks." His office was also recently briefed on Shared Mobility's proposed libraries.

"Shared Mobility deserves credit for its pursuit of the e-bike library and in many of its mobility endeavors," said Mehaffy, noting the organization's focus on making cities more equitable.

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NY: Hundreds of free Uber e-bikes coming to WNY for proposed 'transportation libraries' - MassTransitMag.com