US Space Force creates acquisition command to build culture of innovation – SpaceNews

Gen. John Jay Raymond, the leader of the U.S. Space Force, has been emphatic that the success of the service will depend on its technological might.

You will build the Space Force as the first digital service, and lay the foundation of a service that is innovative and can go fast, Raymond told a group of 86 Air Force Academy graduates who joined the Space Force in April.

Accelerating the pace of innovation is a huge imperative for the newest branch of the U.S. military, established in December 2019 with a mandate to ensure the U.S. stays ahead of foreign adversaries in the space technology race.

The traditional way of buying satellites and other space systems is problematic, Raymond has said, as programs take a decade or longer to move through the military acquisition process and struggle to keep up with commercial space innovation.

Another concern of Raymond, the chief of space operations, is the disjointed nature of the space procurement system, with multiple agencies that work under separate bureaucratic stovepipes.

With these issues in the backdrop, the Space Force on June 30 revealed plans to stand up a Space Systems Command as one of three field commands that will report directly to Raymond.

The other two are the Space Operations Command and the Space Training and Readiness Command, both to be located at Peterson Air Force Base, Colorado.

The Space Systems Command will be the acquisition arm of the Space Force. To be run by a three-star general, the command will be responsible for the development, acquisition and maintenance of satellites and ground systems, the procurement of satcom and launch services, and for making investments in next-generation technologies. It will oversee the Space Forces approximately $12 billion annual budget for research, development and procurement of new systems.

The militarys primary space procurement organization today is the Space and Missile Systems Center at Los Angeles Air Force Base. Officials said the new Space Systems Command is not replacing SMC but will be an umbrella organization bringing together SMC and other procurement agencies that are currently dispersed.

Lt. Gen. John JT Thompson, the commander of SMC, told SpaceNews that his organization will become the initial foundation of Space Systems Command. This is truly a work in progress, he said.

With SMC as the anchor, other organizations that will be moving under the Space Systems Command include the Commercial Satellite Communications Office a group based in the Washington D.C. area that manages the procurement of commercial satcom for the Defense Department and the Air Force Research Laboratorys Space Vehicles Directorate, based at Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico.

Thompson noted that SMC over the past couple of years has been reorganized under an effort called SMC 2.0 that focused on efficiency and speed. The transformation of SMC makes it exactly what we need as a foundational part for the new field command a flat, agile acquisition organization, pushing authorities down to the lowest level possible for timely decision making.

The next challenge will be to integrate other units beyond SMC, Thompson said. This will enable increased synchronization in delivering technologies and systems to space operators, as well as increased partnership with the labs and their science and technology activities.

The Pentagons Space Development Agency is expected to become part of Space Systems Command although the timing is still being negotiated. DoD established the SDA in March 2019 under the office of the undersecretary of defense for research and engineering in response to criticism that the U.S. military was not keeping up with the innovation happening in the space industry. The agency was given special authorities to cut red tape and acquire space technologies on an accelerated timeline.

Congress directed DoD to transfer the SDA to the Space Force by October 2022 but Air Force Secretary Barbara Barrett and Raymond have argued that the SDA should transition to the Space Force sooner.

Before leaving his post on July 10, Undersecretary of Defense for Research and Engineering Mike Griffin had pushed to delay the transfer of the SDA, insisting that the agency should not go to the Space Force until it has a chance to complete its first constellation of low orbiting satellites planned for 2022. Griffins departure has stirred speculation that the transfer of SDA to Space Systems Command will be accelerated.

Barrett and Raymond also want to bring the Space Rapid Capabilities Office under Space Systems Command but face pushback from Capitol Hill.

Based at Kirtland Air Force Base, the RCO develops and acquires classified space technologies using special authorities. The office currently reports to a board of directors made up of Air Force, Space Force and DoD officials. New Mexico lawmakers have proposed language in the 2021 National Defense Authorization Act to keep the RCO in its current status, arguing that if the RCO is swallowed up in the new bureaucracy it will slow down programs.

Space Force officials said they are in talks with DoD, Army and Navy leaders about transferring space organizations from those services to the Space Systems Command. That would include portions of the Army Space and Missile Defense Command in Huntsville, Alabama, that develop and procure satellites; and the Navys satellite communications office in San Diego, California. This remains a long shot, however, as neither service has signaled it is prepared to turn over any assets.

The Space Force has yet to announce the details of how the former Air Force space units known as space wings will fit under the three new field commands. Some will be assigned to Space Operations Command, others to Space Systems Command.

The space wings will be renamed deltas as a way to define their identity separately from the Air Force. The delta wing is a central design element in the Space Force seal and flag.

Under the new structure, some deltas will report to Space Operations Command and others, like the ones that oversee space launches in Florida and in California, will report to Space Systems Command.

Space Force spokeswoman Lynn Kirby said the space wings will be aligned to the new field commands according to their primary missions. Units responsible for space launch, developmental testing, on-orbit checkout, and sustainment and maintenance of space systems will align under Space Systems Command, she said. Specific unit alignments and timelines will be announced when they are finalized.

The two launch deltas currently the 45h Space Wing at Patrick Air Force Base, Florida; and the 30th Space Wing at Vandenberg Air Force Base, California will be under the Space Systems Command. These wings are now aligned with what used to be the 14th Air Force.

Former SMC commander retired Air Force Gen. Ellen Pawlikowski said it makes sense for the launch units to be aligned under Space Systems Command as SMCs Launch Enterprise is responsible for procuring launch services from commercial companies.

The launch wings are a better fit under Systems Command, Pawlikowski told SpaceNews. Launch operations today are really maintaining a range and overseeing contractors. I think thats a really good move.

Companies that sell space technologies to DoD, SMC and other military organizations hope the standup of a new acquisition command leads to more cohesion and consistency.

Were encouraged by anything that helps to clearly define authorities and discourage competition between entities that are doing the same thing, said one industry executive.

In a recent white paper, the National Security Space Association said the Space Force should set clear lanes in the road for acquiring national security space systems. The paper notes that numerous defense and intelligence organizations are currently involved in developing and procuring space systems, which creates confusion for companies trying to sell technologies to the government.

Tom Tav Taverney, a retired Air Force major general and former vice commander of Air Force Space Command, said the standup of the three new field commands are a significant step forward for the nascent Space Force.

It shows they are trying to re-imagine how acquisition fits into space operations, in a more agile way, Taverney said.

Organizations like SMC, he noted, were built around the notoriously convoluted military acquisition process where bureaucrats spend years writing detailed requirements documents, reviewing and approving those requirements before anything is built.

The reality today is we have to get systems into operations much faster, said Taverney. Adversaries are turning technology in three to five years, threats are emerging faster than we can keep up with.

The Space Force said its new field commands will have a flatter management structure than current organizations. That in itself will help speed up programs to some degree, said Taverney, but its not going to be enough unless processes are simplified and managers are willing to delegate authority.

If the intent is a lean, more agile organization, it certainly would be helpful to empower leaders with decision making, he said.

Pawlikowski, the former SMC commander, said Congress and DoD will have to trust the Space Force leadership and allow them to do things a little different.

The Space Force has been given a big task, she told SpaceNews. The performance of the Space Systems Command will be key to the success of the service, she said. Raymond really understands space operations. Hes going to need a really smart person to do the acquisition side. If they dont get the right talent in there then they will struggle, Pawlikowski said. They need people who understand how to calibrate risk and work their way through it.

Lance Lord, retired Air Force general and former commander of Air Force Space Command, said having a single command focused on acquisition is good for the culture.

One key objective of the Space Force is to cultivate its own unique culture. In space acquisitions, that would be hard to do when people are in different organizations, Lord said. The Space Systems Command creates a center of gravity.

Lord has closely followed the standup of the Space Force. A lot of thought went into this, he said. Im sure there are things that will create little friction to start with. That happens in any reorganization. But theyre heading in the right direction.

This article originally appeared in the July 13, 2020 issue of SpaceNews magazine.

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US Space Force creates acquisition command to build culture of innovation - SpaceNews

Israel Is Spearheading a ‘Bio-Convergence’ Revolution | Anya Eldan – The Times of Israel

Four months after the World Health Organization declared it a pandemic, COVID-19 remains at the forefront of the global health agenda and will likely continue to be in the foreseeable future. But this acute global challenge hasnt displaced the long-term problems plaguing health systems worldwide increasing rates of multiple chronic diseases, rising drug development costs and inefficient, unsustainable and prohibitively expensive healthcare delivery models. Indeed, the pandemic has only accentuated and exacerbated these pre-existing conditions.

Ignoring or downplaying these longer-standing issues wont help countries effectively combat the current health crisis and are only a recipe for ensuring more crises down the line. Researchers, clinicians, entrepreneurs, business leaders and governments must therefore adopt a two-pronged approach, investing in innovative solutions for addressing both near- and long-term healthcare challenges.

This will entail nothing short of a revolution in medical treatment and Bio-convergence is poised to play a major role in making it happen. Bio-convergence represents a 21st-century approach to problem-solving, an upcoming technological wave with the potential to revolutionize the digital health industry, as well as many other sectors.

What exactly is Bio-convergence? The nascent field fuses life sciences with different technologies from mathematics, engineering, and the physical and computational sciences, creating a sum far greater than its parts. Indeed, the human body is an incredibly complex organism made up of countless intricate systems, so it makes perfect sense that treating it must be multidisciplinary and multifaceted. Enabled by advances in genomics, gene therapy, DNA sequencing, artificial intelligence, big data, nanotechnology, and synthetic biology, Bio-convergence is paving such a holistic path to remarkable innovations in treatment, discovery and delivery, regenerative medicine, and diagnostics, with potential benefits for COVID-19 and well beyond.

It is exactly this tremendous potential for improving healthcare across the board and in the process bettering lives which has led the Israel Innovation Authority, Israels public agency for promoting innovation at all levels, to spearhead efforts to turn the country into a hub of Bio-convergence endeavor and invention.

Bio-Convergence and the Healthcare Landscape

The Bio-convergence opportunity coincides with a crisis moment in the global health system. While breakthroughs in medical research and treatment have increased global life expectancy at birth from 52.6 years in 1960 to 72.6 years in 2018, aging populations and rising rates of chronic conditions like cancer, heart disease, and diabetes have sent healthcare costs surging.

By 2022, global health expenditure will surpass $10 trillion. That spending tends to be disproportionately devoted to managing chronic illness: In the U.S., for instance, nearly 60% of adults have at least one chronic condition, and these individuals account for 90% of healthcare spending overall, according to the Rand Corporation.

Improving outcomes for patients with chronic illnesses while also controlling costs hinges on early, effective, and personalized intervention and thats precisely what Bio-convergence aims to make possible.

How Israel Is Propelling Bio-Convergence Forward

In theory, its clear why Israel is well-positioned to lead the Bio-convergence revolution. With approximately 1,600 active life sciences companies, unparalleled expertise in fields from AI to digital health to nanotechnology, and some of the worlds leading universities, research centers, and hospital systems, the Start-Up Nation is incubating some of the most promising developments in Bio-convergence.

Ranked fifth in the world in patents per capita, the country has the worlds second-largest centralized electronic health records system and is home to more than 600 active medical device companies, 500 AI-driven healthcare companies, and R&D centers established by major multinational companies like Medtronic, Philips, GE, and more. Israels medical, engineering, and scientific knowhow can fairly be described as an excellent fit for Bio-convergence, with healthcare systems and patients alike standing to gain big.

And in practice? Israeli-developed innovations in Bio-convergence are attracting global attention. Consider the case of BiomX, which combines synthetic biology with an advanced AI platform to develop innovative microbiome-based therapeutics which aim at preventing and treating cancer, skin disorders, and other medical conditions. BiomX is a publicly traded company which offers a complete end-to-end solution from target discovery to development of therapeutic compounds.

BiomX is part of an expanding ecosystem of Israeli companies and institutions operating in the field of Bio-convergence:

MeMed harnesses AI, systems engineering, and molecular biology to create a diagnostic platform to generate precise distinctions between bacterial and viral infections.

The Technions Lab for Cancer Drug Delivery & Cell-Based Technologies has developed nano-ghosts, a drug delivery system that delivers cancer drugs directly to cancerous cells, sparing surrounding healthy cells.

Such companies are continuing a longstanding Israeli tradition of biotechnological innovation. In 1996, the Weizmann Institute of Science developed Copaxone, the groundbreaking multiple sclerosis drug that reduces the frequency of relapses. In the 1970s, the Technion, in collaboration with Teva Pharmaceuticals, incubated Azilect, a drug used to treat Parkinsons Disease.

Notably, these breakthroughs were the product of multi-stakeholder, multidisciplinary collaborations bringing together academic researchers, technologists, and industry exemplifying the kind of cross-pollination at the heart of Bio-convergence.

Accelerating Innovation in Bio-Convergence

At the core of Israels early success in Bio-convergence is its world-renowned human capital. Unleashing the full potential of Israels human capital requires smart investments to support and accelerate promising technologies and cutting-edge solutions which is why over the past decade, the Israel Innovation Authority has invested more than $100 million annually in the life sciences sector across a number of different programs.

Through international cooperation agreements, R&D incentive programs targeting multinational corporations, and early-stage incubator programs, the Innovation Authority is propelling Bio-convergence forward for the benefit of humankind.

The innovations that will define the future of healthcare will transcend disciplines, relying on ingenuity and expertise across different domains. This outside-the-box approach gave rise to the Start-Up Nation and it has put Israel in a prime position to pioneer a new era of healthcare with this groundbreaking approach to human wellness.

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Israel Is Spearheading a 'Bio-Convergence' Revolution | Anya Eldan - The Times of Israel

Guest Column: Getting back to the basics – Oak Ridger

Over the last few weeks people in our town have been seriously asking themselves: What can I do myself to make things right, or better, between the races?

Over the last few weeks people in our town have been seriously asking themselves: What can I do myself to make things right, or better, between the races? Well, over a four-day period, an hour each day, a group of folks have met over Zoom to engage in a series initiated here in Oak Ridge, each seeking to find answers to that question. Here are just a few suggestions for personal actions:

Speak Up! Intervene when you hear people making wrong, hurtful comments especially related to race and race relations. Intervene with your family, neighbors, especially with people that you respect and who respect you in order to get the greatest result. People tend to listen to those with whom they have a close relationship. We all know the difference between right and wrong. If we dont nip it in the bud when we hear what we know to be wrong, we are, each of us, allowing the racism to continue to exist. This is a way that individuals can make changes without ever holding a sign, marching or publicly demonstrating One heart touching another heart, sending out waves of love and care.

Feet Under the Table. Some African Americans in this town have revealed they had never placed their feet under the dinner table in the home of a white person. Many white residents have never had a meal in the home of a black person either. We each can change this. The idea, very simply, is choose someone that you know from work or perhaps you have met at a community meeting from another race, with the goal of developing a close friendship with them. Correspond for now during the COVID-19 pandemic, and once you are able to, plan to have dinner in each others home. You have options even now use the phone, social media, even mail cards to your new friend to begin the relationship. As a start, simply ask how they and their family are doing.

Community Worship. For decades, the Sunday divide has worried some religious leaders. In 1963, during the civil rights movement, Martin Luther King Jr. told an audience at Western Michigan University that 11 a.m. on Sunday morning is "the most segregated hour in this nation" and he also called it a tragedy. Again, this is an idea for after the pandemic. But just consider the idea of setting aside even one day of the month, perhaps a Saturday or Sunday, for a day of community interfaith worship where those who wish can come together for prayer and maybe to break bread together. We all worship the same God we need to seek righteous solutions, together, under God. This would be a good way to break the cultural cycle.

The Golden Rule. We all know that mothers are the first educators of humanity. So, mothers, I suggest that you remember this and instill into your children the moral values they will need to contribute to the betterment of the world. We all have been taught some form of the Golden Rule. (See graphic.) Lets us all live by that, practice it daily, be an example, and teach it to our children.

Listen and Learn. White residents who say they genuinely want to learn, consider how to be a collaborator in whatever processes towards racial justice that are being generated. Dont instinctively take the lead, but listen, learn and offer to help wherever you can.

Our Common History. The earliest Europeans who came as colonists from the Netherlands, Spain, France and Great Britain were Puritans, Pilgrims, Protestants and Papists (Catholics). Most of the settlers to the New World were escaping religious persecution. Driven by religious motives, many of these church members were among abolitionists and anti-slavery advocates. Early newspapers and tracts promoting the abolition of slavery were published by devout church members.

The Underground Railroad was organized to aid enslaved peoples, often at grave risk to many of the religious men and women serving as conductors. Many of the 130 or so historically black colleges were founded and funded by white congregations.

As a people, we simply have not been taught an accurate and true account of our common history. So many who came to this New World actually started as collaborators when religion was part of everyday life, when this country promised equal treatment to all. While the understanding was not practiced at the time, the statement that says, We are all created equal is understandable. So, lets get back to basics! Listen, read, and learn from each other. Peacefully.

Patricia Alston is the public information officer for the Baha'is of Oak Ridge.

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Guest Column: Getting back to the basics - Oak Ridger

‘Afro-indigenous non-binary local organizer’ calls for the ‘abolition of the United States as we know it’ – TheBlaze

There was a rally outside the Mark O. Hatfield Courthouse on Friday, which marked the 50th day of protests in Portland. One of the speakers at the event was Lilith Sinclair, a self-described "afro-indigenous non-binary local organizer." During her speech, she called for the abolition of the United States as we know it."

Sinclair, who is a Black Lives Matter supporter, told the crowd that she is not just "organizing for the abolition of the militarized police state," but also for the "abolition of the United States as we know it." The crowd cheered and applauded for Sinclair's proposal to tear down the United States.

Sinclair also said that Portland was "stolen land," and instructed the crowd to carry out a "land acknowledgment."

Sinclair labels herself as a "Black and Indigenous queer, non-binary femme sex worker." She also identifies as "AFAB," which stands for "assigned female at birth."

In an interview published last month, Sinclair talked about a "global uprising."

"I think it's apt that we are looking at a global uprising against oppressive structures during the month where we celebrate the anniversary of another uprisinganother movement to not just ask for but to demand our rights," Sinclair said.

Following the rally, the tensions flared. People were walking the streets with katanas. Rioters launched fireworks and set off smoke bombs near the Portland Police Bureau.

Vandals attempted to use fencing to barricade the Justice Center and the Internal Revenue Service building. Rioters threw projectiles, such as glass bottles, rocks, and broken pieces of metal from fencing, at Portland police officers.

The street preacher who was assaulted at the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone in Seattle was also in Portland on Friday. The street preacher was allegedly punched in the face and carried away.

Portland has been in headlines this weekend, following videos of law enforcement officers taking away protesters during demonstrations. The mysterious officers are reportedly U.S. Marshals Special Operations Group and Customs and Border Protection's BORTAC. They were deployed to Portland since at least July 14 in an effort to protect federal property.

During clashes with rioters, federal law enforcement officers deployed tear gas on Friday night.

Oregon Governor Kate Brown (D) said, "Having federal troops here is like pouring gasoline on a fire," Portland-based KOIN-TV reported.

"This is appalling," Brown said. "When we need help from the federal government, testing supplies, personal protective equipment, they are missing in action."

On Monday, President Donald Trump commended the federal officers for their work in Portland.

"Portland was totally out of control, and they went in, and I guess we have many people right now in jail and we very much quelled it, and if it starts again, we'll quell it again very easily," Trump said. "It's not hard to do, if you know what you're doing."

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'Afro-indigenous non-binary local organizer' calls for the 'abolition of the United States as we know it' - TheBlaze

Why nurses are joining the call for policing and prison abolition – TheChronicleHerald.ca

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Why nurses are joining the call for policing and prison abolition - TheChronicleHerald.ca

JK Rowling ‘could end up in the dock’ if new hate crime laws are passed, critics warn – Press and Journal

Harry Potter author JK Rowling could fall foul of Scotlands proposed new hate crime legislation for expressing her views on trans issues, critics have warned.

Opponents of a broad extension of stirring up offences claim it is an assault on free speech and should be ditched from when the package is debated at Holyrood,

The proposed revamp of the law widens the offence from race matters to include age, religion, disability, sexual orientation and transgender issues.

Conviction carries a maximum sentence of up to seven years in jail.

Conservative MSP Murdo Fraser, a former lawyer, said his party will oppose the otherwise-uncontroversial and welcomed Hate Crime Bill very vigorously unless the Scottish Government drops that controversial element.

Inverness-born Mr Fraser, who represents Mid-Scotland and Fife, said the provision could impact on an individuals ability to voice what might be controversial or unpopular opinions and said recent examples, including JK Rowling and her recently expressed views on trans issues, could conceivably face prosecution under the legislation.

The view is shared by the director of the Scottish Newspaper Society, John McLellan, who said although it was not the intended purpose of the legislation, it could as a consequence put someone like JK Rowling in the dock.

Mr Fraser, who has led criticism of the Bill from within his party, said: You could create an offence by inadvertently stirring up hatred against a minority group.

To me the easiest way to understand this is to look at practical examples.

Probably the most obvious one recently has been the JK Rowling situation where she expresses a view around trans women and biological sex that causes a lot of upset to some trans rights activists who accuse her of promoting hatred.

I dont think her critics ever suggested that was her intention but under the bill as proposed there would be no need to prove intent, it would simply be sufficient to say that the consequence of somebodys actions was that they could be likely to stir up hatred against a protected group and of course trans people are a protected group.

Conceivably under this legislation, JK Rowling could face prosecution for expressing her views which are in line with biological fact and science.

The bestselling writer has been at the centre of a row about trans rights and has been accused of being transphobic, an allegation Rowling strongly denies.

In December last year, she voiced her support for a researcher who was sacked after tweeting that transgender people cannot change their biological sex.

Last month, Rowling also wrote a lengthy blog post on her reasons for talking about the issue, citing concerns around single-sex spaces.

Mr Fraser, who studied law at Aberdeen University, also used the example of Charlie Hebdo magazine in Paris which faced a deadly attack in 2015 after it ran a series of satirical cartoons featuring the Prophet Muhammad, stating that running cartoons of this nature could quite conceivably be deemed as stirring up hatred against protected groups.

He added: If the government were prepared to remove part two of the Bill and the introduction of these new stirring up offences, I think the rest of the Bill is largely uncontroversial, unobjectionable and I think that would allow the Bill to go through pretty much as it is with with pretty widespread support.

But if the government is determined to keep the stirring up provisions in then certainly the Conservatives view is we will opposite it very vigorously and I know there are many other parliamentarians in other parties who have similar concerns and many of our external groups from the National Secular Society to the Christian Institute and a whole range of others, have expressed the view that they regard this as unacceptable and an attack on free speech.

The new powers would make it an offence for someone to behave in a threatening or abusive manner, or to communicate threatening or abusive material to another person where there is an intention or likelihood to stir up hatred in respect of the seven protected groups.

Concerns have been raised that individuals will be prosecuted if someone is offended by their words or controversial views but the Scottish Government says the marker of whether conduct is deemed threatening or abusive will be a matter for the courts, depending on the individual facts and circumstances of each case.

John McLellan, director of the Scottish Newspaper Society, the trade association representing the Scottish newspaper industry, said while the abolition of blasphemy is long overdue, the rest of the legislation poses considerable threats to freedom of expression.

Social media is awash with people bearing extreme grudges against those with whom they disagree and this legislation has the potential to give them a legal means to silence their opponents.

John McLellan, director of the Scottish Newspaper Society

Mr McLellan, said: In these times of increasingly bitter division over Brexit, Scottish independence and the environment, as well as gender politics, it is not too far-fetched to see the possibility of the police being drawn into political disputes because they would have to investigate complaints and be used as a tool to attack media organisations and close down debate.

It could be used by those who attackedJK Rowling for her views on gender to instigate a police investigation which could lead to conviction and its clear that plenty of her critics would like to see that happen.

It might not be the purpose of this legislation to put someone like JK Rowling in the dock, but that could easily be the consequence.

Social media is awash with people bearing extreme grudges against those with whom they disagree and this legislation has the potential to give them a legal means to silence their opponents.

A recent blog post by the Scottish Government defending the legislation on its website, said the bill does not seek to stifle criticism or rigorous debate in any way.

It added: It is important that people are free to express their views and opinions and the bill does not change that.

Other high profile opponents of the legislation include former deputy SNP leader Jim Sillars, who in a piece for The Spectator, said Scots are now locked in a woke chamber, adding that the act casts its net wide both in terms of who can claim to be a victim and who can be caught.

Meanwhile, one of Scotlands leading QCs Roddy Dunlop, who was recently appointed dean of the Faculty of Advocates, told The Times that changes to the hate crime laws threaten to criminalise comedians who tell the Scottish, Irishman and Englishman go to a pub joke.

He added: We worry it will be too wide and too much of a curb on freedom of expression.

The National Secular Society, a non-party-political organisation, who support secular cases in the courts and work to promote the separation of religion and state, believe the the legislation drafted is excessive, vague and seriously risks chilling free speech.

However, Justice Secretary Humza Yousaf has said he firmly believes the bill strikes the right balance between respecting freedom of speech and tackling hate speech.

He added that individuals can hold and express views on any topic and subject as long as these are not expressed in an abusive and threatening manner.

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JK Rowling 'could end up in the dock' if new hate crime laws are passed, critics warn - Press and Journal

‘They’re really good men’: Victoria Beckham is proud of her sons – Martinsville Bulletin

Victoria Beckham feels "really proud" of her sons.

The 46-year-old designer has Brooklyn, 21, Romeo, 17, and Cruz, 15, with her husband David Beckham - with whom she also has nine-year-old daughter Harper - and has said she couldn't be happier with the way her sons are growing up, as they're "turning out to be really good men".

She said: "I feel really proud of our boys because they are turning out to be really good men. They work hard and they're kind, and being kind is key now. I think everybody should be kind - there are so many horrible things going on in the world. With regards to the boys they always have to have respect for themselves, for others, for girls. Our boys have always had the utmost respect for everyone. They have always been like that."

And for the former Spice Girls star, motherhood is her greatest achievement.

She added during an interview with photographer Alexi Lubimorski for his YouTube series: "Being a mum is the most important job in the world. I love what I do professionally and I take it very seriously but there is nothing more serious than having children. It's your responsibility to bring up really good, good people so I take that responsibility seriously. I try to be the best mum, I try to be the best wife, and I try and be the best professional."

Victoria has been staying at home with her family amid the coronavirus pandemic, and recently said her time in lockdown has been "precious".

She explained: "While working from home, we've been on walks every day as a family. How often would we all go on a walk together normally? Usually there's a conference call or a work meeting or someone is travelling abroad. These times are precious.

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'They're really good men': Victoria Beckham is proud of her sons - Martinsville Bulletin

The Arsenal of old: Twitter reacts to Mikel Arteta and Cos stunning FA Cup win over Manchester City – Scroll.in

Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang was the star of the show as Arsenal produced a fine performance to beat Manchester City and reach the FA Cup final on Saturday.

Gunners boss Arteta outwitted City manager Pep Guardiola with an astute counter-attacking scheme and Aubameyang struck in each half as Arsenal executed their plans to perfection. Arsenal will face Chelsea or Manchester United, who meet in the other semi-final on Sunday, in the final at Wembley on August 1.

Arteta captained Arsenal to FA Cup triumph six years ago and, in his first season in charge of the north London club, the Spaniard has led them back to the final of a competition they last won in 2017.

Just days after beating Premier League champions Liverpool, Arsenal offered further evidence that Arteta could be the man to restore them to the glory days of the Arsene Wenger era. Arsenal had lost their previous seven meetings with City, including a 3-0 drubbing in their first game after the coronavirus hiatus.

But, thanks to Artetas masterstroke, Arsenal handed Guardiolas side a first Wembley defeat in their last 10 visits.

Heres how Twitter reacted to the result:

(With inputs from AFP)

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The Arsenal of old: Twitter reacts to Mikel Arteta and Cos stunning FA Cup win over Manchester City - Scroll.in

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Tyvak Nano-Satellite Systems Announce Agreement to Develop Innovative Telescopes for Nanosatellites -…

IRVINE, Calif., July 16, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) and Tyvak Nano-Satellite Systems, Inc. have reached a cooperative research and development agreement (CRADA) to develop innovative compact and robust telescopes for nanosatellites.

The four-year, $2 million CRADA will combine LLNL's Monolithic Telescope (MonoTele) technology with Tyvak's expertise producing high-reliability spacecraft. In the future, the advanced optical imaging payloads may be employed to collect information for remote sensing data users.

The MonoTele consists of a space telescope fabricated from a single, monolithic fused silica slab, allowing the optic lens to operate within tight tolerances. This approach does not require on-orbit alignment, greatly simplifying spacecraft design and favorably affecting spacecraft size, weight and power needs.

"I'm excited about this technology transitioning from LLNL to space demonstration and eventual commercial use," said Alex Pertica, the deputy program leader for LLNL's Space Science and Security Program (SSSP).

Tyvak will provide the spacecraft and payload, consisting of the MonoTele, sensor, and electronics, ensuring survivability in a demanding vibration environment during launch and wide-ranging temperatures on-orbit.

LLNL will then apply its knowledge of novel optical payloads to develop, test, and process data gathered from the sensors.

"We are delighted to have formalized this collaborative effort with LLNL to demonstrate and commercialize advanced optical imaging technology," said Anthony Previte, Tyvak's CEO. "Together we will enable end users to achieve their mission goals in many space-based markets."

Developed by LLNL over the past eight years, the MonoTele space telescopes range in size from one inch (called the mini-monolith) to 14 inches.

The MonoTele technology provides imaging for nanosatellites, about the size of a large shoebox and weighing less than 22 pounds, and microsatellites, about the size of a dorm refrigerator and weighing up to several hundred pounds.

LLNL researchers undertook the development of the tiny one-inch, mini-monolith for use in star trackers, a component that every satellite has one or more of, and is used to find the satellite's "attitude" or orientation. Attached to the satellite's body, the star trackers compare the satellite's position relative to the position of the stars to determine their orientation.

"Several telescopes with the MonoTele technology have flown in space. They've performed very well," Pertica said, adding that the one-inch, mini-monolith version is now flying aboard Tyvak-0129. The technology's first space mission was the GEOstare satellite, which launched in January 2018.

Typically, space telescopes have two optical mirrors a larger primary mirror and a smaller secondary mirror that face each other. If the mirrors go out of alignment, the image becomes fuzzy.

To keep the mirrors in alignment, a metering structure is typically employed to maintain the mirrors in place. But metering structures can be expensive and can go out of alignment.

To solve this problem, LLNL optical scientist Brian Bauman came up with the idea of the MonoTele replacing the two mirrors and metering structure with one solid piece of glass, with optical shapes and reflective coatings at both ends of the glass.

The MonoTele concept was inspired by the design of the mirrors used for the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope that is under construction in Chile, due to come online in 2023 and expected to image some 20 billion galaxies.

Under this CRADA, LLNL and Tyvak expect to develop additional MonoTele-type telescopes capable of operating in other wavelength bands, such as ultraviolet and short-wave infrared, and as a spectrometer instrument.

The telescopes, which would be demonstrated in space, also would feature compact and low-power focus mechanisms for missions requiring agile optics technology.

The MonoTele nanosatellite imaging payloads can be used across multiple applications and will serve Earth observation, space situational awareness, and satellite navigation initiatives.

"Partnering under a CRADA with outside industry was the natural next step for commercializing the technology," said David Dawes. "We look forward to working with Tyvak."

"The CRADA gives Tyvak the option to license LLNL intellectual property (IP) or joint IP developed under this collaboration, in addition to any of the Lab's existing background IP required to practice the subject inventions," Dawes added.

About Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL)

Founded in 1952, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (www.llnl.gov) provides solutions to our nation's most important national security challenges through innovative science, engineering and technology. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is managed by Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC for the U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration.

About Tyvak Nano-Satellite Systems, Inc.

Founded in 2013 and headquartered in Irvine, California, Tyvak Nano-Satellite Systems, Inc. is an industry leader, delivering optimized, end-to-end satellite solutions. For more information, please visit http://www.Tyvak.com or follow the Company @TyvakNanoSat

Media Contacts:

LLNL

Stephen Wampler[emailprotected] +1 (925) 423-3107

Tyvak

Taylor Cantwell[emailprotected] +1 (949) 439-6153

SOURCE Tyvak Nano-Satellite Systems, Inc., a Terran Orbital Corporation

http://www.tyvak.com

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Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Tyvak Nano-Satellite Systems Announce Agreement to Develop Innovative Telescopes for Nanosatellites -...

Viewed through revamped slide, cancer cells show their hidden side : The Asahi Shimbun – Asahi Shimbun

SAPPORO--Cancer cells play dead to dodge attacks by immune cells, a scientist here discovered, and tumor tissue moves like a slug to fuse with other tumors, revelations that could trigger a breakthrough in the development of carcinoma treatment.

The phenomena were uncovered using a special glass slide that promotes the growth of cancer cells for in-depth observation developed by Yukiko Miyatake, 47, an assistant professor of experimental pathology at the Faculty of Medicine of Hokkaido University.

Miyatake designed the slide with tiny bumps on its surface in order to stimulate cells so they turn into tumor tissue.

To closely observe cancerous cells, Miyatake utilized a technique developed by Kaori Shigetomi, a specially appointed associate professor of micro- and nano-engineering at the universitys Institute for the Advancement of Higher Education.

The method created by Shigetomi, 45, allows one to two cells to be cultured on the slide, by taking advantage of semiconductor substrate development technology.

Miyatake said she expects the technique to become commercially available within a year.

In 2018, Miyatake succeeded in imaging through a microscope how cells gather, grow and convert into cancer tissue on a rough-surfaced glass slide measuring 2 centimeters by 2 cm and repeated the experiment to confirm her results.

Initially, she couldnt figure out why cells grew so smoothly on the special material. A one-year analysis revealed that the bumps on the surface offer the foundation for cells to develop into cancer tissue.

During a more detailed examination, Miyatake found a mature tumor merged with another to grow even bigger, moving around like a slug. She said she was surprised that the minor difference on the glass surface could physically stimulate cells into forming tissue.

ZOMBIE TISSUE

When carcinoma cells killed by exposure to strong ultraviolet rays were put on the slide, tumors took in deceased cells around them, to in effect play dead, rendering it impossible for immune cells that attack cancer cells to target them.

By donning the veil of dead cells like a zombie, tumors may be trying to evade being attacked by immune cells, Miyatake said.

Working with a major manufacturer, Miyatake is now creating a prototype for mass production. If the cell growth observation technology is commercialized, a new anti-cancer agent might be developed, she said.

Miyatake, who majored in virus research in university, said she is inspired to work harder by longtime friends and scientists she first met then who are now devoting themselves to research related to the novel coronavirus.

As someone involved in academic research, my goal is to save the lives of patients and contribute to society, Miyatake said.

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Viewed through revamped slide, cancer cells show their hidden side : The Asahi Shimbun - Asahi Shimbun

With Fedora 33, Nano Will Be The Default Terminal Text Editor – Fossbytes

Which is your favorite Linux terminal text editor? I guess it must be one from the never-ending list of candidates, including Vim and Nano. Even if youre free to install and use any editor, sometimes you chose the one installed by default. Thats why the default text editor matters.

Speaking of the Fedora system, Vi is the current default terminal text editor in most cases, such as git commit and command-line text editing. Now if you want Nano in Fedora, you have to run a single command dnf install nano. But with the upcoming Fedora 33, you no longer need to run any command to get Nano.

Yes, this is because the Fedora developer team has decided to ship the terminal text editor, GNU Nano, by default. This means Nano will replace Vi as the default editor in Fedora 33 Linux distribution.

If youre confused between Vi and Vim, let me tell you that Vim is an improved version of Vi with additional features.

The change comes amid the ongoing development for the upcoming Fedora 33. Along with othersystem-wide changes, a proposal was sent to make Nano the default text editor.

Later, during the Fedora Engineering and Steering Committee (FESCo) meeting last week, several features for Fedora 33 were approved, including Nano text editor by default in the Fedora system.

As the proposal cites, users need to learn the mode concept of Vi even for basic editing tasks. It makes it hard for new users to understand and use Vi.

Unlike Vi, Nano doesnt have any modes, which gives the user a shallow learning curve and lets them interact directly with text using user-friendly graphical text editing.

Hence, this proposal will make Nano the default editor across all of Fedoras editions. However, you still have vi pre-installed owing to the vim-minimal package.

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With Fedora 33, Nano Will Be The Default Terminal Text Editor - Fossbytes

Clean Seed to deploy their patented SMART technologies to modernize the agricultural sector – Proactive Investors USA & Canada

Clean Seed Capital (CVE: CSX- OTC: CLGPF) Chief Operating Officer Colin Rush joined Steve Darling from Proactive Vancouver to discuss the company that is continuing to pioneer the modernization of the crop/food production industry with cutting edge SMART technologies that include their upcoming SMART Seeder MAX and MAX-S seeding and planting systems.

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Clean Seed to deploy their patented SMART technologies to modernize the agricultural sector - Proactive Investors USA & Canada

Five Indian Americans Receive US DoE Early Career Award – The Indian Panorama

BOSTON (TIP): The U.S. Department of Energy (DoE) recently announced the names of 76 scientists who have been selected for their2020 Early Career Research Program. The list includes five Indian Americans.

They are: Arun Devaraj, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (WA), Ranganathan Gopalakrishnan, University of Memphis, Siddharth Karkare, Arizona Board of Regents for Arizona State University, Vedika Khemani, Stanford Junior University, and Karthish Manthiram, MIT.

Under the program, university-based researchers will receive grants for at least $150,000 per year and researchers based at DOE national laboratories will receive grants for at least $500,000 per year. The research grants are planned for five years and will cover salary and research expenses.

Arun Devaraj, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (WA)

Dr. Arun Devaraj is a Material scientist in the Physical and Computational Sciences Directorate. His research focus is in microstructure-property relationship of metallic alloys, oxides and composite materials. Dr. Devaraj has extensive experience specifically in applying atom probe tomography (APT) for material characterization, in addition to scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy dispersive x-ray spectroscopy (EDS), focused ion beam (FIB), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), x-ray absorption near edge spectroscopy (XANES), scanning transmission x-ray microscopy (STXM) and in-situ high energy x-ray diffraction (HEXRD) at beamlines of various DOE synchrotron facilities.

Ranganathan Gopalakrishnan is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Memphis. His research focuses on applying aerosol science and technology to Additive Manufacturing (AM) processes as well as fundamental aspects of aerosol science.

Siddharth Karkare is an assistant professor in the Department of Physics at Arizona State University. He comes to ASU following a 3-year post-doctoral research position at the Lawrence Berkeley Lab. His research is at the interface of accelerator physics and nano-science and focuses on the generation and manipulation of bright electron beams for various applications ranging from meter-scale electron microscopes to large km-scale particle colliders and free-electron lasers.

Vedika Khemani Assistant Professor of Physics at Stanford completed her undergraduate studies at Harvey Mudd College, and her PhD at Princeton University. She was a Junior Fellow at Harvard University before starting as assistant professor at Stanford University. She works on theoretical investigations of quantum many-body systems and how they evolve dynamically.

Karthish Manthiram, the Theodore T. Miller Career Development Chair and Assistant Professor in Chemical Engineering in MIT, is working to synthesize chemicals and materials that we encounter every day in a sustainable manner that eliminates the carbon footprint. With the support of the DoE Early Career Award, the Manthiram lab is specifically looking at how water can be used as a source of oxygen atoms to convert alkenes, which are two carbon atoms attached by a double bond, into an epoxide, a triangular configuration of two carbon atoms and an oxygen atom.

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Five Indian Americans Receive US DoE Early Career Award - The Indian Panorama

Global report: WHO reports record daily increase of coronavirus cases – The Guardian

Irans president says an estimated 25 million people in the country could be infected with the coronavirus, way above the countrys official rate, as the World Health Organization reported a record daily increase of new cases of more 270,000.

Hassan Rouhani told a summit of the countrys coronavirus taskforce on Saturday that the health ministry estimated about 25 million Iranians might have contracted the virus and warned up to 35 million more might become infected in the months ahead.

The method by which the figure was derived was not disclosed, but the estimate gave an insight into the scale of the outbreak in the worst-hit country in the Middle East, with 270,000 confirmed cases and at least 13,979 deaths.

Rouhanis deputy head of communications, Alireza Moezi, added on Twitter that the 25-million estimate referred to those who have encountered the virus and achieved complete immunity.

We have to consider the possibility that 30 to 35 million more may face infection, Rouhani told a televised meeting of the task-force. We have not yet achieved herd immunity and we have no choice but to be united and break the chain of transmission of the coronavirus.

Iran refrained from fully locking down its population of 81 million but closed schools, cancelled public gatherings and banned movement between provinces in March. It lifted most of the restrictions a month later to relieve the impact of the closures on its ailing economy.

Australia postponed the next sitting of its national parliament as cases continued to surge in and around its second-largest city, Melbourne. A second lockdown has been imposed on the southern state of Victoria, weeks after the initial wave of restrictions was lifted and community transmission briefly appeared to have been eradicated.

The national body will be suspended for two weeks to account for the risk of politicians in Victoria spreading the virus to the capital, Canberra, and the surrounding state of New South Wales, the Australian prime minister, Scott Morrison, said on Saturday.

The risks posed by a parliamentary sitting are significantly higher and unlikely to be resolved in the next month, he said.

As the global count of cases being tracked by Johns Hopkins University crossed 14m, with nearly 600,000 deaths, France announced that masks would be made mandatory in enclosed public spaces including banks, shops and indoor markets starting on Monday.

The reproduction rate of the virus in the Brittany region has risen sharply in the past weeks, raising fears the virus may be regaining momentum in the country.

The WHO reported the greatest daily increase in global cases, with the total rising by 237,743 in the 24 hours to Saturday. The biggest increases were reported in the US, Brazil, India and South Africa.

Cases in the US grew by more than 76,000, a record for the worlds worst-hit country.

In a lecture for the Nelson Mandela Foundation, delivered online, the UN secretary-general Antnio Guterres said the pandemic had revealed, like an x-ray, fractures in the fragile skeleton of the societies we have built.

It is exposing fallacies and falsehoods everywhere: the lie that free markets can deliver healthcare for all; the fiction that unpaid care work is not work; the delusion that we live in a post-racist world; the myth that we are all in the same boat, said Guterres, a former Socialist prime minister of Portugal.

He added that the coronavirus outbreak had created a generational opportunity to build a more equal, sustainable world. Because while we are all floating on the same sea, its clear that some are in superyachts while others are clinging to the floating debris, Guterres said.

The UN has appealed for $10.3bn (8.2bn) to help poor states, but has received only $1.7bn.

China launched mass health screenings in the western Xinjiang province after a spike in cases raised fears of a fresh outbreak. Flights into the regional capital rmqi were suspended along with the citys subway services after 17 cases were found on Saturday.

The whole city has entered a wartime state, and will suspend all kinds of group activities, state media quoted an official giving a briefing.

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Global report: WHO reports record daily increase of coronavirus cases - The Guardian

After the Recent Surge in Coronavirus Cases, Deaths Are Now Rising Too – The New York Times

The reopening and relaxing of social distancing restrictions in some states may be contributing to the first noticeable nationwide increase in coronavirus fatalities since April, when the pandemic initially peaked.

The number of cases in late June surged higher than during the outbreaks first peak. At this same time, daily Covid-19 fatalities decreased slightly, leading President Trump to proclaim that deaths were way down. But that divergence may have come to an end last week, when the average number of new deaths per day began steadily rising again.

Where deaths have increased since June 1

Daily new deaths since June 1

States where deaths have increased since June 1

Daily new deaths since June 1, seven-day average

Note: Data as of July 15.

Public health experts have pointed to a few factors that help explain why the death count was initially flat. Treatment has improved and young people, who are less likely to die from Covid-19, make up a larger share of new cases.

Additionally, more widespread testing means cases are caught sooner, on average. That means that the lag between diagnosis and death would be longer than in March, when tests were in critically short supply.

That lag may have come to an end last week, as the number of new deaths began to rise. Many of the states that reopened early are the ones seeing the biggest increases, while New York, the countrys hardest-hit city, has seen a 64 percent drop since June 1.

Deaths in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut

Deaths in rest of the United States

While the growth rate of new deaths has flattened slightly in the past few days, data suggest that the recent increase in deaths may continue. Most of the states seeing the sharpest increase in deaths also have some of the countrys highest positive test rates, as well as soaring hospitalization rates, an indicator that many more residents may be gravely ill.

In addition, a high share of positive tests most likely signals that there are a larger number of people whose infections are going undetected in a states official numbers.

Sources: New York Times database from state and local governments; the Covid-19 Tracking ProjectNote: Data is as of July 15, 2020. States listed above have a minimum of 100 cumulative deaths. Positive test rates are calculated using positive results from July 2 to July 15. Trend lines and new deaths per million show seven-day average data.

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After the Recent Surge in Coronavirus Cases, Deaths Are Now Rising Too - The New York Times

A Shutdown May Be Needed to Stop the Coronavirus – The New York Times

When you mix science and politics, you get politics. With the coronavirus, the United States has proved politics hasnt worked. If we are to fully reopen both the economy and schools safely which can be done we have to return to science.

To understand just how bad things are in the United States and, more important, what can be done about it requires comparison. At this writing, Italy, once the poster child of coronavirus devastation and with a population twice that of Texas, has recently averaged about 200 new cases a day when Texas has had over 9,000. Germany, with a population four times that of Florida, has had fewer than 400 new cases a day. On Sunday, Florida reported over 15,300, the highest single-day total of any state.

The White House says the country has to learn to live with the virus. Thats one thing if new cases occurred at the rates in Italy or Germany, not to mention South Korea or Australia or Vietnam (which so far has zero deaths). Its another thing when the United States has the highest growth rate of new cases in the world, ahead even of Brazil.

Italy, Germany and dozens of other countries have reopened almost entirely, and they had every reason to do so. They all took the virus seriously and acted decisively, and they continue to: Australia just issued fines totaling $18,000 because too many people attended a birthday party in someones home.

In the United States, public health experts were virtually unanimous that replicating European success required, first, maintaining the shutdown until we achieved a steep downward slope in cases; second, getting widespread compliance with public health advice; and third, creating a work force of at least 100,000 some experts felt 300,000 were needed to test, trace and isolate cases. Nationally we came nowhere near any of those goals, although some states did and are now reopening carefully and safely. Other states fell far short but reopened anyway. We now see the results.

While New York City just recorded its first day in months without a Covid-19 death, the pandemic is growing across 39 states. In Miami-Dade County in Florida, six hospitals have reached capacity. In Houston, where one of the countrys worst outbreaks rages, officials have called on the governor to issue a stay-at-home order.

As if explosive growth in too many states isnt bad enough, we are also suffering the same shortages that haunted hospitals in March and April. In New Orleans, testing supplies are so limited that one site started testing at 8 a.m. but had only enough to handle the people lined up by 7:33 a.m.

And testing by itself does little without an infrastructure to not only trace and contact potentially infected people but also manage and support those who test positive and are isolated along with those urged to quarantine. Too often this has not been done; in Miami, only 17 percent of those testing positive for the coronavirus had completed questionnaires to help with contact tracing, critical to slowing spread. Many states now have so many cases that contact tracing has become impossible anyway.

Whats the answer?

Social distancing, masks, hand washing and self-quarantine remain crucial. Too little emphasis has been placed on ventilation, which also matters. Ultraviolet lights can be installed in public areas. These things will reduce spread, and President Trump finally wore a mask publicly, which may somewhat depoliticize the issue. But at this point all these things together, even with widespread compliance, can only blunt dangerous trends where they are occurring. The virus is already too widely disseminated for these actions to quickly bend the curve downward.

To reopen schools in the safest way, which may be impossible in some instances, and to get the economy fully back on track, we must get the case counts down to manageable levels down to the levels of European countries. The Trump administrations threat to withhold federal funds from schools that dont reopen wont accomplish that goal. To do that, only decisive action will work in places experiencing explosive growth at the very least, limits even on private gatherings and selective shutdowns that must include not just such obvious places as bars but churches, also a well-documented source of large-scale spread.

Depending on local circumstances, that may prove insufficient; a comprehensive April-like shutdown may be required. This could be on a county-by-county basis, but half-measures will do little more than prevent hospitals from being overrun. Half-measures will leave transmission at a level vastly exceeding those of the many countries that have contained the virus. Half-measures will leave too many Americans not living with the virus but dying from it.

During the 1918 influenza pandemic, almost every city closed down much of its activity. Fear and caring for sick family members did the rest; absenteeism even in war industries exceeded 50 percent and eviscerated the economy. Many cities reopened too soon and had to close a second time sometimes a third time and faced intense resistance. But lives were saved.

Had we done it right the first time, wed be operating at near 100 percent now, schools would be preparing for a nearly normal school year, football teams would be preparing to practice and tens of thousands of Americans would not have died.

This is our second chance. We wont get a third. If we dont get the growth of this pandemic under control now, in a few months, when the weather turns cold and forces people to spend more time indoors, we could face a disaster that dwarfs the situation today.

John M. Barry is a professor at the Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine and the author of The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. Wed like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And heres our email: letters@nytimes.com.

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A Shutdown May Be Needed to Stop the Coronavirus - The New York Times

What the Coronavirus Brought Relationships: Clarity – The New York Times

I feel like the party line has always been that everybody should decide, not slide into cohabitation, said Alexandra Solomon, a clinical assistant professor of psychology at Northwestern University and the instructor of Northwesterns Marriage 101 course. What I have realized with the quarantine is what a privileged position that is. Its a privilege to make very mindful, thoughtful, intentional choices about when to move in together.

Of course, involuntary home confinement and financial strain against the backdrop of a global health crisis do not add up to domestic bliss for everyone. Joel Velez, 42, was quarantined in Florida with his wife of 18 years and their four children for about a month before he lost his job, for which he worked nights, in a layoff.

For the first time in years, Mr. Velez and his wife were on similar schedules, but their new abundance of time together confirmed something hed suspected for a while. We seem to have lost any kind of common ground besides, you know, where we live and our kids, he said. Last month, Mr. Velez suggested they see a counselor. According to Mr. Velez, his wife suggested they split up instead.

Mr. Velez wondered aloud whether, if the pandemic had never happened, his marriage might have limped along for another 15 years, neither party ever rising to the task of asking for a change.

This whole quarantine situation has forced us to face the problems that weve been experiencing, he said. To stop hiding from each other through work, or through our different schedules.

Robert Falconer, 29, and Julie Fisher, 28, live in Calgary, Alberta, and when their city began to shut down, they, too, had to immediately address a matter theyd been putting off: They had been talking about getting engaged, but there was always just a little too much going on in their lives.

In mid-March, Mr. Falconers parents, who were living in Asia, decided to come and live with him. Mr. Falconer and Ms. Fisher realized they would have to forgo seeing each other in person for a while to minimize exposure risks for their families. All at once, they had to choose: throw together a proposal straightaway, or wait until they could be together in person again, whenever that might be.

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What the Coronavirus Brought Relationships: Clarity - The New York Times

Global report: coronavirus infections in India pass 1m as outbreaks flare globally – The Guardian

India has become the third country to record more than 1m coronavirus infections, following the US and Brazil, as it reported 34,956 new cases in the past 24 hours, taking the national total to 1,003,832.

New peaks continue to appear around the world, including an alarming rise in the Brittany region of France.

Amid evidence that the disease was taking hold in poorer, rural areas of India with less effective public healthcare, the latest tally prompted renewed concerns about the countrys ability to cope with rising infections.

The figures have been released after a week in which authorities in India were forced to impose new lockdowns, including fresh restrictions on 128 million people in the state of Bihar, which came into force on Thursday.

The continuing and escalating outbreaks, on top of record cases in the United States which passed 75,000 daily cases in the last count have dampened hopes that the pandemic is anywhere close to being brought under control, even as researchers race to find a viable vaccine.

Three states in India Maharashtra, Delhi and Tamil Nadu account for more than half of the total cases in the country so far. Ashish Jha, the director of the Harvard Global Health Institute, warned that the majority of cases in the country were still being missed.

The continuing rise has forced authorities to reinstate lockdowns in some cities and states.

In Bangalore, the government ordered a week-long lockdown that began on Tuesday evening after a rapid rise in cases.

Dr Anant Bhan, a global health researcher, said India was likely to experience a series of peaks as the virus spread in rural areas. He said the capital, New Delhi, and the financial capital, Mumbai, had already recorded surges, while infections have now shifted to smaller cities.

Indias response to the virus was initially sluggish, but on 24 March the prime minister, Narendra Modi, imposed a three-week nationwide lockdown of its 1.3-billion population.

By Friday more than 13.8m infections had been confirmed worldwide and nearly 590,000 people had died, according to Johns Hopkins University, with Brazil recording more than 2m infections by the end of the week and the US more than 3m.

Countries around the world have moved quickly to reintroduce restrictions as outbreaks flare up again. Ada Colau, the mayor of Barcelona, Spains second largest city, announced a ban on gatherings of more than 10 people from Saturday as part of a package of measures to curb an increase in coronavirus cases in the Catalan capital.

We have to avoid gatherings of more than 10 people Only 10 people will be allowed in weddings and funerals from Saturday, Colau told a press conference. Residents were urged to shop online and cultural and sports events will also be limited.

In France, which had already announced plans to make mask wearing mandatory in enclosed public spaces, authorities reported a sharp rise in the infection rate in Brittany. According to data released on Friday, the diseases reproduction rate in Brittany had risen from 0.92 to 2.62 between 10-14 July.

Its a worrying number because it means the epidemic is taking off again, Eric Caumes, an infectious disease specialist at the Pitie-Salpetriere hospital in Paris, told BFM TV.

In China, flights into the city of rmqi in the far-western Xinjiang region were restricted on Friday, and underground and public bus services suspended, according to local social media.

The latest outbreak has underlined the continuing difficulty China faces in stamping out the virus even with its imposition of draconian measures which first emerged in the central Chinese city of Wuhan late last year.

Amid fears around the world over the ease in which new resurgences have escalated after countries relaxed restrictions, Hong Kong reported 50 new locally transmitted cases on Friday, stoking further concern about a third peak of infections in the global financial hub.

Tokyo hit a daily high of 293 infections as Japan tried to keep the worlds third-largest economy running while curbing infections, a precarious balancing act of opening restaurants and theatres with limited seating, and having store clerks work behind plastic shielding.

We have asked people and businesses to raise their alert levels, said Tokyos governor, Yuriko Koike. She said the recent higher numbers partly reflected more aggressive testing.

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Global report: coronavirus infections in India pass 1m as outbreaks flare globally - The Guardian

These self-cloning ticks could spread to Maine, experts say – WGME

{p}This undated photo provided by Rutgers University shows three Longhorned ticks: from left, a fully engorged female, a partial engorged female, and an engorged nymph. (Jim Occi | Rutgers University via AP){/p}

(BDN) -- Maine tick experts are keeping an eye out for the Asian longhorned tick, a foreign tick species that can reproduce without mating and has been documented as close as Connecticut.

Reported for the first time in the United States in 2017, this tick species has now established populations in at least 12 states, all of which are in the northeastern half of the country.

Its certainly something that is on every tick researchers radar here in the eastern United States, said Griffin Dill, who manages the Tick Lab, located in the new UMaine Cooperative Extension Diagnostic and Research Laboratory in Orono. This species seems to primarily reproduce through parthenogenesis, which makes its ability to increase its population size rapidly an important factor.

Parthenogensis is a form of asexual reproduction in which growth and development of embryos occur without fertilization by sperm. Female Asian longhorned ticks can lay eggs, which will develop and hatch on their own. Because of this, a single female tick can establish a fast-growing population.

The Asian longhorned tick is known to carry and transmit a variety of dangerous diseases in its home range in Asia, but those diseases have yet to be documented in the Asian longhorned tick populations found in the U.S. However, there is a concern that the species could pick up and transmit diseases that already occur in the U.S. in other tick species, such as anaplasmosis, babesiosis and Powassan virus.

There are a couple of pathogens in Asia that they are believed to transmit that are closely related to pathogens we have here, so its possible, said Dill. But from what weve seen so far in other states, [the ticks] risk to humans is thought to be relatively low at the moment. And we havent seen indication that its able to contribute to the transmission of Lyme disease.

In the U.S., East Asia and other areas where this tick has been found, such as New Zealand and Australia, it is considered to be a serious threat to livestock such as cattle and sheep. Major infestations can cause stress on an animal, reducing its growth and production. And in some cases, infestations can kill animals due to blood loss.

From limited studies that have been done on this species, they do seem to prefer feeding on animal hosts as opposed to humans, Dill said.

A new study in the journal Zoonoses and Public Health, published earlier this month, investigates the origin of this tick species and how they are spreading across the country.

Researchers gathered samples of Asian longhorned ticks across the U.S. and internationally, then used gene sequencing to compare various populations. The results indicate that at least three individual ticks from self-cloning populations were somehow transported to the U.S., and this explains why all adult Asian longhorned ticks found in the U.S. so far have been female. With Asian longhorned ticks that reproduce through parthenogenesis, male offspring are rare.

(In Asia, male Asian longhorned ticks do exist in some populations where they participate in reproduction.)

The study also found that these original ticks most likely came from East Asia.

While the first established Asian longhorned tick population in the U.S. was documented in New Jersey in 2017, researchers believe the species had been flying under the radar in the country for several years.

Theres a whole lot we dont know about it, said Chuck Lubelczyk, vector ecologist at Maine Medical Center Research Institute. Right now, the states where its occurring tend to be doing a lot more research on it [than other states], and I think a lot more research is going to be done on it as time goes by. Its a public health issue thats been introduced to the country and we werent really talking about it before it arrived here. We were kind of unprepared for it.

Its believed that the tick species can easily be spread by wildlife, as well as the transportation of livestock and domestic animals, such as dogs.

There are some pretty good regulations in place in terms of livestock transport, Lubelczyk said. But it certainly speaks to people needing to be vigilant about tick control medicines for their dogs and other domestic animals.

In the U.S., Asian longhorned ticks have been collected from deer, dogs, raccoons, cats, opossums and a number of other warm-blooded animals, as well as a variety of birds, according to data collected by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Theyve also been found feeding on people.

Because of the wide geographical range that the species already inhabits, Lubelczyk believes it could survive Maines climate, even the states cold winters.

At least in southern Maine, I dont think itd have a problem, Lubelczyk said. How it would do up in northern Maine? I dont have a guess.

Moving forward, tick experts ask that Maine people be on the lookout for this invasive tick species; however, theyre difficult to identify. Adults are plain brown but can look similar to brown dog ticks and rabbit ticks, both of which live in Maine.

Researchers from the Maine Tick Lab and Maine Medical Center Research Institute are looking for Asian longhorned ticks, as well as the lone star tick (which has been found in Maine, but not yet in breeding populations), when conducting on-the-ground tick surveillance throughout the state.

In addition, they receive information about tick populations in Maine from the public sending tick samples to the Maine Tick Lab in Orono. The lab identifies these tick samples for free, and for an additional fee of $15 will test deer ticks for three common diseases they carry: Lyme disease, babesiosis and anaplasmosis. For more information, visit extension.umaine.edu/ticks.

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These self-cloning ticks could spread to Maine, experts say - WGME

How genetic studies will become the holy grail to find cancer biomarkers in future – Express Healthcare

Dr Villoo Morawala-Patell, Founder, Avesthagenand her team has been researching on genetic basis of disease risk associated with longevity and the endogamy prevalent within various communities. Theirpurpose is to deliver population-specific qualified biomarker targets to achieve the holy grail of genomics predictive, preventive, and personalised medicines. In an interview withRaelene Kambli, Dr Patell reveals more on their research and its application in the development and validation of cancer biomarker. She also delved into explaining theneed for a cross-disciplinary integration of scientific and clinical expertise for research especially in the field of cancer

What according to you is the most promising area of your current research?

The most promising area of our current work in terms of innovation is the significant and prolific outcomes from the Avestagenome Project for cancers, neurodegenerative conditions, and rare diseases. Our recent work on the genomics of the Zoroastrian-Parsis converges, ancient history, human migration, endogamous population genetics, social behaviour and customs that express in genetic signatures of wellness and health.

Specifically, we present a population genetics study wherein we assembled the first,de novoZoroastrian-Parsi Mitochondrial Reference Genome from one individual and the first Zoroastrian-Parsi Mitochondrial Consensus Genome derived from the assembly of 100 complete mitochondrial genomes of the dwindling, endogamous, non-smoking Zoroastrian-Parsi community of India. Phylogenetic analysis of the 100 Parsi mitochondrial genome sequences, showed a largely Persian origin for the Parsi community of India.Disease association mapping showed that the majority of the mitochondrial variants to be linked longevity and its associated conditions revealing the genetic basis for many of the heritable diseases in the community like cancer, neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinsons, Alzheimers and many rare genetic conditions.Our study is a first in tackling the genetic basis of disease risk associated with longevity and the endogamy prevalent within the community. The outcome of this study has an impact on all populations

So, your paper suggests that Zoroastrian-Parsi genes may help scientists characterise biomarkers predictive of diseases caused by tobacco use, such as lung, head and neck, and oesophagus cancers. Can you elaborate on the same?

We found 420 mitochondrial variants in our analysis of the 100 Zoroastrian-Parsi mitochondrial genomes. The detailed analysis brought to light the absence in the Zoroastrian-Parsi samples variants in mitochondrial genes like ND5, ND6 and tRNA that are shown to be associated with lung cancer and non-small cell lung cancer in other non-Parsi populations. Many of these reported genes have been associated with smoking-induced lung cancer and other smoking-induced cancers. Our study thus serves as a biological validation ofa well-known cultural phenomenon, reflecting the practice of abstinence from smoking in Zoroastrian-Parsis whose origins date back a millennium.

How helpful is this information for your research and what does it imply?

Our study is unique and provides a road map for understanding the genetic factors that underlie ageing and longevity associated diseases. A vast majority of the 420 mitochondrial variants are associated with longevity and conditions like Parkinsons disease, Alzheimers disease as well as breast, colon, prostate, ovarian cancer, infertility disorders like asthenozoospermia and rare neuronal diseases associated with mitochondrial dysfunction. Indeed, epidemiological studies of the community do show a preponderance of these diseases and a strong bias for the inheritance of these genetic disease variants owing to the practice of endogamy within the community. Our current study will complement our research goals as we accelerate our whole-genome analysis of the Parsi community to identify from the control population, alongside other comparative population subjects. The purpose is to deliver population-specific qualified biomarker targets to achieve the holy grail of genomics predictive, preventive, and personalised medicines.

What are the key findings of this study?

Our insights from the assembly of the archetypical Zoroastrian-Parsi mitochondrial genome extend from human migration to the genetic basis of disease prevalence. Our phylogenetic analysis showsalargely Persian origin for the Parsi community and revealed the presence of seven major haplogroups and 25 sub-haplogroups in our study group.We believethe strict endogamy practised by the Zoroastrian-Parsi community, has meant that their maternally inherited mitochondrial genome has remained largely unchanged from that of their ancestors in Old Persia. We also see the prevalence of genetic variants, specifically 217 unique variants linked to longevity and 41 longevity associated conditions like cancers, neurodegenerative disease, and rare diseases. We did not find any mitochondrial variants previously reported for lung cancer in our study and found an extremely low frequency of mutational signatures linked to tobacco carcinogens, reflective of the strong disapproval of smoking in the Zoroastrian religion. Another exciting outcome of our study is the discovery of 12 unique mitochondrial gene variants distributed across 27 subjects that have not been reported in public databases that index mitochondrial variants discovered thus far in other studies. We are currently in the process of investigating their function in the context of diseases.

So, you mean the gene expression picked from this study can be implemented to tailor adjuvant therapy among common cancers?

Mutations in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) can cause a range of incurable and life-limiting metabolic diseases in humans. Our current study has identified crucial disease associated with genetic variants in the mitochondrial genomes of the Zoroastrian-Parsi community. Our study is a necessary first step to tailor therapeutic strategies that involve targeting validated mitochondrial biomarkers involved in diseases. Given the advent of technologies that enable precise genome editing like CRISPR, we believe our study will benchmark crucial mitochondrial disease-associated variants, classify its prevalence and risk outcomes to complement and tailor therapies that can correct genetic mutations, thus improving patient outcomes in the case of complex genetic diseases like cancers.

How much of your study will pave the path to an era of personalised medicine?

It may be fortuitous that our current study is published on the heels of another study published describing important milestone in editing mitochondrial genomes. Mok, BY et al (Nature, July 2020) has demonstrated the ability to enable precise editing of mtDNA. Our study and its future outcomes will provide a database of mitochondrial variants associated with various conditions to further enhance the possibility of precisely editing the inheritable mutations in mitochondrial genomes, moving the needle towards personalised medicines.

Are there any indicators that may raise caution?

Indeed, any disease associations in a dwindling population is a cause for concern. We show an increased association of variants with conditions like Parkinsons disease, prostate, colon and ovarian cancers, rare diseases resulting in an inherited visual disability like LHON, hearing disability, muscular dystrophy like diseases and infertility. Understanding the molecular mechanisms of these variants resulting in clinical manifestations is extremely important in framing healthcare policies that include precise diagnostic platforms for early disease diagnosis and therapy, steps necessary to arrest the declining numbers in communities like the Zoroastrian-Parsis and other close-knit communities across the world.

What are your predictions for the next five years in cancer biomarker development and validation?

In the next five years, understanding of most cancers would be linked to population genetics and would be individualised into specific groups for treatment. Specific targeted drugs linked to a subset of biomarkers found in each individual patient leading to precision individualised therapies would be the order of the day.

Do you think that there is a need for a cross-disciplinary integration of scientific and clinical expertise for research especially in the field of cancer?

Cross-disciplinary research, especially in cancer, is increasingly relevant and important to reducing that gap in what is identified as best practice and what happens in clinical care. Narrowing this knowledgepractice gap continues to be a slow, complex, and poorly understood process, particularly for research that encompasses the notion of transdisciplinarity, as in the case of complex diseases like cancers. The assimilation of diverse perspectives, research approaches, and types of knowledge is important in helping research teams tackle real-world patient care issues, create more practice-based evidence, and translate the results to clinical and community care settings.

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How genetic studies will become the holy grail to find cancer biomarkers in future - Express Healthcare