UCC holds virtual forum to assess progress of Ukraine’s reforms Panel discussion on Zoom comes a year after historic conference – The Ukrainian Weekly

OTTAWA Nearly a year ago, more than 800 representatives of 37 countries and 10 international organizations came to Toronto to attend the third annual Ukraine Reform Conference.

Volodymyr Zelenskyy was there too, with his wife, Olena Zelenska, when Ukraines then-new president chose the global summit in Canada to make his first overseas trip and North American debut. The young Ukrainian leader was warmly welcomed by Canadas youthful prime minister, Justin Trudeau, and his influential (and Ukrainian Canadian) foreign affairs minister, Chrystia Freeland, who now serves as Canadas deputy prime minister.

It was an event and a piece of history never to be repeated.

This years COVID-19 pandemic, and the accompanying national lockdowns and physical distancing requirements, ensured that the fourth conference, scheduled to take place in Lithuania, would be postponed until next summer. (Switzerland will play host to the Ukraine Reform Conference in 2022.)

But when people cannot congregate, as the COVID crisis has demonstrated, there is always Zoom, and the Ukrainian Canadian Congress in partnership with the Canadian International Councils South Saskatchewan Branch used the web-conferencing platform to present a special 90-minute webinar on June 22 examining the progress made and the pitfalls experienced a year after the Toronto meeting.

Although fewer than 100 people most from Ontario, according to an online poll logged into the online lookback (also streamed live on the UCCs Facebook page), the panel discussion provided a review of Ukraines successes and setbacks over the past year.

Taras Shevchenko, director of the Kyiv-based Center for Democracy and Rule of Law, focused on the so-called Toronto Principles set out by a group of over 100 civil-society experts in advance of the 2019 reform conference that identify various steps needed for Ukraine to achieve the goals of security and the rule of law; democracy and good governance; and prosperity and human capital development.

In his assessment, Mr. Shevchenko gave Ukraine a report card consisting of passes and failures.

One of the Toronto Principles addresses electoral reform, including a call for the introduction of a proportional electoral system with open regional lists that is featured in Ukraines Electoral Code that took effect on January 1. Most of the positions provided in the Toronto Principles are already in place in the legislation, said Mr. Shevchenko, who added that he was pleased with developments on decentralization and moves to enhance the independence of Ukraines mass media, and noted the Ukrainian Parliaments May 20 ratification of the Council of Europe Convention on Access to Official Documents, which will provide greater transparency on government business.

However, he said he had expected further progress in the areas of anti-corruption and judicial reform, which are both addressed in the Toronto Principles.

The reform of Ukraines health-care system, in terms of the development of a patient-centered approach that promotes equal access and protection from [the] financial consequences of illness as recommended by the principles, has been stalled, according to Mr. Shevchenko.

He said that, furthermore, there has been little movement in the area of public-administration reform where the Toronto Principles call for transparent competitive selection processes within Ukraines civil service has yet to be implemented.

A joint statement by the governments of Canada and Ukraine, issued at the conclusion of last years Ukraine Reform Conference, which they co-chaired, said that Ukraines 2020 Public Administration Reform Action Plan helped increase the attractiveness of the civil service, resulting in a rise in the average number of applicants for a position from 1.7 to 24 candidates. That, the two countries said, significantly improved competition.

During his online presentation, Mr. Shevchenko also criticized the lack of the strengthening of Ukraines defense system.

The Toronto Principles called for the development of defense and security capabilities based on NATO standards, particularly those pertaining to accountable governance and oversight institutions [and] aimed at restoring the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine.

However, Mr. Shevchenko underlined that civil society remains a strong player in the reform process and that its role needs to be protected by Ukrainian legislation and supported by the international community.

Oksana Markarova, who served as Ukraines finance minister until March 4 when the Verkhovna Rada approved the appointment of Denys Shmyhal as Ukraines prime minister and head of a new government, said that, at the beginning of this year, Ukraine was on a path toward strengthening its economy with expected growth of at least 3.5 percent in its gross domestic product. But the COVID-19 crisis reversed that upward curve, according to a recent World Bank Group report.

Now everything is in decline and is it going to be minus 5 percent or minus 10 percent of GDP? asked Ms. Markarova rhetorically.

However, she referred to Ukraines successes on the road to reform despite the political challenges wrought by two elections for president and for members of Parliament last year. We managed to finance the budget and keep the deficit below 2 percent, said the former two-term finance minister.

The [COVID] crisis does not mean we have to stop reforms. It means we have to focus on a few reforms, Ms. Markarova continued. One, she explained, should involve bolstering the rule of law that would stimulate further foreign investments in Ukraine. Reforming the countrys health and education sectors should also be a priority, she said.

The Canada-Ukraine joint statement from last years Toronto summit acknowledged the Ukrainian governments Priority Action Plan to 2020 that outlined a step-by-step [approach] to achieve economic growth, ensure effective governance, human capital development, rule of law and [the] fight against corruption, security and defense.

The 2019 document also credited Ukraine with achieving an increase of real GDP of 8.4 percent since 2016 despite all the external and internal challenges the country faced.

Ukraine has also managed to stabilize the national currencys exchange rate, said the joint statement, which noted that the inflation rate in Ukraine in 2018 was less than 10 percent, or the lowest indicator for the last five years.

Further strides were also made regarding Ukraines further integration into the European Union, with over 2,000 Ukrainian technical standards harmonized with EU norms. (An agreement between Ukraine and the EU has been in force since September 1, 2017.)

Ukrainian exports of goods and services to the EU have increased 1.5 times to $22 billion within the last three years, said the Canadian-Ukrainian government statement.

Roman Waschuk, Canadas former ambassador to Ukraine who served as moderator of the webinar, highlighted that the Ukrainian reform framework is intended to not only create sufficient preconditions for individual citizens, but also [for] private-sector actors from within Ukraine and outside Ukraine to be able to do business.

He referred to President Zelenskyys July 3, 2019, speech to the Economic Club in Toronto in which Ukraines head of state promoted investment in Ukraine and mentioned a Canadian publicly listed company, Black Iron, Inc., which has spent a decade trying to get an iron ore mine up and running near Kryvyi Rih, the presidents hometown.

Last November, the Toronto-based company signed a memorandum of understanding with Ukraines Ministry of Defense to use some of the government-owned land, currently used for military training, for the $1.1-billion Shymanivske mining and processing plant. In exchange, Black Iron would provide the ministry with funding to be used to build new barracks and an ammunition-storage depot, according to Matt Simpson, the companys chief executive officer.

He said during the UCC webinar that President Zelenskyy was personally committed to the project and that Ihor Zhovkva, deputy head of the Presidential Office of Ukraine, has assumed the role of investment nanny to help shepherd the mine through the government-approval channels.

However, Mr. Waschuk warned that foreign investors could also be scared off by what appears to be the politically motivated prosecution of former Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, who appeared in court on June 18 for a pretrial hearing on charges related to alleged abuse of office during his time in office.

The former Canadian ambassador cited comments made by Ruslan Riaboshapka, the first prosecutor general appointed by President Zelenskyy and dismissed in March after what he believed to be his refusal to sign off on charges against Poroshenko that he dismissed as trash. These were detailed in a recent UkraineAlert blog on the Atlantic Councils website. Mr. Waschuk is quoted there as saying that the raft of charges targeting Mr. Poroshenko reflect an unfortunate insecurity by President Zelenskyy despite his crushing election victory last year and his continuing opinion-poll dominance.

Mr. Waschuk referenced what he said in the blog: this insecurity has been cleverly torqued and exploited by Zelenskyys oligarchic electoral enabler, Ihor Kolomoisky, and Yanukovych-era legal affairs chief Andriy Portnov in order to settle old scores.

During the UCC-led webinar, the veteran Canadian diplomat said that payback time for them is bad news for the country as a whole.

The virtual conference on Ukrainian reform is archived on the UCCs website: https://ucc.ca/2020/06/11/ukraine-reform-conference-one-year-later/.

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UCC holds virtual forum to assess progress of Ukraine's reforms Panel discussion on Zoom comes a year after historic conference - The Ukrainian Weekly

2 officers, suspect killed in Texas border town shooting – Preeceville Progress

MCALLEN, Texas Two police officers were shot and killed Saturday by a suspect who later fatally shot himself in a South Texas border town after responding to a domestic disturbance call, authorities said.

McAllen Police Chief Victor Rodriguez identified the slain officers as Edelmiro Garza, 45, and Ismael Chavez, 39. Garza was an officer with the police department for more than eight years while Chavez had over two years of experience.

"We have lost two brave public servants who sought only to keep peace in our City," Rodriguez, visibly distraught, told The (McAllen) Monitor.

The officers first met with two people who reported assaults that took place inside a nearby home on the south side of McAllen around 3:30 p.m. Saturday, Rodriguez said. But the alleged shooter, whom police identified as 23-year-old Audon Ignacio Camarillo, opened fire when officers attempted to enter the home.

"They were doing their job. That is what they were supposed to do. The person was a suspect of the incident, met our officers at the door, and shot at both officers," Rodriguez said. "Both officers suffered fatal wounds, they have both passed away as a result. The officers never had a chance to suspect deadly assault on them, much less death."

Camarillo shot and killed himself shortly after opening fire on the officers, Rodriguez said, adding that the suspect hid behind a vehicle after other officers responded to the scene. Camarillo had a few run-ins with police beginning in 2016 to his most recent arrest last month on assault charges, according to public records.

More details surrounding the domestic disturbance Garza and Chavez responded to were not immediately known. Rodriguez said the attack happened suddenly and fellow police officers didnt learn of the officers' deaths until arriving to the area moments later.

Rodriguez said he doesn't expect his department to get over the deaths of their fellow officers anytime soon.

"The next few days for us, moving forward as well, will be very, very difficult, for ourselves at the department and at the city of McAllen, but our strength will get us through," the chief said. "We gather our strength from our police officers, and we gather our strengths from our colleagues, as you can see here."

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, who spoke with Rodriguez, offered the full backing of the state and expressed his support via social media.

"Two of our finest were killed in the line of duty while working to protect residents in their community," Abbott wrote on Twitter. "We unite to #BackTheBlue."

Lt. Christopher Olivarez, spokesman for the Texas Department of Public Safety, said DPS was among the agencies assisting McAllen police on Saturday.

Olivarez noted that DPS sent troopers to secure the scene after the McAllen Police Department requested their assistance. He said his agency received a call about the incident around 4:30 p.m.

McAllen is located at the southern tip of Texas, about 70 miles (113 kilometres) west of the Gulf of Mexico.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton tweeted that his office will provide the McAllen Police Department with any help needed.

"Our prayers and full support are with the valiant men and women of the #CityofMcAllen PD this evening," the tweet read. "We are grateful for police in McAllen and around this great state."

U.S. Rep. Vicente Gonzalez of McAllen said in a statement that receiving news of the two officers' deaths was "devastating."

"This is devastating news to our community. My heart breaks for these fallen officers and their families," Gonzalez said. "They served McAllen bravely and honourably and I will keep them in my prayers."

Rodriguez said that while the police are "weakened for the moment," he expects a resilient law enforcement community to stand tall and persevere through it.

"The strength and the resolve we have to serve our communities, all of us here, will allow us to do what we do every day," Rodriguez said.

Law enforcement from several cities in Hidalgo County gathered Saturday evening at McAllen Medical to honour Garza and Chavez. More than 50 police cars were part of a procession that accompanied the bodies of the officers, who were taken to Hidalgo County pathology for an autopsy.

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2 officers, suspect killed in Texas border town shooting - Preeceville Progress

Austerity in the Gulf states: why it’s alarming for women’s progress – The Conversation US

Citizens of Saudi Arabia are having to get used to something that has long been an unpleasant fact of life in most parts of the world. On July 1, the kingdom tripled the VAT levied on consumer goods and services from 5% to 15%. There were reports of frantic stockpiling ahead of the change as consumers put coronavirus fears to one side to buy while prices were low.

Besides VAT, the Saudis are implementing an austerity package that includes cuts to peoples living allowances and to national spending plans to develop the country. The kingdom is partly attributing these measures to the COVID-19 effect on oil prices, which crashed below zero in April. The oil price has since recovered somewhat, though at circa US$40 (32) per barrel, is still well below what the kingdom is used to.

Together with the economic effects of coronavirus restrictions, this has been putting severe pressure on the Saudis and their petroleum-rich neighbours in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC): Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates. The IMF recently predicted that the GCC economies would contract nearly 8% in 2020 a steep downgrade from the 3% decline it forecast in April.

All the same, there is more to the Saudi belt-tightening than the pandemic. On VAT, for instance, the whole GCC bloc reached an agreement in 2016 to introduce VAT for the first time at 5% across the board. The Saudis and UAE duly did so in 2018, followed by Bahrain a year later. Oman, Kuwait and Qatar have yet to impose this tax on their populations, but the question is when rather than whether they will follow suit.

It has long been obvious to the GCC nations that their existence as rentier states that rely on massive natural resources to subsidise goods and services for their populations cannot continue. Petroleum prices are low and unstable, and renewable technologies are reducing global demand for fossil-fuel products.

For years, these countries have been trying to increase their tax revenue and cut public expenditure while diversifying away from petroleum into everything from alternative energy to petrochemicals to construction. They do this through national vision plans such as Saudi Vision 2030, which put the emphasis on private-sector growth and developing the countrys people.

Diversification is supposed to help improve the public finances, yet it has been a victim of the Saudi cutbacks. The kingdom has made a US$8 billion budget cut to Vision 2030, which will involve scaling back plans such as a futuristic city known as Neom and a massive tourism development on the Red Sea.

This will jeopardise the success of the whole Saudi policy of economic diversification, and risks being repeated with cuts to vision plans across the region. Economic stimulus packages were announced in every GCC country in light of the fall in oil prices, but cuts in public spending will probably outweigh them. Compared to a projected Saudi budget cut of 12%, Oman is for instance cutting 10%, while Bahrain is seeking 30% in cuts.

Not only is this bad news for long-term economic prospects, it raises serious development concerns with respect to women. I did a study of Omani women in the context of Omans Vision 2020 (since superseded by Vision 2040). It was clear that these visions are part of a social contract, in which the sultanate retains power in exchange for providing the population of nearly 5 million with various kinds of support.

Particularly for women of low-income and minimal-education backgrounds, the state has been a major catalyst for their personal and professional development. It has provided them with education, training and employment programmes aimed at helping them to participate in the economy.

Likewise, there have been numerous initiatives to help women across the region in recent years. In UAE and Saudi Arabia, legislation was introduced in 2018 and 2019 aiming to remove gender-based discrimination in the workplace. The Saudis decision to lift the ban on women driving in 2018 was not only a win for womens rights but also improved womens access to workplaces among other gains.

Nonetheless, the Gulf continues to suffer from an education and employment paradox, where women are very well educated but play a very limited role in the workforce. The daily reality for women is that they still have to navigate entrenched structures of patriarchy and discrimination that devalue their work. More progressive laws do not guarantee better outcomes for women on their own. The Gulf economies are in fact more undermined by low female participation in the workplace than any other region in the world.

The World Bank has pressed these nations to keep improving in this regard, for instance calling on them to make it easier for women to launch businesses. As shown in my Oman study, barriers can be financial, such as not having enough money to get a business off the ground; and social, such as not having adequate social networks to spread the word and build professional contacts.

In sum, opportunities for women have been rapidly expanding in the Gulf countries in recent years as their rights increase and these economies diversify beyond petroleum to create a wider range of jobs for both men and women. This has been an exciting shift and raises much hope for the future, but it is under threat as the regions petroleum wealth declines and governments reduce spending.

We cant assume that women will continue to enjoy greater economic inclusion in the years to come. They will continue to rely on support from the state to drive this agenda forward, at least for a while. This must be protected from austerity programmes, and instead needs more investment both in the private and public sector to enable women in expanding their capabilities and building their experience, knowledge and skills to participate effectively alongside men in the economy.

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Austerity in the Gulf states: why it's alarming for women's progress - The Conversation US

Fall Update: Progress and Preparation | RIT – RIT News

Dear RIT community,

I hope you all had a relaxing and enjoyable holiday weekend. In a blink, we have gone from virtually celebrating our amazing Class of 2020 to now being only six weeks away from the opening day of classes on Aug. 19. Let me reassure you that we are making tremendous progress in our preparations to reopen for Fall semester.

Last week, the Fall Planning Task Force announced our plan addressing the health and safety of our faculty, staff, student employees, visitors, and other invited guests to campus. In the coming days, we will announce our Student Safety Plan. You will also hear from Provost Ellen Granberg on our reimagined learning environments that will address class sizes, study and meeting areas, how we will safely access our world-class laboratories and studios, and more details on the academic front. All of this work will be consolidated and shared shortly so you have a clear understanding of how RIT will live, learn, and thrive this fall. Our plans will meet and exceed the standards required by the states New York Forward guidelines.

Given the continuing spread of the coronavirus in various regions, we wish to emphasize that you should wear a mask, wash your hands, and watch your physical distance. In addition, we encourage all members of our campus community to stay at home insofar as practical and to associate only with immediate family members in the two weeks prior to returning to campus. The state of New York has put some specific guidelines in place for individuals traveling here from certain states. More specific parameters will be forthcoming. We believe that taking a proactive step and encouraging the entire RIT community to self-quarantine two weeks prior to arrival will add to our safety and give us momentum as we start the semester.

Today the campus will be abuzz with workers upgrading our facilities. Workers are installing air ionizers in residential halls (academic buildings will follow later this month), mounting plexiglass shields in classrooms, redesigning dining areas with improved social distancing and food ordering technologies, and much more. We are also working with our partner, Rochester Regional Health, to finalize a health screening app for daily symptom monitoring.

In terms of future communications, we will be launching a new weekly e-newsletter each Monday, starting July 13. The newsletter will convey the latest information in this still very fluid environment. If we dont have the immediate answer, please be patient; we will work quickly to respond to your inquiries. We will also soon be revamping our coronavirus website to address the reopening. Here, we will post our entire reopening plan, along with several new sections addressing academics, campus life, and health and safety.

Beyond these preparations, each of us must work together to protect the health and safety of every member of our campus community. Protect yourself. Protect others. While we are eager to welcome back our community, it is imperative that we be safe and that we act on our shared responsibility.

RIT Tigers are known for creativity, ingenuity, and problem solving. It is this collaborative spirit that will allow us to come back strong in August. If you have any questions, do not hesitate to contact our Call Center at coronavirusresponse@rit.edu, 585-475-3500, or 1-833-323-0002.

Yours in Tiger pride,

David Munson, RIT President

An ASL-interpreted video of this message is available.

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Fall Update: Progress and Preparation | RIT - RIT News

Enrich Your Religious Grounds Through Holy Texts And Discussions On Mademanministries – York Pedia

(YorkPedia Editorial):- Los Angeles, Jul 11, 2020 (Issuewire.com)MadeManMinistries has created an inspirational and integrated platform to restore humanity and morality in men, the physical reflection of God. Their aim is to unite men of good character hailing from a diverse range of ethnic and social backgrounds and share a common belief in the unadulterated fatherhood of God so that brotherhood prevails in communities.

MadeManMinistries is providing a divisive and digital way of a religious congregation through book readings that will help men to find spiritual closure through the teachings of the Bible and the Heavenly Father. The Bible is the rudimentary as well as the foundational text for individualistic characterization and this platform helps every one to get closer to cerebral joy and reasonability by realizing and deciphering the teachings of the Heavenly Father God, The Lord, and Savior Jesus Christ.

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Values and wisdom are slowly becoming volatile as men are constantly finding themselves as part of dynamic changes of the modern world. But what should always be remembered is the timeless teaching of the Almighty that will eventually lead us all to salvation. Only through the Holy text of Bible can men rebuilt a family where the man is recognized as the head of the household.

The platform regularly hosts religious readings of holy texts and books that leading men to a path of absolute truth. All our actions and decisions are metamorphosed into our fate and hence, it is extremely significant to understand our virtues and insight of moral being. Through guidance and illuminance of the Heavenly Father, mankind will reach and practice heartfelt brotherhood that looks after each other in times of hardships. Each text on the platform deals with a different philosophy thus allowing readers to find their true identity through metaphysical stories. This paves the way for enlightenment that helps men to rearrange life and perspectives through that of the Heavenly Father. Literature and religion symbolically represent each other and the Bible stands as the most popular religious texts helping man find the light to redemption.

Visit their website athttps://mademanministries.com/to cleanse your soul and decipher the affinity of religious and modern-day practicalities in your daily life.

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Enrich Your Religious Grounds Through Holy Texts And Discussions On Mademanministries - York Pedia

Where chefs release their inner Gwyneth Paltrow and peri-peri is from Macau – Daily Maverick

(Photo by Sebastian Coman Photography on Unsplash)

It has happened again. That little text from my tormenter at TGIFood that its my turn to write something for next weeks edition. Suddenly my world is turned upside-down. I pour a stiff whiskey and fall into a black hole. I will remain in that hole for the next week, agonising and racking my empty brain about something to write about. Fortunately we didnt have an alcohol ban here in Chicago so I can at least keep pouring stiff whiskeys while spending time in the black hole.

The problem is once I manage to write something and send it off I experience a brief sense of relief and then immediately plunge into another black hole convinced that Im about to publicly make a complete fool of myself. More stiff whiskey. At least Im not living in SA. I cant imagine spending time in my black hole pouring a stiff dop of my own homemade mampoer or skokiaan or whatever the stuff was that people brewed back home during the no alcohol phase of lockdown.

I thought I could write about the restaurant scene in Chicago but thats too depressing because there is no scene any more. In our current lockdown phase theyre only allowed to do safely spaced outdoor seating and takeout. Many people in the business agree that its probably not enough for most of them to survive. But rather this than whats happening in the southern states where restaurants never got shut down and have now become super spreaders. Depressing. Also, I promised myself that I wont write about the lockdown.

I must however admit that I experienced a little attack of schadenfreude when I saw a recent article in the NY Times about Fat Rice, a restaurant around the corner from me.

A husband and wife team opened it about seven years ago to great fanfare and featured food from Macau, where the wife was born. They even won a James Beard award. I was immediately interested because food from Macau is not something you find every day. They were always booked out and it took months for us to finally get a table at five oclock on a Tuesday afternoon. Strangely, all the waiters were wearing black T-shirts with the words Dont believe the hype printed on them. Our waiter explained that the Chicago Tribune food critic gave them a lukewarm review so the owners made all the staff wear shirts with the above quote from the review. (Interestingly, Macaus national dish is African chicken, a stewy chicken dish.)

Seemed a little arrogant but hey, what do I know. I ordered the chicken peri-peri because that was just before Nandos hit Chicago and you couldnt find peri-peri anywhere. Most Americans had no clue what it was, including Fat Rice, it turned out. When it arrived I thought perhaps he got the order wrong, because it looked like a stew. Like chicken curry in fact. But the waiter assured me that the stuff in front of me was indeed peri-peri and that the chefs should know because one of them was from Macau. I pointed out that peri-peri originated in Portuguese east Africa, not Macau and that I have actually eaten it in Mozambique and it certainly did not look like this. Also it didnt taste anything like peri-peri. I mentioned that I probably should have heeded the advice printed on his T-shirt. Needless to say, we never went back.

It always amazes me how the masses can be wrong about food. Part of the problem is of course living in the age of Yelp and Zagat where everybody is a critic. Only a few cities have managed to sustain daily newspapers with professional food critics so, in 90% of the US, food mayhem reigns. Basically in Fat Rices case, the professional food critic was right and everybody else was wrong. A good rule of thumb when dining out in the US is dont follow the crowds. Of course, the point is moot now.

But to get back to my little bout of schadenfreude. A few weeks ago the Black Lives Matter protests broke out and Fat Rice changed their website to address human dignity and the plight of black people and how their hearts were bleeding and how their restaurants philosophy has always been to serve and uplift the community etc etc. There was an immediate backlash from all their ex employees and it turned out that the two owners were actually two-faced jerks with a history of workplace abuse and making derogatory statements about people of colour, even throwing plates at them in front of a packed restaurant. The blowback got so raucous that it eventually got a front page in the New York Times food section and last week Fat Rice closed down for good.

I know its unseemly to kick the restaurant industry when theyre down but this just reminded me of another case of the munching masses being utterly bonkers. The culprit happens to be a restaurant next door to me called Buona Terra. Actually it is so next to me that I can see it from my back porch. When people hear we live in Logan Square they alway say how lucky we are because we live near their favourite restaurant, Buona Terra. Who thought deconstructed Italian fare could be so popular. In their case the deconstruction is not happening, not because theyre fancy-ass tattooed chefs with shaved heads but because they are just plain clueless and cant cook.

If an Italian restaurant cant do a basic pasta with tomato sauce they shouldnt be in business. The key of course is a long gentle simmer to caramelise the tomatoes and bring out their sweetness. It is so simple, but there should be harmony between the ingredients. What you dont want is a mess of undercooked tomato chunks, half raw onions and chunks of garlic sticking between your teeth. I think they try to emphasise the freshness of the ingredients, but why not then just do a bloody salad? A well made tomato sauce tastes perfectly fresh when served over pasta with a good glug of olive oil. It doesnt need to be half raw.

I suffered from garlic breath for at least a week after that infernal meal. Even trying the trusted old remedy of gargling with vodka didnt help. (Most breath fresheners contain alcohol so if you cut straight to the vodka part you get more bang for your buck.) And trust me, I gargled my way through a few bottles. Actually the pasta they served with the sauce was so al dente that you could snap them like twigs and I probably could have used one of the pasta splinters to pick the garlic from my teeth. I like al dente pasta but this stuff was a joke. Add undercooked tomatoes, onions and garlic and you get the picture. Oh, and did I mention no salt? I felt like sneaking over there in the middle of the night and nailing a copy of Marcella Hazans recipe for Sugo Fresco di Pomodoro to their door. And they are always booked out. Yelp strikes again! So much peril just within a few blocks of my house.

It may not seem like it but I do like eating out and I miss going to restaurants. And I do hope most of them survive. Who knows, maybe during this down time some of the hot young chefs could even have some tattoos removed. Maybe everybody will have forgotten about the whole tasting menu and small plate craze. Or the whole sharing thing. I go to restaurants to share in the atmosphere, to share companionship, conversation and laughter, not my food. My heart always used to sink when a waiter beamed at us and announced that the chefs philosophy was to encourage people to share. Like it was some sort of spiritual experience. And my sinking dark heart would murmur, tough, buddy, but I aint sharing none of my food with nobody.

Ordering shared plates for a table makes for a really awkward situation. Especially when the diners dont know each other very well. First, vegans and gluten free people need to be taken into account. Then the carnivore gluttons get all coy because they dont want to reveal their true natures and cause offence to the food sensitive ones. Its like workshopping a play, a practice Ive never believed in. You always end up with something half baked or an undercooked sauce with not enough salt. Finally, after an agonising period of compromising and polite but desperate strategic manoeuvring and endless smiling and nodding, the food arrives, by which time Im so starved that I just want to load my plate and stuff my mouth. (When Americans feel awkward they tend to nod a lot.) But no, I have to play along and pretend that the whole ritual is really fun. And then of course there is the matter of who gets the last lonely little morsel sitting there in the middle of the table. More often than not it ends up going back to the kitchen followed by my hungry eyes because everybody is too self-conscious to just grab it. Painful, and not why I go to restaurants. I go to restaurants to relax, talk a lot and drink a lot, not to relive something resembling my first date.

Up there with the sharing thing is when the server asks whether weve dined in the restaurant before. Ive gotten wise to that one because if you stupidly answer in the negative, prepare yourself for a lecture about how to read the menu and oh how lucky you are to share in the chefs enlightenment after discovering their true tattooed inner souls during their farm to table journey. Like Paul falling off his donkey on the road to Damascus. Before you know it they start naming all the goats the enlightened owners milked that very morning, just for you! The religious experience of picking organic heirloom tomatoes on a small farm. Its like theyre trying to set you up for a guilt-trip in case you dont like the food.

Whats with all this philosophy in the kitchen anyway. When did that sneak in? I dont want to go on a spiritual journey when I go to a restaurant. I want to eat. Cooking and serving a good meal is not enough any more. Its like some chefs feel the need to release their inner Gwyneth Paltrow and turn something you thought was just dinner into a deeper and more meaningful event. Blame it on the Pilgrims but Americans certainly have a streak of missionary zeal in them. Shut up and cook. A plate of good food will do me just fine.

I really do like restaurants. Really. And its not just about the food. Its about the buzz as well. Of course, bad food or service can be a real buzz killer but the food is just one part of the big picture. Its about being part of the world, part of a bustling city. Only now that theyre gone do I realise what an integral part of city life restaurants are. Dining with friends, surrounded by strangers, eavesdropping on conversations, soothed by the sounds of clattering plates and clinking glasses, one gets lulled into feeling all is okay with the world. I dont even need to dine. Just strolling by all the bustling neighbourhood restaurants gives me a feeling of contentment. I even miss crossing the street to avoid seeing the suckers dining at Buona Terra. I miss them all and hope they all survive these terrible times. Bon Appetit. And dont forget the salt. DM/TGIFood

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Where chefs release their inner Gwyneth Paltrow and peri-peri is from Macau - Daily Maverick

Race, diversity, and Black ownership in the cannabis industry: A conversation with SC Labs CEO Jeff Gray – PotNetwork

Cannabis is a term; cannabis is a plant, said Jeff Gray in an early morning conversation with The PotNetwork. Gray is the CEO of SC Labs, which stands for Science of Cannabis, and is one of the few African American executives in an industry thats fallen way too short on its promises of social equity. From a scientific perspective, it is truly an amazing plant in terms of what it produces and the amounts of these compounds that it produces."

What it's been used for by the people who have the power in order to control has changed, he continued.

Today, some of the people who make money in the legal cannabis trade are the same forces that made marijuana central to the drug war so many years ago, he said. To Gray, that idea is critical toward understanding the industrys current climate. And its an issue with historical blame on both sides of the political aisle.

The prominence of cannabis even in the anti-war movement, in communities of color as a tool to put people to incarcerate people, that was the way that they were probably going to make the most money at that time, said Gray, discussing the corporate landscape of the past 50 years.

And now, theres a different opportunity to make money, he continued, remarking upon the corporate infiltration of legal cannabis. So, let's change it up.

Gray was born in Gardena and grew up in California, where the atmosphere around cannabis was always progressive. Hes a graduate of the University of California, Santa Cruz, whose first job out of college was at a government social service agency. Like many, his foray into cannabis began with a general fascination with the plant.

I cultivated a couple of things but never had a specific end in mind, he said, recalling his early days in what was yet to be an industry.

A smoker for sure at the time though not as much now since hes become a father Grays initial interests in cannabis lie more in the drugs greater possibilities. As he told The PotNetwork, there is a robust cannabis movement rooted in activism, safe access, and patients. According to Gray, having more control over treating oneself for certain things than with conventional medicine is a powerful form of self-autonomy.

And cannabis spoke to his independent, entrepreneurial spirit as well.

The marriage of the ideal with the entrepreneurial is what brought Gray, along with three partners, to found SC Labs. Labeling themselves as four activist-entrepreneurs, they sought to give consumers a way to trust the brands they were being sold by bringing cannabis out of the Wild West and developing the industrys first testing standards. Together they succeeded, with the guidelines they devised having been adopted into extensive use across the cannabis space.

Gray is modest when it comes to his accomplishments; however, crediting his partners as the backbone of SC Labs. I am not the I'm not the visionary behind this, he said. One of my partners was the first lab director at the first cannabis testing lab of its kind.

The lot of them convinced him that together, they could make a difference. I learned more than I had about areas that I hadn't even considered in 10 years that I've been participating in cannabis prior to that, said Gray, praising his partners and the work they do at SC Labs.

Jeff Gray is proud of the work he does at SC Labs and is invested in his role in the cannabis industry at large. But as one of the few Black men to break through the barriers of minority ownership in the legalized cannabis trade, he carries the burdens of racial disparity to often overlooked in everyday conversations about seed-to-sale, marijuana banking, and the like. As Gray explained to The PotNetwork, the political moment may finally have arrived at more in-depth discussions on race in America, but hes been a Black man all of his life.

I was reading James Baldwin, who said to be conscious and Black in America is to be in a rage every day, said Gray, speaking straightforward. My experience as a Black man in this country hasn't changed since these recent events.

Those events, of course, are the brutal police murders of Black men and women like Breonna Taylor and George Floyd, and the Black Lives Matter demonstrations that followed across the country. As Gray explained, watching the video of George Floyds murder was so visceral it was akin to a snuff film. If you're not upset, if that doesn't hurt you, if you don't empathize somewhere something's wrong, he said.

As down-to-his-bones angry as Gray is at this moment, however, he hopes it can be an opportunity for change the kind of change that goes beyond surface-level distraction and reaches a meaningful discourse within the zeitgeist. He sees the work of younger people who are taking to the streets and prays that the moment isnt missed.

Feeling a responsibility to speak, Gray recently took to Instagram, joining in what he hopes will be a larger conversation about race, equality, and cannabis. It feels like the appetite for the destruction of Black bodies is insatiable, he told his followers before speaking some necessary truths to the legal marijuana trade.

(Story continues below...)

With money comes the exclusion of people of all backgrounds who helped build this, he continued, calling cannabis [a]n industry devoid of people of color in positions of power. They were harsh words for a community that built itself on whats transformed into a facade of social justice and racial equity. Still, the statistics dont lie.

African Americans have been shut out of the cannabis industry. According to a report by NBC News earlier this year, less than one-fifth of owners or stakeholders are people of color. In the United States, Black-owned cannabis dispensaries make up less than one percent of the entire industry. Minorities are underrepresented in boardrooms across the globe as well.

Yet, Black communities continue to be persecuted for cannabis use. As the ACLU has pointed out, Black Americans are four times more likely to be arrested for cannabis than their white counterparts, even though both groups use the drug at similar rates. Even in states that have legalized the plant, African Americans still face over-policing for public nuisance crimes concerning cannabis at a rate higher than whites.

If you don't have capital, you don't have access getting into cannabis, said Gray, speaking from his own California-centric experience. He explained that as much as the situation has improved for example, he noted the lack of police helicopters searching for heat signatures to make large drug busts is a net positive its only improved for certain classes of people. Cannabis shifted from an all-inclusive economy to the same, uniform dynamics of every other capitalistic industry.

It all gets consolidated among the few, and the many get left out, he said.

But efforts at inclusiveness that look to uplift the Black community within legal cannabis mostly miss the point, according to Gray. Governments, activists, and industrialists who push for equal treatment now, as sincere as they may be, still ignore 400 years of racial disparity.

Economic equality is also critically important in the industry because without it getting into this industry is like starting a Monopoly game and somebody already owns half the property the disadvantage is on you, he said. We could be at such a disadvantage competitively for so long and then for everybody just to go okay, so we're good, even if we got to the point that we have equal treatment. We can't just start from there.

As Gray said in his Instagram video, however, diversity is marketed as a brand, especially in the cannabis industry. At the height of protesting in June, a group of African American women from Cannaclusive put out The Accountability List. It tracked every major cannabis brands response to the Black Lives Matter movement. While its perhaps difficult to gauge sincerity from a single Twitter post or Facebook feed, the women insisted that the industry put its money where its mouth is.

Cannaclusive followed up with each brand to see who was donating to the cause, and how many Black employees and Black executives they had in their ranks, among other markers. Too many brands were content with posting a blank square on social media and calling it social justice.

Gray doesnt want to judge sincerity either necessarily but is also too invested in the gravity of this moment to let surface gestures rule the day. He sees that for many in the industry, what theyve done is a marketing play; their efforts will be short-lived.

It's such a sad thing that it's going to take this moment and make it that it doesn't achieve its potential, he lamented.

Unlike others, though, he is doing something about it and has been for a while now. He and his team and SC Labs work with SACNAS or the Society for Advancement of Chicanos/Hispanics and Native Americans in Science, and UC Santa Cruz to recruit minority students in STEM majors into the cannabis industry. At SC Labs, these students gain valuable scientific and technological experience in the cannabis industry.

Its essential work to Gray, who noted the difficulty in finding talented scientists to work in the cannabis field. According to him, many people would shun the work for fear of what it would mean for their future career prospects, with those who took internships going as far as leaving it off their resumes.

There's the development of the talent on your team and the openness and commitment to elevating those people when giving them those opportunities, said Gray. We grow their careers. That's always a treat.

In the end, Gray stressed that he doesnt want to lose this moment for what it is, an opportunity.

We don't know the experiences we don't have, and that's okay, said Gray. Policing, the arrest rate, pre-trial cash bail for Black people stopped by police that affects the poor and people of color disproportionately. This system is largely oppressive for poor people, as well as sentencing disparities, the rates of parole. Then you have to put all this post-prison, securing employment, accessing the social safety net. I mean the right to vote. Weve taken away the right to vote for people.

All those things are part of that system, he continued. And where we sit in cannabis, we have this sort of extra responsibility.

Images: SC Labs lab employees (Courtesy SC Labs)

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The Morning Show Star Gugu Mbatha-Raw On Americas Cultural Awakening & The Road To A New Normal – Deadline

Gugu Mbatha-Raw knew her role on The Morning Show would be a challenge. As Hannah Shoenfeld, the talent booker who survives a sexual assault, she provided a crucial turning point in the Apple TV+ series that centers on the sexual misconduct that plagued a news organization. It was her story, and ultimately, her tragic fate, that put a spotlight on unchecked abuses of power. Mbatha-Raw tapped into a gamut of emotions to showcase a trauma that so many women are only too familiar with, and hopes that Hannahs tragic ending can serve as a cautionary tale, showing the value in not staying silent.

DEADLINE: First off, I have to ask, how are you doing? The world is super unsettling right now. How are you holding on?

Related StoryGugu Mbatha-Raw On Her Harrowing Sexual Assault Scenes In 'The Morning Show' & More - The Actor's Side

GUGU MBATHA-RAW: Im doing well today. There are ups and downs. Its sort of a day-by-day, week-by-week process. But today Im doing well. I think it has been an incredible time and Im inspired. Im inspired to think that even though were going through so many challenges that hopefully positive things are going to come from everything.

DEADLINE: Your character Hannah was an impetus for change, which fits very well with the times were in. It seems like something has to happen, like what happened with George Floyd, for people to actually take notice and see what people have been experiencing for years.

MBATHA-RAW: I know. Its very sad that there was a sacrifice in that way that it becomes a catalyst. Certainly, in terms of The Morning Show, not to say it had to be that way, but I think sometimes when youre dealing with institutions, and youre dealing with cultures that are very slow-moving and set in their ways that unfortunately, like you say, sometimes there has to be something so jolting and so shocking and so sad that it awakens people. Both in the culture that were in now, but certainly in terms of the show, what happens in Episode 10 of The Morning Show is an awakening. Hopefully, the emotional trigger of that moment will sustain the evolution of the culture.

DEADLINE: Youre very vocal about Black Lives Matter and whats going on with racial injustices, with police brutality.

MBATHA-RAW: I think its a fascinating moment in history were in on many, many levels. Its really a seismic shift and a catalyst and an awakening culturally. Ive always believed that Black lives matter, thats not something new to me, but I think what is fascinating is when the culture also simultaneously awakens, and there is a sense of momentum and I think that thats when real change can actually happen.

Beyond anything that feels like activism on the fringe, this is activism in the front and center of our culture, and its an international conversation that is happening now. So that, to me, as much as its like giving birth, theres so much pain that needs to happen, but then for a new system and hopefully a more equal way of living. There has to be a reckoning and there has to be discomfort. I think its part of the process.

DEADLINE: Hannahs journey is just so vital to exposing abuses of power in The Morning Show. What were your initial thoughts when you first read the script?

MBATHA-RAW: I read the first couple of scripts, and because not everything was written, I couldnt tell from them exactly where Hannah was going to go in the story. I knew it was being cast by Vickie Thomas who is an incredible casting director, and who Ive met for many things over the years, and I know she always does great, interesting work. Through her, I got on the phone with [executive producers] Kerry Ehrin and Mimi Leder, and they explained the arc of Hannahs journey which I just thought was so powerful. So, it was really in them explaining where she goes. I was really inspired by the fact that, as well as having this traumatic experience with the Mitch character, she also confronts him. I think it revealed the complexities of how different people bury those kinds of experiences. In terms of relating to her, the writing was so great in terms of the world and the characters being very ambitious and driven. I definitely could identify with Hannahs in the world of entertainment that Ive met, in terms of that career drive, and so that was interesting, at least on the surface, but I was definitely more drawn to her secrets.

DEADLINE: What else drew you to the show as a whole?

MBATHA-RAW: Obviously, the cast. Knowing that this is Jennifer Anistons first return to TV since Friends, I knew it was going to be a big deal. Id worked with Reese Witherspoon very briefly on A Wrinkle in Time, and really respected the way she has been championing female voices in her storytelling and her production company. Steve Carell obviously is such an amazing actor with such a range. I was intrigued by Apple TV+ because it didnt exist really at the point that I got the scripts and knowing that it was going to be a new streaming platform, I thought it was a fascinating and interesting experience to be part of something brand new like that.

It was the first time post-#MeToo that Id read anything that addressed the power dynamics in the media landscape so directly, but also in a nuanced way. I thought the conversations were going to be interesting and provocative, and hopefully potentially healing if we got it right, in terms of showing all the different perspectives and looking at the gray area of these issues. Because I think it can be very easy to simplify them when things become a hashtag, and things become just very much part of the zeitgeist. I think its always important to remember the human cost and look at those issues more intimately. So, I was excited by that challenge.

DEADLINE: This show came at a time when a similar scandal rocked a very popular morning show, The Today Show. I know this show was written before all of that came to light but how mindful of that did you have to be when you were approaching this character?

MBATHA-RAW: Obviously, we always knew we were dealing with a fictional drama. Kerry Ehrin, the showrunner and lead writer, had done so much research with the writing team. I think it was a testament to the research and how eerily accurate some of the scenarios were. But it was never based on anybody specific in that way. I think that they wanted it to be relevant but also universal in a way that women could relate to it, and men hopefully can relate to it, or at least see a new light shared on experiences that maybe theyd overlooked.

Its always exciting to work on something that you feel is topical, because as painful as some of these issues are, I think that they do need to be processed. And I think when youre watching something that is a drama that is outside of yourself, that is fictionalized somehow on your TV screen or your phone or however youre consuming it, its a safe place. Youre watching it even though some of the scenes are close to the bone and potentially triggering for people whove had those experiences. I think to know that its a drama, to know its outside of you, that it will have some kind of resolution outside of yourself, is helpful for the culture, I hope.

DEADLINE: There was a healing quality to the story. Not just the Hannah story but with all the stories of the other womenof Bradley, of Alex.

MBATHA-RAW: To see so many defined female characters in one show, not just archetypes, theyre nuanced and complex and there are so many of them. Not just Hannah, obviously Reeses and Jennifer Anistons characters, Karen Pittman, Bel Powley, theres such a spread of different perspectives on that world and I just really appreciated the nuances of the ensemble.

DEADLINE: Your character was very good at what she did. She was a hustler, and she had the added weight of what happened to her, and the circumstances surrounding her promotion. Was that challenging for you to balance all those elements?

MBATHA-RAW: I love a challenge and I definitely felt that there was a lot going on for Hannah. But I think that thats very real, and that people dont always wear their heart on their sleeve in terms of their past and their trauma. I think people do want to move on, even if they havent processed things, and the idea of being a survivor of a situation like this, at least for Hannah, she didnt want it to define her. She wanted it to be something that she could forget about and move on from. Obviously, as we see, she hadnt fully dealt with it. But its very human to put out that tougher facade. The defense mechanism, the workaholic energy, all of that, is a way often to numb actually having to just be still and deal with your stuff. That is very familiar for people in the entertainment industry, in news, and somewhere in the morning show world which is a blend of entertainment and news which is very adrenalized, and that live TV element obviously adds an extra [layer] to everything. Its very easy to be in denial in a world that moves very fast.

DEADLINE: As women, especially in this industry, we always feel like we have to prove ourselves. Being a woman of color, Ive always been told we have to be two times better than our counterparts, especially our white male counterparts.Was that something that you felt that Hannah was dealing with?

MBATHA-RAW: I think that that was obviously an underlying pressure for her. It wasnt overtly expressed in the storyline but we did talk about her backstory. I think in the quest for equality, gender equality and racial equality, this is a big conversation were having culturally now. But in the quest for that, certainly when we were making The Morning Show, and in terms of Hannahs perspective on that, I think that she probably had internalized the culture that she was in to such a degree that she was just trying to progress and trying to do the best she could. I dont know if it was always conscious. It was very much internalized for her.

DEADLINE: Were in this moment where weve heard a lot of survivors come out with their accounts of abuse. While weve also seen people like Harvey Weinstein or R. Kelly having to answer for these wrongdoings, the sad truth is that were living in a world where people still question or place judgment on the survivors. Were you concerned at all about how viewers would receive Hannahs story?

MBATHA-RAW: I think everybody was concerned to do their best to honor that in a nuanced way, certainly in terms of going through those beats of showing Hannahs perspective. There has been some judgment in the media about why it takes a long time for people to come forward in these situations, or why they were in the hotel in the first place, and all of those kinds of things. Seeing that episode, really seeing somebody like Hannah, who was in a very vulnerable scenario after the Vegas shooting, a very traumatic experience in itself, and just really understanding how somebody like Mitch was a mentor figure for her and I think his perspective was so different to hers. She was looking up to him, idolizing him as the star of the show, and that hes actually giving her a little bit of extra attention in terms of as a mentor and being kind to her. I dont think she ever imagined that it would transition to anything more than thatTheres so much going through Hannahs mind in terms of what will the implications will be. She doesnt know how to deal with that situation so she just goes through with it. I think that to actually see those beats, and working with Michelle MacLaren who directed the episode, making it much more about the thought process for Hannah as well as the physical element was very important. So, I trusted the female leadership behind the camera. They really wanted to show a different side and in detail, a nuanced side of that experience.

DEADLINE: What kind of responses have you received to your performance and to Hannahs story?

MBATHA-RAW: Its been really interesting for me. Theres been a whole gamut of emotions. Many women have found it quite moving. People have reached out to me on social media, and some people have felt like its the first time they felt seen.

DEADLINE: Did you interpret Hannahs overdose as accidental, even though it was never really talked about or mentioned on the show?

MBATHA-RAW: Its incredibly sad and it could have gone many ways for Hannah. Knowing that she had this promotion, and a chance of a new start in Los Angeles with a different outlook there, which in a sense you could say its a fresh start, or it could be that shes also thought of a problem being removed out of sight, out of mind, and somewhat blackmailed to get out of that situation.

We talked a lot about that moment where Hannah accepts the promotion, or leaves a voicemail at least, and then realizes that that didnt solve it. That didnt solve this abyss, this pain inside of her, and that its really that. She feels like she needs to numb that. Obviously, suicide is such a sensitive and complex issue, and I think in terms of, Did she intend to do it? Did she not? we talked a lot about it, and I always felt like she didnt intend to die but that she did intend to numb.

But Im optimistic. Im hopeful there are so many stages of this process and weve gone through them very quickly in the last few weeks and I think that is going to be really interesting to see in the long term. I hope that the movement has stamina and I hope that the culture has the stamina for really implementing the shifts that need to happen, not just a hashtag, beyond the hashtag. As powerful as that is in our culture for a moment, I think its also about letting in things that are going to have longevity.

DEADLINE: What did playing Hannah teach you?

MBATHA-RAW: I learned a lot on many levels. I think I learned about the world of morning shows on a superficial level. But also, the power of actually staying silent doesnt help anyone. I think as we see with Hannah, her silence, or her inability to process, actually only becomes self-destructive to herself, and that has been a lesson for me. I think actually youre not protecting anyone by staying silent about those kinds of injustices. Its only eating you inside. So thats been a valuable lesson in terms of addressing things, processing them.

DEADLINE: What are you looking forward to at the moment?

MBATHA-RAW: I guess Im looking forward to just seeing how we as a culture evolve. The word normal, whatever that means, I dont think that normal was functional overall, the normal that we had for many people. I think that before things settle there has to be a new configuration. Im looking forward to the new normal and progress.

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The Morning Show Star Gugu Mbatha-Raw On Americas Cultural Awakening & The Road To A New Normal - Deadline

Developer Reveals Layer-Two Private Messaging and Payment System on Bitcoin Cash | Technology – Bitcoin News

On July 4, 2020, the Bitcoin Cash proponent Cain published an interview with the blockchain developer, Shammah Chancellor, about a new project called Stamp Chat. At its basic level, Stamp is a prototype of a layer-2 private messaging and payment system on Bitcoin Cash. It implements stealth [plus] confidential transactions on top of Bitcoin Cash using layer-2 protocol technologies.

This week Bitcoin Cash supporters were introduced to a new interview about a tool called Stamp, an encrypted message and payment system that leverages the Bitcoin Cash (BCH) chain. Stamp was highlighted about a month earlier via a Bchignite.com livestream. The project is being developed by the software programmer Shammah Chancellor, otherwise known as @micropresident.

The project was introduced on Saturday, July 4, 2020, by the Bitcoin Cash proponent Cain (@bchcain) via the read.cash blog. Cain gives a summary of how governments today have the ability to censor our speech online, and our financial lives as well through centralized parties. The BCH enthusiast highlights how our freedom of expression is censored and monitored by the powers that be.

The fact that we are being monitored limits our freedom of thought and our freedom of expression, Cains interview stressed. You might think twice about entering something into a search engine, or posting something on Facebook or Twitter. This limits our ability to communicate and explore ideas, and this is why I am so excited by Stamp, the new Bitcoin Cash project being developed by Shammah Chancellor, aka @micropresident.

Cains post further added:

Stamp is still in its early stages and only available on testnet, but the interface already looks polished and many features like group chats and nested messages have already been deployed. According to his Github page: Stamp is a prototype of a layer-2 private messaging and payment system on Bitcoin Cash. It implements stealth [plus] confidential transactions on top of Bitcoin Cash using layer-2 protocol technologies.

Individuals who are interested in Stamp can check out the Github repository and get more familiar with the project. The Github repos disclaimer is a touch different and states: Stamp is in early alpha development stage. There will be multiple breaking changes from now until a stable release. We default to the Bitcoin Cash testnet as to protect against lost funds.

Those who are interested in testing the Stamp protocol can do so by accessing the cashweb/stamp/releases section and grabbing test coins from faucet.fullstack.cash.

The Stamp developers who contribute to the project also have a Telegram chat channel as well for people who want to learn more about the project. Shammah Chancellor also describes the Stamp project in great detail during his interview with Cain.

Stamp is the name of the wallet that uses a number of backend protocols, the developer explained. These protocols are a suite called Cashweb, with the vision being that everything online is powered by Bitcoin Cash. Fundamentally, Cashweb is powered via standard web technologies: Websockets, JWT tokens, HTTP/2. The idea being to make it easy for non-cryptocurrency developers to integrate with.

Cashweb is a [three] tier network, Shammah Chancellor continued. The first tier being Bitcoin Cash. The second tier is a keyserver network, which is used to look up, in a cryptographically secure way, important information about a Bitcoin Cash address. The third tier is a messaging system (called relay servers) which allows wallets to pass, encrypted, structured messages between them. The developer concluded:

When you add a contact to a Stamp wallet, it reaches out to a keyserver and requests your contact information. This is then verified, and used to determine which relay server they accept messages on. Once your wallet has this information, it can start exchanging structured, encrypted, messages between itself and another user.

Cryptocurrency supporters who are interested in reading the rest of the interview between Cain and Shammah Chancellor can follow this link here that stems from the read.cash blog.

On the Reddit forum r/btc, BCH proponents seemed pleased with the announcement and some people contributed to the development funding. Looks promising, an individual wrote on Reddit. I sent a bit of funding. Good luck with it.

What do you think about the Stamp project built on the Bitcoin Cash network? Let us know what you think about this subject in the comments section below.

Image Credits: Shutterstock, Pixabay, Wiki Commons, Stamp, Read.cash, Cain

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. It is not a direct offer or solicitation of an offer to buy or sell, or a recommendation or endorsement of any products, services, or companies. Bitcoin.com does not provide investment, tax, legal, or accounting advice. Neither the company nor the author is responsible, directly or indirectly, for any damage or loss caused or alleged to be caused by or in connection with the use of or reliance on any content, goods or services mentioned in this article.

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Forget Cash ISAs, Bitcoin and gold. I’d buy bargain FTSE 100 shares to get rich and retire early – Yahoo Finance UK

Every investor should build a balanced portfolio containing different assets classes, but I think you should use most of your long-term wealth to buy bargain FTSE 100 shares.

I would keep only a small proportion of my wealth in rival assets such as Cash ISAs, Bitcoin, and gold. History shows that stock markets beat almost every rival over the long run. If you want to get rich and retire early, this is where Id start.

When you buy equities, you are investing in real life companies that produce goods and services people need and want to buy. After the Covid-19 crash, many of these companies are in trouble. Others are genuine FTSE 100 bargains, good companies whose share prices have plunged along with the bad. This is where your opportunities lie right now.

You arent investing in the real world when you trade Bitcoin.The virtual currency has almost no practical uses. Primarily, it is a speculative tool to keep day traders amused. Until they start losing real money, that is. Then its not so amusing.

Crypto-currencies are a play on volatility. Spot markets can be volatile too, but you can make that work in your favour. At the Motley Fool, we urge investors to buy FTSE 100 shares when they are trading at bargain prices, say, after a stock market crash. If you plan to hold them for the long term, you will benefit when markets recover, as they always do in the longer run.

Cash is a safe haven from volatility, but theres a catch. Easy access savings accounts destroy the value of your money. They now pay just 0.25% on average, half todays inflation rate. It means your money is eroding in real terms.

Everybody needs a bit of cash on easy access for emergencies, but your the money you are building into long-term wealth should go into equities. Id start by buying FTSE 100 shares, which are particularly attractive when available at bargain prices, like today.

The stock market crash in March saw another rush into gold as a store of value. As I write this, the gold price stands at just over $1,800 an ounce, a level last seen in 2012. If it rises much more, it could top its all-time high.

I have a natural aversion to investing at the top of the market. You have missed most of the gains, and are vulnerable to a crash.

That is why Im favouring bargain FTSE 100 shares right now. Despite the recovery, they are still down 20% from their pre-pandemic highs. If we get another crash, my advice would be the same, buy more shares at the new, lower price. Then hold them for the long term, and reinvest your dividends for growth.

You can reduce the risk by targeting companies with strong balance sheets, steady revenues, minimal debts, and strong competitive moats against rival firms. Many still pay attractive dividend yields, something you wont get from Bitcoin or gold.

Thats why my money is going into bargain FTSE 100 shares today.

The post Forget Cash ISAs, Bitcoin and gold. Id buy bargain FTSE 100 shares to get rich and retire early appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.

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Harvey Jones has no position in any of the shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has no position in any of the shares mentioned. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.

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Forget Cash ISAs, Bitcoin and gold. I'd buy bargain FTSE 100 shares to get rich and retire early - Yahoo Finance UK

The Three Most Controversial Bitcoin Price Models and What They Predict – Cointelegraph

There are several well-known Bitcoin price models and theories that are often highly debated and considered controversial. Models like stock-to-flow, Hyperwave and Elliot Wave typically predict large price movements in the medium- to long-term.

The first and most widely acknowledged Bitcoin price model is stock-to-flow. The S2F model predicts the long-term trend of Bitcoins value based on its scarcity. Since Bitcoin has a fixed monetary supply, the biggest value proposition of the dominant cryptocurrency is its scarcity and the reducing supply of BTC.

The model takes the stock-to-flow of gold and silver as its benchmark. The term stock-to-flow refers to the flow of new supply relative to the amount of existing circulating supply. The model believes the value of gold held up over time because it is not possible to newly create all of the circulating supply of gold to render the precious metal worthless.

Unlike gold and silver, the supply of Bitcoin is fixed, and every halving decreases the rate of supply production. As such, in theory, Bitcoin is even more scarce than gold and silver. The model predicts the market capitalization of Bitcoin to exceed $1 trillion after the May 2020 halving. The prediction goes in line with the performance of Bitcoin following previous halvings in 2012 and 2016. PlanB, the creator of the model, explained:

The predicted market value for Bitcoin after May 2020 halving is $1trn, which translates in a Bitcoin price of $55,000. That is quite spectacular. I guess time will tell and we will probably know one or two years after the halving.

The main criticism around stock-to-flow comes down to two main arguments. First, some say the assumption that golds value derives solely from scarcity is inaccurate. Second, others think that the use of linear regression might lead to imprecise predictions. Nico Cordeiro, the chief investment officer at Strix Leviathan crypto hedge fund, wrote:

From a theoretical foundation, the model is based on the rather strong assertion that the USD market capitalization of a monetary good (e.g. gold and silver) is derived directly from their rate of new supply. No evidence or research is provided to support this idea, other than the singular data points selected to chart gold and silvers market capitalization against Bitcoins trajectory.

Cordeiro also argued that the use of linear regression to chart the S2F model poses a high probability of spurious results. The investor said that many random data points can be fit into the model as a result of the regression.

But, it is difficult to state that the S2F model is correct or flawed, because there is not enough data to definitively reject the predictions made by the model. As an example, evidence is lacking to support that the value of gold is dependent on its scarcity. Yet, it is also challenging to prove that scarcity has not been the main catalyst of golds longevity as a store of value.

The Elliott Wave Theory is widely utilized by technical analysts to determine market cycles. It spots both bearish and bullish cycles, by assuming that the market moves based on crowd psychology. Typically, the Elliott Wave Theory is applied in many bearish scenarios. It presents an eight-part move, where the price of the asset declines on a level-by-level basis.

The Elliott Wave Theory is often criticized because it is considered to be highly subjective. It also assumes that the market follows the same crowd psychology across varying time frames. As such, it frequently leads to extreme price predictions for both bearish and bullish scenarios.

A report on the Elliott Wave Theory by Binance Academy reads:Critics argue that the Elliott Wave Theory isnt a legitimate theory due to its highly subjective nature, and relies on a loosely defined set of rules. However, it also makes note that, There are thousands of successful investors and traders that have managed to apply Elliotts principles in a profitable manner.

The Elliott Wave Theory is not a specific technical pattern or market structure. It is a principle that can be adopted by traders on how they see fit, depending on the price trend of an asset at a certain time. It is difficult to establish that the Elliott Wave Theory is inaccurate or flawed, because it does not set specific targets. It is up to traders and technical analysts that adopt the principle to assess crowd psychology of a certain market.

The Hyperwave Theory, popularized within the cryptocurrency market by a well-established trader, Tone Vays, determines the formation of a potential bubble in the market. It is a seven-part market cycle that spots a bearish trend reversal typically at a peak. The Hyperwave structure is similar to the Elliott Wave principle, but it only pertains to bearish scenarios.

Hyperwave-based price predictions are often controversial because they assume the peak of an asset has been hit. Consequently, it often leads to extreme predictions, calling for an 80% to 90% drop from a local top. For instance, Vays said that he used the Hyperwave Theory in early 2018 to call for a price target of $1,500. Over the next year and a half, the price of Bitcoin dropped from around $18,000 to $3,100.

Referring to the Hyperwave Theory, Vays said: I was off by 12%. That was my margin of error. When I called $1,500 (from the January 2018 top), I was only off by 12% on the low of the bear market.

In a recent discussion about the Hyperwave Theory, Vays said that the model is still calling for a $1,000 price point for Bitcoin. But Vays emphasized that it does not mean he is waiting for BTC to drop to the $1,000s, suggesting that it is merely a theory and a point of reference. Vays noted:

I dont know why people think I am still waiting for $1,200 or $1,500. That is a ridiculous view. People seem to be very confused. And for some reason, people seem to be very upset that when I said Bitcoin has a high probability of going to $1,500, I said it when Bitcoin was here [at a record high].

Read more:

The Three Most Controversial Bitcoin Price Models and What They Predict - Cointelegraph

Bitcoin Up 27% in First Half of 2020, Beating Gold, Silver and Platinum – CoinDesk – CoinDesk

Bitcoin showed its luster during the first half of 2020 by rallying more than 27% percent amid mediocre returns from precious metals including gold, silver and platinum.

Gold underperformed bitcoin by nearly 11 percentage points despite gaining 16 percent in the first half of 2020 and making eight-year highs in late June. Silver and platinum both finished the first half of 2020 with negative gains.

Bitcoins strong performance is no shock to some analysts, especially in context of the benchmark cryptocurrencys increasing correlation with equity markets. Given that equities are now near, or in some cases above, their highs reached in February, its not surprising to see bitcoin do the same, said Ryan Watkins, bitcoin analyst at Messari.

Why compare returns from bitcoin to gold or other precious metals? Gold is bitcoins most aspirational asset, explained Watkins. Like bitcoin, gold is a scarce commodity whose value is derived almost entirely from its monetary premium.

Unlike gold, however, bitcoin investors have historically experienced more extreme volatility. Silver and platinum were also much more volatile than gold through the first half of 2020.

Bitcoin and gold could be seen more like complementary investments than competitives ones based on their performance over the past six months, said David Lifchitz, managing partner at Paris-based quantitative cryptocurrency trading firm ExoAlpha. Given bitcoins historic volatility, holding digital and physical gold together could provide a better risk-return profile than holding either of them individually, said Lifchitz.

Investors typically adjust their portfolios based on the amount of risk required to achieve a certain return. Increased returns often bring with it higher volatility or risk. Depending on how assets correlate, though, a properly weighted portfolio can achieve a higher expected return with a lower level of risk than would be found in a portfolio containing just one asset.

Investing in bitcoin and the less-volatile gold during the first half of 2020 could have reduced an investors risk without sacrificing returns, Lifchitz told CoinDesk. Equal investments in gold and bitcoin, for example, could have more or less matched returns from an investment only in bitcoin while suffering less of a drawdown in March, Lifchitz explained.

But risk-adjusted returns from bitcoin and gold over the last six months may not hold true going forward, said Lifchitz. For one thing, the cryptocurrency market has grown eerily quiet over the past few weeks as bitcoins volatility has plummeted.

A Bloomberg July report on bitcoin noted bitcoins 260-day volatility is at the lowest versus the same gold-risk measure since the crypto assets parabolic 2017 rally. Senior commodity strategist Mike McGlone, who authored the report, said, Volatility should continue declining as bitcoin extends its transition to the crypto equivalent of gold from a highly speculative asset.

Bitcoins dropping volatility to historic lows could quickly change directions, however. McGlone described bitcoin as a resting bull ready for a breakout, adding, We expect recent compression to be resolved via higher prices.

The leader in blockchain news, CoinDesk is a media outlet that strives for the highest journalistic standards and abides by a strict set of editorial policies. CoinDesk is an independent operating subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, which invests in cryptocurrencies and blockchain startups.

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Bitcoin Up 27% in First Half of 2020, Beating Gold, Silver and Platinum - CoinDesk - CoinDesk

Bitcoin friendly Elon Musk is now richer than Bitcoin hater Warren Buffett – Decrypt

Tesla CEO Elon Musks wealth skyrocketed Fridaymaking him richer than billionaire investor Warren Buffett.

Its out with the old and in with the new; the pair hold wildly different opinions about Bitcoin and the future of money and Musks tech-first business logic appears to have paid off.

Musks wealth shot up by $6.1 billion after Tesla stock rose by 11%, according to a Bloomberg report. The eccentric entrepreneurs net worth now stands at a staggering $70.5 billion, data from the Bloomberg Billionaires Index shows.

While Buffettwho has clashed with Musk in the pastis worth just $69.2 billion. The SpaceX founders wealth spurt also means he is now richer than Larry Ellison, the CEO of tech giant, Oracle Corporation.

The Tesla boom also means Musk is the highest paid CEO in the US, according to the Bloomberg Pay Index: thanks to a deal the CEO made two years ago, he earned $595 million in one day.

Buffett has always criticized Bitcoincalling the cryptocurrency rat poison squared and saying it has no unique value at all. A $4.7 million charity dinner with the CEO of Tron, Justin Sun, didnt change his mind, even after Sun gifted him a Bitcoin.

Musk, on the other hand, has praised it, calling it pretty cleverbut has admitted he owns just $2,500 of the asset.

Musk then became the butt of Bitcoin enthusiasts jokes for not spending more of his fortune on the cryptocurrency. (In March, he said his favorite cryptocurrency was Dogecointhough it wasnt clear if he was being serious.)

Musk also said in January that Bitcoin can be a replacement for cash and in May responded to a JK Rowling tweet by telling her that Bitcoin looked solid by comparison to massive currency issuance by the government.

The differences dont stop there, though.

Buffett, one of Bitcoins most outspoken critics, runs the investment firm, Berkshire Hathaway. Known as the Oracle of Omaha, the investor has led a frugal life. In comparison, car-maker Musk is known for his outburstsparticularly on Twitterthat have caused him trouble in the past.

In May, the 49-year-old tech mogul wiped $15 billion off Tesla stock after a bizarre Twitter rant where he said his companys stock was too high.

Now Musk has an extra $6 billion to spare, maybe hell invest in Bitcoin.

Read more here:

Bitcoin friendly Elon Musk is now richer than Bitcoin hater Warren Buffett - Decrypt

Education In The Age Of Fake News, Distraction, And Vanity – Forbes

Dimo Ringov is an Associate Professor atEsades Department of Strategy and General Management.

Getty

We live in an era of fake news, all-you-can-eat distraction, and vanity. Disinformation and hoaxes popularly referred to as fake news are accelerating and affecting the way individuals learn and interpret information. A recent Ipsos Public Affairs survey found that fake news headlines fool American adults about 75% of the time. Only 24% of respondents believe social media sites do a good job separating fact from fiction according to the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism.

What is more, human average attention spans have declined precipitously in the last thirteen years and are now shorter than that of a goldfish. The average attention span for the notoriously ill-focused goldfish is nine seconds, but according to a new study from Microsoft Corporation, people now generally lose concentration after eight seconds. Finally, diagnoses of narcissistic personality disorder have risen sharply over the last decade and research suggests social media use may be a contributing factor. The average British user nowadays spends more than two hours a day on various social media and checks their smartphone every twelve minutes.

How should educators approach these substantial changes in our learning environment and the context within which learning takes place? As a professor at a leading European business school, I often ask myself this question. How do we help students cut through the noise, develop the acumen and judgment to identify fake news, and maintain a perspective grounded in reality? While these are complex, far-reaching questions deserving of equally deep and comprehensive answers, I would like to briefly highlight three points:

First, we should ask ourselves (and encourage others to ask themselves) about the underlying motivations for upholding or promoting specific positions, information, or beliefs. For instance, what is the background, financing, or objective of a given news source? Who is considered a credible expert in a given field by his or her respective community of scholars or practitioners? Moreover, is one pursuing further education out of love for knowledge, learning, excellence, contribution, and personal growth or primarily out of fear of otherwise being perceived as not-good-enough, disrespected, outcompeted?

Second, educational institutions have (or can promote) practices that help address the above challenges. The effect of fake news can be mitigated by promoting lifelong learning and discussion communities, rigorous training in the scientific method, diversity in the classroom, and broad cross-disciplinary education. The effect of distractions can be mitigated by implementing practices that encourage technology detox such as no laptop/electronic device use in the classroom unless specifically authorized rules. Judgment and perspective can be cultivated by helping internalize universal human values alongside the development of professional and executive skills, and by supporting open, collaborative, welcoming learning environments as well as by forming inclusive learning communities that incorporate and engage underprivileged groups/individuals.

Last, but not least, research-focused educational institutions are well-positioned to make a difference through focused efforts to promote further research on the above challenges facing education in the twenty-first century as they apply to specific educational and research settings. Business schools, in particular, can serve as true catalysts for research-driven debate on how to transform education and research organizations to better serve our changing learning and research environments through rigorous research programs, innovative educational practices, and active presence in the social debate. Thought leadership and entrepreneurial action are needed to envision and enable systemic change. Will we answer the call?

Excerpt from:

Education In The Age Of Fake News, Distraction, And Vanity - Forbes

There is a pandemic of fake news and hate on social media. You can help fight it – The Times of India Blog

By Dolar Popat and Rupa Ganatra-Popat

Until recent years, there had long been a stance by Mark Zuckerberg, Sheryl Sandberg and Jack Dorsey that Facebook and Twitter were platforms rather than publishers and therefore are not responsible for the content that is published on their platforms.

In the current climate where pandemic conspiracy theories are on the rise and racial injustice is being played out on the world stage, Facebook and Twitters billionaire founders have an increasing responsibility to moderate such content. Both Twitter and Facebook have been removing posts that promote violence, suspending accounts for repetitive hate content like that of Katie Hopkins last week and highlighting manipulated photographs and videos. However even by the time of their action, much of the damage is usually done as was illustrated recently by the racist baby video that President Donald Trump had posted, which had already been viewed over 20 million times on Twitter and over 4 million times on Facebook by the time it was removed.

Since the democratisation of content creation following the launch of social media platforms, each one of us have become content creators creating and publishing our own content, which in turn has created a system where the quality of published content can no longer be controlled. The impact of the last two decades technology revolution is now impacting businesses, political systems, family lives, society and individuals.

The problem has been exasperated and amplified in recent months, perhaps as people have spent an increasing time online during lockdown. From the well-known to the unknown, fake news, misinformation and hate rhetoric are causing harm to many individuals.

Hate speech, disinformation and rumours in India have been responsible for acts of violence and deaths in India for some time. On April 16 this year two sadhus and their driver were lynched in Gadchinchale village in Palghar, Maharashtra. The incident was fuelled by WhatsApp rumours about thieves operating in the area and the group of villagers had mistaken the three passengers as thieves and killed them. Several policemen who intervened were also attacked and injured.

A 2019 Microsoft study found that over 64% of Indians encounter fake news online, the highest reported amongst the 22 countries surveyed. There are a staggering number of edited images, manipulated videos and fake text messages spreading through social media platforms and messaging services like WhatsApp making it harder to distinguish between misinformation and credible facts.

A 2020 University of Michigan study found that Indias misinformation issue has now entered a new troubling era, where misinformation has moved from fake facts that can quickly be disproved to cultural content that play on emotion and identity, which are harder to verify and therefore make it even more likely that people will believe them or act on them.

Fake news on WhatsApp is perhaps the bigger problem to solve given that the app has over 400 million users in India alone and messages are encrypted making it challenging to identify, report and remove content in the same way as it can on other platforms. In 2019, WhatsApp reported that it was deleting 2 million accounts per month as part of an effort to reduce the use of the app to spread fake news and misinformation. In addition to other initiatives that Facebook, Twitter and WhatsApp have employed, it is still not enough and there is still much to be done.

The challenge of fake news and hate speech requires careful consideration and collaboration between government, academia, publishers, social media platforms and civil rights groups. In the meantime, we must all contribute to tackling the issue. As individuals, we must ask ourselves whether something we read is true. We must question the articles and videos we are sent. If we see hate posts about violence, we should report it. If we receive forwarded posts on WhatsApp, we must think twice before forwarding these on.

Whilst a long term solution is developed for the problem that has been created as a byproduct of the past decades technology revolution, each one of us has the responsibility to question what we read, post and share. Each one of us should take responsibility for the content we create, the content we consume and the content we forward to others.

Dolar Popat is a UK Member of Parliament. Rupa Ganatra-Popat is an entrepreneur, investor and board adviser

DISCLAIMER : Views expressed above are the author's own.

Read the original here:

There is a pandemic of fake news and hate on social media. You can help fight it - The Times of India Blog

We live in an age of ‘fake news’. But Australian children are not learning enough about media literacy – The Conversation AU

Today we release the findings from our new research into how young Australians consume and think about news media.

Following a summer of bushfires and during the COVID-19 pandemic, young people have told us they consume news regularly. But they also say they can find it frightening and many dont ask questions about the true source of the information they are getting.

To our surprise, despite widespread concern about fake news and a growing body of evidence about the reach and impact of misinformation, many young people are also not getting formal education about news media at school.

In February and March 2020, we conducted an online survey of young peoples media use and education. We used a nationally representative sample of more than 1,000 young Australians aged between eight and 16 years.

In our results, we refer to two age categories for analysis: children (8 to 12) and teens (13 to 16).

This repeats and extends a similar survey we did in 2017.

To provide a snapshot of news consumption, we asked young Australians where they got news stories from on the previous day.

We found a clear majority of young people do consume news directly from news sources or they hear about it from people they know and trust.

We found 88% had heard about news events from at least one source, up 8% on 2017. Family were by far the most common source.

A striking finding is news consumption has become more social - obtained either through someone they know or social media.

The day before the survey, 70% of young people received news from family, teachers or friends (up 13% from 2017), while 29% got their news from social media (up 7%).

As with 2017, the news consumption practices of children and teenagers are quite different. The greatest difference is in their use of online media, including social media, to get news stories.

Read more: Social media platforms need to do more to stop junk food marketers targeting children

While 43% of teens got news from social media the day before the survey, only 15% of children did this. However, the use of social media to get news stories has increased for both age groups when compared with 2017 (it increased 8% for teens and 5% for children).

Young peoples socially orientated news consumption means they will have different experiences and expectations of news media and this may challenge the expectations of older generations.

For example, socially acquired news may not prioritise impartiality or objectivity in the same way traditional news media does. Trust in a source may be developed using different criteria.

To understand what young people are learning about news media, we asked about young peoples critical engagement with news and the opportunities they have been given to create their own stories in the classroom.

Just one in five young Australians said they had a lesson during the past year to help them decide whether news stories are true and can be trusted. This result was the same for both children and teens. While this figure increased by 3% for children, there was a 4% drop for teens when compared with 2017.

There was also a drop in the number of young people who said they had had lessons to help them create their own news stories. When it came to teens, 26% had these lessons (down 4% on 2017). For younger children, 29% had these lessons (down 8%).

This lack of news media literacy education in classrooms is troubling.

The number of young people who agree they know how to tell fake news from real new stories increased only marginally from 2017, moving from 34% to 36%.

Read more: Most young Australians cant identify fake news online

This very small increase is surprising, given the considerable amount of attention given to this issue by politicians and media outlets over the past few years.

Of further concern, our survey finds a large number of young Australians do not challenge the news they consume, even as they get older.

For example, 46% of young people who get news stories from social media, say they give very little or no attention to the source of news stories found online this result was the same for children and for teens.

When asked how they feel when they consume news media, the majority of young Australians surveyed reported they often or sometimes feel afraid, angry, sad or upset.

It is possible recent large-scale events such as the summer bushfires and COVID-19 pandemic account for some of these strong responses.

However, they also demonstrate the need for adults to be aware of the impact of news on young people, and to initiate supportive conversations about news.

We also believe these findings suggest media literacy efforts need to take place at home as well as school, with more resources to help parents ensure their childrens news interactions are safe and beneficial.

It is not fully clear why Australian students are not receiving widespread critical news literacy education. But our related research finds that while most teachers believe its important to support students news media literacy, there are many barriers that prevent them from doing this.

These include timetable constraints, an overloaded curriculum, a lack of time for planning and a lack of appropriate training and support.

Read more: How to help kids navigate fake news and misinformation online

These barriers must be addressed if teachers are to equip young Australians with the critical skills they need to engage with news media effectively and to discern trustworthy news from disinformation.

As we noted above, young people reported more engagement with news in 2020 than in 2017, either directly through news media or through friends, family and teachers.

In addition, 49% agree following the news is important to them and 74% say news makes them feel smart or knowledgeable.

Our findings do suggest, however, there is an urgent need for policy makers and education authorities to increase their efforts around young peoples learning about media.

We believe young people should be receiving specific education about the role of news media in our society, bias in the news, disinformation and misinformation, the inclusion of different groups, news media ownership and technology.

Only then will news play a positive role in young peoples lives and continue to do so in the future.

More here:

We live in an age of 'fake news'. But Australian children are not learning enough about media literacy - The Conversation AU

Learn about misinformation, fake news and political propaganda in an online workshop from the Klamath County Library – Herald and News

Are you overwhelmed with contradictory messages from politicians, news sources and other media? Learn to distinguish truth from fiction using real-world examples of political ads, news headlines, logical fallacies, graphs/charts, as well as the effect of word choice in messaging, statistical data and other types of (mis)information. Become your own fact-checker! Also, learn how to find accurate information.

The downtown Klamath County Library will host a virtual workshop Civics for Adults: Misinformation, Fake News and Political Propaganda on Thursday, July 23 at 7 p.m.

The workshop will be held via a Zoom meeting. A link to join the meeting will be emailed 48 hours before the event to everyone who RSVPs at Eventbrite via http://www.eventbrite.com/e/civics-for-adults-misinformation-fake-news-and-political-propaganda-tickets-112515543018 or by emailing Charla at coppenlander@klamathlibrary.org. Pre-registration is required and limited to the first 35 registrations.

The workshop will be facilitated by Donna L Cohen, MLIS, MEd. Cohen is an Oregonian who has been a teacher and librarian and now devotes her time to developing, refining and presenting civic education for adults. She believes that civic education should be lifelong and also that public libraries are the best place for this.

The life of our democracy depends on its citizens thinking critically, understanding basic political structures and engaging in the work of sustaining and building our society, said Cohen.

Cohens presentation will last just over an hour, with time after for questions and discussion.

For more information about the workshop, or for help using Zoom, call 541-882-8894 ext. 10 or email Charla at coppenlander@klamathlibrary.org. For more information about Cohen visit http://www.civicthinker.info/.

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Learn about misinformation, fake news and political propaganda in an online workshop from the Klamath County Library - Herald and News

Editor, staff arrested for fake news on CMs health – The Hindu

The editor and a reporter of a Telugu newspaper were arrested by the Jubilee Hills police on charges of publishing false news and spreading rumours about the health status of Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao. The newspaper Aaadab Telangana recently published a news report that Mr. Rao had tested positive for coronavirus and is admitted in a corporate hospital.

One Mohammed Illyas of Rahmathnagar in Jubilee Hills on Sunday, lodged a complaint stating that the published news article on Mr. Rao was fake, and created panic among the general public.

Based on the complaint, the police registered a case under Section 505 (whoever makes, publishes or circulates any rumour or report) of Indian Penal Code and Section 54 of Disaster Management Act, against the publication and the editor.

On Monday, a team of police officials arrested reporter Venkateshwara Rao from Khammam, editor Veeramalla Satyam and sub-editor Shiva from Hyderabad. Venkateshwara Rao, a resident of Tarnaka, had recently gone to his native place Khammam.

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Editor, staff arrested for fake news on CMs health - The Hindu

Fake news alert: CBSE 2020 results not releasing this week – NewsBytes

The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) on Thursday sought to clarify that it is yet to release the dates to announce examination results.

The clarification came after a false notification had been doing the rounds on social media. According to this notification, the results were to be announced on July 11 and July 13.

Here are more details.

Fake news

An erroneous letter with the CBSE's letterhead had been doing the rounds on social media.

The letter claimed that the results for 2020 examinations for Class XII students will be released on July 11 (Saturday) while the Class X results will be announced on July 13 (Monday).

The false letter had also been published by the news agency ANI as verified information.

CBSE's statement

In an official statement, the CBSE noted, "There is a fake message being circulated with regard to the declaration of Class X and XII Board Results 2020."

It added, "It is hereby clarified that the Board has not yet announced the result dates. The public is hereby advised to await the announcement on CBSE's official website or social media account."

Twitter Post

#FakeNewsAlert #cbseforstudents #students pic.twitter.com/9Jaf5Mch2u

Information

ANI also retracted the incorrect piece of information and said the error was regretted. For authentic information regarding updates from the CBSE, you may visit cbse.nic.in or follow the Board's official Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube channels.

Recent news

In recent weeks, the CBSE has had to issue several crucial updates. The pending 2020 exams were canceled mere days ahead of their scheduled dates. The exams were supposed to be conducted between July 1 and 15.

On Tuesday, the CBSE also announced that the curriculum for Classes IX to XII will be reduced by 30% for next year's examinations.

Excerpt from:

Fake news alert: CBSE 2020 results not releasing this week - NewsBytes

Maharashtra Lockdown Extension News: Shutdown in Thane’s Bhiwandi Town Extended Till July 19 – India.com

Maharashtra Lockdown Extension News: The Bhiwandi Nizampur City Municipal Corporation (BNCMC) in Thane district of Maharashtra has extended the ongoing lockdown in the township till July 19. The ongoing lockdown in Bhiwandi had started on July 2 and was to end Sunday midnight. Also Read - Fake News: Amitabh Bachchan DID NOT Record Video Thanking Doctors at Nanavati Hospital After Testing COVID-19 Positive

Till Saturday night, the number of coronavirus positive cases in Bhiwandi was 2,701, while the death toll was 144. Also Read - Former Amnesty India Chief Aakar Patel Lambasted on Twitter For Accusing Amitabh Bachchan-Akshay Kumar-Sachin Tendulkar of 'Frog in Well Mentality'

Yesterday, the lockdown in other civic corporation limits and rural parts of Thane district was extended till July 19. Also Read - Hina Khan Wishes Quick Recovery to Kasautii Star Parth Samthaan After He Gets COVID-19

Meanwhile, the Vartak Nagar ward committee of the Thane civic administration on Sunday issued an order prohibiting all activities, except for the sale of medicines and milk, in Shivai Nagar, Ganesh Nagar, Sainath Nagar and Misalwadi till further notice after spurt in COVID-19 cases in these areas.

Meanwhile, the Thane Small Scale Industries Association (TSSIA) has urged district guardian minister Eknath Shinde to withdraw the lockdown, stating that the industrial units were incurring losses due to the restrictions in place since March.

Link:

Maharashtra Lockdown Extension News: Shutdown in Thane's Bhiwandi Town Extended Till July 19 - India.com