Liberty Shere named Northeast Tech Claremore Campus Director – Claremore Daily Progress

Northeast Tech Claremore is under new management as the former Director of Business and Industry Services Liberty Shere stepped into the role of assistant superintendent and Claremore campus director.

Shere is a life-long Rogers County resident, who attended Sequoyah Public Schools and Rogers State University.

During college, Shere began working as a software developer at Sequoyah Software and for a small business she ran with her husband for 15 years, Lonnie's Window Tint, Mufflers and Accessories.

From 2007 to 2012, Shere served as a business and information technology instructor at Chelsea and the Sequoyah Public Schools, an experience that pushed her to pursue a Masters Degree in educational leadership and administration from Oklahoma State University. While pursuing her degree, Shere was and audit analyst for Cherokee Nation Businesses.

Shere has worked for Northeast Technology Center for almost seven years, first as an instructor at the Afton campus, and then as an administrator in Pryor.

I feel very fortunate that my professional experience has had a really good blend of educational experience and experience in industry, Shere said, adding that it offers her a unique perspective and approach as an administrator.

It helps me operate in both worlds, because I understand the challenges from an educational perspective, but I also understand what businesses are facing, Shere said. Ive worked for small companies, large companies, and now in education. Not everybody gets afforded all of those opportunities, so I feel fortunate for that.

Both of Sheres daughters attended NTC, and Shere added that she was excited to take on the new role and position in Claremore, in part, because her 2-week-old grandbaby lives along her drive home from work.

As campus director, Sheres responsibilities include: ensuring instructors have the resources they need to be effective, ensuring procedures are in place to provide the best possible learning environment for students, maintaining the facilities, and meeting the education and transportation needs of students, and serving at the public face of Northeast Tech in Rogers County.

We want to make sure were serving the needs of our sending schools while also listening to what our community needs and what skills the business leaders in the community say our students need, Shere said. You have to constantly being having that communication with your industry partners. At a career tech, it is even more critical that we are giving them skills that will get them the jobs that are out there.

In June, Claremore Campus Director Rick Reimer retired after 33 years of service to Northeast Tech. Reimer helped to build the Claremore campus from the literal ground up in 2006.

I want to give him credit for handing over a really awesome facility, Shere said. He built a really good staff that Ive been able to inherit, a lot of really good people. So I thank him for setting me on a firm foundation, and I want to take that and continue the good work that is being done with the good staff and faculty I have here.

Reimers administration had organized visioning committees to help elaborate a future direction for the school and looking for opportunities to expand.

Currently each NTC instructor has an advisory board they meet with once a year, made up of industry leaders from the field they teach.

Something I want to push as a new campus director is getting those instructors out in industry more, Shere said, explaining that NTC would, provide them support so they can take some time out of the classroom to be out in the industry.

Over the next decade, Shere said, she foresees NTC doubling its course offerings and expanding the physical campus.

Technical schools across the board, Shere said, will only increase in demand and opportunities, as they continue to be a fast-paced and flexible option for continuing education.

Our community is growing, their needs are growing, and we need to grow, too, Shere said. Along with maintaining what we have now, in the next five years I hope to be able to seek out where the needs are, find new programs we can add, and expand our campus so we can serve those needs.

What we do is important, it benefits individuals, and it benefits our community as a whole, so the more of that we can do, the better, Shere said. Our roots are here. Rogers County is our home, and we want to see it continue to grow.

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Liberty Shere named Northeast Tech Claremore Campus Director - Claremore Daily Progress

More new cases of COVID-19 reported in Liberty County – Bluebonnet News

Liberty County now has 381 confirmed cases of COVID-19, according to the Liberty County Office of Emergency Management.

Of the cases, 23 are newly diagnosed nine from the north end of the county and 14 from the south end. The ages of the victims range from their 20s to 80s. Twelve of the victims are male and 11 are female.

Currently Liberty County has 287 active cases and 91 recovered cases. The death total stands at three. The last death in the county was reported in May.

Liberty County remains under a mask order for residents aged 10 and older through July 15 unless it is extended, terminated or modified.

From the effective date of this order, all commercial entities in the County of Liberty that provide goods and services directly to the public must develop and implement a health and safety policy. The policy must require, at a minimum, that all employees, customers, vendors and visitors, 10 years or older, wear face coverings when accessing areas of the commercial entitys premises that involve close contact or proximity to other employees or members of the public, where six feet of separation is not feasible. Face coverings required by this order may include but are not limited to surgical masks, industrial masks, homemade masks, scarfs (sic), bandanas (sic) or handkerchiefs, the order reads.

Failure of a commercial entity to develop, post and implement a policy required by this order by noon on July 6 may result in a fine not to exceed $500 for each violation. No civil or criminal penalty will be imposed on individuals for failure to wear a face covering.

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More new cases of COVID-19 reported in Liberty County - Bluebonnet News

Online learning hiccups lead to civil liberty threats | TheHill – The Hill

In April, Berkeley High School students were shocked when in the middle of their video conference, a man joined the meeting, exposing himself and shouting obscenities. The infiltration was just one of the numerous examples of so-called "Zoom bombing", which occurs when an unwanted or uninvited guest causes a disruption. However, unlike other high profile instances of Zoom bombing, Berkeley High School's example stands out as the organizers of the video conference followed best practices aimed at preventing such an invasion.

The response was an immediate suspension of video conferencing services. Berkeley Unified School District Superintendent Brent Stevens wrote in a districtwide email, "... I've received from many of you that the real-time online interaction between students and teachers has been a valuable relief from the sense of isolation during this Shelter-in-Place order...It is simply unacceptable to ignore the risk of this significance."

Yet, therein lies an underlying problem, due to shelter-in-place orders, schools and students have been thrust into unfamiliar territory. These disruptions are not merely the latest in school pranks. Students coordinating efforts to Zoom bomb each other's lessons over on the platform discord might be likened to a high-tech version of typical foolery. But class clowns were not previously able to broadcast pornographic material to kindergarteners as they are now.

Concerns do not stop with the actions of outsiders alone. Instead, the increased reliance on remote learning services leaves students in a potentially vulnerable position due to the practices of their educational institutions. In the name of repressing the hijinks, there seems to be an unfortunate tendency among administrators to increase their remote monitoring capabilities. Douglas Levin of EdTech Strategies in an SC Magazine article said, "In many cases, school districts are circumventing what privacy and cybersecurity controls they may have implemented in a rush to offer online learning to students who won't be returning to school for weeks or months,"

At the same time, schools are making efforts to monitor students remotely, and these efforts raise serious concerns about loss of privacy. Many schools have issued devices that are pre-installed with spyware -- spyware that can conduct scans of student emails, instant messages, and internet browser history. Roughly one-third of American students use school-issued devices. What is at stake here is not benign supervision by teachers whom parents know, but instead monitoring, tracking, and recording by invisible strangers whose intentions are unknown. Also at stake is possible future harassment of students after they leave the K-12 system, based on stored information.

Spyware, which would be considered malicious if someone loaded it onto your personal computer, is frequently marketed to educational institutions. Amelia Vance, director of Youth & Education Privacy at the Future of Privacy Forum, points out, "These products are not privacy-protective by default, and many likely violate FERPA [the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act]." The Children's Internet Protection Act (CIPA) imposes rules on schools and libraries that receive internet service discounts through the federal e-rate program. While the purported intention was to target pornography, in an effort to comply with CIPA requirements, schools have invested in radically invasive web filters.

Not only are filters poor when it comes to preventing illicit content, but they also over block content with educational value, including websites that cover important issues such as religious and 2nd Amendment topics. Accompanying monitoring software can track student browsing habits and generate detailed reports for administrators.

Unfortunately, this issue has come up before. In 2009 the Lower Merion School District in Pennsylvania had installed spyware on school-issued laptops, which also gave the ability to activate webcams. School personnel spied on their students while the students were in the comforts of their homes the school district ended up paying out a settlement of $610,000.

Many schools have no specific privacy policies like data retention limits to protect their students. Notably, the Vermont Superintendent Association publication took the prudent step of recommending that parents be able to decide if their student was recorded. But others have been slow to adopt.

With schools and universities holding exams online, test proctoring software has been a popular tool for instructors trying to dissuade would-be cheaters. At the University of California, Santa Barbara, the faculty association in a letter, went to bat for students and expressed professors' concerns over the remote monitoring software ProctorU.

The UC Santa Barbara Faculty Association wrote:

"...this service also mines the data of our students, making them available to unspecified third parties, and therefore violates our students' rights to privacy, and potentially implicates the university into becoming a surveillance tool. [We fear this] may incur not only in very significant and unbudgeted expenses but also in serious violations of constitutional rights by partnering with private enterprises like ProctorU."

With the mass use of online learning services, now is the opportune time to reconsider the government requirement for the "Orwellian" monitoring of school-issued devices such as Chromebooks.

Williamson M. Evers is a senior fellow at the Oakland-based Independent Institute and Director of the Institute's Center on Educational Excellence. Jonathan Hofer is a research associate at the Independent Institute.

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Online learning hiccups lead to civil liberty threats | TheHill - The Hill

Facial Recognition System Market: Deep Analysis by Production Overview and Insights 2018 – Market Research Publicist

Facial Recognition System Market (2020)Report Provides an in-depth summary of Facial Recognition System Market Status as well as Product Specification, Technology Development, and Key Manufacturers. The Report Gives Detail Analysis on Market concern Like Facial Recognition System Market share, CAGR Status, Market demand and up to date Market Trends with key Market segments.

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Key players in global Facial Recognition System Market include:3M, Animetrics, Aware, Inc., Ayonix Corporation, Cognitec Systems, Daon, Gemalto NV, Herta Security, IDEMIA, KeyLemon S.A., NEC Corporation, Neurotechnology, NVISO SA., Panasonic i-PRO Sensing Solutions Co., Ltd., and Techno Brain

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Facial Recognition System Market: Deep Analysis by Production Overview and Insights 2018 - Market Research Publicist

Encouraging results from functional MRI in an unresponsive patient with COVID-19 – Science Codex

BOSTON - Many patients with severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) remain unresponsive after surviving critical illness. Investigators led by a team at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) now describe a patient with severe COVID-19 who, despite prolonged unresponsiveness and structural brain abnormalities, demonstrated functionally intact brain connections and weeks later he recovered the ability to follow commands. The case, which is published in the Annals of Neurology, suggests that unresponsive patients with COVID-19 may have a better chance of recovery than expected.

In addition to performing standard brain imaging tests, the team took images of the patient's brain with a technique called resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI), which evaluates the connectivity of brain networks by measuring spontaneous oscillations of brain activity. The patient was a 47-year-old man who developed progressive respiratory failure, and despite intensive treatment, he fluctuated between coma and a minimally conscious state for several weeks.

Standard brain imaging tests revealed considerable damage, but unexpectedly, rs-fMRI revealed robust functional connectivity within the default mode network (DMN), which is a brain network thought to be involved in human consciousness. Studies have shown that stronger DMN connectivity in patients with disorders of consciousness predicts better neurologic recovery. The patient's DMN connectively was comparable to that seen in healthy individuals, suggesting that the neurologic prognosis may not be as grim as conventional tests implied.

Twenty days later, on hospital day 61, the patient began following verbal commands. He blinked his eyes to command, opened his mouth to command, and on day 66 followed four out of four vocalization commands. By this time, he also consistently demonstrated gaze tracking with his eyes in response to visual and auditory stimuli.

"Because there are so many unanswered questions about the potential for recovery in unresponsive patients who have survived severe COVID-19, any available data that could inform prognosis are critical," said senior author Brian Edlow, MD, director of the Laboratory for NeuroImaging of Coma and Consciousness and associate director of the Center for Neurotechnology and Neurorecovery at MGH. "Our unexpected observations do not prove that functional MRI predicts outcomes in these patients, but they suggest that clinicians should consider the possibility that unresponsive survivors of severe COVID-19 may have intact brain networks. We should thus exercise caution before presuming a poor neurologic outcome based on our conventional tests."

Providing families with an accurate prognosis about neurological recovery is particularly challenging for patients with COVID-19, because so little is known about how the brain is affected by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), or associated inflammation and clotting disorders. "Initially, our goal in the intensive care unit was to support patients through the critical illness of COVID-19," said lead author David Fischer, MD, Neurocritical Care fellow at MGH. "However, we found that a subset of patients, after surviving the critical illness, were not waking up as expected. As neurologists, we were asked by many families whether their loved ones would regain consciousness - a critical question given that decisions about life support often hinged on the answer - but we were uncertain. We used functional MRI to try to provide a more comprehensive assessment of brain function."

The application of functional MRI to critically ill patients with disorders of consciousness is the culmination of decades of work to develop this technology and ultimately translate it to clinical care. Co-author Bruce Rosen, MD, PhD, director of the Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging at MGH, and one of the developers of functional MRI in the early 1990s, explained that "we have to be cautious when interpreting results from a single patient, but this study provides proof of principle that clinicians may be able to use advanced imaging techniques like functional MRI to get a clearer picture of a patient's brain function, and hence the potential for recovery."

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Encouraging results from functional MRI in an unresponsive patient with COVID-19 - Science Codex

Elon Musk says Neuralinks capability to cure mental illness is great and terrifying – Republic World – Republic World

Stating Neuralinks top priority to help with brain injuries, Elon Musk also noted that its both great and terrifying that his brain-computer chip startup could help in curing mental illnesses including depression. While replying to an inquiry of a follower who asked if Neuralink can cure that part of the brain which causes addiction or depression, the Tesla CEO said on July 10 for sure but then acknowledged the dilemma that comes with it. Musk has also hinted that an entire progress report on American neurotechnology company founded in 2016 will be released on August 28.

The company aimed to develop ultra-high bandwidth brain-machine interfaces to connect humans and computers has prompted many curious questions by people across the world. In the same tweet, Elon Musk said that every emotion that an individual has felt in his or her entire life are just mere electrical signals.

Read -Elon Musk Teases 'progress Update' For Neuralink Machine-human Interface Company

Moreover, when another follower inquired about the human trials of Neuralink and how the company will come up with eligibility criteria for the same, Musk said there was no easy way to answer that question but the company remains focussed on healing injuries in the brain. In yet another interaction with a follower on Twitter, the Tesla CEO said absolutely and agreed to an internet user who wondered that Neuralink might enhance progress and help people reach their goals at a faster rate.

Read -Elon Musk Dared To Wear Tesla's Short Shorts At A Meeting, His Reply Is Hilarious

Meanwhile, Tesla CEO Elon Musk just became the seventh richest man in the world over CEO of Berkshire Hathaway Warren Buffet, as per the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. SpaceX CEOs wealth increased by $6 billion on July 10 followed by a huge surge in Teslas stock by 10.8 per cent reaching a record $1,544 per share. Now, the market value stood at $286.5 billion. Elon Musk currently owns at least 20.8 per cent of Teslas stock and thus, his stake is worth nearly $60 billion. Moreover, he is also the primary shareholder of SpaceX making his total net worth to be $70.4 billion.

Musk went up the Bloomberg list as Buffets fortune plunged this week after he decided to donate nearly $3 billion worth stock of his company to charity under his plan of giving away most of his wealth to philanthropic ventures. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos still holds the top position with the total net worth of $189 billion and according to international media reports, the Tesla CEO could eventually replace him based on the pay package that Tesla shareholders had approved two years ago. Other people ahead of Musk include Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, Bernard Arnault, Steve Ballmer and Larry Page.

Read -Elon Musk Now Launches Tesla 'short Shorts', Website Crashes After Inside Joke

Read -Elon Musk Pledges Full Support For Kanye West's 2020 US Election Bid, Late As It Comes

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Elon Musk says Neuralinks capability to cure mental illness is great and terrifying - Republic World - Republic World

Newport area weather: July 11-12 – News – newportri.com

COASTAL RHODE ISLAND

Saturday: A chance of showers, mainly before 8 a.m. Patchy fog before 10 a.m. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a high near 77. South wind 11 to 17 mph, with gusts as high as 29 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible. Saturday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly between 11 p.m. and 1 a.m. Patchy fog before 9 p.m. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a low around 71. Southwest wind 11 to 15 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30%.

Sunday: A slight chance of showers and thunderstorms before 10 a.m., then a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms after 5 p.m. Mostly sunny, with a high near 81. Southwest wind 11 to 16 mph, with gusts as high as 28 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%. Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 70. Southwest wind 9 to 13 mph, with gusts as high as 23 mph.

EXTENDED

Monday: A chance of showers after 1p.m. Mostly sunny, with a high near 81. Southwest wind 8 to 14 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30%. Monday Night: A chance of showers before 2am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 69. Southwest wind 8 to 11 mph. Chance of precipitation is 40%.

Tuesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 81. Southwest wind 7 to 13 mph. Tuesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 68. Southwest wind 6 to 9 mph.

Wednesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 81. Northwest wind 6 to 11 mph becoming south in the afternoon. Wednesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 70. Southwest wind 8 to 10 mph.

MARINE

Saturday: South wind 10 to 15 knots, with gusts as high as 25 knots. A chance of showers and thunderstorms before 9 a.m., then a slight chance of showers between 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. Patchy fog before 10 a.m. Seas 1 foot or less. Saturday Night: South-southwest wind 10 to 13 knots. A chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly between 11 p.m. and 1 a.m. Patchy fog before 9 p.m. Seas 1 foot or less.

Sunday: South-southwest wind 10 to 14 knots, with gusts as high as 24 knots. A slight chance of showers and thunderstorms before 10 a.m., then a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms after 5 p.m. Seas 1 foot or less. Sunday Night: Southwest wind 8 to 11 knots, with gusts as high as 20 knots. Partly cloudy. Seas 1 foot or less.

TIDES, ETC.

Saturday's high tides: 12:54 a.m., 1:24 p.m. Low tides: 6:10 a.m., 6:40 p.m.

Saturday's sunrise, 5:22. Sunset, 8:21.

Sunday's high tides: 1:37 a.m., 2:08 p.m. Low tides: 6:56 a.m., 7:50 p.m.

Sunday's sunrise, 5:23. Sunset, 8:20.

Thursday's temperatures: High 83, low 71.

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Newport area weather: July 11-12 - News - newportri.com

A maximum of futurism: the video showed electric crossover Nissan Ariya – The Saxon

The network posted diamiter Nissan Ariya

On the eve of the debut of the electric car serial Ariya Nissan has published diameter, which included footage from the test runs on the snow-covered expanses and on paved road. See what prepared for us Japanese.

The video ends with a darkened silhouette Ariya with glowing led lights and boomerangs daytime running lights on the sides of the grille-ashield.

Commodity crossover, which will compete with the Tesla Model Y, almost identical to the same concept with concise design, shown last year at the motor show in Tokyo. He, in turn, borrowed many traits from earlier shoukara called IMx.

In the teaser, Ariya received a similar concept of air intakes, as well as black plastic covers on the side skirts and wheel arches.

Our database model is a new platform CMF-EV, designed specifically for electric cars. In motion Ariya give two motor Nissan e-4ORCE one for each axis. The crossover has received a highway autopilot ProPilot 2.0 functions of the movement no hands. The system also knows how to go off batobalani highways and remotely Park the car.

It is expected that the first market for Nissan Ariya will become native Japan. Then the car will appear in other countries in China, Europe and the United States.

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A maximum of futurism: the video showed electric crossover Nissan Ariya - The Saxon

Humanists, the Time for Action Has Always Been Now – Patheos

Lets begin with a recap, friends. Its been rough times for me here in Colombia, just as its been rough times for a great many of you around the world. Having a lock on what to say, as a humanist with a platform, isnt easy when it feels like weve a hundred fires to put out all at once. The best Ive been able to do, these past few weeks, is to try to advocate for thinking carefully about where were looking to advocate for comprehensive change, how were handling a fear of getting things wrong, and how to avoidsweating the small stuff when theres so much hurt to go around.

And yet, every time I go online Im still inundated by posts fixated on the inanity of religious people in the US, the infotainment circus of major newsmedia continuing to parrot dangerous lies so that we can all be shocked by whos saying them, and the bevy of heated online disagreements around speculation about various celebrities actions.

And Im just so tired of it, friends. Im tired of the rubbernecking at developing disasters.

So, todays post is less about thinking, and more about doing.

And the stark reminder thatdoingsomething is at the heart of humanisms aims.

Last night, I stayed up comforting a friend. (In Spanish, I might add, which is one of the most gratifying affirmations of the worth of learning another language.) Her mother is dying, and it is not a good death. Because there is no state support for healthcare for those without insurance, the mothers renal cancer advanced too far before my friend, with my help, was able to get her mother to a treatment centre where Im sad to say I recognize that what they were giving her was more palliative care than genuine hope. (My friend, on the other hand, is not fully processing that the cancer has already spread.)

But just as happens in the US, another blow befell my friend while she was getting her mother into treatment. She lost her job for want of personal-day protections. Which meant the family had nothing. With no savings, they started going hungry the moment the mother was released from treatment. My friend started begging on the street.

The support I gave her to buy food helped, of course, but then a third lack of safety net kicked in at the end of June. President Duque had extended the lockdown in Colombia, butnotthe eviction protections. I learned from a legal source that some rental companies had prepared themselves quite well for this loophole, and filed thousands of mediation requests to take effect July 1, to start the contractual proceedings necessary either to force people to pay or else to hasten along their evictions. But that process is just for peoplewithcontracts. The vast majority here live by spoken agreement and there are no underlying rental protections without contracts.

The landlord came to my friends apartment and shouted in her dying mothers face that he would throw them both to the street by force if they didnt have the rent the next day. And no police force would stop him.

Now, Im not telling this story to toot my own horn for helping one family, but rather to illustrate that helping families in the singular is itself a sign that ever so much more action is required if were to build a better, more just world.

Because, while I have been helping this family, Ive also been seething not just at the arbitrary nature of giving personal aid, but also at the level of care that serves as a social norm not just here, but in many parts of the world where people have come to stop expecting massive systemic changes. The thoughts and prayers, that is, which the rich issue because theyve no interest in sharing the wealth and security of their class status; and the thoughts and prayers the poor lean on because they literally have nothing else.

My friend, as youve probably guessed by now, is Catholic. Her mother is Catholic, too. Neither knows Im an atheist nor does it matter, at this juncture, because I know my friend has nothing to offer me in exchange for my help but the standard God bless you. What kind of jackanape would I be if I dismissed her calling on God and the Virgin to keep me in good health, while shes crying her eyes out daily over not being able to feed her mother or alleviate her pain?

But there are times, friends boy howdy, there are times when I almost wish therewerea god, because what an awful thing it is to hear tell of a poor woman devout her whole life, dying painfully in a modest barrio, crying out to her daughter Dont let me die!

Because, well, we know, dont we, fellow atheists? We know that only silence awaits. There is no wiping away of all these horrible tears. And so, how I sorely wish shecouldhave a feeling of grace wash over her, to ease her all the better to that end and my friend, too, as she comes to terms with her mothers impending death. But it isnt to be, no matter how much mother and daughter pray together these days, and no matter how much ever so many others do the same while dying in similarly downtrodden neighbourhoods across our deeply hurting world.

Which isnt to say, humanists of faith, that Im suggesting theystoppraying. (Not if theres no better available aid than the solace of ritual and presence of others through it!)

Im just saying that we humanists, from all across the spectrum, need to aim higher in our practice of giving aid.

In some ways, then, for all its horrifying disasters, the US is alsopositivemarvel these days for look how quickly the conversation about systemic injustice has accelerated along a host of critical issues requiring a deep uprooting of supposedly too-entrenched norms. Racist statues coming down, the 79-year-old Mount Rushmore centered as a target for similar dismantling, cities being sharply rebuked and brought to account for bloated police budgets, relief cheques being cut in a country that claims such actions to be communism What the US has amply illustrated in these last few months, that is, is that when the zeitgeist is upon us, when a sense ofurgencyis truly believed in, suddenly quite a few elements of the status quo can indeed be dropped almost overnight.

Which means, fellow humanists, that weve no excuse for not pushing that sense of urgency even further. Socioeconomic precarity comes in many forms, but they all share one key outcome: a disparity with respect to who gets to live and die with dignity.

Why is this a matter for humanism, in particular? Because humanism is not just about the recognition that humans have the most pressing agency in our known universe (whether or not you believe in a higher power), but also about a prioritizing ofknowledge, comprehensive worldly knowledge, from a wide range of behavioural sciences as from the facts of biology, geology, and cosmology, to develop a body of public policy that will best extend the capacity for informed agency to as many human beings as possible.

In this struggle, though, wearecompeting with fellow human beings: those, that is, who view agency differently some from within religious parameters, and some from without. The nihilists of the world favour human subjection, either to one another or to specific framings of a spiritual order. Nihilists would say that it is sufficient that some humans get tolive in such a way that their agency supersedes others in the day-to-day world. Nihilists would further try to diminish the critical importance of alleviating human suffering, such as when one claims that there is perhaps more dignity to the old woman who dies in Christ, however horribly in poverty and fear, than to the rich man who dies comfortably and quietly in his secular home.

One thing popular atheistic discourse has done over the last 20 years or so is focus on the nihilism in Christianity. And there is certainly plenty of it! There are some choice anecdotes I could pull from prominent atheists interactions on panels and radio shows, but lets go right to the source instead. As part of my Victorian lit studies I read excerpts from John Henry Newmans Apologia, so when he was canonised last year by the Catholic Church, all the nihilism in his account of conversion from Anglicanism to Catholicism came rushing to the fore. Ill give you just a nip of it here, as it pertains to the above:

What shall be said to this heart-piercing, reason-bewildering fact [i.e. the existence of suffering]? I can only answer, that either there is no Creator, or this living society of men is in a true sense discarded from His presence. Did I see a boy of good make and mind, with the tokens on him of a refined nature, cast upon the world without provision, unable to say whence he came, his birth-place or his family connexions, I should conclude that there was some mystery connected with his history, and that he was one, of whom, from one cause or other, his parents were ashamed. Thus only should I be able to account for the contrast between the promise and the condition of his being. And so I argue about the world;ifthere be a God,sincethere is a God, the human race is implicated in some terrible aboriginal calamity. It is out of joint with the purposes of its Creator. This is a fact, a fact as true as the fact of its existence; and thus the doctrine of what is theologically called original sin becomes to me almost as certain as that the world exists, and as the existence of God.

Its a fascinating excerpt, no? Because, of course, atheists are slapping their foreheads at the line before the part in bold, shouting, No Creator! Obviously! but humanists of all stripes should be shaking their heads at the wickedness of the binary drawn here by Newman: the either no Creator or mankind discarded. Spiritual and religious humanists: youknowthese arent the only two options. And its important for all of us to call out bullpucky when we see it.

But also, Ive placed one part in bold because Newman clearly didnt understand the psychology underpinning his baffling conclusion here but we do. We humanists know both that it would be patently absurd to see a child living in the streets and first think wow, his parents mustve been ashamed of him butalso, that Newman was plainly unaware offundamental attribution error, wherein one tends to attribute fault for a specific situation to individual character in lieu of broader environmental factors.

So, yes, lots of classist nastiness built into exalted forms of religious belief.

The problem with the atheistic trend of just focussing on nihilism in the church, though, is that we become trained to see it as only existing inthat quarter, onthatside of the spectrum when absolutely, secular nihilists are also well-seasoned in using naturalistic defenses, falling prey to Humean is/ought fallacy, to justify why inequity must simply be accepted (so long as they are comfortably situated within its systems).

In your part of the hurting world, my fellow humanists, action might look different from action in my own. But these differences need only be superficial. So much of the world rose up in solidarity with Black Lives Matter, for instance, that its clear we now operate within a globalized discourse, where the strong, unwavering actions towards greater justice in one part of the worldcanhave a significant impact upon related campaigns in others.

As such, an old standby in the justice-seeking community, Think Globally, Act Locally, is long overdue for a rewrite. What we need to do, rather, is act locallyto move the world.

And that means not being satisfied with individual acts of social outreach.

That means pushing for bolder, more systemic changes in our necks of the wood, secure in the knowledge that any one city, province, or whole countrys initiative towards a greater justice for allwillserve as a test case, for better or for worse, for citizens elsewhere striving to enact the same.

Lets all give each other, then, the very best test cases possible for the creation of more humanistic societies, globally, requires no less than a rethinking ofthe world on whole.

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Humanists, the Time for Action Has Always Been Now - Patheos

Joe Mathews: Mask mandates are controversial, we should make them fun – KCRW

Zocalo commentator Joe Mathews wants to turn mask-wearing into a statewide masquerade. He finds much to recommend in the anonymity that comes with covering ones face: social equity, for one, but also the opportunity to take a break from our normal identities. Why not slip on a mask and let loose a little, perhaps even behave badly? Mathews says its a reasonable price to pay to keep everyone compliant with a justified health order.

Read Mathews essay below:

A California Masquerade

Agoston Haraszthy didnt hesitate to wear masks. A Hungarian immigrant, he became San Diegos first sheriff by portraying himself as a military colonel. Then, he sold himself as a metallurgist to win a top job at the San Franciscos first U.S. Mint office. He billed himself as royaltyCount Haraszthywhen he established the Buena Vista Winery in Sonoma.

By 1864, The Count was in trouble. The Civil War and mounting debts strained his wine business. Hed planted the vines too close together, and his attempt to create a sparkling California champagne literally fizzled. To stay afloat, he sold off pieces of the estate.

Despite all these troubles, County Haraszthy hosted a lavish Masquerade Ball, touted as the first in California history. The costumes and wine technologies drew enough of a crowd for the event to endure. It was held most recently in 2019.

Todays Californians, so wary of face coverings, might consider what The Count knew: Masks are about fun and finding light in darkness. What better time to don a mask than when your whole world is falling down around you?

Californias scolds, who use shame to force mask compliance, miss this point. They tell us, with considerable scientific justification, that we must wear masks to be good. But the true virtue of masks is that they allow us to be bad.

Behind masks, we cant be easily shamed. We can try on new identities and deviate from social norms. In this cultural moment, when we are surrounded by so much coerced and performative goodness, might more people want to wear masks if we emphasized their darker and more subversive appeal? Instead of framing face-coverings as solemn obligation, might the public health be better protected if we reimagined this moment as a lavish, statewide masquerade?

The current, highly polarized debate over masks is much too dull when you consider the history of masks. Our modern conception of masking owes a debt to the Republic of Venice, with a mask-wearing cultured rooted in desirefor hedonism and equality. With identities shielded, people could do as they wished. Without faces, all had voices.

In the 18th century, the Venetian passion reached America. Of course, in this Puritan country, mask-wearing produced backlashes, with moralists claiming that masquerades were a foreign and immoral influence. By the second half of the 19th century and through the 1960s, major California municipalities from Los Angeles to San Francisco had laws barring public disguise and cross-dressing. Scholars describe those discriminatory ordinances as forerunners of todays so-called bathroom bills targeting the transgendered.

Fortunately, the transgressive act of masking has won the cultural warFreddy Krueger has the box office receipts to prove it. Masquerade in California, from costume superstores to Comic-Con, is now big business. In L.A., the Labyrinth Masquerade Ball, first held in 1997, has thousands of attendees and an ongoing story line with newly invented characters and mythologies. Shawn Strider, its host, told me the masquerades are great levelers in status-conscious L.A., because regular Angelenos and A-list stars attend together, without learning each others true identities.

The appeal of masks in an age such as ours isnt hard to see. When everyone wants you to pick a side, the masquerade offers glorious ambiguity. When people are reduced to their political or racial identities, and digital surveillance seems all, masks provide anonymity, and the possibility of being our full selves.

For all these reasons, we should be making masks a symbol of celebration, not compliance. Let government strike teams award cash prizes for the most beautiful or creative masks that they see. Public kiosks outside grocery stores and food banks could help Californians make their own masks. And if people must gather, lets hold small, outdoor, socially distanced masquerades.

In other words, lets savor a difficult time as best we canlike Count Haraszthy did. Two years after his 1864 masquerade, he was fired from his own winery for extravagance and unfaithfulness, declared bankruptcy and moved to Nicaragua.

In 1869, he disappeared, forever, into a river full of reptiles, leaving behind a lasting lesson. Wear all the masks you canbecause you never know when the alligators will swallow you whole.

Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column forZcalo Public Square.

Read more here:

Joe Mathews: Mask mandates are controversial, we should make them fun - KCRW

Gay culture has grown toxic with unchecked privilege. It’s time for us to reset – CBC.ca

Queeries is a weekly column by CBC Arts producer Peter Knegt that queries LGBTQ art, culture and/or identity through a personal lens.

This is the first time I've written this column since May. When the protests spurred by George Floyd's murder began, it was extremely clear to me that, as a white person, my voice was not one that needed to take up space amongst thevery necessary conversations happening conversations which were already fighting for attentionin a world inundated with news about incompetent white people fucking up a worldwide pandemic. It was my time to just listen. But even though the conversations that muted this column for six weeks are nowhere close to being over, I do feel like some things that came up during that time of contemplation are worth saying now particularly to my fellow white gay cis men.

When I decidedto put this column on a brief hiatus, I was working on a reflection on the life of legendary gay activist, writer and shit disturber Larry Kramer, who passed away of pneumonia on May 27th. (If you don't know much about Kramer, please change that immediately by watching the documentary Larry Kramer in Love and Anger currently available on Crave and HBO Max.)Kramer's legacy was forged during the height of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, during which he played a pivotal role in combating governments and institutions who could not give less of a fuck about the lives of the marginalized people that disease was killing. I thought the fearlessness Kramer showed in the face of HIV/AIDS might teach us all a little about surviving in these times. But "these times" looked very different on May 27th than they did on May 29th, orJune 2nd, or pretty much any day since.

However, the ghost of Larry Kramer very much remained in my own head as I made my way through a Pride month unlike any other. I spent a few quiet afternoons reading his 1978 debut novel Faggots, a satirical (yet clearly autobiographical) look at the lives of gay men in 1970s New York City that he wrote just before AIDS made him a figurehead of American activism. Following a man in his late 30s (based on Kramer himself) who is seeking out a loving, long-term relationship in a sea of hedonism, the novel has a clear message: gay men need to start loving each other instead of being so obsessed with getting fucked up and (literally and figuratively) fucking each other.

Upon publication, Faggots was dismissed by many as puritanical and self-loathing for its criticism of gay men's obsession with vanity, promiscuity and recreational drug use. Yet, when AIDS hit a few years later, the same words of warning sounded almost prophetic. And while, on one level, the book is a wild (if at times problematic) window into an era of gay culture 40 years in the past, it also felt like it had a lot to say about gay culture today.

What even does it mean to say "gay culture"?In mainstream gay media, the phrase almost always refers to a fairly specific subset of the LGBTQ "community" largely made up of white gay cis men even though many of the battles won around queer rights were fought by people of colour, trans and gender-nonconforming folks, and queer women, and in fact the modern Pride movement itself was in large partinitiated by Black trans women. If an impression of a monolithic "gay culture" defined by such a homogeneous demographic exists, it is because white gay cis men have until very recently dominated mainstream representation under the LGBTQ umbrella and have, in general, been handed a level of privilege in the last decade that is wildly disproportionate to any other demographic under said umbrella. The most extreme and problematic representatives of this "culture" are the men, one of whom knowingly had COVID-19,who partied on packed beaches on Fire Island last week. (Prophetically enough, Fire Island is where the climax of Faggots Kramer's excoriation of "gay culture" takes place.)

Reading Faggots this past month made me consider my own inheritance of its themes. I thought about my relationship to Pride, which was not physically happening pretty much anywhere for the first time in my 36 years of existence. I first went to Pride in 2003, expecting a gloriously fabulous weekend of finally feeling connected to a community and maybe finding the love of my life. But instead, my experience was very much summed up by this paragraph from the book:

"Their glances his way seemed like disposable bottles, no deposit, no return. He felt like Mr. Not Wanted On The Voyage, even though it was, so be it, his birthday. Many years would pass before he would discover that everybody else felt exactly the same, but came out every weekend so to feel, thus over the years developing more flexible feelings in so feeling."

I too would, over the years, develop more flexible feelings in so feeling, which is why I continued to participate in a culture I never quite felt welcome in yet desperately sought validation from. This is something I'd already been thinking a lot about since quarantine began four months ago. The pandemic essentially shut down all of social gay culture, relieving me of pressures to participate in it. Gay bars were shuttered and, unless you were being a horribly irresponsible person, Grindr was no more. I started wondering: did I even enjoy Grindr and the hours I would regularly put into it seeking out casual sex I usually also did not enjoy? When was the last time I actually had a good time at gay bar full of people I have definitely spoken to on social media or apps but who act like I'm completely insane when I smile or say hello in person? It suddenly all felt like such a grand waste of a whole lot of time.

One of the most cathartic moments of my quarantinewas the week or so I spent listening to Fiona Apple's legitimate masterpiece of an album Fetch the Bolt Cutters on endless repeat after its April 17th release an experience surely shared by many. I would walk up and down the streets of my neighbourhood contemplating its lyrics with respect to how my own identity has been built over the years: Fetch the bolt cutters / I've been in here too long.

"It's about breaking out of whatever prison you've allowed yourself to live in, whether you built that prison for yourself or whether it was built around you and you just accepted it," Apple says of the lyrics to the title track in this Vulture interview. "The message in the whole record is just: Fetch the fucking bolt cutters and get yourself out of the situation that you're in whatever it is that you don't like."

Fetch the Bolt Cutters made me recall an article in The New Yorker from 2015 about the HBO series Looking. In analyzing the show's depiction of young gay men living in San Francisco, writerDaniel Wenger diagnoses what he terms the "new gay sadness": an entire generation of urban, privileged gay men who seem to have no clue what they're looking for or who they are. Largely born in the 1980s, they are the earliest wave of a "post-Stonewall, post-plague, post-activist" generation of gays "too old to have brought a boy to the prom and too young to have nursed a fantasy of running away to an urban gay utopia," Wenger explains.

For this demographic of which I very much belong it's likely true that for many of us, the only real battles we've had to fight were the ones taking place in our own minds. We were born into complicated and traumatic closets but now live extraordinarily advantaged lives with seemingly endless options. But with fulfilled dreams comes emotional responsibility, and none of us seem to be owning up to our own damage. Instead, we've become obsessed with what people think of our appearance and status (Instagram sure hasn't helped with that) at the expense of really looking at ourselves and a culture we have helped create that is rife with racism, transphobia, classism, ageism, ableism, fat-shaming and just plainmeanness.

I spent Pride Day 2020 at a rally organized by the No Pride in Policing Coalition in Toronto's Nathan Phillips Square with thousands of other people, all socially distanced from one another and wearing masks. I listened to speakers explain the seemingly infinite battles we as a collective society are currently facing: anti-Black racism, anti-Indigenous racism, transphobia, the need to abolish the police and the prison industrial complex, homelessness, the opioid crisis. And it was perhaps the most satisfying Pride Day I'd ever experienced, if just because, in listening to their words, I was learning how to be a more active part of the solution instead of an unknowing part of the problem. Protests around the world have made us more aware than ever that what we need is not a "return to normal" when that "normal" was predicated on the disenfranchisement and victimization of so many. "Gay culture" should learn the same lesson: "back to normal" is not enough.

I've seen many of my fellow white gay cis men seemingly rise to the occasion by retweeting Black and Indigenous voices, going to rallies and vowing to educate themselves on how to truly be anti-racist (though how performative that is in some cases is unclear). I've also seen quite a few of them post shirtless photo from last year's Pride with a caption along the lines of "Pride is weird this year" followed by vague rambling about solidarity with Black trans people. Which of these gays do you want to be?

If it's the former, know that this is only the beginning of your commitment.There is a revolution happening right now one of the most powerful global mobilizations on systemic racism in history. There is also a global pandemic that is wreaking havoc on the physical, mental and financial well-being of so many people around us. We are in the middle of modern society's most monumental reset, and we need to do whatever we can to help it end well for those much more marginalized than us. And that includes doing our best to reset ourselves and the culture we've helped create.

Resetting "gay culture" will require fighting back against entrenched social pressures and expectations ofgay cis men and calling them out when they perpetuate,even passively, any form of discriminatory dialogue. The fight will require fearlessness. Larry Kramer didn't give a shit what people thought of him, particularly other gay men. And it was in large part because of that attitude that he could lead AIDS activists through a corrupt and homophobic system to gain access to the drugs that made it possible for our generation to have the lives that we do. So let's think long and hard about how we've been choosing to live them.

Fetch the fucking bolt cutters, gays. We've been in here too long.

See original here:

Gay culture has grown toxic with unchecked privilege. It's time for us to reset - CBC.ca

Films For When You Miss Loyola and New Orleans, Part 2 – Maroon

About two months ago, The Maroon published a list of films for when anyone misses the great city of New Orleans, and most particularly the Loyola campus. Turns out, theres a lot more that the Big Easy can offer, as it has asserted its reputation as an understated yet iconic setting for several great films in the past.

Here are a few more films for when you feel like taking a trip down memory lane.

King Creole

Elvis Presley stars in the 1958 musical drama from director Michael Curtiz about a nightclub singer who gets mixed up with the local mob. Mostly shot on location in French Quarter, production was constantly delayed due to crowds of fans. Presley, who had been drafted into military service, was granted a 60-day deferment to participate in the making of the film.

King Creole became a critical and commercial success, with Presleys performance frequently cited for praise. The theme song Hard Headed Woman, sung by Presley, was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America.

To watch King Creole, click here.

Cat People

Paul Schrader creates a spellbinding erotic thriller based on the influential 1942 film of the same name. It stars Nastassja Kinski as a young woman who finds out that her sexual urges turn her into a black leopard. The film has become a cult classic over the years, primarily due to its soundtrack from electronic music producer Giorgio Moroder, with the iconic theme song sung by David Bowie.

The film prominently featured Audubon Zoo before its eventual renovation, even if Schrader also built extensive zoo sets to have total production control. Still, Cat People is essential viewing if anyone wants to know what New Orleans looked like in the 1980s.

To watch Cat People, click here.

The Big Easy

The 1986 neo-noir romantic thriller stars Dennis Quaid as a corrupt police officer investigating a series of murders in, you guessed it, the Big Easy. He becomes entangled in a forbidden relationship with the local District Attorney, played by Ellen Barkin.

The city serves as an important element in the film, extensively showcasing its sights. However, the main drawback is Quaid sporting a quite embarrassing Cajun accent, which he later attributed to cocaine on set. The film at least tries to show the city as an underrated place for hedonism in the same way as Cat People, making it a campy delight for anyone who loves the city of New Orleans.

To watch The Big Easy, click here.

Interview with the Vampire

Tom Cruise stars in the 1994 gothic horror film based on the novel by Anne Rice. It features the actor as vampire Lestat as he recounts his experiences, as well as an early turn from Brad Pitt as his protege Louis.

The film was shot in New Orleans, with Louiss plantation being a combination of Destrehan Plantation west of the city and Oak Valley Plantation in Vacherie. A period feel was achieved by filming in the French Quarter as well as in a purposely built boardwalk overlooking the Mississippi River.

To watch Interview with the Vampire, click here.

Deja Vu

Denzel Washington stars in the 2006 action sci-fi film from director Tony Scott. He plays an ATF agent who travels back in time to prevent a domestic terrorist attack in New Orleans and save one of the victims that he falls in love with, played by Paula Patton.

Principal photography was set in New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. In fact, the resulting destruction was prominently featured, especially with scenes in the Lower 9th Ward.

To watch Deja Vu, click here.

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

The 2008 fantasy romantic drama film from David Fincher is loosely based on the 1922 F. Scott Fitzgerald short story of the same name. Brad Pitt stars as the titular character, who ages in reverse, while Cate Blanchett plays his love interest. The film was later nominated for Academy Awards, winning three primarily for its innovative use of special effects and makeup.

The film was primarily shot in uptown New Orleans, mainly to take advantage of Louisianas production incentives. Pitt described the film as a love letter to the city, and later bought a home in the French Quarter.

To watch The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, click here.

Special Mention: ZeroZeroZero

Last but not the least is the 2020 crime drama miniseries from Amazon Prime Video. ZeroZeroZero explores the international drug trade, in particular tracing the transport of a cocaine shipment from Italy to the United States.

New Orleans, particularly St. Charles Avenue, serves as the home of the Lynwood family, who serves as the brokers of the inevitably fraught drug deal. A brief yet noteworthy scene is set at the Holy Name of Jesus Church along the Loyola campus.

Click here to read The Maroons full review of ZeroZeroZero.

To watch ZeroZeroZero, click here.

See the article here:

Films For When You Miss Loyola and New Orleans, Part 2 - Maroon

G.K. Fimbel: We have to teach real history, even though it may be painful – Asheboro Courier Tribune

Fimbel moved here in 2007. She has been a vocal advocate for measures to end de facto school segregation.

WILMINGTON -- More than a century after the 1898 Massacre, during which a mob of white supremacists overthrew the biracial government and murdered dozens (perhaps more) of Black residents, some argue the Black community has never fully recovered from the damage it did and the inequality it enshrined in Wilmingtons way of life -- inequality that they say remains in the DNA of the citys institutions and culture.

G.K. Fimbel Fimbel moved here with her family from the Washington, D.C., area in 2007. She has children in New Hanover County Schools and has been a vocal advocate for measures to end de facto school segregation.

This is what she had to say about where things currently stand for Black residents in Wilmington, and what needs to happen to make Wilmington more inclusive.

What are your thoughts about the current state of Black people living in Wilmington?

The African-American community here is an incredibly tenacious, resilient, resourceful group of people. They have endured generational trauma and violent assaults on their dignity since before 1898 and many years after.

The other way to answer that question speaks to the past and present conditions that our country and community have imposed upon African-Americans. Are they given access to true equality? How has our city reckoned with violent crimes and transgressions against them? How are we restoring what is broken? Unfortunately, I think the answer to those questions is that we have not done enough to usher in justice and restoration.

Over the past 25 years, Wilmington's population has grown and overall prosperity has increased. How have Black residents fared during that time?

Ask the child still plagued to live in substandard housing even though their parent is working a 40-hour a week job at minimum wage. Ask the child whose closest park is poorly maintained and whose facilities are denigrating. Ask the child who is criminalized and arrested at school. Ask the child in fourth grade why she was asked to role-play slavery, including shackles and punishment, in a classroom full of white peers. Ask the hundreds of children who are disproportionately suspended at higher rates for the same behaviors as white children. All of these children, and more, could answer this question much better than I could. My privilege, including the color of my skin, shields me from many of these things.

As a white person, what do you sense has gotten worse for African Americans here?

It has always been bad for Black people as well as other people of color in America, so I can't say that anything has gotten worse. White supremacy is a gas that runs through different engines but continues to fuel racism. There has been a movement in Wilmington, thankfully, exposing the 1898 coup. But it was certainly not the singular act of violence against Black people in our country or city. I recently heard that white people are lucky that Black people are seeking justice and not revenge, and it resonated with me. The violence that white people have committed against Black people in this country is long and harsh.

What has gotten better?

I am hopeful that our honesty about racial injustice will propel us to a better way. Speaking truth is always powerful, and we need a complete transformation in this area. I should not have been in my 30s, learning the truth about Christopher Columbus for the first time. We have to teach real history, even though it may be painful. Black history is so much more than a story of struggle; Black history is a story of resistance, overcoming, and thriving in the face of brutal odds. We need to tell those stories. We also need to tell stories about the white people who stood with them in the fight for freedom. They did exist, and we have to stop absolving white people from responsibility because "it was just the time they lived in." That's bologna. I have ancestors who enslaved other human beings, but I also have ancestors who fought against it and broke ties with our family because of it.

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[Editors note: To read what others had to say about whether Wilmington can again become a place for Black opportunity, click here.]

Ready for full coverage of Southeastern North Carolina? Subscribe to the StarNews

Reporter Scott Nunn can be reached at 910-343-2272 or Scott.Nunn@StarNewsOnline.com.

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G.K. Fimbel: We have to teach real history, even though it may be painful - Asheboro Courier Tribune

Modern slavery is operating in plain sight. If our leaders wont shoulder the burden, we have to – The Independent

Modern-day slavery is not new, it has been happening in UK cities for years, and around the world. In fact, it is estimated that there are at least 40.3 million people worldwide are currently in enslaved, which is more than those exploited by the transatlantic slave trade.

The second lockdown in Leicester, as a result of the rising number of Covid-19 cases, revealed that during the lockdown, a textile factory or sweatshop continued to operate and exploit workers by paying them as little as 3.50 an hour.

The majority of those trapped in modern slavery endure appalling conditions, threats to their safety, restrictions on their freedom, and intimidation. In 2018, for example, modern slavery raids in Newham, Ilford and Barking revealed people living in highly overcrowded situations. 22 people were discovered living in a small, terraced house in Ilford. But this is just the tip of the iceberg.

Sharing the full story, not just the headlines

The House of Commons Environmental Audit Committees 2019 report, Fixing Fashion: Clothing consumption and sustainability, reported the problem in Leicester stating: Leicester has the second-highest concentration of textile manufacturers in the country with 700 factories employing 10,000 textile workers. Unite the Union said that while the majority of the factories are compliant, there are a small number of factories which break the law to maximise profits.

For decades, various industry sectors have been a source of modern-day slavery, from the once-thriving rag trade in Brick Lane where Bangladesh garment workers worked in small dangerous factors for pittance, to current barbershops in Brent. In February this year, the Metropolitan Police investigated reports of human trafficking after concerns were raised about workers in barbershops in London. After visiting addresses in Brent, Barnet and Harrow, the suspected victims were taken to a receptions centre for support and medical treatment.

The pandemic has only further thrown light on a matter that has always been there, so why is it still happening?

Some people may ask why these people do not reach out for help. The simple answer is that they are afraid. Many of them have been lured to the UK under the promise of a better life than they have back home, dangling carrots of employment, money, food and accommodation. If they speak out, then they risk being sent back to a situation that may not be much better than that which they are currently enduring. Sometimes, the workers are driven into debt, hence tightening their employers hold over them.

The Salvation Army website shares victims stories, such as that of Ferda, who was trafficked to the UK from the Czech Republic after ending up on the streets following his wifes death. When he arrived in the UK, he was told that he had to pay back the cost of his travel, so most of his wage paid off his debt and the cost of his accommodation. He said: I was working 12 hours a day, six days a week for very little. When he was no longer able to work because of ill health, he was evicted and left on the streets.

As Christine Jardine, Liberal Democrat Home Affairs spokesperson quite rightly said: "We have to be on our guard to ensure that the inexcusable scourge of modern slavery does not grow under cover of COVID-19. Sadly, as job losses due to the crisis mount, more and more people may be forced [to] accept underpaid jobs in unsafe conditions to avoid complete destitution if we do not act.

Celebrities, such as Kylie Jenner, who has been accused along with her sister, Kendall Jenner, of not paying Bangladesh factory workers during the pandemic (claims they strongly deny), should condemn modern-day slavery. These recent accusations aside, this isn't the first time one of the Jenners has been asked to handle the issue of modern slavery more sensitively, most notably after Kylie Jenner threw a Handmaids Tale themed party.

Consumers also have a responsibility not to support modern-day slavery. If, for example, you are buying a top for under 5, there is a high probability that it was made in a sweatshop.

NCA has launched a touring photographic exhibition which aims to portray the signs of slavery and exploitation. Entitled Invisible People, the exhibition will tour the country as part of the National Crime Agencys campaign to raise awareness of modern slavery and human trafficking.

National Crime Agency

Child trafficking for sexual exploitationTraffickers use grooming techniques to gain the trust of a child, family or community. The childrenare recruited, transported and then sold for sex, often returning to their homes immediately afterwards, only to be picked up by the same people again. This is happening here in the UK, to migrant and British-born children.Spot the signs of child trafficking:Often, children wont be sure which country, city or town theyre in.They may be orphaned or living apart from their family, in unregulated private foster care, or in substandard accommodation. They may possess unaccounted-for money or goods or repeatedly have new, unexplained injuries.

National Crime Agency

Some workers in the farming sector, harvesting grains or root vegetables, tending livestock or fruit picking, are being exploited every day in the UK.Victims of this crime in the agricultural sector are often Eastern European men and women, who were promised a job by traffickers, or they could be individuals on the fringes of society, homeless or destitute. Through threats, violence, coercion or forced drug and alcohol dependency, theyre enslaved, working for little or no money, living in squalid conditions having had their identity documents taken from them.Spot the signs of exploitative labour in agriculture:Agricultural slaves often have their wages paid into the same bank account, meaning an illegal gangmaster is likely collecting all their wages.Exploited agriculture workers often dont have suitable protective equipment, working instead in cheap sports clothing and trainers, and dont have a different change of clothes from day-to-day.

National Crime Agency

Polish or Slovakian men are brought to the UK with the offer of employment and, after arrival, gangmasters seize documents, opening multiple bank and utility accounts in their names butrefuse to handover access to the accounts or bank cards. Hours are long and the work is gruelling and dangerous. Workers are abused and are controlled by threats of harm to their families at home.Spot the signs:Those exploited wear inappropriate clothes and often no safety gear despite working with dangerous and life-threatening equipment. They may often have untreated injuries and be refused medical attention, and will live and work in agricultural outhouses.

National Crime Agency

Labour-intensive sectors like construction, where temporary and irregular work are common, are high-risk sectors for forced labour. With new homes, offices and buildings being constructed or upgraded in great quantity, labour exploitation is the second most common type of modern slavery, after sexual exploitation.Spot the signs of exploitative labour in construction:Exploited workers are often not provided with protective clothing or equipment, and may show signs of abuse or carry old untreated injuries.Slave workers are also likely to work extremely long work hours for six or seven days a week without any leave.Photographer Rory Carnegie, said: I wanted this image to communicate that despite being forced to live, eat, wash and sleep where theyre working, in cramped and unhygienic conditions, that there is a human instinct to domesticate. I wanted to show how there is still hope and dignity in the most squalid and difficult of circumstances.

National Crime Agency

In the tough maritime industry young men, often Filipino or Indian, Eastern European or African, are promised a better life, but instead find themselves in a cycle of debt and exploitation.Unable to read, they are offered a job, given papers to sign and begin working on a trial-basis, only to be told they have failed and owe money, and have to work more to settle the debt. They may be forced to work for long hours in intense, hazardous and difficult conditions.Photographer Rory Carnegie, said: In the 80s, Chris Killip published a series of images called In Flagrante, and these images were at the forefront of my mind while composing this shot. I wanted to show the utter desperation of these men - how passed their limit they are. The broken floats and the entire decaying environment around him, I saw as a metaphor for his existence.

Rory Carnegie/National Crime Agency

Each year, women from across Eastern Europe and West Africa are lured to the UK by the dream of a better life. Whether by fake migration services or unscrupulous individuals who befriend and then betray them, women fall into a dark spiral of sexual exploitation and forced, unpaid prostitution, unable to escape.Photographer Rory Carnegie, said: What I really wanted for this image, was to depict how women are used as commodities, the complete control slavery has over them the helplessness of having to sit and wait for man after man, until no more men arrive. I wanted the image to show how lonely and eventually numbing that experience is, and for that ugliness to be contrasted against the bright blue of the wig a fancy dress item that we would usually associate with a fun event but here is used as a disguise, perhaps of her own identity to herself - to further emphasise how unjust the situation is.

NCA

The cannabis industry hides a dark secret in the house next door. Gangs bring young boys to the UK from countries like Vietnam and deliver them to a house where, once in, they wont be able to leave. Forced to tend cannabis plants that fill specially rigged houses, the boys are often locked in and forced to work, sleep and eat in one confined and dirty room. The chemicals used on the cannabis are poisonous, and often victims dont know where they are or how to get help if they do escape. The eyes, ears and compassion of the local community are essential.Spot the signs:Aside from the strong and prolonged smell of cannabis, have you noticed a house that looks unusual? Are the windows covered or usual entry points blocked? Buildings might be over-heated in very cold weather is the roof without frost, because the house is being kept warm to grow plants

National Crime Agency

Some workers in the farming sector, harvesting grains or root vegetables, tending livestock or fruit picking, are being exploited every day in the UK.Victims of this crime in the agricultural sector are often Eastern European men and women, who were promised a job by traffickers, or they could be individuals on the fringes of society, homeless or destitute. Through threats, violence, coercion or forced drug and alcohol dependency, theyre enslaved, working for little or no money, living in squalid conditions having had their identity documents taken from them.Spot the signs of exploitative labour in agriculture:Agricultural slaves often have their wages paid into the same bank account, meaning an illegal gangmaster is likely collecting all their wages.Exploited agriculture workers often dont have suitable protective equipment, working instead in cheap sports clothing and trainers, and dont have a different change of clothes from day-to-day

National Crime Agency

Spot the signs of forced prostitution:Victims of this type of crime might appear withdrawn or scared, avoid eye contact, and be untrusting. Poor English language skills could indicate exploitation because it suggests someone else must be arranging the work. A brothel is likely to be an average house on a normal looking street, but may have curtains which are usually closed and many different men coming and going frequently.

National Crime Agency

Spot the signs of exploitative labour in the maritime sector:Victims might appear withdrawn or frightened, often unable to answer questions directed at them or speak for themselves,. They might be afraid of authorities like police, immigration or the tax office, and may perceive themselves to be in debt to someone else. They may not have been given proper protective equipment so can suffer illness or injury.Photographer Rory Carnegie, said: Throughout the series of images, I wanted to juxtapose the harshness of the lives of slaves against bright primary colours colours we traditionally associate with happiness or a feeling of wellbeing to provoke a reaction. The image, as rich as it is, communicates how completely uncomfortable this person is. I wanted to show how his body is not his own, and how he has no right to avoid hardship, avoid the ice, or wear better shoes, he is utterly controlled.

Rory Carnegie/National Crime Agency

Photographer Rory Carnegie, said: This image communicates utter exhaustion and dejection. We can see how dire his situation is. He has no protective gear on, and we can see the extreme tiredness that leads him to a place of anxiety and distraction, where he doesnt care about whether hes operating machinery safely, or putting himself at risk.

National Crime Agency

The exhibition comprises a series of large, freestanding cubes displaying images capturing snapshots of life within different types of modern slavery - in agriculture, construction, maritime, cannabis farming and food processing, child trafficking for sexual exploitation and forced prostitution.Each image comes with written commentary describing what the viewer is seeing, and information about signs which may indicate someone is a victim.

National Crime Agency

NCA has launched a touring photographic exhibition which aims to portray the signs of slavery and exploitation. Entitled Invisible People, the exhibition will tour the country as part of the National Crime Agencys campaign to raise awareness of modern slavery and human trafficking.

National Crime Agency

Child trafficking for sexual exploitationTraffickers use grooming techniques to gain the trust of a child, family or community. The childrenare recruited, transported and then sold for sex, often returning to their homes immediately afterwards, only to be picked up by the same people again. This is happening here in the UK, to migrant and British-born children.Spot the signs of child trafficking:Often, children wont be sure which country, city or town theyre in.They may be orphaned or living apart from their family, in unregulated private foster care, or in substandard accommodation. They may possess unaccounted-for money or goods or repeatedly have new, unexplained injuries.

National Crime Agency

Some workers in the farming sector, harvesting grains or root vegetables, tending livestock or fruit picking, are being exploited every day in the UK.Victims of this crime in the agricultural sector are often Eastern European men and women, who were promised a job by traffickers, or they could be individuals on the fringes of society, homeless or destitute. Through threats, violence, coercion or forced drug and alcohol dependency, theyre enslaved, working for little or no money, living in squalid conditions having had their identity documents taken from them.Spot the signs of exploitative labour in agriculture:Agricultural slaves often have their wages paid into the same bank account, meaning an illegal gangmaster is likely collecting all their wages.Exploited agriculture workers often dont have suitable protective equipment, working instead in cheap sports clothing and trainers, and dont have a different change of clothes from day-to-day.

National Crime Agency

Polish or Slovakian men are brought to the UK with the offer of employment and, after arrival, gangmasters seize documents, opening multiple bank and utility accounts in their names butrefuse to handover access to the accounts or bank cards. Hours are long and the work is gruelling and dangerous. Workers are abused and are controlled by threats of harm to their families at home.Spot the signs:Those exploited wear inappropriate clothes and often no safety gear despite working with dangerous and life-threatening equipment. They may often have untreated injuries and be refused medical attention, and will live and work in agricultural outhouses.

National Crime Agency

Labour-intensive sectors like construction, where temporary and irregular work are common, are high-risk sectors for forced labour. With new homes, offices and buildings being constructed or upgraded in great quantity, labour exploitation is the second most common type of modern slavery, after sexual exploitation.Spot the signs of exploitative labour in construction:Exploited workers are often not provided with protective clothing or equipment, and may show signs of abuse or carry old untreated injuries.Slave workers are also likely to work extremely long work hours for six or seven days a week without any leave.Photographer Rory Carnegie, said: I wanted this image to communicate that despite being forced to live, eat, wash and sleep where theyre working, in cramped and unhygienic conditions, that there is a human instinct to domesticate. I wanted to show how there is still hope and dignity in the most squalid and difficult of circumstances.

National Crime Agency

In the tough maritime industry young men, often Filipino or Indian, Eastern European or African, are promised a better life, but instead find themselves in a cycle of debt and exploitation.Unable to read, they are offered a job, given papers to sign and begin working on a trial-basis, only to be told they have failed and owe money, and have to work more to settle the debt. They may be forced to work for long hours in intense, hazardous and difficult conditions.Photographer Rory Carnegie, said: In the 80s, Chris Killip published a series of images called In Flagrante, and these images were at the forefront of my mind while composing this shot. I wanted to show the utter desperation of these men - how passed their limit they are. The broken floats and the entire decaying environment around him, I saw as a metaphor for his existence.

Rory Carnegie/National Crime Agency

Each year, women from across Eastern Europe and West Africa are lured to the UK by the dream of a better life. Whether by fake migration services or unscrupulous individuals who befriend and then betray them, women fall into a dark spiral of sexual exploitation and forced, unpaid prostitution, unable to escape.Photographer Rory Carnegie, said: What I really wanted for this image, was to depict how women are used as commodities, the complete control slavery has over them the helplessness of having to sit and wait for man after man, until no more men arrive. I wanted the image to show how lonely and eventually numbing that experience is, and for that ugliness to be contrasted against the bright blue of the wig a fancy dress item that we would usually associate with a fun event but here is used as a disguise, perhaps of her own identity to herself - to further emphasise how unjust the situation is.

NCA

The cannabis industry hides a dark secret in the house next door. Gangs bring young boys to the UK from countries like Vietnam and deliver them to a house where, once in, they wont be able to leave. Forced to tend cannabis plants that fill specially rigged houses, the boys are often locked in and forced to work, sleep and eat in one confined and dirty room. The chemicals used on the cannabis are poisonous, and often victims dont know where they are or how to get help if they do escape. The eyes, ears and compassion of the local community are essential.Spot the signs:Aside from the strong and prolonged smell of cannabis, have you noticed a house that looks unusual? Are the windows covered or usual entry points blocked? Buildings might be over-heated in very cold weather is the roof without frost, because the house is being kept warm to grow plants

National Crime Agency

Some workers in the farming sector, harvesting grains or root vegetables, tending livestock or fruit picking, are being exploited every day in the UK.Victims of this crime in the agricultural sector are often Eastern European men and women, who were promised a job by traffickers, or they could be individuals on the fringes of society, homeless or destitute. Through threats, violence, coercion or forced drug and alcohol dependency, theyre enslaved, working for little or no money, living in squalid conditions having had their identity documents taken from them.Spot the signs of exploitative labour in agriculture:Agricultural slaves often have their wages paid into the same bank account, meaning an illegal gangmaster is likely collecting all their wages.Exploited agriculture workers often dont have suitable protective equipment, working instead in cheap sports clothing and trainers, and dont have a different change of clothes from day-to-day

National Crime Agency

Spot the signs of forced prostitution:Victims of this type of crime might appear withdrawn or scared, avoid eye contact, and be untrusting. Poor English language skills could indicate exploitation because it suggests someone else must be arranging the work. A brothel is likely to be an average house on a normal looking street, but may have curtains which are usually closed and many different men coming and going frequently.

National Crime Agency

Spot the signs of exploitative labour in the maritime sector:Victims might appear withdrawn or frightened, often unable to answer questions directed at them or speak for themselves,. They might be afraid of authorities like police, immigration or the tax office, and may perceive themselves to be in debt to someone else. They may not have been given proper protective equipment so can suffer illness or injury.Photographer Rory Carnegie, said: Throughout the series of images, I wanted to juxtapose the harshness of the lives of slaves against bright primary colours colours we traditionally associate with happiness or a feeling of wellbeing to provoke a reaction. The image, as rich as it is, communicates how completely uncomfortable this person is. I wanted to show how his body is not his own, and how he has no right to avoid hardship, avoid the ice, or wear better shoes, he is utterly controlled.

Rory Carnegie/National Crime Agency

Photographer Rory Carnegie, said: This image communicates utter exhaustion and dejection. We can see how dire his situation is. He has no protective gear on, and we can see the extreme tiredness that leads him to a place of anxiety and distraction, where he doesnt care about whether hes operating machinery safely, or putting himself at risk.

National Crime Agency

The exhibition comprises a series of large, freestanding cubes displaying images capturing snapshots of life within different types of modern slavery - in agriculture, construction, maritime, cannabis farming and food processing, child trafficking for sexual exploitation and forced prostitution.Each image comes with written commentary describing what the viewer is seeing, and information about signs which may indicate someone is a victim.

National Crime Agency

Although we live in an era of disposable fashion, it is not just cheap brands, but designer brands who are exploiting people for financial gain. Women and girls comprise 71 per cent of all modern slavery victims and, shockingly, children make up 25 per cent and account for 10 million of all enslaved peopleworldwide.

So, the next time you pick up a beautiful item of clothing, ask yourself, Was this made by an enslaved person?

We can all do something to help.

Rabina Khan is a Liberal Democrat councillor for Shadwell in Tower Hamlets Council

If you suspect that someone is being trafficked, you can call the Modern Slavery Helpline on 08000 121 700 or visit the Anti-Slavery website for advice and a list of other helpful phone numbers

Excerpt from:

Modern slavery is operating in plain sight. If our leaders wont shoulder the burden, we have to - The Independent

Provocations: Who’s next to fall to BLM’s wokeism? (DAVE NEESE Column) – The Trentonian

The statue-toppling Black Lives Matter mob is on a revisionist rampage. Even abolitionists are starting to show up on its s-list.

According to BLM and its Woke mob pals, Martin Luther King had it all wrong.

Skin color is indeed grounds for judging a person's character.

So even the statues of Lincoln and Grant who won the Civil War and ended slavery must come down. They were white guys, you see. And skin color not only counts, it's an essential criterion.

So then, who's to be next on the angry mobs' ever-expanding s-list?

The likely candidate: the Democratic Party.

Right now the party is pleased to have BLM function in effect as its political shock troops.

Let the Woke revolutionaries raise holy hell, until a weary populace decides that things are out of and concludes that Trump's gotta go. That seems to be the Democratic Party game plan.

But revolutions check out the French and Russian ones tend to seek out new foes and to start finding them within their own ranks.

This being so, it's only a matter of time before BLM and the Woke gang turn their righteous ferocity on the Democratic Party. For it's an unavoidable historical fact that the party carries in its very bloodstream the dread virus of racism. "Systemic racism," you might say. You can look it up in the history books.

The Woke revolutionaries' in fact have already started to turn on the Democratic Party. The neo-Taliban iconoclasts have shifted their attention from obscure Confederacy statuary to a previously revered founding father of progressivism none other than President Woodrow Wilson.

Wilson was the very personification of high-minded liberalism, with his PhD, his pince-nez spectacles and his Princeton University academic perch. But suddenly the Woke mob is bent on mounting his intellectual egghead noggin atop a pike.

Wilson's name has been moved to the "most wanted" spot on the PC orthodoxy s-list. That he championed the eight-hour work day and additional pay for overtime is not likely to save his skin now.

The Ivy League professoriate has taken note, if a bit belatedly, that Dr. Wilson aside from his voluminous good works in the cause of domestic reforms and international peace was really no better than a bible-and-gun-clinging deplorable when it came to race relations.

It remains a matter of curiosity why it took the sages of academe an entire century to take note of Wilson's conspicuously unenlightened attitudes toward

African Americans. Maybe that curiosity will serve as grist for future doctoral theses.

In any event, the man who won the Nobel Peace Prize for creating the League of Nations, forerunner to the United Nations, and who led America triumphantly through the monarchy-smashing era of World War I, is now regarded in bien-pensant circles as little more than a bookish version of Donald Trump.

It's too late to force old Woodrow to apologize, to resign and slink off into disgraced oblivion. But it's not too late to throw a rope around his statues wherever they're found and pull 'em down, to give the author of "New Freedom" and "Fourteen Points" a valedictory along the lines of that given to Saddam Hussain's sculptural likeness when Baghdad fell.

In the new estimation of the Woke revisionists, Wilson, despite his hoity-toity airs the man once taught ancient Greek and Roman history at the fancy ladies' college, Bryn Mawr was really of the same ilk as those smelly Walmart shoppers, same ilk as those plebes with mere voc-tech high school diplomas.

Therefore, Princeton will have to be scrubbed of all imagery linking itself to the man who was once the school's president and governor of New Jersey. His snooty elitism was always acceptable, but not, ultimately, the part of his snootiness that manifested itself in racial superciliousness.

The truth is that Wilson's racial snootiness was the single and lone quality that gave this haughty progressive any claim to being a man of the people. With that gone, there's no saving his legacy now.

But wait. Speaking of racism racism being very loosely defined, as it always is nowadays then what about Princeton itself? Might not the university have to be toppled like a horse-mounted Jeb Stuart sculpture on some Deep South courthouse square?

How many black kids were ever admitted to Old Nassau's hallowed halls? How many even today? Do not the answers to those two questions give off the telltale odor of the ubiquitous racism that, according to the New York Times, festers at the nation's rotten core?

Indeed, might it not be said consonant with today's rhetorical themes that the elite university's history fairly exudes an exclusionary stink indicative of white- supremacist, academic apartheid?

If that is a somewhat exaggerated assessment, do not today's rules of public discourse allow, indeed encourage, the accommodation of such over-inflated hyperbole?

What's more, Wilson may be the least of Princeton's problems. There's the university's most distinguished alumnus, James Madison Father of the Constitution.

Although Madison recognized slavery as a blight that must be terminated, eventually, he nevertheless owned slaves himself. His papers show that he once sold a batch of them to raise funds to cover unanticipated household expenses.

According to the dictates of Wokeism, this historical fact must now totally define Madison to the exclusion of everything else he did. Never mind his authorship of the

Bill of Rights and co-authorship of the Federalist Papers. Madison's gotta go, too.

Come to think of it, Madison's slavery connection makes it sounds like Princeton U. would be an ideal candidate for the privileged white snots of Antifa to set up an "autonomous zone" and occupy it until the school agrees to redistribute its massive endowment riches to the cause of slavery reparations.

But even the dismantlement of Princeton looks to be only a first step on the long journey to racial justice. The road on that journey leads no avoiding it to the elimination of the Democratic Party itself. For, you see, the party and racism are inextricably entangled.

The party's founding presidential candidate, Andrew Jackson, despite his populist sympathies for the little man and his heroic military actions preserving the existence of the young United States, was a slave owner, too. Case closed against him. Down with Old Hickory! Erase his offensive mug from the $20 bill!

But how do you throw out Jackson without also jettisoning the party he founded and long personified? It's not as if, regarding dubious views on race, Jackson and

Wilson were Democratic Party outliers.

The PC propaganda sessions that now pass as history classes in our schools don't go near the subject, but an unenlightened attitude where race is concerned has been the recurring leitmotif of the Democratic Party throughout its history.

Democrats were the driving constituency behind secession and creation of the Confederacy. They were the political constituency that waged a Civil War not only in defense of existing slavery but in support of its westward expansion.

Thwarted in that goal, an entrenched faction of the party proceeded, post war, to wage a long rear-guard action in opposition to civil rights.

To this end, Democrats founded the Ku Klux Klan. All through the last four decades of the 19th Century and the first five decades of the 20th Century, a powerful faction of congressional Democrats the "Dixiecrats" resisted even legislation aimed at eliminating the scourge of racial lynchings, forget about civil rights.

All of the memorable and powerful black-harassing segregationists were Democrats. All of them. Every last one. Bull Connor. Orval Faubus. George

Wallace. Lester Maddox. Democrats all.

To note this, let us hasten to say, is not to try to sneak in a good word for the GOP.

While fraudulently posing as advocates of mom-and-pop free enterprise, that party has long been the political toadies of powerful transnational corporations, of resourcefully contrived legal entities that have more allegiance to the bottom line than to America that have, as a matter of fact, refused to open board meetings with the Pledge of Allegiance out of fear of offending, say, the Politburo overlords of China with whom they have profitable business arrangements.

Decades ago the Republican Party morphed into a party of surreptitious agendas including, for example, "free trade" arrangements that disassembled U.S. factories and reassembled them abroad to take advantage of cheap labor.

The GOP also morphed into the party that on the sly favors open-door immigration to bid down wages. And it morphed into the party that favored disastrous military meddling in distant squabbles of marginal concern to Americans.

Ironically, there were certain Swamp Democrats who, in a spirit of bipartisanship, found none of this particularly objectionable, for example ahem Joe Biden.

Meanwhile, Donald Trump was the politician who tore up this script, which fact surely accounts for at least some of the establishment-ruffling hysteria he arouses.

Aside from all this, the Republican Party has over the years been perfectly content to ignore African Americans and, whether out of racism or (more likely) out of indifference, to concede the Black vote to the other party as its captive constituency.

Apart from forfeiting an entire racial constituency, Republicans find themselves at a further tactical disadvantage. They're no competition for Democrats when it comes to stirring up envy and resentment and offering voters utopian visions of the Big Rock Candy Mountain. Democrats have long excelled at promising freebies for all, leaving dyspeptic Republicans grumping that their rich pals might get stuck paying the bill.

Taking into full account the GOP's agenda and attitude, African Americans' lockstep political support for the Democratic Party becomes a somewhat less baffling phenomenon. Still, there's no denying the Republican Party its noble historical legacy regarding matters racial noble at least in comparison to the other party.

The GOP was the party that opposed slavery, or at least opposed its westward expansion. The party was founded with that single objective as the reason for its establishment.

The GOP was the party of the Emancipation Proclamation and the Thirteenth Amendment. The Democratic Party was the party that opposed all of these, that fought against them tooth and nail.

When Lyndon Johnson became president upon John Kennedy's assassination, he departed company with his old segregationist Democratic buddies on Capitol Hill and introduced the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964. His old buddies, however, stood firm against the legislation.

The measure was rescued from defeat when Republicans rallied behind it and delivered the votes necessary for passage. In the House, 60% of Democrats voted against it, in contrast to nearly 75% of Republicans who voted for it. In the Senate, 46% of Democrats voted against the historic bill, in contrast to 78% of Republicans who supported it.

The Democratic senators who stood firm against the Civil Rights Act constituted a Who's Who of the nation's political luminaries. They were the Democratic poobahs who chaired the powerful committee fiefdoms and held the key party leadership posts.

They included the likes of Sen. William Fulbright, D-Ark., foreign policy intellectual, proof that erudition does not always preclude the ignorance of bigotry. To keep himself in office, Fulbright, boyhood idol of Bill Clinton, voted consistently segregationist.

Opponents of the Civil Rights Act also included Sen. Robert Byrd, West Virginia Democrat, a man who entered politics via the Ku Klux Klan, attaining the rank of

Exalted Cyclops before, decades later, belatedly renouncing the organization. His half-century long service in Congress was fulsomely hailed by such colleagues as Sen. Hillary Clinton and Sen. Joe Biden.

Other staunch foes of the Civil Rights Act included Sen. Al Gore Sr., Tennessee Democrat, father of Al Gore Jr., and Sen. Sam Erwin, North Carolina Democrat, later to become a heroic figure of the Nixon impeachment.

Filling out the phalanx of civil rights opponents were the Senate's most powerful Democratic bosses Richard Russell, Ga.; George Smathers, Fla.; Russel Long, La.; James Eastland, Miss.; John Stennis, Miss.; Strom Thurmond, S.C. (who later changed parties to Republican), and Harry Byrd, Va.

If iconoclasm is to be the BLM rule of the day, surely this list of Democratic worthies offers plenty of statues, busts and portraits as targets. And surely the list offers up the Democratic Party as a juicy target itself for having surrendered the moral high ground for more than a century to those who maintained that the words of the Declaration of Independence the words that all Americans are entitled to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness did not apply to Blacks.

The Woke vandals, BLM and others, have instead targeted a statue of Republican Theodore Roosevelt, first president to invite a Black man to the White House as a dinner guest, a gesture that rippled through the ranks of the Democratic Party as a ghastly scandal.

Sen. Robert C. Byrd, the one-time Exalted Cyclops, could all by himself keep the BLM's idol-topplers busy fulltime. As chairman of the Senate's appropriations committee barony, he funneled more than $1 billion of pork into his home turf.

Now bearing the old Cyclops' name are the Robert C. Byrd Highway, the Robert C. Byrd Bridge, the Robert C. Byrd Auditorium and National Conservation Training Center, the Robert C. Byrd High School, the Robert C. Byrd Greenbank Telescope, the Robert C. Byrd United Technology Center, the Robert C. Byrd Bio-Technology Science Center, the Robert C. Byrd Cancer Research Center, the Robert C. Byrd Library and so on and so on.

How long can the Democratic Party keep itself off of BLM's s-list? The guess here is surely not much longer.

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Provocations: Who's next to fall to BLM's wokeism? (DAVE NEESE Column) - The Trentonian

Editorial | Race is on to develop COVID vaccine – TribDem.com

We were encouraged to learn thatDr. Patrick Soon-Shiongs COVID-19 vaccine is ready for clinical trials.

Soon-Shiong, whosenonprofit Chan Soon-Shiong NantHealth Foundation isthe umbrella for both Chan-Soon Shiong Medical Center at Windber and the Chan Soon-Shiong Institute for Molecular Medicine at Windber,shared the news recently on Fox Business News.

As our Randy Griffith reported, his NantKwest vaccineisamong 14 candidates being evaluated as part of Operation Warp Speed,a federal government initiative that aims to deliver 300 million doses of safe and effective COVID-19 immunizations by January.The Department of Health and Human Services says thegovernment expects to select about seven of the candidates for further study.

Im really hopeful that our government will support my being able to develop billions of doses, Soon-Shiong said on Fox Business News.

That would be welcome news, as COVID-19 cases have surged lately.

While the race is on to find a vaccine for the virus that has killed more than 500,000 people worldwide, experts cautionnot to set expectations too high.

Weve been burned before,Dr. Anthony Fauci, of the National Institutes of Health, told The Associated Press.This isnt a race of who gets there first. This is, get as many approved, safe and effective vaccines as you possibly can.

Researchers in Britain and China are already testing potential inoculations and,according to the AP, the U.S. is opening the largest trials 30,000 peoplethis month with 30,000 to test a British one about a month later. Fauci saidthey willlikely be divided among Americans and volunteers in other countries.

Soon-Shiong said his vaccine originated through his cancer research. He told Contagion,amedical news site, that the coronavirus acts like cancer because it finds receptors on human cells that allow the virus cells to invade and change the makeup of the cells.It integrates and replicates just like cancer metastasizes, he said in a ContagionLive video.

TheNantKwest vaccine helps the body develop antibodiesand T cells, which playa key role in the immune system. He believeshis is the only vaccine in development that includes the T cell strategy.

Its a very sophisticated approach of not just throwing things at a wall and seeing what sticks, Soon-Shiong said inthe video. In the long run, we need to find out through clinical trials. Thats where we are now.

We wishSoon-Shiong and other researchers luckin theirrace to develop a safe and effective COVID-19 vaccine.

We are making critical coverage of the coronavirus available for free. Please consider subscribing so we can continue to bring you the latest news and information on this developing story.

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Editorial | Race is on to develop COVID vaccine - TribDem.com

Need to focus on silent transmission of Covid-19, say experts – Telangana Today

Hyderabad: Researchers, epidemiologists and experts are increasingly pointing towards silent transmission of SARS-CoV-2 as a major factor, if not addressed quickly would lead to a prolonged fight to contain the spread of the Covid-19 infections, not only in the States but across the Country.

At present, the ongoing response to Covid-19 pandemic in almost all the Indian States including Telangana is to focus on symptom-based isolation of positive patients. And yet, the cases of Covid-19 have continued to surge not only here but in the entire country, which is a clear indication that public health experts might be overlooking silent transmission of SARS-CoV-2 from pre-symptomatic and asymptomatic cases.

Pre-symptomatic cases are those persons who are Covid-19 positive but are yet to develop symptoms while asymptomatic cases are those cases that are positive but will not have the typical Covid-19 symptoms at all.

Professor of Molecular Medicine and founder of Scripps Research Institute, United States, Dr Eric Topol recently highlighted a US-based study titled The Implications of silent transmission for the control of Covid-19 outbreaks, which was published on July 6 in the peer-reviewed journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS).

Majority of Covid-19 infections are attributable to silent transmission from a combination of pre-symptomatic and asymptomatic infections. To control outbreaks, the silent infections must be detected and isolated, Dr Eric Topol on Twitter said.

In fact, a few days later, Chief Scientist of World Health Organisation (WHO), Dr Soumya Swaminathan took to the social media platform and referred to the same PNAS study and said Pre-symptomatic patients can transmit Covid-19, highlighting the importance of surveillance and isolation of symptomatic cases and quarantining of close contacts.

The study found that the majority of incidences of Covid-19 infections may be attributable to silent transmission from a combination of pre-symptomatic stage and asymptomatic infections. Consequently, even if all the symptomatic cases are isolated, outbreak may nonetheless unfold, the study said.

Researchers said that silent disease transmission during the pre-symptomatic and asymptomatic stages are responsible for more than 50 per cent of the overall attack rate in Covid-19 outbreaks.

Furthermore, such silent transmission alone can sustain outbreaks even if all symptomatic cases are immediately isolated. The results corroborate recent contact tracing studies indicating a substantial role of pre-symptomatic transmission among 243 Covid-19 cases in Singapore and 468 Covid-19 cases in China, the study said.

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Need to focus on silent transmission of Covid-19, say experts - Telangana Today

100 days on from Megxit, have Harry and Meghan got what they wanted? – Yahoo Sports

At the end of March, 100 days ago, Prince Harry and Meghan Markle formally ended their time as senior royals.

The couple had carried out hundreds of engagements and a handful of royal tours abroad, but decided they wanted to pursue their own path, seeking financial freedom and the ability to live in North America for some of the time.

They remain members of the Royal Family of course, keeping their titles of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex and choosing to stop using their HRH stylings.

In a world in the grips of the coronavirus pandemic, much of what they hoped and planned to do has been put on hold.

So what did they want, and what have they got in 100 days? And how does the Royal Family look without them?

In a statement on their website when they stood back, they said the move to be private individuals will remove the supposed public interest justification for media intrusion into their lives.

The couple moved to Los Angeles, the duchesss hometown, in late March, which is known to be a city where it is hard to escape paparazzi.

They have found themselves the subject of intrusive photos, with drones flying over their home and photographers walking along a path which looked into their garden.

But the lockdown may have helped them, as they have to carry out much of their work from home, and can choose limited places to go to. For example, they released images through the Homeboy Industries charity after volunteering there.

The duchesss ongoing court battle with the Mail On Sunday and the MailOnline does mean they continue to attract press, and they are having to reveal some information they perhaps would not want to.

The couple had hoped to use Sussex Royal as their brand when they left their senior royal roles, but they had to agree not to use the word royal in any jurisdiction.

Harry and Meghan had built up a huge following on their Instagram account, but they might have to start again when they launch Archewell, their new non-profit.

The name Archewell comes from the Greek word Arche, which means source of action. Its also the inspiration for their son Archies name.

The couple did not get to use the brand they want, and due to the pandemic, are having to bide their time on launching their new non-profit too.

But with their loyal following, they are likely to pick up plenty of support when they launch.

Read more: Why are Prince Harry and Meghan Markle stepping back as senior royals?

The couples main reason for stepping back was to achieve financial independence, and not rely on the public purse for their income.

As senior royals, about 5% of their annual income was from the Sovereign Grant the money paid by the taxpayer to the Royal Family to fund their duties, their travel and other expenses.

The rest of their money came from the Prince of Wales, Harrys father, who funded them through the Duchy of Cornwall.

A hundred days on, Harry and Meghan have signed up as speakers with an agency in New York, who have the likes of Barack and Michelle Obama on their books.

Harry and Meghan are signed up as speakers with a New York agency. (Getty Images)

They appear though to have mostly been working with their charities patronages set up while they were royals and so while they dont represent the Queen on those, it also doesnt give them any income.

Security is costing the couple 7,000 a day, according to reports last month, as they inherited a firm which was being used at the home theyre living in in California.

They have said they are meeting this privately, but its not known exactly how.

Harry and Meghan wont be the only people whose plans for financial independence are on hold because of coronavirus.

The couple intended to split their time between North America and the UK, keeping their home in Windsor at Frogmore Cottage.

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They were living in Canada, on Vancouver Island, but moved to LA just before the border between the US and Canada was closed to prevent the spread of coronavirus.

The move was met with some criticism, because Canada is part of the Commonwealth, and so basing themselves there reflected the commitment they had made to the organisation.

They cant move freely between the two nations at the moment because of the coronavirus restrictions, but are paying a rental plus monthly fee on their home in Windsor so that they can keep it as their home and also pay off some of the renovation costs.

It means we could still see the couple and their son back in Britain when travel restrictions ease.

Harry and Meghan were living in Canada before they moved to the duchess's hometown. (Getty Images)

When Harry and Meghan first announced their plan, they said they hoped there would be a way for them to continue to represent the Queen, while also being financially independent.

They were told that would not be possible, but they were allowed to continue with many of the patronages they were given when they were senior royals.

Nothing they do now is on behalf of the Queen or the Royal Family.

While that is in contrast to what they said they wanted, it could be helpful that they have a new found freedom and they have been more outspoken that might be expected from working royals.

Both of them have spoken about racial injustice and racism in society, and have even appeared to criticise the Commonwealth and its history in a way they may not have felt able to if they were representing the Queen directly.

The couple don't carry out engagements on behalf of the Queen anymore. (Getty Images)

The couple said in January that they no longer wanted to work through the royal rota, the name given to a group of newspapers and broadcasters through which the Royal Family has engagements covered and shares news.

Since they stepped back, Harry and Meghan took the decision to cut off several of the papers who are on the rota, including the Daily Mail, and The Daily Mirror.

They wrote to the editors of four tabloid papers, to tell them they would no longer work with them, accusing them of basing stories on lies and writing for clickbait.

Its not something they would have been able to do if they were still senior royals.

It hasnt stopped those papers writing stories about them, but it has allowed the couple to deal directly with other media outlets.

There are some Royal Family members who have been more visible since the Duke and Duchess of Sussex stepped back, but no new names have been added to the working royals list.

Its long been said that Prince Charles has wanted to slim down the monarchy, and he may have got his wish in ways he had not foreseen when his second son said he wanted to step back as a senior royal.

The Countess of Wessex and her husband, Prince Edward, were already working royals, but they have moved more to the forefront of royal duties, with Sophie being seen in public frequently during the pandemic.

As the youngest of Charless generation of royals, Edward and Sophie were well placed to carry out engagements during coronavirus because they did not need to shield.

And as a confident and engaging public speaker, with a track record on speaking out against sexism and gender based violence, Sophie could find herself filling the role Meghan may have wished to take.

Family members like Sophie Wessex have been more visible since Harry and Meghan stepped back. (Getty Images)

The Queen made clear in her statement when she reached an agreement with Harry and Meghan that they would remain a valued part of my family.

She showed that would be the case when she invited the couple and their son Archie to spend some of their summer with her in Balmoral.

They accepted, and it is thought were planning to return to the UK for other events, like the Trooping the Colour, throughout the last few months.

However, its coronavirus that has put an end to that.

When the Queen celebrated her 94th birthday, she got a video call from Harry, Meghan and Archie in LA.

Whatever happens, the trio will still be members of the Queens family.

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100 days on from Megxit, have Harry and Meghan got what they wanted? - Yahoo Sports

Joint lives maintenance orders: are they dead? – IBB Law – IBB Solicitors

On the breakdown of a marriage, it is common for one party to be ordered to pay regular payments, known as periodical payments or spousal maintenance, to the other party who has less or no income with which to support themselves following the separation. These payments are usually made on a monthly basis to support the transition for one spouse to financial independence and effectively result in a clean break being (no ongoing financial relationship) deferred until this support also terminates. The payments can be made for a defined period of time, for example 3- years or as is most common. until the youngest child turns 18 or ceases full-time secondary education (depending upon the ages of the children at the time). The rationale here is that at this time the party in receipt of the income is able to enhance their income more easily as they will not be held back by looking after the children, and will not have the cost of the children as they are considered adults at the age of 18 and therefore independent.

Another option for the Court in financial remedy cases in the past was something called a joint lives order. These allowed for the income to be paid by one party until the death (or in some cases retirement) of the other. Over recent years, there has been a noticeable move away from joint lives orders which can be lengthy and onerous. In recent years, the Court is certainly less willing to support this type of order than they were in the past and prefer to achieve a clean break for both parties as soon as possible. This involves both parties having to become financially independent and support themselves.

The case of Mills v Mills 2018 UKSC deals with cross-appeals by both parties regarding the variation of periodical payments, which had been ordered on a joint lives basis. The parties had divorced after a marriage of 15 years and resolved the financial issues by way of a consent order, in which it was agreed that the husband would make periodical payments to the wife at an annual rate of 13,200 due to the wifes lower earning capacity and ill-health. The husband appealed this aspect of the order on both the amount that he was ordered to pay and the term over which he was to pay this. The husband requested that this was capped at 10 years. The wife cross appealed that the amount should be increased, as she had incurred considerable debts since the divorce. As the wifes outgoings had increased due to choices she had made, the Judge declined to vary the order for periodical payments either upwards or downwards. As no fixed period could be identified that would allow the wife to adjust without undue hardship to the termination of income, the Judge held that the original order should remain. The payments were to continue at the same rate on an open-ended basis.

This was an approach that was adopted widely by the Family Court when dealing with cases involving a disparity between the parties income position and a justification as to why one party would not be able to enhance their income in the short term.

In a significant departure from the Mills V Mills previously known as the case that offered a meal ticket for life, the husband in the recent case of Waggott v Waggott 2018 EWCA successfully argued that a joint lives maintenance order should be capped to a non-extendable period of 3 years. Lord Justice Moylan held that the Judge in the first instance had failed to give proper consideration to the clean break principle and the wife would be able to adjust without undue hardship as she had substantial liquid capital of approximately 9.6 million to utilise as income.

Since the case of Waggott v Waggott, there has been a continued shift towards non-extendable terms for maintenance to encourage the receiving party to re-enter the workplace and become financially independent.

In April 2019, Lady Hale stated that she saw the goal of divorce settlements as being to give each party an equal start on the road to independent living. Each case will turn on its own facts, however it seems likely that joint lives orders are soon to be a thing of the past.

In summary, although there are often a range of issues in dealing with whether maintenance payments are justified and if so, the quantum and period over which the income is to be paid, one factor is at least clear. The Court is far less likely to consider it attractive to have an ongoing financial relationship between the parties for any length of time, if at all. The emphasis is now on how best to achieve a clean break for both parties as soon as is practicable. This could require one party having to enhance their income and earning potential sooner rather than later.

IBB Laws family law practice can provideexpert advice on all family law issues. To contact the family law team please email familylaw@ibblaw.co.ukor call03456 381 381.

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Joint lives maintenance orders: are they dead? - IBB Law - IBB Solicitors

Why is Notre Dame not in a conference? Four reasons why the Irish remain independent in football – Sporting News

Why won't Notre Dame's football program join a conference? Why does it insist on remaining independent while other Notre Dame athletic programs compete in the ACC? These questions are asked on a perpetual basis, especially in the context of scheduling and College Football Playoff debates. But Notre Dame's football program has a simple reason for remaining independent.

Because it can.

Some might call it opportunistic business. Others might call it arrogance. But the truth is Notre Dame football's brand is strong enough to warrant national attention every year, and the program knows it. NBC knows it, too, which is why the cable network broadcasts all Fighting Irish home football games and reportedly pays Notre Dame $15 million per year for the rights.

But Notre Dame would earn more money if its football program joined a conference, so finances are only part of the school'sreasoning when it comes to its football program's independence. The status is not going to changeanytime soon for the following four reasons.

MORE: What if Notre Dame had joined the Big Ten?

In 1991, Notre Dame signed a five-year, $38 million television contract with NBC so the network could broadcast all Fighting Irish home games. Notre Dame at the time was three years removed from its 11th national championship. Coach Lou Holtz was entering his sixth season in South Bend. NBC wanted to tie itself to such a powerful brand.

Almost 20 years later, the only thing that has changed is the amount of money NBC is handing over to Notre Dame for the right to broadcast its home footballgames. In 2013, NBC announced a new, 10-year contract with Notre Dame that would begin in 2016 and run through 2025. The school reportedly gets $15 million per year in the deal.

According to ESPN, Notre Dame at the time said it wouldcontinue using the revenuefrom the NBC contract to fund itsfinancial-aid endowment for the general student body (not including athletes), and that since 1991, more than 6,000undergraduates hadreceived almost$80 million in aid generated by the TV deal. Per the report, Notre Dame also uses the TV moneyto supportdoctoral fellowships in its graduate school and MBA scholarships in its Mendoza College of Business.

While it does not completely add up, the TV money helps cover what Notre Dame football would earn from a Power 5 conference payout. The ACC in 2019, for example, reportedly distributed an average of $29.5 million to its 14 schools based on its$465 million revenue (the least of the Power 5 conferences). Notre Dame received just $7.9 million.

"There is no financial advantage to Notre Dame being independent in terms of operations, Notre Dame athletics director Jack Swarbricktold The Athletic last year. "It costs us money. We would be much better off all in with the ACC or any Power 5 conference.

"But it is the broader value it produces. And this is the dynamic thats always a bit hard to articulate and engage in for the fans just focused on whether youre going to win the national championship. That is very important to all of us, but the decisions we make dont just drive to that question.

One small financial advantage to Notre Dame football remaining independent, though, is the fact thatthe College Football Playoff awards a base amount of money to independent programs regardless of whether they make the Playoff, and Notre Dame gets the most. According to Business of College Sports, Notre Dame was awardedmore than $28 million over the first five years of the CFP while participating in thePlayoff only once.

In 2018, Forbes listed Notre Dame as the seventh most valuable college football team with a revenue of $112 million and a profit of $72 million.

The program is doing just fine financially as an independent.

With its all-but-football deal in the ACC, Notre Dame football doesn't get the same conference revenue share otherprogramsget. But it also is not obligated to play what otherwise might be a boring (and in many cases, weak) schedule almost completely full of ACC opponents.

Notre Dame is obligated to play just five ACC opponents per year, and the rest of the schedule is, for the most part, a blank slate of possibilities. Last year (and in 2017) the Fighting Irish played Georgia. They've renewed their rivalry with Michigan over the last couple seasons. Texas and Oklahoma have clashed with Notre Dame in the last decade. Therivalry games with USC,Stanford and Navy are protected.

This is a great deal for Notre Dame football fans, who don't have to watch their team play the same eight or nine teams every year. And Notre Dame football deserves credit for generally scheduling tough opponents in those open, non-ACC slots.

The TV networks love this, too. ESPN/ABC routinely broadcasts Notre Dame away games because of the ratings draw the program is, and those ratings are amplified when the Fighting Irish play in big games. Last year's Notre Dame-Georgia game was such a big deal toCBS, the networksacrificedits onlyprime-time window of the seasonto show the game at 8 p.m. ET and forced itself tobroadcastLSU-Alabama in its 3:30 p.m. ET window later in the season.

Notre Dame vs. Georgia ended up being the second-highest rated game of the regular season followed by, of course, LSU vs. Alabama.

When Notre Dame reached the BCS championship game in 2012, it was aided by a win at No. 8 Oklahoma in late October. When Notre Damereached the College Football Playoff in 2018, wins over No. 14 Michigan and No. 7 Stanford boosted the team's resume. The Fighting Irish might not have had title chances either year had the programscheduled cupcakes.

Notre Dame football gets (almost) all of the benefits associated with playing in the ACC. And the ACC gets (almost) all of the benefits of such a high-profile programbeing part of its conference. Thismarriage, established in 2014, is built to last.

And barring any unforeseen circumstances, it is a marriage that is contractually obligated to last. Three years ago, the ACC announced an extension of its football agreement with Notre Dame that will last through at least 2037.

The advantages for Notre Dame are simple: It gets a portion of ACC revenue, participates in the conference's bowl tie-ins and, perhaps most importantly, preserves its football independence.

The advantages for the ACC are equally simple: It gets the TV ratings and attendanceboosts associated withNotre Dame away games, and if Notre Dame were to give up its football independence, it would be obligated to join the ACC.

"Based on my background, I realized Notre Dame probably wasnt going to go all in (with the ACC), North Carolina athletics director Bubba Cunninghamtold The Athletic when asked about the conference's acceptance of Notre Dame without football. Theres essentially three reasons why, and as long as those three reasons are there, they dont need to.

"They need to have access to the (national) championship. They need to maintain a television contract. They need a place for their Olympic sports in a competitive league. If they have those three things, theyre going to maintain their independence.

"If any one of those three are not available, theyll have to reconsider.

Notre Dame considers itself a national school with a national footprint. Likewise, and as the TV ratings prove, Notre Dame football is a national brand. So preserving that broad relevance is important for a program that doesn't want its games confined to one region.

Swarbrickis proud to say no other college football team has played in Los Angeles, Chicago andNew York in the same season, and that Notre Dame has done it nine times.

"Thats the role football has to play at Notre Dame, Swarbricktold The Athletic. "Thats how we contribute to help uniquely position this university."

AddedJohn Baumer, a Notre Dame alum and donor who is a senior partner at a private equity firm in California: "It is a little bit of the United Nations in South Bend, which is great, because its very different dynamic than other schools. Regardless of where you live in the country, theres a good chance, because of that independence, youre going to see Notre Dame rolling through every year, every few years.

"That keeps people proud of their institution, and youd lose that if youd go into the Big Ten or the ACC. It would be such a regionalized schedule that I think that would make it tougher to maintain those relationships with the alumni deep into their careers, especially later in their careers when theyre more in the mode of giving back. I think thats critical.

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Why is Notre Dame not in a conference? Four reasons why the Irish remain independent in football - Sporting News