Why are scientists trying to manufacture organs in space? – Livescience.com

Gravity can be a real downer when you are trying to grow organs.

That's why experiments in space are so valuable. They have revealed a new perspective into biological sciences, including insights into making human tissues.

Gravity influences cellular behavior by impacting how protein and genes interact inside the cells, creating tissue that is polarized, a fundamental step for natural organ development. Unfortunately, gravity is against us when we try to reproduce complex three dimensional tissues in the lab for medical transplantation. This is difficult because of the intrinsic limitations of bio-reactors used on Earth.

I am a stem cell biologist and interested on brain health and evolution. My lab studies how the human brain is formed inside the womb and how alterations in this process might have lifelong consequences to human behavior, such as in autism or schizophrenia. Part of that work includes growing brain cells in space.

To build organized tissues in the lab, scientists use scaffolds to provide a surface for cells to attach based on a predetermined rigid shape. For example, an artificial kidney needs a structure, or scaffold, of a certain shape for kidney cells to grow on. Indeed, this strategy helps the tissue to organize in the early stages but creates problems in the long run, such as eventual immune reactions to these synthetic scaffolds or inaccurate structures.

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By contrast, in weightless conditions, cells can freely self-organize into their correct three-dimensional structure without the need for a scaffold substrate. By removing gravity from the equation, we researchers might learn new ways of building human tissues, such as cartilage and blood vessels that are scaffold-free, mimicking their natural cellular arrangement in an artificial setting. While this is not exactly what happens in the womb (after all the womb is also subject to gravity), weightless conditions does give us an advantage.

And this is precisely what is happening at the International Space Station.

These experiments help researchers optimize tissue growth for use in basic science, personalized medicine and organ transplantation.

But there are other reasons why we should manufacture organs in space. Long-term space missions create a series of physiological alterations in the body of astronauts. While some of these alterations are reversible with time, others are not, compromising future human spaceflights.

Studying astronauts' bodies before and after their mission can reveal what goes wrong on their organs, but provides little insights on the mechanisms responsible for the observed alterations. Thus, growing human tissues in space can complement this type of investigation and reveal ways to counteract it.

Finally, all forms of life that we know about have evolved in the presence of microgravity. Without gravity, our brains might have evolved in a different trajectory, or our livers might not filter liquids as it does on Earth.

By recreating embryonic organ formation in space, we can anticipate how the human body in the womb would develop. There are several research initiatives going on in my lab with human brain organoids at ISS, designed to learn the impact of zero gravity on the developing human brain. These projects will have profound implications for future human colonization (can humans successfully reproduce in space?). These studies will also improve the generation of artificial organs that are used for testing drugs and treatments on Earth. Will better treatments for neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative conditions that affects millions of people come from research in space?

This article was originally published atThe Conversation.The publication contributed the article to Live Science'sExpert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

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Why are scientists trying to manufacture organs in space? - Livescience.com

Here Come the 4 Horsemen of the Techopolypse – The New York Times

You can call it Techpalooza.

The chief executives of four of the most powerful tech companies in the world Apple, Facebook, Google and Amazon have agreed to appear in late July before a congressional committee as part of an investigation focused on antitrust.

Representative David Cicilline, a Democrat from Rhode Island who has become one of the biggest critics of Big Techs enormous power, told me on Wednesday that Jeff Bezos of Amazon, Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, Sundar Pichai of Google and Tim Cook of Apple will testify in what could be an all-day event.

Mr. Cicilline said that the yearlong congressional investigation has included eight round-table discussions, 93 requests for information, 43 experts testifying and five hearings.

Its the first major look at antitrust in this industry in 50 years and a lot of people worldwide are watching how lawmakers deal with tech, he said. But throughout, we know it is impossible to properly conclude this without hearing from the decision makers themselves.

He said that all of the chief executives agreed to appear voluntarily and that logistics are still being worked out for what he hopes will be an in-person hearing in Washington. But safety concerns over the coronavirus may mean that the executives end up testifying remotely.

And while tech leaders have appeared before Congress in the past and there is often less illumination than noise at these kinds of hearings given the growing public alarm about the power of the tech giants, this gathering of the four horsemen of the Techopolypse could be an epic show. Winter may be coming for Silicon Valley.

Mr. Zuckerberg, Mr. Pichai and Mr. Bezos had indicated in letters previously that they were open to appearing at a hearing, after being invited by Mr. Cicillines antitrust subcommittee, while Apple had said that it was open to sending a top official.

Its clear that the chief executives wanted to appear together, not so much for support frenemies is about as close as I would describe them, and there is intense dislike between some of the companies but in the hopes that a group appearance will keep any one of them from being singled out for intense scrutiny. Some are suggesting that a multiday interrogation, with each chief executive facing a small number of experienced questioners, as well as real people they hurt, would be a better way to grill the tech moguls.

Still, if the lawmakers do their job in the planned format and ask pointed questions about the true impact of these companies power on competition, there could be some important moments.

This hearing will be part of a wider bipartisan inquiry into how the tech giants dominate the digital industry and hurt rivals and consumers.

Along with fines, politicians and regulators are contemplating new laws on privacy and competition, the repeal of a law that gives platforms broad immunity for content on their sites, and, perhaps most drastically, breaking them up.

And while each company has different problems such as a damaging role in the spread of disinformation and hate speech (Hello, Facebook!) the near monopolistic power of their services and what to do about it is the focus of the House investigation.

We have very serious concerns about the absence of competition, Mr. Cicilline said. So we are interested in a wide range of things like their acquisitions, bullying, market power, their favoring of their products and services.

While the House has been conducting its investigation, the Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission have also been looking into competition in tech. So, too, have state attorneys general and also international regulators, most notably the European Commission under its antitrust head, Margrethe Vestager.

Too bad Ms. Vestager wont be asking these tech titans the questions she is the bane of the tech industrys existence, along with Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts. How the hearing will be conducted will be critical.

No surprise that I prefer public grillings with a side of shame, but more important will be how the companies portray themselves and how they differentiate themselves. While its convenient to apply the catchall term Big Tech to them, they are not a monolith and some in this group are further along in understanding that with great power comes great responsibility and, more important, accountability.

Hopefully, that is what we are going to finally see at the hearing. Mr. Cicilline said the House will issue a report of its findings later in the year, along with recommendations.

He also said that he had not been an expert in antitrust issues before he took over the helm of the antitrust subcommittee, but that the more I have studied and learned, the more terrifying the power of their large digital platforms is made clear, including the impact on innovation and start-ups.

At the heart of these inquiries, of course, is how can we continue to innovate as power has become more concentrated than ever. I have done innumerable interviews with start-ups and investors in which they talk about the chilling effect of big companies on their business.

Ask yourself, how easy it is to start an ad-based search engine, a social network, a major online retailer or an app platform when these companies completely cover the field with their money and power and might?

Answer: Its not easy, which is why I will try to grab a seat in the front row.

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Here Come the 4 Horsemen of the Techopolypse - The New York Times

New records show 5,000+ contracts between big tech and the Pentagon – Business Insider – Business Insider

Ties between Silicon Valley and the Pentagon are deeper than previously known, according to thousands of previously unreported subcontracts published Wednesday.

The subcontracts were obtained through open records requests by accountability nonprofit Tech Inquiry. They show that tech giants including Google, Amazon, and Microsoft have secured more than 5,000 agreements with agencies including the Department of Defense, Immigrations and Customs Enforcement, the Drug Enforcement Agency, and the FBI.

Tech workers in recent years have pressured their employers to drop contracts with law enforcement and the military.

Google workers revolted in 2018 after Gizmodo revealed that Google was building artificial intelligence for drone targeting through a subcontract with the Pentagon after some employees quit in protest, Google agreed not to renew the contract. Employees at Amazon and Microsoft have petitioned both companies to drop their contracts with ICE and the military, but neither company has caved to the demands.

The newly-surfaced subcontracts published by Tech Inquiry show that the companies' connections to the Pentagon run deeper than many employees were previously aware. Tech Inquiry's research was led by Jack Poulson, a former Google researcher who left the company in 2018.

"Often the high-level contract description between tech companies and the military looks very vanilla and mundane," Poulson told NBC News. "But only when you look at the details of the contract, which you can only get through Freedom of Information [Act] requests, do you see the workings of how the customization from a tech company would actually be involved."

Subcontracts come about when one contractor can't carry out all the duties of their federal contract and hires a third party to fulfill certain aspects. In many cases, military and law enforcement contractors subcontracted with Google, Amazon, and Microsoft for services like cloud computing and data processing.

The research shows that Microsoft has over 5,000 subcontracts with law enforcement, while Amazon and Google each have several hundred subcontracts.

A Microsoft spokesperson declined to comment.

Representatives for Google and Amazon did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

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New records show 5,000+ contracts between big tech and the Pentagon - Business Insider - Business Insider

Dow gains more than 400 points after big tech rally, Amazon and Netflix hit records – CNBC

Stocks closed sharply higher on Monday, led by strong gains in the tech sector, as Wall Street built on the momentum from last week's solid performance and shook off a continued rise in coronavirus cases.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 459.67 points, or 1.8%, to 26,287.03. The S&P 500 popped 1.6% to end the day at 3,179.72. The Nasdaq Compositehit an all-time high, surging 2.2% to 10,433.65.

There were a few reasons for the bullish lift to start the week:

"The economy is doing a lot better than most of the economists think," said Jeff Saut,chief investment strategist atCapital Wealth Planning, to CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Monday. "We may stall here for a while into the fall, into September, October, November, but I think you're going to get a rocket ship coming in the fall of this year...I think the S&P 500 is going to trade above 4,000."

Monday's gains came even asthe number of coronavirus cases kept surging globally, raising concerns about the world economy and its recovery from the pandemic.

The World Health Organization said Saturday that more than 200,000 coronavirus cases were confirmed over a 24-hour span, a record. At a regional level, the biggest spike was seen in the Americas, where nearly 130,000 new cases were confirmed.

In the U.S., coronavirus-related hospitalizations grew in more than 20 states, including, Florida, Texas, Arizona and Georgia.

"We are currently experiencing a spike in Covid-19 cases, particularly in the sunbelt states that were in the vanguard of loosening social distancing restrictions to facilitate the reopening of their economies," said Marc Chaikin, CEO of Chaikin Analytics, in a post.

"That reopening momentum has been halted by the spike in Covid-19 cases and the temptation to translate this into a bearish outlook for stocks is strong," he added. "Fatalities have not spiked, however, but are a lagging indicator. Thus the next two weeks are critical for a number of reasons."

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Dow gains more than 400 points after big tech rally, Amazon and Netflix hit records - CNBC

Big Tech’s Washington hearing will be a spectacle for the ages – Financial Post

Strength in numbers or guilt by association?

When Jeff Bezos, Tim Cook, Sundar Pichai and Mark Zuckerberg appear together to answer questions from U.S. lawmakers in the coming weeks, it could be a watershed moment for Big Tech.

Their appearance before a House committee looking into whether Amazon.com Inc., Apple Inc., Alphabet Inc. and Facebook Inc. unfairly freeze out competition will mark the first time Congress has tried to hold Big Techs leaders jointly to account. The corporate power on display not to mention the combined wealth of a quarter of a trillion dollars will be unlike anything lawmakers have faced before.

The group hearing before the House judiciary committee, which the CEOs agreed to this week, means that they will escape the sort of grilling they could have expected had they appeared individually. There wont be time for lawmakers to drill too deeply into the complexities of the companies very different markets and business models.

But the spectacle of a joint hearing could more than make up for that by emphasizing their combined economic power. It also offers the chance to emphasize questionable business tactics they have in common such as the use of their dominant platforms to freeze out competitors and favour in-house services, whether by directing search queries (Google), promoting favoured products (Amazon) or integrating in-house services more closely with their hardware (Apple). If Big Techs critics were looking for the symbolic moment when the industry could be held to account, this could be it.

Inevitably, the hearing will be dismissed as political theatre though that will not lessen the anticipation. Theatrics count in the realm of antitrust, where investigations are often carried forward on the strength of political momentum and public opinion, even if any sanctions ultimately have to stand the test of court oversight. For politicians trying to drive home the need for action, there may be no better opportunity.

Congressional hearings that take the top leadership of entire industries to task have an honourable tradition. It is one that should make the tech bosses wary. Lining up a group of CEOs and getting them to raise their right hands in unison to be sworn in then sitting them shoulder to shoulder at a desk has obvious courtroom symbolism. It isnt just the imagery that matters: the process is also psychologically significant, throwing a group of wealthy corporate bosses, accustomed in the safety of their executive suites to feeling invulnerable, on to the defensive.

When the men in suits who controlled Big Tobacco were arrayed together on Capitol Hill in 1994, it became a turning point in forcing their industry to pay out billions of dollars in damages. Big Auto got a grilling in 2008, when the heads of the largest U.S. carmakers came cap in hand to Congress in the depths of the financial crisis to ask for a bailout (it didnt help that all three turned up in their corporate jets).

It will be harder for the lawmakers to land a similar blow on Big Tech. The pandemic is likely to rob the occasion of some of its dramatic potential. Rather than sitting alongside each other, facing a circle of inquisitors on an elevated platform, the four are more likely to be seen side by side in video windows on a Zoom screen. But, properly stage-managed, there should still be plenty of opportunity to make an impact.

By marshalling the meeting of the four CEOs, David Cicilline, the House judiciary committee chairman, has shown a keen awareness of the power of the moment. The canny Democratic congressman from Rhode Island has methodically worked through the detailed complaints of Big Techs critics, and called witnesses from the tech companies, in a series of hearings over the past year. He now has a chance to draw out the highlights, and to underline how much is at stake.

There are obvious pitfalls. One to avoid will be the spectacle presented by Zuckerbergs appearance before both branches of Congress after the Cambridge Analytica scandal came to light. The anger among politicians was palpable and the Facebook chief executive was widely criticized for being evasive. But he still managed to neutralize the political attacks, largely because of the uncoordinated and unfocused nature of the hearings.

Devising a format where the important issues can be aired at a high enough level, while at the same time leaving time to dig into the most egregious behaviour of the dominant tech companies, will be difficult. But if properly managed, it could prove an uncomfortable moment for leaders of some of the worlds most powerful companies.

2020 The Financial Times Ltd.

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Big Tech's Washington hearing will be a spectacle for the ages - Financial Post

Samsung needs a splashy product for its splashy product launch – The Verge

The last big tech event I attended in person was Samsungs launch of the Galaxy S20 line of smartphones. Now Samsung will join everybody else in tech by trying to capture some semblance of that experience and hype in a purely online event with the upcoming Unpacked event scheduled for August 5th.

We are, of course, expecting to see the Galaxy Note 20 lineup announced that day. Though the rumors initially waffled a bit on what exactly that lineup would entail, more recent leaks point to a Note 20, a Note 20 Plus (which will be bigger), and a Note 20 Ultra (which will be... Ultra, whatever that means).

In addition to the Note 20 line, there are plenty of other Samsung devices that are due for an imminent release. Theres the 5G version of the Galaxy Z Flip folding phone, the Galaxy Z Fold 2 (rumors point to Z being Samsungs brand for screens that bend), the Galaxy Watch 3 smartwatch, and also new earbuds that are bean-shaped (yes really).

If all of these devices get announced, then it will be obvious that Samsung is hoping to make a splash with this event. Not to put too fine a point on it, but the company is broadcasting that intention quite clearly with a literal metallic paint splash on the invite.

As is Tradition, I will now proceed to overanalyze the image provided in a tech invitation. But while the normal rules require me to guess what products this image portends, instead I think it speaks to the psychology behind those products. Is it a halo? The drooping crown of a deposed king? Im just going to with saying it is what it looks like: a splash. Heres what it means: if the rumors hold true, this summers Unpacked event will see Samsung throw a bunch of ideas into the water to see what floats.

I get the feeling that Samsung is casting about for a halo device (something else that image could resemble, maybe). A halo device needs to impress everybody and draw people to the store, but not necessarily be the thing those people buy and walk out with. Will that be the Note 20, the Z Flip, or the Z Fold 2? I doubt Samsung itself knows the answer to that.

Me neither but my pessimistic take is Fold 2 or bust. Lets just review the contenders.

The Note 20 will surely be fine, but it will be laden with two problems. First, the spec-chasers will know that its just a Galaxy S20 with a stylus. Second, Samsungs big bet this year was on a new camera sensor that has been ...fine at best and problematic at worst.

Samsung was hoping for a generational leap, but instead tripped and has been trying to recover ever since. Reportedly, the Note 20 wont try to recreate the so-called 100X zoom but it will keep using that problematic 108-megapixel sensor. Even though Samsung has done much to improve it since the launch of the Galaxy S20 Ultra, its still worrisome.

The Galaxy Z Flip is genuinely better than any other clamshell folding phone (the main competitor being the new Razr), but the big issue I have with it is that it costs too much. I dont know whos clamoring for it to cost more. A 5G variant isnt the splash Samsung needs.

The Galaxy Watch? Itll be the best smartwatch for Android phones, which given the state of the competition means bupkis. As for the earbuds, all I want is for Samsung to have the self-confidence to actually call them beans. Tech is too self-serious these days. Give me Ear Beans.

But Ear Beans arent it either. Which leaves us with the Galaxy Z Fold 2 (or whatever it will be called. Im sure Samsung will throw a 5G in the name there in exchange for a carrier kickback).

I had a front-row seat to the disastrous Galaxy Fold launch in April of last year anytime your phone breaks spontaneously in the hands of several reviewers, thats bad. Samsung did eventually re-release the Fold (at its sky-high $1,980 price), but you wouldnt blame the company if it decided to just pull back on that whole folding tablet thing for a year or two.

Nope. If the rumors are true, the Fold 2 is coming. Now that is confidence. Rumors on what it will or wont be are a little more sparse than Id normally expect for a Samsung phone at this stage a larger outer screen, no stylus, and 5G. I also assume itll have that ultra-thin glass screen from the Z Flip. There will be more to the story, but that phone has a better shot at being a halo device than anything else.

Why does Samsung need a halo device? Because Chinese phone makers are nipping at its heels for marketshare (if not outright winning in lots of regions) and Samsung has staked its reputation on innovation. You can find a phone with 90 percent of what you get in a flagship Samsung phone while spending hundreds less so Samsung really needs to wow you with the other 10 percent.

The best wireless earbuds to buy right now. Im with Chris Welch on this one. After bouncing between five different BT headphones (AirPods Pro, Pixel Buds, Sony 1000XM3, OnePlus neckbuds, and the Galaxy Buds) for the past month, the Galaxy Buds are the ones I use the most now and notably, I use them with my Mac, iPhone, and Android phone. Would I like noise cancellation? Sure, but its not as much of a priority for me now that I dont commute by train. Id also like these headphones to switch between devices more seamlessly, but at least theyre better than Sony (nearly everybody is better than Sony in that regard).

Theres no one set of earbuds that is perfect at everything. For general everyday listening, the Samsung Galaxy Buds Plus are the best wireless earbuds. Got an iPhone? Nothing beats the AirPods Pro.

How I hosted my first charity stream, and how you can host one, too. Great walkthrough from Bijan Stephen:

If youre planning for your stream to be slightly more elaborate, I think the most important features to consider are length, guests, and a donation thermometer.

A portable display can make working from your dining room table easier. Dan Seifert:

Right now, the Ananta is available through a Kickstarter campaign, with deliveries promised for September of this year. As of this writing, the lowest price you can get the display for is $359, and it is expected to retail for a rather steep $599 when it hits general availability. If you go for the Kickstarter deal, the price is reasonable for how large, versatile, and well the Ananta works. But at full price, it may cost nearly as much as the laptop youre plugging it into, at which point you have to wonder if its worth it.

LG Gram 17 review: lighter than it looks. Monica Chin:

Its very unusual to see a 17-inch laptop under four pounds let alone under three. Couple that with a $1,499 starting price (our model currently goes for $1,699), and youre looking at a pretty niche target demographic. For that niche, though, this laptop tracks.

I built my own camera with a Raspberry Pi 4. This video from Becca Farsace is a treat. And it will encourage you to go try something weird and new during lockdown. Watch!

How to convert a PDF file for your Kindle.

This isnt a COVID-19 wave its a tsunami. Mary Beth Griggs has a much better metaphor for whats happening in the US right now.

Sports bubbles are good places to study COVID-19. Nicole Wetsman:

If the virus starts to spread within the isolation zones, though, it should be relatively easy to trace the path it traveled. In the outside world, its hard for people to remember where they go and who they interact with, says Angela Rasmussen, a research scientist at the Center for Infection and Immunity at the Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health. If youre on a tight schedule and living in a central location, like athletes in these environments are, that information is easy to access. You can work out, not only the number of contacts youve had, but the types of interactions you have with those people.

Tracing the link between your phone and the next pandemic. Justine Calma on how everything is connected. Mining for the minerals needed to make your phone puts people in situations that may cause spill over of viruses from animals to humans:

Ultimately, the way humans interact with animals and the environment can have grave consequences for our own well-being. Thats why scientists and public health experts have developed a strategy for addressing the ways in which the health of the environment and all of the people and wildlife living in it are connected. Its an approach called one health.

Microsoft announces new Windows 10 Start menu design and updated Alt-Tab. Tom Warren:

Essentially, the reduction in the color of the blocky tiled interface on the Start menu will simplify it slightly and make it easier to scan for the apps you use on a daily basis. Its a subtle change, but it certainly makes the Start menu look a little less chaotic and avoids many tiles sharing a similar blue color.

Microsoft announces Xbox Series X games event for July 23rd. How many times can you announce a new console?

Mmhmm turns your boring Zoom call into a Weekend Update-style TV show. If, like me, you briefly thought Oh I could probably pull all this off with OBS and a little work, youre missing the point. The whole key to this software is the ease of the UI, which could democratize different ways of presenting and having video conversations. I cant wait to try it out.

Google discontinues the Pixel 3A and 3A XL.

BMW is going all-in on in-car microtransactions. Well, I hate this! Sean OKane:

BMW now wants to take this to a far more specific level. The German automaker announced on Wednesday that all cars equipped with its newest Operating System 7 software will soon receive an update that makes it possible for the company to tinker with all sorts of functions in the car, like access to heated seats and driving assist features like automatic high beams or adaptive cruise control. And the company unsurprisingly plans to use this ability to make money.

Uber acquires meal delivery service Postmates for $2.65 billion.

Fading Light: the story of Magic Leaps lost mixed reality magnum opus. Adi Robertson:

Inside the company, though, a few dozen developers were building what they describe as one of Magic Leaps most exciting projects. Its called The Last Light: an interactive story about a young woman dealing with the death of her grandmother, designed to show the storytelling potential of mixed reality. And crucially, its creators say its finished but they arent sure if anyone will ever see it.

Theres no quick fix for climate change. Were so bad at understanding delayed results, as Justine Calma explains:

There is this fundamental misunderstanding of the climate system by non climate scientists trying to use trends on a 10 year time scale for climate change, when [with] climate change a 100 or 200-year timescale is relevant, explains Natalie Mahowald, a climate scientist at Cornell University who was not involved in the study. All our hard work today, we will not be able to see for 20 or 30 years this is the crux of the problem, Mahowald says. Humans have a really hard time doing something for future generations.

Quibi is flailing because no one at Quibi understands what Quibi is. Julia Alexander looks at the moves Quibi could make to survive as everybodys free trial runs out.

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Samsung needs a splashy product for its splashy product launch - The Verge

Stocks Close Higher With Amazon and Netflix Making Big Gains – Barron’s

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Wall Street returned from the long holiday weekend feeling bullish as U.S. stocks rallied on Monday and the Nasdaq Composite closed at a fresh high. Mondays advance was initially propelled by China, which saw the Shanghai Composite Index gaining 5.7%.

But as the day wore on, big tech drove the market even higher. The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 459.7 points, or 1.8%, to close at 26,287. The S&P 500 added 1.6%, while the Nasdaq Composite gained 2.2%.

Tech was largely behind Mondays rally with Amazon (ticker: AMZN) surging 5.8% to cross $3,000 apiece for the first time ever. Netflix (NFLX) shares climbed 3.6%, also notching an all-time high.

The Shanghai Composite surged to its highest level in over five years, and the Hang Seng rose nearly 4%, as a front-page editorial in Chinas state-run Securities Journal said a healthy bull market after the pandemic is now more important to the economy than ever.

That suggests the government is likely to do what it can to support the stock market, said Marshall Gittler, head of investment research at BDSwiss Group.

Markets across Asia and Europe rose. The Nikkei 225 rose 1.8% in Tokyo and the German DAX gained 1.6%.

Recent economic data has also helped fuel gains. Germany on Monday reported a 10.4% gain in new manufacturing orders for May, which nonetheless was 29.3% lower than a year ago.

The stock market gains come amid rising coronavirus case loads, particularly in southern parts of the U.S.

States containing over half the U.S. population now meet one or none of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-recommended gating criteria for reopening, point out analysts at Goldman Sachs, who separately downgraded their U.S. economic growth view for the year to a 4.6% contraction from a 4.2% downturn.

New York City entered the third phase of its reopening process on Monday, meaning that nail salons, tattoo parlors and other personal services are allowed to resume business. Indoor dining at restaurants is still on pause, however.

Oil wavered with the price of West Texas Intermediate crude falling 0.2% to $40.58 a barrel while the price of Brent crude popped 0.6% to $43.04 a barrel.

Goldman Sachs (GS) and Boeing (BA) led the Dow with shares climbing 5% and 3.9%, respectively. Walgreens Boots Alliance (WBA) was also a blue chip leader as shares rose 2.8%. Walgreens is set to report earnings on Thursday for its fiscal third quarter.

Uber Technologies (UBER) shares gained 6% after the company announced it would buy Postmates in a $2.65 billion stock deal. The move to buy the food-delivery service comes after attempts to acquire Grubhub (GRUB) fell through.

Dominion Energy (D) shares were down 11%. Dominion and Duke Energy (DUK) scrapped plans to build a natural gas pipeline under the Appalachian Trail due to legal uncertainty. Duke shares were off 2.5%.

Meanwhile, Warren Buffetts Berkshire Hathaway (BRK. B) announced Sunday it would buyDominions natural gas assets in a deal worth $10 billion, marking the Oracle of Omahas first major acquisition during the coronavirus pandemic. Berkshire stock was up 2.2% in Mondays trading.

Tesla (TSLA) shares jumped 13.5% following a bullish note from JMP Securities. Teslas shares have climbed roughly 40% over the last month. The electric car maker also appeared to mock short sellers over the holiday weekend by selling pairs of red shorts on its website.

Harley-Davidson (HOG) shares soared 7.4% after analysts at Citigroup initiated coverage on the motorcycle maker with a Buy rating and a $33 per share price target on hopes that Harley can stage a turnaround.

Write to Steve Goldstein at steven.goldstein@wsj.com and Carleton English at carleton.english@dowjones.com

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Stocks Close Higher With Amazon and Netflix Making Big Gains - Barron's

COVID-19 Impact and Recovery Analysis | Artificial Intelligence (AI) Market In BFSI Sector 2019-2023 | Focus On Autonomous Banking to Boost Growth |…

LONDON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Technavio has been monitoring the artificial intelligence (AI) market in BFSI sector and it is poised to grow by USD 11.94 bn during 2019-2023, progressing at a CAGR of over 32% during the forecast period. The report offers an up-to-date analysis regarding the current market scenario, latest trends and drivers, and the overall market environment.

Although the COVID-19 pandemic continues to transform the growth of various industries, the immediate impact of the outbreak is varied. While a few industries will register a drop in demand, numerous others will continue to remain unscathed and show promising growth opportunities. Technavios in-depth research has all your needs covered as our research reports include all foreseeable market scenarios, including pre- & post-COVID-19 analysis. Download The Latest Free Sample Report of 2020-2024

The market is concentrated, and the degree of concentration will accelerate during the forecast period. Amazon Web Services Inc., Google LLC, IBM Corp., Microsoft Corp., and Oracle Corp. are some of the major market participants. To make the most of the opportunities, market vendors should focus more on the growth prospects in the fast-growing segments, while maintaining their positions in the slow-growing segments.

Buy 1 Technavio report and get the second for 50% off. Buy 2 Technavio reports and get the third for free.

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Focus on autonomous banking has been instrumental in driving the growth of the market.

Technavio's custom research reports offer detailed insights on the impact of COVID-19 at an industry level, a regional level, and subsequent supply chain operations. This customized report will also help clients keep up with new product launches in direct & indirect COVID-19 related markets, upcoming vaccines and pipeline analysis, and significant developments in vendor operations and government regulations. https://www.technavio.com/report/report/global-artificial-intelligence-ai-market-in-BFSI-sector-industry-analysis

Artificial Intelligence (AI) Market in BFSI Sector 2019-2023: Segmentation

Artificial Intelligence (AI) Market in BFSI Sector is segmented as below:

To learn more about the global trends impacting the future of market research, download a free sample: https://www.technavio.com/talk-to-us?report=IRTNTR31823

Artificial Intelligence (AI) Market in BFSI Sector 2019-2023: Scope

Technavio presents a detailed picture of the market by the way of study, synthesis, and summation of data from multiple sources. The artificial intelligence (AI) market in BFSI sector report covers the following areas:

This study identifies the growing focus on personalized experience as one of the prime reasons driving the artificial intelligence (AI) market growth in BFSI sector during the next few years.

Technavio suggests three forecast scenarios (optimistic, probable, and pessimistic) considering the impact of COVID-19. Technavios in-depth research has direct and indirect COVID-19 impacted market research reports.Register for a free trial today and gain instant access to 17,000+ market research reports.

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Artificial Intelligence (AI) Market in BFSI Sector 2019-2023: Key Highlights

Table of Contents:

PART 01: EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

PART 02: SCOPE OF THE REPORT

PART 03: MARKET LANDSCAPE

PART 04: MARKET SIZING

PART 05: FIVE FORCES ANALYSIS

PART 06: MARKET SEGMENTATION BY END-USER

PART 07: CUSTOMER LANDSCAPE

PART 08: GEOGRAPHIC LANDSCAPE

PART 09: DECISION FRAMEWORK

PART 10: DRIVERS AND CHALLENGES

PART 11: MARKET TRENDS

PART 12: VENDOR LANDSCAPE

PART 13: VENDOR ANALYSIS

PART 14: APPENDIX

PART 15: EXPLORE TECHNAVIO

About Us

Technavio is a leading global technology research and advisory company. Their research and analysis focus on emerging market trends and provides actionable insights to help businesses identify market opportunities and develop effective strategies to optimize their market positions. With over 500 specialized analysts, Technavios report library consists of more than 17,000 reports and counting, covering 800 technologies, spanning across 50 countries. Their client base consists of enterprises of all sizes, including more than 100 Fortune 500 companies. This growing client base relies on Technavios comprehensive coverage, extensive research, and actionable market insights to identify opportunities in existing and potential markets and assess their competitive positions within changing market scenarios.

Continued here:

COVID-19 Impact and Recovery Analysis | Artificial Intelligence (AI) Market In BFSI Sector 2019-2023 | Focus On Autonomous Banking to Boost Growth |...

Artificial Intelligence Powered COVID-19 Diagnosis Tool to Seek Lung Scan Images from India – The Weather Channel

Representational image

Experts at University of British Columbia in Canada who are building an Artificial Intelligence-powered COVID-19 diagnosis tool with the help of resources from Amazon Web Services (AWS) are seeking lung scan images from India to refine their open source model, a researcher involved with the project said.

This tool is important because it becomes easier for doctors the world over to treat a patient if they know what disease they are suffering from and how badly that disease has infected that person.

The same goes with COVID-19 patients. Knowing that a person is COVID-19 positive can help, but this is not all that doctors want to know. They would do better if they knew how deep the infections were and how the patients were likely to respond to the treatments.

Now researchers know that lung images of COVID-19 patients can give them some clue to finding answers to these important questions.

That is the reason why a project was set up at the Cloud Innovation Centre (CIC) at the University of British Columbia (UBC) with the goal to develop and deploy an open source AI model capable of analysing CT scans of COVID-19 infected patients.

It aims to empower radiologists by providing metrics and statistical information about the infection that cannot normally be assessed by the human eye alone. The CIC at UBC is a public-private collaboration between UBC and AWS.

Recent literature suggests that the percentage of well-aerated-lung correlates to clinical outcomes, such as the need for ventilator support, ICU admission and death.

But the percentage of lung involvement, and inversely the percentage of well aerated lung, is difficult to accurately measure without advanced software tools, such as AI, said Savvas Nicolaou, Director of Emergency and Trauma Imaging at Vancouver General Hospital, as well as a Professor of Radiology at the University of British Columbia.

"We hope that utilising a machine to accurately calculate the lung involvement ratio and absolute volume will be a valuable metric for researchers to use to prognosticate patients with COVID-19 and other respiratory illnesses," Nicolaou told IANS in a video call.

The team leading the project worked with health centres around the world to assemble one of the largest international COVID-19 CT-scan datasets, but it could not immediately gather data from India at the start of the project due to the strict restrictions put in place in the country to fight the pandemic.

The dataset contains CT studies from countries such as Iran, Italy, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, and Canada to increase model generalisability, minimise bias, and establish an accurate model for any site.

The project dataset consists of COVID-19 positive scans as well as scans of patients with similar symptoms but are not COVID-19 positive.

By May this year, the "COVID-L3-Net" model was built on more than 1,100 CT scans. The team has collected another 3,100 scans from around the world that will be labeled to make the model even more accurate.

"The team welcomes scans from India. If radiologists or any medical professionals want to share their data sets and scans with the team, they need to reach out through the UBC Cloud Innovation Centre website," Nicolaou said.

"The team is also looking for researchers to test the model since it is in beta, and to receive feedback on the model," he said.

The data collaboration was possible due to an open-source tool called SapienSecure which was developed and released by a company named SapienML last year.

This open source app standardises the data de-identification of Personal Identifiable Information in medical imaging and helps to integrate directly into Amazon's storage service, Amazon S3, in the AWS Canada (Central) Region.

A team of more than 30 Vancouver General Hospital radiologists and UBC medical students coded the images, using software from MD.ai Inc.

Teams can remotely login, label and work on scans from home during this COVID-19 pandemic, all powered by Amazon compute instances.

"Right now, the team has released the model in pre-beta, and will be moving to beta soon. The goal is to have the model released in early September," Nicolaou said.

"The models keep getting better with more data, so we continue to collect more CT Scans from around the world," he added.

Continued here:

Artificial Intelligence Powered COVID-19 Diagnosis Tool to Seek Lung Scan Images from India - The Weather Channel

Artificial intelligence should be used to augment human creativity – not replace it – Bizcommunity.com

"It's easy for AI to come up with something novel just randomly. But it's very hard to come up with something that is novel and unexpected and useful." - John Smith, manager of Multimedia and Vision at IBM Research

Platforms such as Googles Smart Display and Dynamic Search and Facebooks Dynamic Creatives enable brands to automate the process of tailoring ads for different audiences and to do so at a highly granular level. In theory, this enables us to improve engagement and conversion by getting the right message to the right person at the right time.

But AI cannot be truly creative in the sense of using imagination to develop truly original ideas and make something. AI systems are limited by the original datasets humans give them to learn from. So, the question shouldnt be technology or creativity, but rather how AI can help creatives to meet their goals.

Getting it right isnt as simple as testing various combinations of assets to achieve the highest relevance for each person and to ensure the best results for the campaign goal. Its not just about putting together the right images and copy to address the needs of the user, but also about ensuring that the ad the person sees is interesting and emotionally engaging. Thats where human creativity comes in.

So where do brands, agencies and marketing teams go from here?

1. Start thinking about AI as an assistant for the creative team rather than a potential replacement for human insight and emotional intelligence. AI is invaluable and cost-effective for the rapid gathering of data and testing of different creative combinations, freeing up time for human creatives to dream up original thoughts and build emotionally engaging creative assets. Creatives and marketers will need to rapidly upskill to keep ahead of the tech advancements.

2. Marketers still need their creative agencies, perhaps more than ever. They should find ways to bridge the gaps between creative agencies and data & analytics teams and agencies. This will help them use data to drive better creative, while leveraging human strengths around cultural nuances, understanding human motivation, and original thinking.

3. Creative teams will need to move beyond the one killer concept or the one big idea towards developing multiple concepts that can be tested across various audience segments. The good news is that we can now try numerous ideas cheaply and rapidly without focus groups or surveys. This enables creatives to quickly create engaging assets and messages answering to different stages of the customer journey, and different consumer behaviours, demographics, interests and so forth.

4. Its time for media owners and digital media agencies to work more closely with creative agencies. A good media strategist will be able to offer a lot more value upfront when creatives are brainstorming rather than at the end. The role is no longer simply to select the best channels and propose the most suitable ad units, but also to help creatives to understand the potential of various channels and machine learning.

To close, here are some practical tips for AI-enabled creativity:

Excerpt from:

Artificial intelligence should be used to augment human creativity - not replace it - Bizcommunity.com

Forums held ahead of World Artificial Intelligence Conference – Chinadaily USA

A staff member demonstrates 5G-based remote control of a robot during the 2019 World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in East China's Shanghai, on Aug 29, 2019. [Photo/Xinhua]

Three forums were held in Korea, Singapore and Germany prior to the official kickoff of the World Artificial Intelligence Conference 2020 on Thursday, with experts discussing topics from AI application scenarios to cross-border AI collaboration, according to a news release by the organizing committee released on Tuesday, also known as "WAIC2020 Global Day".

The release stated that representatives attending the forum in Singapore mapped out AI's widespread adoption throughout retail, medical care, education and financial services, and vowed to strengthen cooperation with China, and especially Shanghai, a city aiming to build itself into a global AI highland.

A total of five international exchange programs are scheduled to be held before and after the conference commences. These include an international summit on smart city, investment, AI innovation salon, international talent and a special roadshow for promising AI projects.

At least three cooperation deals are expected to be signed during the end of the conference, the committee said.

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Forums held ahead of World Artificial Intelligence Conference - Chinadaily USA

VeChain Is Attending the World Artificial Intelligence Conference 2020 Hosted – AiThority

VeChain will be opening the first blockchain technology session in this conference, with our session titledblockchainize the future, power the economy.

The blockchain forum will be co-hosted by theShanghai Municipal Commission Of Economy And Informatization,Shanghai Finance Information Associationand several other large enterprises and organizations. VeChain will be sharing our experience in the blockchain deployment, integration and usage for various business scenarios and current successful users.

Recommended AI News:Azure DevSecOps Jumpstart Now Available In The Microsoft Azure Marketplace

Since the first WAIC in 2018, the event has become a grand meeting and festival, accumulating international influences across various industries. In line with the growing trend of the online new economy and digital transformation, this years conference will be inviting top-of-line tech enterprises, including Microsoft, Amazon, Alibaba,Tencent, Huawei and more.

This event will be the perfect avenue for VeChain to showcase our industry-leading blockchain infrastructure and technology. As the company responsible for opening the blockchain session of the WAIC conference, we have no doubt that our keynote will be closely listened to by other attendees and VIPs invited to the event.

Recommended AI News:Gryphon Investors Announces Majority Investment In 3Cloud

On20 April 2020,ChinasNational Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), the cabinet-level department that draws up policies and strategies for the direction of the Chinese economy,has expanded its definition of new infrastructure to include blockchain technology.

Investment in new infrastructure is expected to comprise 7%-12% of all infrastructure spending,with China International Capital Corporation (CICC) seeing new infrastructure investment of between 1-1.8 trillion yuan. As blockchain technology is becoming one of the major technical forces to boost the post-COVID economy, WAIC intends to open more discussions around its development.

With the theme of Intelligent Connectivity Indivisible Community, this Conference will be a high level platform attracting the most influential scientists and entrepreneurs around the world as well as government leaders to converse and talk about the technological frontiers, industry trends and provoking issues in forms of speeches and high-level forums.

VeChain will capitalize on this massive opportunity to pitch and share our experience and solutions to all stakeholders attending the conference. We are confident that our reputation and experience in solving pain points in the business world will convince even more partners to come onboard and expand our networking opportunities.

Recommended AI News:Scality Affirms Commitment To Open Source As Founding Member Of New Linux Foundation

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VeChain Is Attending the World Artificial Intelligence Conference 2020 Hosted - AiThority

ContractPodAi and Bowmans Partner to Bring Artificial Intelligence-Powered Contract Management to the African Market – Business Wire

LONDON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--ContractPodAi, the award-winning provider of AI-powered contract lifecycle management solutions, today announced that it is partnering with Bowmans, one of Africas leading corporate law firms, to introduce Bowmans clients to its advanced technology solution. All this allows corporate legal teams to work smarter, faster and with far greater impact during the contracting process.

ContractPodAi is one of the worlds most robust contract lifecycle management (CLM) technologies, providing corporate legal counsels with a platform that provides end-to-end contract management capabilities like a smart contract repository, contract automation, document e-signatures, seamless workflows, third party contract review, negotiating and collaboration tools, and AI-based analytics.

As part of its digitisation strategy, Bowmans is strengthening its technology solutions toolkit. The firm is partnering with ContractPodAi because it offers a robust and graphically intuitive contract management system that streamlines document automation processes.

Craig Kennedy, Head of Technology, Media and Telecommunications at Bowmans, said: Part of the value we add to our clients businesses is the ability to support them in exploring and identifying suitable digital solutions to streamline their legal services.

With ContractPodAi, we saw an opportunity to help them to focus on strategic initiatives by implementing a technology solution that replaces time-consuming manual efforts.

ContractPodAi offers customers intelligent AI functionality, built on the trusted IBM Watson, and Microsoft Azure AI platforms, right out-of-the box. Its like getting the safety of IBM and Microsoft with the speed of a startup. A big part of whether CLM technology is successful within a company is its adoption with the business users, and legal team. Beyond the intuitive graphical user interface, a client success manager (CSM) supports every customer. Digital transformation is a challenge for any industry, and legal is no exception. As such the CSM facilitates adoption and encourages internal advocacy and education of every rollout.

We are thrilled to partner with an innovative African law firm like Bowmans to introduce our contract management solution to the African market, said Sarvarth Misra, co-founder and CEO, ContractPodAi. It is exciting to work with a firm that embraces the use of technology and is dedicated to making their clients successes a priority.

Learn how ContractPodAi is empowering legal teams across the world at ContractPodAi.com.

About ContractPod Technologies (ContractPodAi)

A pioneer in the legal transformation space, ContractPodAi is now one of the worlds fastest growing legal tech companies. Customers include some of the worlds largest and highly regarded corporations. ContractPodAi is an award-winning easy to use, intuitive and affordable end-to-end contract lifecycle management solution aimed at corporate legal departments. It enables users to assemble, automate, approve, digitally sign and manage all their contracts and documents from one place.

Our platform is built in partnership with some of the most trusted technologies in the industry including IBM Watson AI, Microsoft Azure, DocuSign and Salesforce. ContractPodAi is headquartered in London and has global offices in San Francisco, New York, Glasgow, Mumbai and Toronto. More information is available at ContractPodAi.com.

About Bowmans

With over 400 specialist lawyers, Bowmans draws on its unique knowledge of the business and socio-political environment in Africa to advise on a wide range of legal issues.

Everywhere it operates, Bowmans offers its clients a service that uniquely blends expertise in the law, knowledge of the local market and an understanding of their businesses. The firms aim is to assist its clients to achieve their objectives as smoothly and efficiently as possible while minimising the legal and regulatory risks.

Clients include corporates, multinationals and state-owned enterprises across a range of industry sectors as well as financial institutions and governments.

See more here:

ContractPodAi and Bowmans Partner to Bring Artificial Intelligence-Powered Contract Management to the African Market - Business Wire

How Machine Learning Will Impact the Future of Software Development and Testing – ReadWrite

Machine learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI) are frequently imagined to be the gateways to a futuristic world in which robots interact with us like people and computers can become smarter than humans in every way. But of course, machine learning is already being employed in millions of applications around the worldand its already starting to shape how we live and work, often in ways that go unseen. And while these technologies have been likened to destructive bots or blamed for artificial panic-induction, they are helping in vast ways from software to biotech.

Some of the sexier applications of machine learning are in emerging technologies like self-driving cars; thanks to ML, automated driving software can not only self-improve through millions of simulations, it can also adapt on the fly if faced with new circumstances while driving. But ML is possibly even more important in fields like software testing, which are universally employed and used for millions of other technologies.

So how exactly does machine learning affect the world of software development and testing, and what does the future of these interactions look like?

A Briefer on Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence

First, lets explain the difference between ML and AI, since these technologies are related, but often confused with each other. Machine learning refers to a system of algorithms that are designed to help a computer improve automatically through the course of experience. In other words, through machine learning, a function (like facial recognition, or driving, or speech-to-text) can get better and better through ongoing testing and refinement; to the outside observer, the system looks like its learning.

AI is considered an intelligence demonstrated by a machine, and it often uses ML as its foundation. Its possible to have a ML system without demonstrating AI, but its hard to have AI without ML.

The Importance of Software Testing

Now, lets take a look at software testinga crucial element of the software development process, and arguably, the most important. Software testing is designed to make sure the product is functioning as intended, and in most cases, its a process that plays out many times over the course of development, before the product is actually finished.

Through software testing, you can proactively identify bugs and other flaws before they become a real problem, and correct them. You can also evaluate a products capacity, using tests to evaluate its speed and performance under a variety of different situations. Ultimately, this results in a better, more reliable productand lower maintenance costs over the products lifetime.

Attempting to deliver a software product without complete testing would be akin to building a large structure devoid of a true foundation. In fact, it is estimated that the cost of post software delivery can 4-5x the overall cost of the project itself when proper testing has not been fully implemented. When it comes to software development, failing to test is failing to plan.

How Machine Learning Is Reshaping Software Testing

Here, we can combine the two. How is machine learning reshaping the world of software development and testing for the better?

The simple answer is that ML is already being used by software testers to automate and improve the testing process. Its typically used in combination with the agile methodology, which puts an emphasis on continuous delivery and incremental, iterative developmentrather than building an entire product all at once. Its one of the reasons, I have argued that the future of agile and scrum methodologies involve a great deal of machine learning and artificial intelligence.

Machine learning can improve software testing in many ways:

While cognitive computing holds the promise of further automating a mundane, but hugely important process, difficulties remain. We are nowhere near the level of process automation acuity required for full-blown automation. Even in todays best software testing environments, machine learning aids in batch processing bundled code-sets, allowing for testing and resolving issues with large data without the need to decouple, except in instances when errors occur. And, even when errors do occur, the structured ML will alert the user who can mark the issue for future machine or human amendments and continue its automated testing processes.

Already, ML-based software testing is improving consistency, reducing errors, saving time, and all the while, lowering costs. As it becomes more advanced, its going to reshape the field of software testing in new and even more innovative ways. But, the critical piece there is going to. While we are not yet there, we expect the next decade will continue to improve how software developers iterate toward a finished process in record time. Its only one reason the future of software development will not be nearly as custom as it once was.

Nate Nead is the CEO of SEO.co/; a full-service SEO company and DEV.co/; a custom web and software development business. For over a decade Nate had provided strategic guidance on technology and marketing solutions for some of the most well-known online brands. He and his team advise Fortune 500 and SMB clients on software, development and online marketing. Nate and his team are based in Seattle, Washington and West Palm Beach, Florida.

Excerpt from:

How Machine Learning Will Impact the Future of Software Development and Testing - ReadWrite

Protesting U.S. Immigration Policies, Artists Aim for the Sky – The New York Times

CASSILS The urgency of In Plain Sight has become paramount as people began to die from Covid-19 in detention camps. We had initially planned for this project to occur without any press, but when the pandemic hit, we launched our Instagram page that features short interviews with our artists and calls to action. Its been a great opportunity to take action. In recent months, Ive had 11 exhibitions canceled or paused. Almost every artist I know has, too.

There is a rich history of artists looking toward the sky for inspiration. Yves Klein used it as inspiration for his conceptual blue paintings. Recently, the artist Jammie Holmes flew George Floyds final words above five cities across the country. What other works have inspired your skytyping project?

ESPARZA Repellent Fence (2015) by the art collective Postcommodity was particularly important for us. They created a metaphorical suture along the migration path between the United States and Mexico with tethered balloons to speak about land art in relation to permanence and shifting landscapes. In the same way that they used the land to talk about the divisive power of colonial structures, we are hoping to index the sky as a symbol of inspiration and hope. And the sky is able to migrate messages across borders. When our message is skytyped above San Diego, the words will likely drift into Tijuana. And when our words are written above Los Angeles, they will have a shared orbital path, allowing phrases like Abolition Now and Stop Crimigration Now to coalesce into a circular message.

CASSILS We are also thinking of artists who have used the language of advertisement to get their points across. Artists like Lynda Benglis and Barbara Hammer. The AIDS Memorial Quilt was another important reference because it demonstrates how people can come together through a patchwork of activism.

Many artists involved with the project are also queer, which may or may not be a coincidence. We are thinking about the words of Jos Esteban Muoz, who wrote in 2009 that queerness exists for us as an ideality that can be distilled from the past and used to imagine a future. We see a liberation for queer, migrant and Black communities as deeply bound together because they are all rooted in the issues of white supremacy and colonization. Our jobs as queer artists is to imagine the future.

ESPARZA And we are putting the proposal of care, which is central to many queer communities, at the forefront of this project. We want to imagine what care looks like for people who are impacted by migrant detention and Covid-19.

CASSILS Bringing the skytypers into the fold has also been a unique experience. And with some messages being written in Cree, Farsi and Urdu, this will likely be the first time many people will see their own languages in the sky. There has also been a challenge to imagine how to write languages in the sky that dont use the Roman alphabet. Skytypers usually work in fleets of five planes each, so any image or letter must exist along a five-point matrix. For artists on the project, that means experimenting with the grid and drawing out words like freedom in Farsi or Urdu. Its interesting to note the challenges of what we can put into the sky, and how we might overcome those barriers.

In Plain Sight

Find out how to see the art at: instagram.com/inplainsightmap/

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Protesting U.S. Immigration Policies, Artists Aim for the Sky - The New York Times

What clients need to know about ESG investing – FT Adviser

With over 24 trillion in assets globally, an increase of 34 per centin just two years, it is unsurprising that Environmental, Social and Governance-linked (ESG) investment strategies continue to dominate financial headlines.

However, there remains a lack of clarity around how investors can benefit from more conscientious investing.

Key terms

ESG is a set of standards seeking to reduce negligent corporate behaviour that may lead to environmental degradation, armament sales, human rights violations, racial or sexual discrimination, harmful substances production, worker exploitation and corruption, though this list is by no means exhaustive and remains disputed.

Socially Responsible Investment (SRI) generally focuses on excluding sin-stocks from the investment pool based on negative screening guidelines.

This results in the selection of companies with strong SRI characteristics, such as those that have a positive influence on society or the environment.

One of the objectives of the screening process is to positively influence corporate behaviour and drive change.

Thematic investing is unconstrained by traditional geographic and sector demarcations focusing instead on top-down systemic shifts.

By this definition, within ESG, investors can apply capital to a variety of niche themes however broad or niche.

Impact investing positively screens candidates on their ability to generate favourable influence on society and the environment, minimise any detriment and generate positive returns.

A combination of public awareness, regulation and the imminent generational transfer of wealth are factors explaining the increase in demand.

Reasons for investing responsibly

Many investors recognise that long-term stable and sustainable investment returns depend on well governed social and environmental systems.

Companies that incorporate ESG risk management are better long-term custodians of investor capital, offer greater downside protection and can generate better long-term risk adjusted returns.

Initiatives and organisations looking todriving change

The United Nations Global Compact (UNGC) Principles.

Corporate sustainability creates long-term stakeholder value by means of a principles-based approach to business.

Commercial operations, at the very least, should meet fundamental standards in key areas of human rights, labour, environment and anti-corruption.

Effective integration of the UN's 10 Global Compact Principles, in addition to a culture of integrity, paves the way for long-term success.

The 10 Global Compact Principles are:

Human rights

1)Businesses should support and respect the protection of internationally proclaimed human rights and;

2) Make sure that they are not complicit in human rights abuses

Labour

3) Businesses should uphold the freedom of association and the effective recognition of the right to collective bargaining;

4) The elimination of all forms of forced and compulsory labour;

5) The effective abolition of child labour; and

6) The elimination of discrimination in respect of employment and occupation.

Environment

7) Businesses should support a precautionary approach to environmental challenges;

8) Undertake initiatives to promote greater environmental responsibility; and

9) Encourage the development and diffusion of environmentally friendly technologies.

Anti-Corruption

10) Businesses should work against corruption in all its forms, including extortion and bribery

United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

Goal 1: No Poverty

Goal 2: Zero hunger

Goal 3: Good heath andwell being

Goal 4: Quality education

Goal 5: Gender equality

Goal 6: Clean water and sanitation

Goal 7: Affordable andclean energy

Goal 8: Decent work andeconomic growth

Goal 9: Industry, innovation andinfrastructure

Goal 10: Reduced inequalities

Goal 11: Sustainable cities andcommunities

Goal 12: Responsible consumption andproduction

Goal 13: Climate action

Goal 14: Life below water

Goal 15: Life on land

Goal 16: Peace, justice andstrong institutions

Goal 17: Partnerships

The United Nations 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) address the global challenges humanity faces and are a blueprint to a better future.

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What clients need to know about ESG investing - FT Adviser

Capital punishment, immigration issues compel Iowa bishops to speak up – Crux: Covering all things Catholic

DAVENPORT, Iowa Iowas Catholic bishops are taking a prominent stand on three pressing federal issues, one involving the imminent execution of four federal death-row inmates, another on the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, and the third on the asylum system.

In a July 1 letter to President Donald Trump, the bishops of Iowas four dioceses requested clemency for Dustin Lee Honken and three other men facing capital punishment in the coming weeks. Honken, of Iowa, was convicted in 2004 of the horrific acts of killing five people, including two children and is scheduled to be executed July 17.

The bishops ask Trump to commute Mr. Honkens sentence, as well as the sentences of others to be executed this summer from death to life without the possibility of parole. It is a duty of the state to punish offenders and defend the common good and this would still be accomplished by commuting his sentence.

RELATED: Faith leaders urge president, attorney general to halt federal executions

Honkens conviction stemmed from his efforts to eliminate witnesses in his federal drug case, according to court records. Two of the five victims were men who planned to testify against Honken. The other three victims were a single, working mother and her 10-year-old and 6-year-old daughters.

A jury in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Iowa found Honken guilty of numerous offenses, including five counts of murder during the course of a continuing criminal enterprise, according to a June 15 U.S. Department of Justice news release.

The other men facing execution are:

Daniel Lewis Lee, a member of a white supremacist group convicted of murder in 1999 by an Arkansas district court jury.

Wesley Ira Purkey, who was convicted of murder in 2003 by a Missouri district court jury.

Keith Dwayne Nelson, who pleaded guilty in 2001 in a Missouri district court to charges related to the murder of a child.

Iowas bishops affirm a special need to offer sympathy and support for the victims of violent crime and their families.

We sincerely hope and pray for their consolation and healing. We also pray for the condemned and his family and friends, the bishops said. They are surely harmed by the choices he has made and they too suffer and will likely grieve his death. Even those who have committed great harm retain their human dignity and the capacity to reform, to love, and to be loved.

RELATED: Victims family asks for delay of federal inmates execution

It is our concern that the death penalty contributes to a growing disrespect for the sacredness of all human life, they continued. We believe that state-sanctioned killing would not deter or end violence, but instead perpetuate a cycle of violence. We oppose the death penalty to follow the example of Jesus, who both taught and practiced the forgiveness of injustice.

The letter is signed by Archbishop Michael O. Jackels of Dubuque and Bishops Thomas R. Zinkula of Davenport, R. Walker Nickless of Sioux City and William M. Joensen of Des Moines.

The Catholic Church teaches that capital punishment is inadmissible in all cases because it is an attack on the inviolability and dignity of the person (CCC 2267), Bishop Zinkula told The Catholic Messenger, newspaper of the Diocese of Davenport.

In his address to Congress during his apostolic visit to the U.S., Pope Francis called for the global abolition of the death penalty,' the bishop said. As our country struggles with systemic racism, it is important to note that it also exists in our criminal legal system in the unfair and biased application of the death penalty.

We cannot build a culture of life when the federal government puts people to death. We should be focused on protecting and preserving life, not carrying out executions.

In a statement released July 6, Iowas bishops expressed concern on many issues, but focused on two specifically, DACA and the U.S. asylum system.

Regarding DACA, they said, Since 2012, hundreds of thousands of young people have come forward, passed background checks, paid a fee, and received permission to live and work in America. These young people arrived in the U.S. as children, with their parents, and know America as their only home, the bishops said.

I know a number of Dreamers in our diocese, Bishop Zinkula said. They are fine young people who are woven into the fabric of our country and of our church. Dreamers are mothers and fathers, doctors and nurses, veterans of our military, hard-working college students, and parish leaders.

I cant imagine being brought to the U.S. by ones parents, being totally assimilated here, having no or minimal association with ones home country, living with the uncertainty and fear of ones life being completely uprooted by deportation.

He said the U.S. bishops have long supported Dreamers and their families. DACA recipients are called Dreamers after the proposed Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act, or DREAM Act, which would grant temporary conditional residency to these young people. It was first introduced in Congress in 2001 and has yet to pass.

The Iowa bishops called on the House and Senate and Trump to continue the DACA program and encourage Catholics to send comments to senators at https://justiceforimmigrants.org/category/action-alerts.

The Iowa bishops also opposed the administrations effort to essentially abolish the current asylum system. Under that system, individuals who successfully apply for asylum meet the definition of persons fleeing persecution in U.S. law. Such status allows them to remain in the country and receive services, if they are eligible.

A new, proposed law would violate domestic and international law, the bishops said. It also would violate asylum-seekers due process rights, foreclose asylum for those fleeing gender- and gang-based violence, and give asylum adjudicators unfettered discretion to deny asylum applications, the bishops said. They encourage the Department of Justice and the Department of Homeland Security to withdraw the proposed rules in their entirety.

Asylum is a lifeline for tens of thousands of vulnerable individuals, the bishops said. These rules, which would make accessing asylum extremely difficult if not nearly impossible for the vast majority of asylum-seekers, are morally wrong. If enacted, the United States will no longer be a leader in protecting the most vulnerable.

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Capital punishment, immigration issues compel Iowa bishops to speak up - Crux: Covering all things Catholic

‘Safety citizen’ makes point that defunding police will fail those most in need of crime fighting – Norfolk Daily News

George Floyds murder has changed many things, especially the world of law enforcement.

But it would be wise to reflect on desires to modify or improve law enforcement policies and efforts before letting those in favor of defunding the policy take control of the criminal justice reform agenda.

Developments in Seattle, Atlanta and elsewhere where violence, arson and vandalism occurred in response to high-profile police use of deadly force spurred the demands for defunding.

Defunding may actually be more of a wish than reality given complex webs of municipal, state and federal law in addition to civil service and police union regulations to be untangled before what is an obviously dangerous goal can be attained. But significant funding cuts for law enforcement are a real concern.

Thats why we appreciate the perspective of individuals like Nadra Enzi, who is a member of the Project 21 Black leadership network in New Orleans. The security consultant refers to himself as a safety citizen an individual who values his community and wants to work with authorities to keep them crime-free.

Safety citizens need to make it clear we support fully funded and empowered police departments. Period, he recently wrote. And they need to know that we also support punishing rogue officers.

Both safety citizens and police critics hoped earlier community policing policies would be the solution to long-term tensions between law enforcement and urban communities. Its focus on relationship-building at all levels, however, seems to have fallen short of the mark. In fact, it appears that relationship-building between police and the public gave way to calls for diminished police powers and even abolishing the profession altogether.

Defunding proposals couldnt come at a worse time. Culturally, American law enforcement became increasingly unpopular since the 2014 death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo.

This tipping point birthed de-policing where officers who feel they are under too much scrutiny cease being proactive for fear of termination or even prosecution by state and federal authorities, Mr. Enzi wrote.

A bitter irony emerges with the rise of Black Lives Matter activism. Less empowered and underfunded police departments will effectively be set up to fail in underserved low-income, high-crime communities.

Regardless of whether defunding demands are wishful thinking or determined steps toward an abolition of the police profession, one inescapable conclusion remains: Defunding police is defeating public safety. This defeat will be acutely felt in the very communities that are screaming that Black lives matter.

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'Safety citizen' makes point that defunding police will fail those most in need of crime fighting - Norfolk Daily News

Angela Davis on Abolition, Calls to Defund Police, Toppled Racist Statues & Voting in 2020 Election – Democracy Now!

This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

AMY GOODMAN: We turn now to look at the uprising against police brutality and racism, following the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis on May 25th. The protests have helped dramatically shift public opinion on policing and systemic racism, as defund the police becomes a rallying cry of the movement.

Well, for more on this historic moment, we turn to the legendary activist and scholar Angela Davis, professor emerita at the University of California, Santa Cruz. For half a century, Angela Davis has been one of the most influential activists and intellectuals in the United States and an icon of the Black liberation movement. I interviewed her in early June and asked her if she thought this moment is truly a turning point.

ANGELA DAVIS: This is an extraordinary moment. I have never experienced anything like the conditions we are currently experiencing, the conjuncture created by the COVID-19 pandemic and the recognition of the systemic racism that has been rendered visible under these conditions because of the disproportionate deaths in Black and Latinx communities. And this is a moment I dont know whether I ever expected to experience.

When the protests began, of course, around the murder of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor and Ahmaud Arbery and Tony McDade and many others who have lost their lives to racist state violence and vigilante violence when these protests erupted, I remembered something that Ive said many times to encourage activists, who often feel that the work that they do is not leading to tangible results. I often ask them to consider the very long trajectory of Black struggles. And what has been most important is the forging of legacies, the new arenas of struggle that can be handed down to younger generations.

But Ive often said one never knows when conditions may give rise to a conjuncture such as the current one that rapidly shifts popular consciousness and suddenly allows us to move in the direction of radical change. If one does not engage in the ongoing work when such a moment arises, we cannot take advantage of the opportunities to change. And, of course, this moment will pass. The intensity of the current demonstrations cannot be sustained over time, but we will have to be ready to shift gears and address these issues in different arenas, including, of course, the electoral arena.

AMY GOODMAN: Angela Davis, you have long been a leader of the critical resistance movement, the abolition movement. And Im wondering if you can explain the demand, as you see it, what you feel needs to be done, around defunding the police, and then around prison abolition.

ANGELA DAVIS: Well, the call to defund the police is, I think, an abolitionist demand, but it reflects only one aspect of the process represented by the demand. Defunding the police is not simply about withdrawing funding for law enforcement and doing nothing else. And it appears as if this is the rather superficial understanding that has caused Biden to move in the direction hes moving in.

Its about shifting public funds to new services and new institutions mental health counselors, who can respond to people who are in crisis without arms. Its about shifting funding to education, to housing, to recreation. All of these things help to create security and safety. Its about learning that safety, safeguarded by violence, is not really safety.

And I would say that abolition is not primarily a negative strategy. Its not primarily about dismantling, getting rid of, but its about reenvisioning. Its about building anew. And I would argue that abolition is a feminist strategy. And one sees in these abolitionist demands that are emerging the pivotal influence of feminist theories and practices.

AMY GOODMAN: Explain that further.

ANGELA DAVIS: I want us to see feminism not only as addressing issues of gender, but rather as a methodological approach of understanding the intersectionality of struggles and issues. Abolition feminism counters carceral feminism, which has unfortunately assumed that issues such as violence against women can be effectively addressed by using police force, by using imprisonment as a solution. And of course we know that Joseph Biden, in 1994, who claims that the Violence Against Women Act was such an important moment in his career the Violence Against Women Act was couched within the 1994 Crime Act, the Clinton Crime Act.

And what were calling for is a process of decriminalization, not recognizing that threats to safety, threats to security, come not primarily from what is defined as crime, but rather from the failure of institutions in our country to address issues of health, issues of violence, education, etc. So, abolition is really about rethinking the kind of future we want, the social future, the economic future, the political future. Its about revolution, I would argue.

AMY GOODMAN: You write in Freedom Is a Constant Struggle, Neoliberal ideology drives us to focus on individuals, ourselves, individual victims, individual perpetrators. But how is it possible to solve the massive problem of racist state violence by calling upon individual police officers to bear the burden of that history and to assume that by prosecuting them, by exacting our revenge on them, we would have somehow made progress in eradicating racism? So, explain what exactly youre demanding.

ANGELA DAVIS: Well, neoliberal logic assumes that the fundamental unit of society is the individual, and I would say the abstract individual. According to that logic, Black people can combat racism by pulling themselves up by their own individual bootstraps. That logic recognizes or fails, rather, to recognize that there are institutional barriers that cannot be brought down by individual determination. If a Black person is materially unable to attend the university, the solution is not affirmative action, they argue, but rather the person simply needs to work harder, get good grades and do what is necessary in order to acquire the funds to pay for tuition. Neoliberal logic deters us from thinking about the simpler solution, which is free education.

Im thinking about the fact that we have been aware of the need for these institutional strategies at least since 1935 but of course before, but Im choosing 1935 because that was the year when W.E.B. Du Bois published his germinal Black Reconstruction in America. And the question was not what should individual Black people do, but rather how to reorganize and restructure post-slavery society in order to guarantee the incorporation of those who had been formerly enslaved. The society could not remain the same or should not have remained the same. Neoliberalism resists change at the individual level. It asks the individual to adapt to conditions of capitalism, to conditions of racism.

AMY GOODMAN: I wanted to ask you, Angela Davis, about the monuments to racists, colonizers, Confederates, that are continuing to fall across the United States and around the world. Did you think you would ever see this? You think about Bree Newsome after the horror at Mother Emanuel Church in Charleston, South Carolina, who shimmied up that flagpole on the grounds of the South Carolina Legislature and took down the Confederate flag, and they put it right on back up. What about what were seeing today?

ANGELA DAVIS: Well, of course, Bree Newsome was a wonderful pioneer. And I think its important to link this trend to the campaign in South Africa, Rhodes Must Fall. And, of course, I think this reflects the extent to which we are being called upon to deeply reflect on the role of historical racisms that have brought us to the point where we are today.

You know, racism should have been immediately confronted in the aftermath of the end of slavery. This is what Dr. Du Boiss analysis was all about, not so much in terms of, Well, what we were going to do about these poor people who have been enslaved so many generations? but, rather, How can we reorganize our society in order to guarantee the incorporation of previously enslaved people?

Now attention is being turned towards the symbols of slavery, the symbols of colonialism. And, of course, any campaigns against racism in this country have to address, in the very first place, the conditions of Indigenous people. I think its important that were seeing these demonstrations, but I think at the same time we have to recognize that we cannot simply get rid of the history. We have to recognize the devastatingly negative role that that history has played in charting the trajectory of the United States of America. And so, I think that these assaults on statues represent an attempt to begin to think through what we have to do to bring down institutions and reenvision them, reorganize them, create new institutions that can attend to the needs of all people.

AMY GOODMAN: And what do you think should be done with statues, for example, to, oh, slaveholding Founding Fathers, like George Washington and Thomas Jefferson?

ANGELA DAVIS: Well, you know, museums can play an important educational role. And I dont think we should get rid of all of the vestiges of the past, but we need to figure out context within which people can understand the nature of U.S. history and the role that racism and capitalism and heteropatriarchy have played in forging that history.

AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about racism and capitalism? You often write and speak about how they are intimately connected. And talk about a world that you envision.

ANGELA DAVIS: Yeah, racism is integrally linked to capitalism. And I think its a mistake to assume that we can combat racism by leaving capitalism in place. As Cedric Robinson pointed out in his book Black Marxism, capitalism is racial capitalism. And, of course, to just say for a moment, that Marx pointed out that what he called primitive accumulation, capital doesnt just appear from nowhere. The original capital was provided by the labor of slaves. The Industrial Revolution, which pivoted around the production of capital, was enabled by slave labor in the U.S. So, I am convinced that the ultimate eradication of racism is going to require us to move toward a more socialist organization of our economies, of our other institutions. I think we have a long way to go before we can begin to talk about an economic system that is not based on exploitation and on the super-exploitation of Black people, Latinx people and other racialized populations.

But I do think that we now have the conceptual means to engage in discussions, popular discussions, about capitalism. Occupy gave us new language. The notion of the prison-industrial complex requires us to understand the globalization of capitalism. Anti-capitalist consciousness helps us to understand the predicament of immigrants, who are barred from the U.S. by the wall that has been created by the current occupant. These conditions have been created by global capitalism. And I think this is a period during which we need to begin that process of popular education, which will allow people to understand the interconnections of racism, heteropatriarchy, capitalism.

AMY GOODMAN: Angela, do you think we need a truth and reconciliation commission here in this country?

ANGELA DAVIS: Well, that might be one way to begin, but I know were going to need a lot more than truth and reconciliation. But certainly we need truth. Im not sure how soon reconciliation is going to emerge. But I think that the whole notion of truth and reconciliation allows us to think differently about the criminal legal system. It allows us to imagine a form of justice that is not based on revenge, a form of justice that is not retributive. So I think that those ideas can help us begin to imagine new ways of structuring our institutions, such as well, not structuring the prison, because the whole point is that we have to abolish that institution in order to begin to envision new ways of addressing the conditions that lead to mass incarceration, that lead to such horrendous tragedies as the murder of George Floyd.

AMY GOODMAN: The legendary scholar and activist Angela Davis. When we come back, well talk about the 2020 election and more.

[break]

AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now! democracynow.org. Im Amy Goodman. Were spending the hour looking at the ongoing uprisings against police brutality and racism, following the police killing of George Floyd on Memorial Day. Later in the program, well hear from professors Cornel West, Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor and Tamika Mallory, but first we continue our discussion with the legendary scholar and activist Angela Davis. I spoke to her in early June, a week before she received the Fred L. Shuttlesworth Award from the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute in her hometown of Birmingham, Alabama. The institute made international headlines last year when the institute initially rescinded the award due to Angela Daviss support for Palestinians and the BDS movement. Thats Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement. After outcry, the institute reversed its decision. Angela Davis formally received the award on Juneteenth thats June 19th this year. I asked her about the significance of what happened.

ANGELA DAVIS: A lot has happened over the last period, including within the context of the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute. They have completely reorganized. They have reorganized their board. They have been involved in conversations with the community. Of course, as you know, the mayor of Birmingham was threatening to withdraw funding from the institute. There was a generalized uprising in the Black community.

And, you know, while at first it was a total shock to me that they offered this award to me, and then they rescinded it, Im realizing now that that was an important moment, because it encouraged people to think about the meaning of human rights and why is it that Palestinians could be excluded from the process of working toward human rights. Palestinian activists have long supported Black peoples struggle against racism. When I was in jail, solidarity coming from Palestine was a major source of courage for me. In Ferguson, Palestinians were the first to express international solidarity. And there has been this very important connection between the two struggles for many decades, so that Im going to be really happy to receive the award, which now represents a rethinking of the rather backward position that the institute assumed, that Palestinians could be excluded from the circle of those working toward a future of justice, equality and human rights.

AMY GOODMAN: Speaking about whats going on in the West Bank right now and about the whole issue of international solidarity, the global response to the killing of George Floyd. In the occupied West Bank, protesters denounced Floyds murder and the recent killing of Iyad el-Hallak, a 32-year-old Palestinian special needs student who was shot to death by Israeli forces in occupied East Jerusalem. He was reportedly chanting Black lives matter and Palestinian lives matter, when Israeli police gunned him down, claiming he was armed. These links that youre seeing, not only in Palestine and the United States, but around the world, the kind of global response, the tens of thousands of people who marched in Spain, who marched in England, in Berlin, in Munich, all over the world, as this touches a chord and they make demands in their own countries, not only in solidarity with whats happening in the United States? And then I want to ask you about the U.S. election thats coming up in November.

ANGELA DAVIS: Well, yes, Palestinian activists have long supported Black peoples struggle against racism, as I pointed out. And Im hoping that todays young activists recognize how important Palestinian solidarity has been to the Black cause, and that they recognize that we have a profound responsibility to support Palestinian struggles, as well.

I think its also important for us to look in the direction of Brazil, whose current political leader competes with our current political leader in many dangerous ways, I would say. Brazil if we think we have a problem with racist police violence in the United States of America, look at Brazil. Marielle Franco was assassinated because she was challenging the militarization of the police and the racist violence unleashed there. I think 4,000 people were killed last year alone by the police in Brazil. So, Im saying this because

AMY GOODMAN: And, of course, the president of Brazil, a close ally of President Trump. We only have two minutes, and I want to get to the election. When I interviewed you in 2016, you said you wouldnt support either main-party candidate at the time. What are your thoughts today for 2020?

ANGELA DAVIS: Well, my position really hasnt changed. Im not going to actually support either of the major candidates. But I do think we have to participate in the election. I mean, that isnt to say that I wont vote for the Democratic candidate. What Im saying is that in our electoral system as it exists, neither party represents the future that we need in this country. Both parties remain connected to corporate capitalism. But the election will not so much be about who gets to lead the country to a better future, but rather how we can support ourselves and our own ability to continue to organize and place pressure on those in power. And I dont think theres a question about which candidate would allow that process to unfold.

So I think that were going to have to translate some of the passion that has characterized these demonstrations into work within the electoral arena, recognizing that the electoral arena is not the best place for the expression of radical politics. But if we want to continue this work, we certainly need a person in office who will be more amenable to our mass pressure. And to me, that is the only thing that someone like a Joe Biden represents. But we have to persuade people to go out and vote to guarantee that the current occupant of the White House is forever ousted.

AMY GOODMAN: The legendary scholar and activist Angela Davis.

When we come back, well speak to Cornel West, Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, and well hear from Tamika Mallory. Stay with us.

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Angela Davis on Abolition, Calls to Defund Police, Toppled Racist Statues & Voting in 2020 Election - Democracy Now!

Sisolak issues formal call for special session focused on budget cuts; may address other issues later – The Nevada Independent

Gov. Steve Sisolak is calling for a special session starting at 9 a.m. Wednesday to address the states pandemic-driven budget shortfall, but says he may issue another proclamation authorizing the Legislature to take up other issues if there are additional policy matters that deserve immediate consideration.

The governor issued the proclamation on Tuesday evening, after announcing last week that July 8 would be the tentative start date depending on safety and health conditions related to COVID-19. The session will be closed to the public, with only legislators, essential staff and a limited number of reporters allowed in the legislative building in Carson City.

I am eager to work with our Nevada lawmakers on this difficult undertaking, and finalize the necessary reductions while prioritizing resources to protect Nevadas residents as much as possible, Sisolak said in a statement. I understand that the COVID-19 public health crisis has put us in the position to make very painful decisions on the State budget, but I am confident we will be able to overcome this challenge together and forge a new path forward.

The proclamation comes a day after Sisolaks office released a 40-page outline of his budget cut proposal, which addresses the $1.2 billion budget shortfall through a half billion dollar cut in agency budgets, transfers of other funds and furloughs of state employees.

In a press release, Democratic Assembly Speaker Jason Frierson said lawmakers must make some painful cuts to get through this period but wanted to protect vital services. He called on Congress to pass legislation giving state and municipal governments direct financial aid to help deal with fallout of the pandemic, something Democratic leaders in the Legislature and Sisolak have publicly asked for.

Beyond the budget cuts, Sisolak said the Legislature may authorize the Clark County School District to use unspent school-level funds to address its financial needs, and may authorize the Board of Regents to change eligibility requirements for Millennium Scholarship recipients adversely affected by the pandemic.

In a press release, a spokeswoman for the governor said Sisolak will issue a subsequent proclamation for the Legislature once the budget shortfall is addressed to consider policy items that rise to the extraordinary occasion of a special session.

Members of the Legislature are required to deal only with matters listed in the governors proclamation calling for the special session. Such sessions are limited by the state Constitution to not exceed more than 20 calendar days.

That hasnt stopped a variety of advocacy groups from calling in recent days for more items on the agenda, including the expansion of in-person and mail voting, law enforcement reforms including the abolition of police unions, the increase of taxes and the repeal of the death penalty.

Bracing for cuts

As lawmakers prepare for the budget-cutting, advocates have called on them to spare health and human services spending and school funding.

Before the governor unveiled his budget proposal Monday, eight education organizations sent him and legislative leaders a cosigned letter calling for no K-12 spending cuts. The diverse group behind the letter included CCSD Parents, Charter School Association of Nevada, Clark County Education Association, HOPE for Nevada, Nevada Parent Teacher Association, Nevada School Choice Coalition, Power2Parent and Rise Up Nevada Education.

While we do have differences on the method and the delivery choices in education, we really felt this was the time to come together and say Nevada has to make a choice: Are we going to ever prioritize education? said Rebecca Garcia, president of the Nevada PTA. That was the message.

Sisolaks budget proposal falls short of that goal. While it safeguards the basic per-pupil support districts receive from the Distributive School Account the states main funding pot for K-12 education it recommends cuts to categorical revenue streams, including the Read by Grade 3 and SB178 grant programs. The SB178 money, also known as the New Nevada Education Funding Plan, gave certain schools an extra $1,200 per child to support low-achieving students.

During a special school board meeting Monday night, Clark County Superintendent Jesus Jara and the districts chief financial officer, Jason Goudie, said it was too soon to say what changes might be needed to the reopening plan. District leaders planned to evaluate the governors budget plan Tuesday and present an update to the school board Thursday.

Even so, Trustee Chris Garvey summed up the likely outcome this way: This is going to be really, really painful no matter how we look at it.

The pandemic and related economic fallout has thrown a wrench in years-long efforts to bolster Nevadas K-12 education funding. State lawmakers approved a new K-12 funding formula in the 2019 session and, in early March, education advocates filed a lawsuit challenging Nevadas school finance system. The legal action was seen as an accelerated push to dramatically increase education spending in a state that consistently ranks near the bottom in that metric as well as in student achievement.

But the coronavirus shuttered schools and nonessential businesses less than two weeks later, drying up tax revenue across the state. At the same time, the school closures highlighted existing inequities as districts struggled to ensure technology and learning access for students without Chromebooks or reliable internet at home.

Now, districts are engulfed in discussions about how to reopen schools for the 2020-2021 academic year amid a pandemic that has shown little sign of abating. District leaders have lamented the fiscal situation, saying it has been difficult to plan without knowing firm budget numbers from the state.

All of those factors signal a special legislative session steeped in an education debate. Garcia said punting investing in education has become an endless loop that needs to finally stop.

We all feel like this is a really critical juncture because we still havent recovered from the last recession when it comes to education funding, she said.

Although the session is closed to the public over COVID-19 health concerns, some groups are nonetheless planning public demonstrations in Carson City protesting aspects of the planned cuts. The Nevada State Education Association will hold a protest outside of the Legislative Building at noon tomorrow, and members of the Nevada Police Union the collective bargaining body for the state-employed police officers has mounted a public information campaign asking to be exempt from planned across-the-board state worker furloughs, saying the cost of overtime would exceed any savings from furloughs.

Gov Sisolak Special Session Proclamation July 7, 2020 by Michelle Rindels on Scribd

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Sisolak issues formal call for special session focused on budget cuts; may address other issues later - The Nevada Independent