One of the World’s Most Powerful Scientists Believes in Miracles – Scientific American

When I talk to my students aboutthe tempestuous relationship between science and religion, I like to bring up the case of Francis Collins. Early in his career, Collins was a successful gene-hunter, who helped identify genes associated with cystic fibrosis and other disorders. He went on to become one of the worlds most powerful scientists. Since 2009, he has directed the National Institutes of Health, which this year has a budget of over $40 billion. Before that he oversaw the Human Genome Project, one of historys biggest research projects. Collins was an atheist until 1978, when he underwent a conversion experience while hiking in the mountains and became a devout Christian. In his 2006 bestselling bookThe Language of God, Collins declares that he sees no incompatibility between science and religion. The God of the Bible is also the God of the genome, he wrote. He can be worshipped in the cathedral or in the laboratory. Collins just won the$1.3 million Templeton Prize, created in 1972 to promote reconciliation of science and spirituality. (See my posts on the Templeton Foundationhereandhere). This news gives me an excuse to post an interview I carried out with Collins forNational Geographicin 2006, a time whenRichard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett and others were vigorously attacking religion. Below is an edited transcript of my conversation with Collins, which took place in Washington, D.C. I liked Collins, whom I found to be surprisingly unassuming for a man of such high stature. But I was disturbed by our final exchanges, in which he revealed a fatalistic outlook on humanitys future. Collins, it seems, haslots of faith in God but not much in humanity. John Horgan

Horgan:How does it feel to be at the white-hot center of the current debate between science and religion?

Collins:This increasing polarization between extremists on both ends of the atheism and belief spectrum has been heartbreaking to me. If my suggestion that there is a harmonious middle ground puts me at the white-hot center of debate--Hooray! Its maybe a bit overdue.

Horgan:The danger in trying to appeal to people on both sides of a polarized debate is--

Collins:Bombs thrown at you from both directions!

Horgan:Has that happened?

Collins[sighs]: The majority have responded in very encouraging ways. But some of my scientific colleagues argue that its totally inappropriate for a scientist to write about religion, and we already have too much faith in public life in this country. And then I get someverystrongly worded messages from fundamentalists who feel that I have compromised the literal interpretation of Genesis 1 and call me a false prophet. Im diluting the truth and doing damage to the faith.

Horgan:Why do you think the debate has become so polarized?

Collins:It starts with an extreme articulation of a viewpoint on one side of the issue and that then results in a response that is also a little bit too extreme, and the whole thing escalates. Every action demands an equal and opposite reaction. This is one of Newtons laws playing out in an unfortunate public scenario.

Horgan:I must admit that Ive become more concerned lately about the harmful effects of religion because of religious terrorism like 9/11 and the growing power of the religious right in the United States.

Collins:What faith hasnotbeen used by demagogues as a club over somebodys head? Whether it was the Inquisition or the Crusades on the one hand or the World Trade Center on the other? But we shouldnt judge the pure truths of faith by the way they are applied any more than we should judge the pure truth of love by an abusive marriage. We as children of God have been given by God this knowledge of right and wrong, this Moral Law, which I see as a particularly compelling signpost to His existence. But we also have this thing called free will which we exercise all the time to break that law. We shouldnt blame faith for the ways people distort it and misuse it.

Horgan:Isnt the problem when religions say,Thisis the only way to truth? Isnt that what turns religious faith from something beautiful into something intolerant and hateful?

Collins:There is a sad truth there. I think we Christians have been way too ready to define ourselves as members of an exclusive club. I found truth, I found joy, I found peace in that particular conclusion, but I am not in any way suggesting that that is the conclusion everybody else should find. To have anyone say, My truth is purer than yours, that is both inconsistent with what I see in the person of Christ andincrediblyoff-putting. And quick to start arguments and fights and even wars! Look at the story of the Good Samaritan, which is a parable from Jesus himself. Jews would have considered the Samaritan to be a heretic, and yet clearly Christs message is:Thatis the person who did right and was justified in Gods eyes.

Horgan:How can you, as a scientist who looks for natural explanations of things and demands evidence, also believe in miracles, like the resurrection?

Collins:My first struggle was to believe in God. Not a pantheist God who is entirely enclosed within nature, or a Deist God who started the whole thing and then just lost interest, but a supernatural God who is interested in what is happening in our world and might at times choose to intervene. My second struggle was to believe that Christ was divine as He claimed to be. As soon as I got there, the idea that He might rise from the dead became a non-problem. I dont have a problem with the concept that miracles might occasionally occur at moments ofgreatsignificance where there is a message being transmitted to us by God Almighty. But as a scientist I set my standards for miracles very high. And I dont think we should try to convince agnostics or atheists about the reality of faith with claims about miracles that they can easily poke holes in.

Horgan:The problem I have with miracles is not just that they violate what science tells us about how the world works. They also make God seem too capricious. For example, many people believe that if they pray hard enough God will intercede to heal them or a loved one. But does that mean that all those who dont get better arent worthy?

Collins:In my own experience as a physician, I have not seen a miraculous healing, and I dont expect to see one. Also, prayer for me is not a way to manipulate God into doing what we want Him to do. Prayer for me is much more a sense of trying to get into fellowship with God. Im trying to figure out what I should be doing rather than telling Almighty God whatHeshould be doing. Look at the Lords Prayer. It says, Thywill be done. It wasnt, Our Father who are in Heaven, please get me a parking space.

Horgan:Many people have a hard time believing in God because of the problem of evil. If God loves us, why is life filled with so much suffering?

Collins:That isthemost fundamental question that all seekers have to wrestle with. First of all, if our ultimate goal is to grow, learn, discover things about ourselves and things about God, then unfortunately a life of ease is probably not the way to get there. I know I have learned very little about myself or God when everything is going well. Also, a lot of the pain and suffering in the world we cannot lay at Gods feet. God gave us free will, and we may choose to exercise it in ways that end up hurting other people.

Horgan:The physicist Steven Weinberg, who is an atheist, has written about this topic. He asks why six million Jews, including his relatives, had to die in the Holocaust so that the Nazis could exercise their free will.

Collins:If God had to intervene miraculously every time one of us chose to do something evil, it would be a very strange, chaotic, unpredictable world. Free will leads to people doing terrible things to each other. Innocent people die as a result. You cant blame anyone except the evildoers for that. So thats not Gods fault. The harder question is when suffering seems to have come about through no human ill action. A child with cancer, a natural disaster, a tornado or tsunami. Why would God not prevent those things from happening?

Horgan:Some theologians, such as Charles Hartshorne, have suggested that maybe God isnt fully in control of His creation. The poet Annie Dillard expresses this idea in her phrase God the semi-competent.

Collins:Thats delightful--and probably blasphemous! An alternative is the notion of God being outside of nature and of time and having a perspective of our blink-of-an-eye existence that goes both far back and far forward. In some admittedly metaphysical way, that allows me to say that the meaning of suffering may not always be apparent to me. There can be reasons for terrible things happening that I cannot know.

Horgan:I think youre an agnostic.

Collins:No!

Horgan:You say that, to a certain extent, Gods ways are inscrutable. That sounds like agnosticism.

Collins:Im agnostic about Gods ways. Im not agnostic about God Himself. Thomas Huxley defined agnosticism as not knowing whether God exists or not. Im a believer! I have doubts. As I quote Paul Tillich: Doubt is not the opposite of faith. Its a part of faith. But my fundamental stance is that God is real, God is true.

Horgan:Im an agnostic, and I was bothered when in your book you called agnosticism a copout. Agnosticism doesnt mean youre lazy or dont care. It means you arent satisfied with any answers for what after all are ultimate mysteries.

Collins:That was a putdown that should not apply to earnest agnostics who have considered the evidence and still dont find an answer. I was reacting to the agnosticism I see in the scientific community, which has not been arrived at by a careful examination of the evidence. I went through a phase when I was a casual agnostic, and I am perhaps too quick to assume that others have no more depth than I did.

Horgan:Free will is a very important concept to me, as it is to you. Its the basis for our morality and search for meaning. Dont you worry that science in general and genetics in particularand your work as head of the Genome Project--are undermining belief in free will?

Collins:Youre talking about genetic determinism, which implies that we are helpless marionettes being controlled by strings made of double helices. That is so far away from what we know scientifically! Heredity does have an influence not only over medical risks but also over certain behaviors and personality traits. But look at identical twins, who have exactly the same DNA but often dont behave alike or think alike. They show the importance of learning and experience--and free will. I think we all, whether we are religious or not, recognize that free will is a reality. There are some fringe elements that say, No, its all an illusion, were just pawns in some computer model. But I dont think that carries you very far.

Horgan:What do you think of Darwinian explanations of altruism, or what you callagape, totally selfless love and compassion for someone not directly related to you?

Collins:Its been a little of a just-so story so far. Many would argue that altruism has been supported by evolution because it helps the group survive. But some people sacrifically give of themselves to those who are outside their group and with whom they have absolutely nothing in common. Like Mother Teresa, Oscar Schindler, many others. That is the nobility of humankind in its purist form. That doesnt seem like it can be explained by a Darwinian model, but Im not hanging my faith on this.

Horgan:If only selflessness were more common.

Collins:Well, there you get free will again. It gets in the way.

Horgan:What do you think about the field of neurotheology, which attempts to identify the neural basis of religious experiences?

Collins:I think its fascinating but not particularly surprising. We humans are flesh and blood. So it wouldnt trouble me--if I were to have some mystical experience myself--to discover that my temporal lobe was lit up. Id say, Wow! Thats okay! That doesnt mean that this doesnt have genuine spiritual significance. Those who come at this issue with the presumption that there is nothing outside the natural world will look at this data and say, Ya see? Whereas those who come with the presumption that we are spiritual creatures will go, Cool! There is a natural correlate to this mystical experience! How about that! I think our spiritual nature is truly God-given, and may not be completely limited by natural descriptors.

Horgan:What if this research leads to drugs or devices for artificially inducing religious experiences? Would you consider those experiences to be authentic? You probably heard about the recent report from Johns Hopkins that the psychedelic drug psilocybin triggered spiritual experiences.

Collins:Yes. If you are talking about the ingestion of an exogenous psychoactive substance or some kind of brain-stimulating contraption, that would smack of not being an authentic, justifiable, trust-worthy experience. So that would be a boundary I would want to establish between the authentic and the counterfeit.

Horgan:Some scientists have predicted that genetic engineering may give us superhuman intelligence and greatly extended life spans, and possibly even immortality. We might even engineer our brains so that we dont fear pain or grief anymore. These are possible long-term consequences of the Human Genome Project and other lines of research. If these things happen, what do you think would be the consequences for religious traditions?

Collins:That outcome would trouble me. But were so far away from that reality that its hard to spend a lot of time worrying about it when you consider all the truly benevolent things we could do in the near term. If you get too hung up on the hypotheticals of what night happen in the next several hundred years, then you become paralyzed and you fail to live up to the opportunities to reach out and help people now. That seems to be the most unethical stance we could take.

Horgan:Im really asking, Does religion requires suffering? Could we reduce suffering to the point where we just wont need religion?

Collins:In spite of the fact that we have achieved all of these wonderful medical advances and made it possible to live longer and eradicate diseases, we will probably still figure out ways to argue with each other and sometimes to kill each other, out of our self-righteousness and our determination that we have to be on top. So the death rate will continue to be one per person by one means or another. We may understand a lot about biology, we may understand a lot about how to prevent illness, and we may understand the life span. But I dont think we will figure out how to stop humans from doing bad things to each other. That will always be our greatest and most distressing experience here on this planet, and that will make us long the most, perhaps, for something more.

Further Reading:

In Defense of Disbelief: An Anti-Creed

Can Faith and Science Coexist?

Richard Dawkins Offers Advice for Donald Trump, and Other Wisdom

What Should We Do With Our Visions of Heaven and Hell?

Mind-Body Problems(free online book, also available asKindle e-bookandpaperback).

The rest is here:

One of the World's Most Powerful Scientists Believes in Miracles - Scientific American

This Is a Very, Very Tiny List of Elected Atheist Republicans – Patheos

Almost a month ago, the group Republican Atheists sent a message to members hoping to publish a list of atheist Republicans who are elected officials in Republican groups and/or their cities/counties.

They wanted names.

I laughed a lot because the GOP, as a whole, is clearly hostile to people who arent white evangelicals, and thats evident through the policies they promote, their platform, and their top-tier candidates. Its hard to imagine Republican voters supporting a candidate whos openly and proudly non-religious, because Republican values go against what most non-religious people support. A party that supports Mike Huckabee, Mike Pence, and Ted Cruz isnt about to throw money and support to an avowed atheist. (They had a hard enough time getting their people to support a Mormon candidate in 2012.)

Ill freely admit there are conservative atheists especially ones who feel very strongly about one or two issues and vote on those issues alone but thats different from supporting todays GOP. Being a Republican today means backing a party whose politicians are overwhelmingly anti-science, anti-LGBTQ rights, anti-choice, and anti-church/state separation. It means supporting a president who blindly accepts and promotes conspiracy theories, surrounds himself with a coterie of evangelical Christians, and condemns expertise and reason whenever they contradict his whims.

Maybe some voters can deal with that cognitive dissonance but actual politicians? Cmon now. Lets be serious.

That said, I would love to know if there are any openly atheist elected Republicans out there. That would be newsworthy! But theyre not out there! Ive looked!

Just to prove my point, here are some numbers for you. After the 2018 midterms, by my best estimate, there were 52 openly non-religious politicians in the country at the state level or higher. Were talking about state representatives and state senators, along with one congressman. Many of them use the word atheist to describe themselves. (I didnt keep track of atheists below that level because, frankly, there would be too many.)

Every single one of them is a Democrat.

In 2017, I stumbled across one guy who was both an elected Republican and, it turned out, openly atheist but he soon switched parties (becoming a Libertarian) and lost his bid for re-election.

There are currently no elected Republicans at the state level or higher who are openly atheist.

52 Democrats. 0 Republicans.

If Im incorrect, though, Im all ears. I would love to know if there are elected officials in the Republican Party who openly reject God. That would be fascinating! (It would be weird, too, but thats a different issue.) If nothing else, having prominent atheists in the GOP might mean having some voices in the party pushing for science and church/state separation and countering the weight of the Religious Right.

Thats a long way to say I really looked forward to seeingthis list from Republican Atheists.

But the weeks came and went and there was no update. I was only told the list was coming and that it was not impressive. (Shocker. But thanks for the honesty.)

Yesterday, the group finally released the list.

Are you ready for it?

There are three names.

Thats it.

Poulson is a leader within his local GOP affiliate but not elected to anything outside of that. Same with Anderson. (Correction: I said earlier Anderson had run for office, but that is not the case.)

As for Umphrey, she is indeed a Republican atheist but it should be noted that the city council elections are non-partisan and the body doesnt usually debate the more polarizing issues we see at the state level. There arent any examples of her publicly calling herself an atheist or a Republican, at least as it relates to her office or examples of her promoting atheism or the GOP during the campaign.

Thats not a criticism of her, by the way! Those kinds of issues just dont often come up at many city council meetings outside of invocations and the like. My point is that if I just looked at her record or public statements, I dont think I would be able to pin down that she was a Republican or an atheist. But shes the only person the group could find after nearly a month of searching and they already knew about her in 2018.

This whole search just proves my point: There are no openly atheist elected Republicans at the state level or higher. (Apparently they barely exist at lower levels, too.) That shouldnt surprise anyone.

Its been said that the only thing atheists have in common is one answer to one question. But many people who call themselves atheists support secular schools, oppose faith-based discrimination, want accessto birth control and contraception, etc. Its hard to imagine someone who cares enough about the topic of religion that she uses the label atheist finding a home in the GOP.

(I should also say the Democratic Party has a long way to go on these issues, too, but theres just no comparison.)

I would love for the Republican Atheists group to simply admit the current GOP is no place for open atheists but theyre working to change that and then I want to see what theyre doing to make that happen.

Instead, as far as Ive seen, all they ever do is promote MAGA memes and push conservative propaganda to their followers. Theyre like the Log Cabin Republicans a group that claims to represent LGBTQ people, but is widely considered a laughingstock because Republican politicians and judges routinely oppose LGBTQ rights. Theres no way to spin that. Every time the group tries to do it, its just pathetic.

But good luck getting Republican Atheists to admit all that.

Read this article:

This Is a Very, Very Tiny List of Elected Atheist Republicans - Patheos

Making Blockchain Safe and Secure, a Balancing Act That Never Ends – Cointelegraph

Blockchain technology has become synonymous with privacy and security, but those very characteristics have been put to the test over the past decade. With historical roots embedded in cryptography, many blockchain and cryptocurrency projects purport to offer unbridled security and privacy measures. The industry is split between public blockchain platforms like Bitcoin and private or permissioned blockchains focused on enterprise use.

Cointelegraph has previously explored the ins and outs of privacy concerns around blockchain technology, but the security of these systems is a major consideration on its own. In the years since Bitcoins (BTC) inception, a multitude of cryptocurrencies has been created, along with numerous blockchain projects in the private and public sphere.

The sheer number of working parts and industry participants means that vulnerabilities have been identified and exploited over the years. This is despite the best efforts of those involved to create the most secure blockchains, cryptocurrencies and exchanges.

This article will shine a spotlight on public blockchains and cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, permissioned blockchains that offer enterprise solutions to mainstream corporate companies as well as privacy coins to delve into the different considerations of their perceived and actual levels of security.

Given that the use of cryptocurrencies primarily began with individual users and adoption by bigger entities such as financial institutions has been slow, a major concern is the security of blockchain or cryptocurrencies being used by individuals. In order to get an understanding of what makes these systems secure, Cointelegraph reached out to blockchain and cryptocurrency analysis firm CipherTrace.

John Jefferies, who is the companys chief financial analyst, identified and separated the different categories that are needed to fully understand the level of security of an open blockchain or cryptocurrency like Bitcoin:

There are three levels of security to consider: personal, platform and technology. Blockchains provide the technology layer, but the average user must trust the security of the particular wallet or exchange they are using. A well-validated, open-source blockchain built using known, trusted encryption, such as the Bitcoin blockchain, provides the level of security to assure the average user that their transaction data has not been tampered with.

When asked whether open blockchain systems have provided trusted security and privacy to users, Jefferies outlined two key elements of Bitcoins system that answered long-standing problems plaguing earlier digital currency projects. First of all, the Blockchain technology proved to be a major advancement, as it solved the double-spend issue in peer-to-peer transactions.

Another vital protocol that ensured security was the basis of Bitcoins consensus protocol, as Jefferies explained, the blockchain technology also deals with the Byzantine Generals Problem, where a messenger sharing information between generals can deliver false information. However, if all parties receive information that is verified by the majority, the corrupt messengers will be discovered. While these two elements provide robust security to the overall Bitcoin system, Jefferies makes a clear distinction between the security of the protocol and the privacy afforded to users:

It is a common misconception that Bitcoin was designed to be anonymous, but in actuality, the Bitcoin blockchain is pseudonymous, meaning transactions are publicly visible yet the individual users associated with transactions are not. Satoshis white paper only discusses privacy in two paragraphs. If privacy was the goal, it would have been designed differently.

Cointelegraph also reached out to Stanford University Ph.D. student Florian Tramr, who recently managed to discover vulnerabilities in privacy coins Monero (XMR) and Zcash (ZEC). A remote side-channel assault would enable an attacker to recover a users IP addresses, thereby destroying any semblance of anonymity and privacy of the users in a transaction.

Tramr weighed in on the level of security that open blockchain networks, like Bitcoin, offered the average user. He highlighted in a comment to Cointelegraph that Bitcoins consensus protocol has proved its efficacy on its own, but the development of numerous third-party applications, like exchanges, has added a number of vulnerabilities to the overall ecosystem:

The general idea of consensus via proof-of-work definitely seems to be standing the test of time in terms of security at least, not so much in terms of scalability. [...] On the security side, weve seen countless examples of vulnerabilities in smart contracts, wallets, exchanges, etc. From the privacy side, there have also been many studies showing that cryptocurrency transactions are relatively easy to trace and de-anonymize, even in systems, such as Monero and Zcash mostly because actually achieving good privacy requires a lot of extra care on the users side.

Private, or permissioned, blockchains have become a go-to solution for big companies and corporates that are looking for distributed ledger solutions for various business challenges. It goes without saying that bigger conglomerates will take no chances when it comes to security and so they turn to permissioned blockchains that are tailor-made and managed by specialist tech companies.

Prime examples are Microsoft Azure Blockchain Service and IBMs Blockchain platform, which is powered by the Linux foundations Hyperledger Fabric. Microsoft Azure Blockchain Service performs a similar function, allowing users to build and operate blockchain networks that scale. IBM Blockchain is aimed at large businesses and corporations and has a variety of existing blockchain platforms that companies can join. Clients can also build and launch their own platforms that can be programmed to carry out specific functions.

Related: Leveraging Hyperledger Fabric Enterprise Blockchain Unleashes Viable Solutions

When asked if permissioned blockchains are more secure than open networks, CipherTraces Jefferies offered an argument suggesting that these platforms arent inherently more secure:

No, they are simply attacked less because they do not move money and are not widely deployed. If anything, they could be more susceptible to hacks and security breaches because by nature of being permissioned, private blockchains are more centralized.

Tramrs take was similar to that of Jefferies about how permissioned blockchains would contrast the security of open blockchains:

The threat model is certainly different. Yet, some issues, such as smart-contract bugs, key management, etc., would also be a problem in a permissioned or private system.

While companies may turn to permissioned blockchains to operate closed-off ledger systems and other financial tasks, at the other end of the spectrum, there are privacy coins that aim to offer complete anonymity to users. Considering Tramrs research into perceived privacy and security offered by privacy coins, he insisted that assessing the actual degree of privacy and anonymity offered is not a clear-cut conversation:

On the one hand, Zcash and Monero use some fairly advanced and very recent developments in cryptography to offer, in principle, high degrees of privacy and anonymity for transactions. On the other hand, cryptography is only one part of a large distributed system implemented by these projects. And measuring privacy, or the lack thereof, at a systems level is very hard. There can be subtle implementation bugs and a variety of usage patterns or side-channel leaks that might reveal much more than the cryptography intends.

A key takeaway is that security concerns in the blockchain and cryptocurrency space transcend individual systems. One cannot label a single platform or cryptocurrency as insecure due to the fact that there are numerous systems that plug into one another. Tramr offered a comparison between traditional financial systems and the emergence of blockchain-based cryptocurrencies where no system is unhackable and that security concerns also come down to usability issues:

You shouldnt have to be an expert to use these cryptocurrencies in the most secure way possible. At the same time, striving for an unhackable system is not necessarily the right goal. If you look at the banking system for instance, things are clearly not unhackable. People get their credit cards and account logins stolen all the time; banks get hacked; theres a lot of fraud; and most of this gets handled by the legal framework and insurance. A similar framework for seamlessly and gracefully handling security breaches and losses in the cryptocurrency space doesnt exist yet.

In the decade following Bitcoins creation and the emergence of numerous altcoins, blockchain platforms, cryptocurrency exchanges and a multitude of other projects have sprung up. This inevitably included teething problems and hacks; fraud and security breaches were rife, particularly among cryptocurrency exchanges.

Meanwhile, technologists and developers have begun leveraging blockchain technology and cryptography to build secure and robust systems. The exploration of the capabilities continues today, and Jefferies believes that the technology will continue to drive the development of more secure systems across a wide range of industries:

Yes, there has been a lot of experimentation looking for use cases where blockchain provides benefits beyond traditional technology. [...] We are seeing companies and countries pursuing digital currencies because of the enhanced efficiency and control enabled by digitalization. In the next 10 years, every major economy will have their own Central Bank Digital Currency.

The rest is here:

Making Blockchain Safe and Secure, a Balancing Act That Never Ends - Cointelegraph

Blockchain in the shipping industry – the rise of Smart Shipping – Lexology

According to the UK Governments Office for Science, 80% of world-wide trade is carried by maritime transport. UK ports handle 5% of total world maritime trade. A new change is coming to this integral part of the British economy

We are at a new era. Digital information, computer coding and new technological infrastructure are the new drivers of the future world. It is inevitable that these drivers will innovate and change the shipping industry. Many of the commercial contracts in the world may become smart contracts coded by computers. The application of blockchain technology is particularly beneficial in digitising smart shipping.

Blockchain and smart contracts

What are distributed ledgers?

Distributive ledger technology consists of a distributed database, a ledger, shared among participants in a network. The ledger is simply a digital file system which grows and becomes larger with every transaction. Rather than having a single database held in one place, identical copies of the ledger based on mathematical algorithms are held on multiple computers in the network, creating a circle of trust. All network participants have a full copy of the ledger for full transparency.

What is a blockchain?

Blockchain is a specific form of organised distributive ledger technology. All transactions in the network are linked in a sequence of blocks. The blocks can be closed, locked and new blocks can be added to the chain through digital coded transactions. The blocks are stored and recorded in a sequential manner with fixed, specified numbers.

Blockchain algorithms can add subsequent blocks using public and private key cryptography. It is a self-governing system where cryptography verifies information in permanent blocks of data. This is therefore a secure process of verification of transactions, which records the timing of the transaction and ensures that only the intended recipients get access to the information.

What is a smart contract?

Blockchain is capable of moving digital assets. For example, in cryptocurrency, the asset is a digital coin. However, blockchain can be used to allow you to move any asset that can be represented with a digital token for example, registration of land, intellectual property rights or contractual obligations. You can also attach rights to it and put in place coded protections while moving the asset. The rights operate automatically through coding. This is how you create a smart contract. A smart contract is a programmed code which is made out of a network of blockchains containing data.

Advantages of using the distributive ledger technology in the shipping industry

Speed & lower costs

Handling trade on paper and manual handling of documents, even when sent by email, fax or post, slows down logistics and facilitation of trade. Blockchain technology enables the automatic operation of a maritime smart contract, with events triggering actions that would otherwise require manual intervention or processing. Digitisation of the paperwork exchange process is a cost effective mechanism, which will provide savings in transaction costs.

This means that you will not need to take any decisions in relation to the smart contract because the decisions will be taken automatically. The automation will enforce conditions coded into transactions, e.g. enabling a conditional payment in relation to the shipment. This reduces the scope for individual mistakes, removes the role of intermediaries and can improve operational efficiency of port and terminal operators.

Privacy

Blockchain is a distributive ledger technology which means that every party to a shipment has access to their information and a secure audit trail of all shipments. The peer-to-peer network has secure interactions thanks to cryptography. The users identities are safely protected by crypto-programming and permission-based sharing. Each party has the right to protect sensitive information, such as customer data.

Reliability

The blockchain-based tracking system is more accurate because it enables all members of the platform to see the ledger at the same time, and have access to secured data in real time. This means that the port authority, carriers and freight forwarders can improve their logistics by viewing the whole progress of the shipment.

Security & Immutability

All records are individually encrypted. All nodes, which are comparable to small servers, contain a copy of this record. Any validated record in a blockchain is irreversible and cannot be changed. The documents exchanged in real-time on the blockchain cannot be altered, which reduces the risk of fraud. For example, a Bill of Lading is exchanged between participants in the network, whose rights are coded. Each transaction is encrypted using a key which links relevant participants. This reduces the risk of an unidentified number of copies of a Bill of Lading circulating between parties. This Bill of Lading cannot be misrepresented to avoid import taxes.

Key players

These benefits of distributive ledger technology have not been unnoticed. In 2017, Maersk and IBM developed the supply chain called TradeLens, which is run on blockchain. Some of the largest carriers, port operators, for example the Port of Rotterdam, and industry actors in the global shipping supply chain have joined this digital shipping network. In March 2020, Standard Chartered joint TradeLens as the first banking and financial services institution, which demonstrates confidence in this blockchain-enabled digital container logistics platform.

IBM stated that TradeLens platform will reduce the cost and complexity of trading. IBM and Maersk want the blockchain technology to manage and track the paper trail of millions of containers in the world. It is a neutral platform, accessible to all stakeholders, which moves the technology and the shipping industry forward by cooperative data-sharing.

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Blockchain in the shipping industry - the rise of Smart Shipping - Lexology

IBM Blockchain: What Is Blockchain Technology? – Supply Chain Digital – The Procurement & Supply Chain Platform

Its widely believed that blockchain technology can do for transactions what the internet did for information. But what actually is it?

Simply put, blockchain is a shared ledger, used to record transactions, track assets, improve visibility and build trust in supply chain networks around the world. Immutable records mean no participant in a network can change information once it has been recorded, meaning errors must be reversed instead of covered up.

To help supply chain leaders learn the benefits and better implement blockchain technology into their operations, IBM Blockchain has published Blockchain for Dummies. The third edition of the publication, readers can download it for free to grasp basic fundamentals, understand how blockchain truly works, see it in action with use cases, and understand the steps to implementing it.

Smart contracts are also a key benefit of blockchain technology. These rules are stored on the chain and automatically executed, meaning conditions for corporate bond transfers, terms for travel insurance to be paid and much more can be defined quickly, and with great ease.

Not only does blockchain improve visibility, but it also helps build trust. With the food supply chain as an example, the technology can trace when, where and how produce has been grown, picked, shipped and processed around the world. This shared record of the truth is a significant boost to efficiency, transparency and confidence.

Blockchain networks can be public, private, permissioned, or built by a consortium. Public networks, such as Bitcoin, allow anyone to participate in and join, whilst private ones are controlled by an organisation. Private networks are still decentralised networks, however.

Permissioned blockchains are generally set up by organisations who have built private systems, enabling restrictions on participants. Consortium-built chains can be shared between organisations, ideal for business where shared responsibility is required.

Learn more about blockchain from IBM here.

SEE ALSO:

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Blockchain expected to explode when lawmakers finally embrace it as an economic growth solution – Stockhead

Blockchain technology has been predicted to take off for some time now, but governments seeking to reboot their economies again could be the catalyst for adoption.

Multiple predictions have been made in recent weeks about how much blockchain investment will take off in the years to come.

Earlier this month, Forbes Business Insights predicted the market would be $21bn by 2025. Considering the market was only $US1.64bn in 2017, this level of growth would equate to a 38.4 per cent compounded annual rate.

This followed on from a similar prediction last month made by American analytics firm CB Insights. It thinks spending will surpass $US16bn by 2023 and has practically limitless potential in 58 industries.

To date blockchain has been more hype than reality with it having very little impact on peoples daily lives.

But signs in recent days point to a brighter future for blockchain, with lawmakers starting to seriously consider its potential as an economic growth opportunity.

One of the more notable pushes towards blockchain adoption is in China, where currently the National Peoples Congress (NPC), the top legislative body, is holding its annual meeting.

A Beijing News report over the weekend suggested deputy to the NPC, Jieqing Tan, would propose setting up a special fund for blockchain industry development.

Such a fund would support the development and growth of blockchain enterprises and cultivate a new generation of unicorns.

While Tan may be just one lawmaker, the embracing of blockchain has made its way higher in Chinas ranks.Last year, President Xi Jinping made multiple statements in support of blockchain technology.

The news excited the industry in China, and globally, at the time, but China has since been preoccupied with the virus and its economic impact.

Meanwhile, in the US last week one of the most conservative Republican representatives, Brett Guthrie, introduced an Advancing Blockchain Act into the House of Representatives.

He said the act would promote the use of blockchain in the economy.

The ongoing coronavirus pandemic has made it clear that we need to maintain American leadership in technology, Guthrie said.

America is a nation of innovation and enterprise and we need to keep it that way. We cannot let China beat us.

But its not just the worlds two most powerful nations where blockchain advocacy has reached law-makers. Japanese officials are looking into blockchain technologies too.

Senator Otokita Shun, a member of Tokyo Nippon Ishins Financial Affair Committee, said digital assets would become more important for the economy in the future.

In a tweet on Saturday he said the Diet (Japanese parliament) would call for improvements to tax and regulations that hindered innovation.

Probably the most noticeable use of blockchain that would impact peoples daily lives would be as the basis for a proposed immunity certificate or passport.

This document would certify the holder either cannot be infected by COVID-19 or is at lower risk. This would potentially give governments confidence to re-open their borders to tourists and business travellers again.

Three firms in Europe Guardtime, SICPA and OpenHealth are working on such a project.

A finished product would contain peoples COVID-19 test results and consequently help governments monitor the populations state of immunity. Patients would only need a smartphone or computer to sign up.

The companies hope it will be adopted en-masse by European lawmakers.

They claim that the data will be secure and impossible to falsify, a critical element in the continent with the worlds strictest data protection laws.

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Blockchain expected to explode when lawmakers finally embrace it as an economic growth solution - Stockhead

Choosing Blockchain As A Career: What Are The Options? – Analytics India Magazine

Blockchain is one of the fastest-growing technology in the market, and a large number of banking, insurance, and tech giants have been deploying numerous blockchain solutions. In 2019, blockchain professionals were at the top of the list of most in-demand jobs, as per LinkedIn.

Numerous financial institutions, startups and traditional enterprise are already either using or experimenting with the technology with great success. The crypto ecosystem had been flourishing in countries such as Singapore, for example, helping it become new-age banking services, and pushing decentralised innovation in the financial sector.

Because the technology is still very new, people who dont have a technical background or coding skills can make a career by understanding the field in detail, and finding an area where they can contribute. If you are a developer, you need to understand the basics of blockchain.

Start by reading the bitcoin white paper to understand where it all started and what concepts such as consensus mechanisms, mining, rewards systems, game theory, and decentralisation mean. Understanding Ethereum comes after that as it is used in a variety of decentralised applications.

While some companies work solely on the Ethereum technology stack or other public protocols, other companies are working on private blockchains, and so there are many different kinds of protocols.

If you are interested in working in the crypto space, then you can focus on learning programming related to open blockchain protocols like Ethereum and learn niche languages known as Solidity, a contract-oriented, high-level language for implementing smart contracts.

Even Python would work in blockchain as Ethereum will soon be launching programs and smart contracts written in Vyper (a Pythonic language). Learning smart contacts is important, knowing the basic principles of data structure, algorithms, and familiarity with the development processes is key to success.

If you want to go and work for financial firms, most of them rely on private blockchains, i.e. the access to the blockchain is controlled by the company, and the data isnt open. Here, the most important skill is learning Hyperledger Fabric, an open-source development platform led by the Linux Foundation.

There are many other blockchain solutions available from companies such as Oracle, IBM and Salesforce offering blockchain-as-a-service tools and leveraging modern programming languages. Choosing a platform will need significant research and a clear understanding of the use case, specific to a particular industry. All enterprise blockchain solutions have their own training modules provided by vendors, which programmers can learn.

There are highly valuable positions open for the blockchain industry when it comes to the software side for designing networks, and building decentralised applications and smart contracts. This includes positions such as blockchain network architect, blockchain engineer, blockchain developer, blockchain UI/UX designers, blockchain network security analyst, blockchain project manager, etc.

Through all of these job roles, professionals can make anywhere between $80,000- 150,000 on the global talent market. Salaries in the domestic market would be considerably less though as the Indian blockchain industry is almost non-existent, and only a handful of startups and enterprise POCs exist.

While learning software is one of the most important routes of building a career in blockchain, there are other ways as well. As a startup, you can develop a new protocol for file storage or exchange of data using blockchain. There are many such startups which came up in the last 3-4 years, raising funds via crowdsourcing, aka ICOs.

This includes business development, marketing, and content related positions. With the crypto ecosystem coming to life, we see multiple projects offered ICOs and hired a bunch of business executives and marketing professionals.

Blockchain advisors can help companies find problems which can be solved with blockchain technology. Due to their acumen in both business and technology, they can combine those two to find niche implementations of distributed ledgers. If you are a business person without technical skills, you can start with the basic understanding of fundamental blockchain concepts such as distributed computing, consensus protocols, tokenomics, cryptography, crowdfunding, etc.

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Choosing Blockchain As A Career: What Are The Options? - Analytics India Magazine

Legendary Cryptographer on Building the First Blockchain in The ’90s – Cointelegraph

In an exclusive interview with Cointelegraph, renowned cryptographer Jean-Jacques Quisquater discusses building the internets first blockchain in the 1990s and being cited in the Bitcoin Whitepaper.

In 1989, Quisquater began working on transitioning media from analog to digital systems for Philips Research Lab in Brussels, where he had been working for 19 years.

The goal was to take a current (analog) situation in real life, and find out how to handle it in digital systems, said Quisquater.

We did that for analog signatures, time, location ... and we discovered many problems, some still to be solved correctly, but we took special care for time (we called it timestamping).

After investigating concrete situations in which timestamping is crucial, the research lab had a series of very positive meetings with Belgian notaries during the same year.

Quisquater stated that the research lab produced a system in which the digital signatures of notaries are used to timestamp documents that are communicated across a distributed network and stored on a database:

We imagined, together with the notaries, a system where notaries could convert documents into a digital version (pdf was not there at that time), put a digital signature on it, and send it to a trusted central authority of the notaries (in Belgium, we call it l'Ordre des Notaires, a central location). At the time there were some digital communications between notaries using modems (forget internet).

The next problem was what to do at the central location, said Quisquater. We then imagined using cryptographic hash functions in order to register in a secure way to receive messages without any possibility of changing it with the digital signature of the central authority (ordre des notaires).

And one day I discovered that it was possible to use that without the use of such signatures if the whole file (chain) is public for all notaries. The concept of (block)chain was created!

However, Quisquater noted that the lab also experienced escalating financial difficulties, leading to its closure at the end of June 1991.

Quisquater then began working for the Belgian university UCLouvain, in a very bad position where he was paid the lowest possible salary for a professor, and only worked half-hours.

However, in 1996, he received a grant alongside Bart Preneel of KULeuven university to work on a project called Timesec.

The idea was to introduce standards at the [International Organization for Standardization] ISO and [Internet Engineering Task Force] IETF levels about secure digital time in order to get a more secure tool as [Network Time Protocol] NTP, said Quisquater

The cryptographer recounts papers written by Scott Stornetta and Quisquaters long-time friend Stuart Haber offering ground-breaking insights into the use of hash functions for timestamping at the time papers that are also cited in the Bitcoin Whitepaper.

After receiving the grant, Quisquater began to work on implementing the first blockchain on the emerging internet alongside Haber:

The first blockchain, by Stuart, was using NYTimes to publish hash values (surety.com). It still exists. We used blocks (the real idea of Merkle) chaining with 2 secure hash functions (in case one is broken) and a secure pseudo-random generator.

Quisquater recounts that the IETF was not really interested in our ideas (too complicated), but ISO was able to publish a working draft and then an ISO standard about blockchains [that] was continued till very recently.

Five papers were written about the project, including Design of a secure timestamping service with minimal trust requirements the second reference listed in the Bitcoin Whitepaper.

Haber and Quisquaters system did not involve any form of mining.

Last week, EAL7-security certified hardware wallet manufacturer Ngrave announced the appointment of Quisquater as an advisor ahead of the launch of their flagship Zero wallet.

Quisquater stated that he will advise the company on how to secure a chip, a physical object, and how to make sure that a cryptographic algorithm is the right one, in addition to general rules to handle security.

Ngrave co-founder and CEO, Ruben Merre, told Cointelegraph that the Ngraves founders first met Quisquater in October 2018, leading to collaboration on crypto security.

It was apparent that Quisquater shared the same vision as the Ngrave team, said Merre, recounting that when they next met in person, the Ngrave team explained their newly invented key generation process, and Quisquater told the team he had the exact same thing in mind.

The first half of 2020, interactions became more frequent and eventually Quisquater also became formally involved, Merre added.

Quisquater has also advised 12 blockchain startups, four initial coin offerings (ICOs), and has given at least 25 talks on the subject of blockchain over the past three years.

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Legendary Cryptographer on Building the First Blockchain in The '90s - Cointelegraph

Inequality manifests in stimulus – Mail and Guardian

Among the many inequalities revealed by the Covid-19 pandemic, one of the most striking is the dramatic divergence in governments fiscal responses. Economic activity has collapsed worldwide as a result of lockdown measures to contain the coronavirus. But although some developed countries have been able to deploy fiscal stimulus on an unprecedented scale, most have not.

Since March, the United States government has announced additional spending amounting to more than 14% of gross domestic product (GDP). In Japan, the figure is more than 21%, compared to nearly 10% in Australia and about 8.4% in Canada. In Europe, lack of agreement on a strong joint stimulus effort has led to more varied responses, from additional spending ranging from 1.4% of GDP in Italy and 1.6% in Spain to 9% in Austria, with Germany and France in the middle, at 4.9% and 5%, respectively. Rigid European Union budget rules continue to limit government spending in precisely those countries that need it the most.

Meanwhile, monetary-policy responses have expanded the fiscal capacity available at subnational levels of government in many advanced economies. By cutting interest rates, buying up municipal and provincial bonds, and introducing new lending facilities for specific sectors and enterprises, the US Federal Reserve and other major central banks have used all means at their disposal to keep borrowing costs low, and to maintain public agencies liquidity.

By contrast, the fiscal response across most developing economies has been underwhelming, but not because the economic conditions facing these governments are any less challenging. If anything, the lockdown measures and disruption of global trade and investment have inflicted even greater damage on developing and emerging economies.

In India, for example, it is estimated that 122-million people lost their jobs in April alone. Worse, despite lockdown measures, the number of Covid-19 cases in the country continued to rise rapidly. Declining remittances and sharply falling export and tourism revenues have battered many other developing economies as well, even those with less stringent lockdowns.

Yet, despite large-scale job losses and declining household incomes, there has been relatively little fiscal response. Although Prime Minister Narendra Modi just announced a package amounting to 10% of GDP, this includes earlier allocations and the expected effects of monetary measures. Additional public spending will comprise only a minuscule fraction of the total amount.

These differences are evident even within the G20. By the end of April, new public spending by the groups emerging economies averaged about 3% of GDP, compared to 11.6% among the advanced economies. And even within that cohort, there was wide variation, with South Africa increasing spending to 10% of GDP, while Indias new public spending was less than 1%. Not surprisingly, outside the G20, low-income countries have struggled to marshal even tiny rescue packages, let alone anything sufficient to combat the virus and avert economic collapse.

Much of this difference in fiscal responses can be explained by long-standing systemic inequalities in the global economy, in which developing countries must borrow in internationally accepted reserve currencies. As a result, they do not have the fiscal freedom enjoyed by countries that issue such currencies. That is why a new issue of the International Monetary Funds reserve asset special drawing rights has become such an urgent priority.

Moreover, many developing economies were already being crushed by a mountain of external debt before the pandemic struck. For example, African countries (as a group) were spending more on debt service than on public health. Although many bondholders and other creditors remain in denial about the need for substantial debt relief, the imminent implosion of global debt makes this outcome inevitable.

The widespread cessation of economic activity means that tax revenues are plummeting just when governments need to increase spending. For developed-country governments that can borrow directly from the central bank, this isnt really a problem. But for most developing countries, the calculus is more difficult. Even those without immediate debt-repayment concerns are showing little inclination to raise public spending to anywhere near the levels needed to prevent a broader economic collapse.

The reason is simple: most of these countries fear capital flight. Already, more than $100-billion has poured out of developing countries since the pandemic began. Aside from debt denominated in foreign currencies, more than a quarter of developing countries local-currency debt is held by foreigners, and liberalised capital-account rules in many countries have made it easier for domestic residents to shift their funds abroad. All of this leaves developing countries exceedingly vulnerable, meaning the fear of financial markets acts as a major constraint on even the most obvious and urgently needed policies.

In India, for example, a top finance ministry adviser justified the pathetically small size of the governments stimulus package by raising concerns about the countrys sovereign rating. Never mind that an inadequate response increases the likelihood of a major economic collapse in which hundreds of millions of Indians will face poverty and hunger. In South Africa, the deputy finance minister created controversy for making the perfectly reasonable suggestion that the central bank should buy government bonds directly.

In this self-imposed climate of neoliberal fear, the very idea of instituting capital controls is dismissed as crazy, on the grounds that it would frighten away foreign investors. Yet the economic fallout from the pandemic has made a substantial increase in public spending essential for most developing economies. Besides, how many foreign investors (other than those keen to snatch up assets on the cheap) will be attracted by economies that have been left completely devastated?

Well before the pandemic arrived, it was evident that the financialisation of the global economy was fuelling massive levels of inequality and economic volatility. In this unprecedented crisis, the need to rein it in has become a matter of life or death. Project Syndicate

Jayati Ghosh is professor of economics at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi, executive secretary of International Development Economics Associates, and a member of the Independent Commission for the Reform of International Corporate Taxation

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Inequality manifests in stimulus - Mail and Guardian

New Legislative Caucus Established, Members Say They Will Focus on a Reform Agenda – Effingham’s News Leader

Published on May 22 2020 10:00 amLast Updated on May 22 2020 10:00 amWritten by Greg Sapp

A group of Illinois Republican House members have created the Illinois Taxpayer Freedom Caucus that will work within the House Republican Caucus. A caucus release says the group will have a primary focus of promoting structural and ethical reforms in the state.

Members of the Taxpayer Freedom Caucus include Representatives John Cabello (R-Machesney Park); Joe Sosnowski (R-Rockford); Blaine Wilhour (R-Effingham); Dan Caulkins (R-Decatur); Brad Halbrook (R-Shelbyville); Chris Miller (R-Oakland); Allen Skillicorn (R-Crystal Lake); Darren Bailey (R-Xenia); Andrew Chesney (R-Freeport); David McSweeney (R-Barrington Hills); Amy Grant (R-Wheaton); Terri Bryant (R-Murphysboro); Randy Freese (R-Quincy); Dave Severin (R-Benton); Tom Morrison (R-Palatine); Tom Weber (R-Lake Villa); Patrick Windhorst (R-Metropolis); Dan Swanson (R-Alpha); Charlie Meier (R-Okawville); and Tony McCombie (R-Savanna).

The members of the IL Taxpayer Freedom Caucus issued the following statement:

There is a growing number of legislators who are tired of the business as usual politics that is bankrupting our state. We have major fiscal issues and structural imbalances that stifle our ability to grow, create jobs and aggressively utilize our many natural advantages.

We need to do more than just tinker with a few policies. We need to transform how our government works.

The Democrat party in Illinois is too unaccountable. The lack of a proper check on their influence has resulted in an agenda that is extreme, one-sided and renders vast regions of our state powerless.

The current political operations in Illinois have shown that they are unwilling to meaningfully address these imbalances in a way that is sustainable for the future.

Spending reform, economic growth, and ethical government are the answers to our problems. Enacting policies that allow our economy to grow and dealing with our major budgetary and debt drivers in a way that is fair to all taxpayers is our only pathway to economic prosperity and stability in Illinois.

The pandemic has exposed the failure of the current economic policies in Illinois. If we had taken the proper steps to control spending, reform our structural imbalances, and eliminate the influence peddling in our government, we would be in a much better position to deal with these emergencies and our children and grandchildren would not be burdened with an endlessly oppressive tax system.

This caucus intends to work within the Republican Caucus to present honest assessments and provide realistic solutions. We acknowledge that at this point, none of the answers are easy or popular but we were sent to Springfield to deal with the real issues.

The Caucus is to meet this week and elect officers.

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New Legislative Caucus Established, Members Say They Will Focus on a Reform Agenda - Effingham's News Leader

Buying The Third Congressional District – Los Alamos Reporter

BY TOM WRIGHTSanta Fe

The race is on for Democrats to replace Ben Ray Lujan in the CD3, which takes in all of northern New Mexico and Quay and Curry Counties in eastern New Mexico. The Democrat Primary has fielded eight candidates who have raised a record total of $4,707,002 as per currently published figures from the Federal Election Commission.

The Republicans have fielded five candidates who raised a total of $108,235.

Why is this House District so valuable to Democrats? It has been held by them since 1982, with the exception of one special election when Republican Bill Redmond won the district when then Representative Bill Richardson was appointed our Ambassador to the United Nations. It is also the district that holds New Mexicos capital city, Santa Fe.

The campaign funds raised by the Democrat candidates have come largely from outside the state. Valerie Plame has raised the most among the field with receipts of over $2 Million and disbursements of $1.7 Million, with most of her donations coming from outside New Mexico.

Conversely, the Republican candidates have much smaller war chests, but their funding comes mostly from New Mexicans.

Traditionally, northern New Mexicans have voted Democrats into office, but this last election we saw a split in the Democrat Party between the centrist and the progressives, with progressives winning the governorship, two congressional seats and several state legislative seats. Democrat Senator John Arthur Smith of Deming and Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee is a primary target of his party. He has traditionally called for fiscal responsibility which progressives cant understand and they are attempting to defeat him.

All of the Democrat candidates in the CD3 race are progressives and the pre-Primary Convention choice, Teresa Leger Fernandez has been accused by her competitors as bringing dark money in the race from groups attacking them. They had agreed not to encourage dark money, but thats politics.

Harry Montoya is the Republican pre-Primary choice in the race who campaigns on his record and has disbursements of $14,881. Yet, Montoya expects to win the primary and is determined to defeat his Democrat opponent with his experience and local support. He has been married to his wife Doris for 40 years and has made a life of community service through his fraternal organization, the Knights of Columbus as well as serving as an elected member of the Santa Fe County Commission and the Espaola Public School District.

Being well known in the district, he has been endorsed over the other Republican candidates in the primary election by the Santa Fe New Mexican, Albuquerque Journal and Taos News, as well as former Congressman Bill Redmond (CD3) and a host of pastors and politicians.

Harry describes himself as a pro-life, pro-Second Amendment, and pro-religious freedom conservative Republican who left the Democrat party last year because he said it had radically changed. It is because of the new, radical direction Democrats have taken that he feels he best represents the traditional values of all of northern New Mexico and not those who have brought outside money and influence into Santa Fes politics.

He has dedicated his entire life to helping those who suffer from substance abuse and he founded Hands Across Cultures with a mission to educate our youth on substance abuse prevention. He is an internationally recognized expert on addiction and has served in Argentina and Mexico on assignments from the U.S. State and Commerce Departments to help them organize substance abuse programs. He took a leave to run for Congress from CYFD where he worked as the Constituent/Legislative Affairs Director.

Editors note: Tom Wright is a political commentator and lives in Santa Fe.

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Buying The Third Congressional District - Los Alamos Reporter

A few Friday thoughts on what the Arizona Mirror is (and isn’t) – Arizona Mirror

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In the 19 or so months since Arizona Mirror launched, weve gotten accustomed to disingenuous complaints almost exclusively from conservative politicians, activists, political consultants and corporate lobbyists that we exist to ensure Democrats are elected and are part of a dark money propaganda plot.

Were not. What we are is a team of professional and veteran reporters who have a depth of experience covering Arizonas citizens and the governments they form. We have complete editorial independence: The stories we write are the stories we think are important. Our work stands on its own.

To the extent that our work angered people in the halls of power, well, reporting on things that the powerful dont want you to know is the entire purpose of journalism.

And we havent ever taken a single thin dime from a 501(c)(4) corporation, the entities typically referred to as dark money outfits because they can spend unlimited sums on American politics without disclosing where the money comes from.

The argument has been that were a dark money operation has its roots in how our publishing organization began. States Newsroom, the 501(c)(3) public charity that publishes us and our 11 sister publications, did what many nascent charities do when they launch: It found a fiscal sponsor so it could begin its work while it applied to the IRS for certification as a 501(c)(3). That fiscal sponsor was Hopewell Fund, a charity with ties to the progressive world.

Fiscal sponsorship allows a new nonprofit to raise their own money tax-free by using the sponsors 501(c)(3) certification until the IRS approves its application. For States Newsroom, that happened in summer 2019. By the fall, the complicated process of separating from that fiscal sponsorship was complete, and all ties with Hopewell were severed.

Today, Open Secrets, the news site operated by the Center for Responsive politics (itself a public charity) that is dedicated to uncovering hidden money in politics, wrote about the network of money funding pseudo-news outlets to advance progressive causes.

Deep into the piece, after detailing a variety of astroturfed news operations online and on Facebook many of which were shut down after the election they sought to influence was over Open Secrets turned its attention to Hopewell, which shares resources with two other nonprofits that directly funded some of the other pseudo-local outlets.

The story notes that Hopewell had ties to States Newsroom, and that our parent organization plans to bring in more than $27 million by the end of next year something that isnt all that surprising, considering that there are plans for us to expand significantly.

What wasnt mentioned by Open Secrets is that Hopewell doesnt, and hasnt ever, given money to States Newsroom.

As our publisher, Chris Fitzsimon, told Axios in January, the organization doesnt accept corporate donations or underwriting, just philanthropic donations. What does that mean? Well, for starters, not a single cent that pays for this operation comes from a dark money outfit, despite how much our bad-faith critics yell that we do.

Open Secrets would have known as much had it bothered to contact Fitzsimon before publishing; several hours after the story went live, it was updated to include exactly that information.

I have deep moral and professional problems with people who seek to exploit the decline in local news to advance a political agenda. The model is gross: Masquerade as a local outlet, leverage content on social media, gather tons of data on the people that interact with the content, then feed those people political ads from the affiliated political groups. Their local presence is minimal, at best, and is primarily composed of people without serious journalism backgrounds.

Many of those groups and sites and Facebook pages no longer exist, and Im betting that many of those that do in 2020 wont in 2022.

How are we different? Were part of a public charity that exists to launch legitimate news sites to cover statehouses in states where failing corporate media has left an absence of coverage. Were staffed by veteran journalists who have experience covering their communities and capitals. We have a physical presence at the Capitol, and attend meetings and press conferences and political events right alongside the other members of the Capitol press corps.

Were also raising money from our community not for political campaigns, but to support the news we already cover and build on what we do. The Mirrors local fundraising efforts have allowed us to increase pay, bring on interns and hire more freelancers.

We dont have associated 501(c)(4) outfits or super PACs. We dont gather data from our subscribers or followers so we can later microtarget them with political ads aimed at supporting particular candidates or issues.

We dont get told what to write or what to cover or how to do our jobs. The truth is that Ive never had more journalistic freedom at any point in my career.

That allows us to write original news, to break stories, to cover under-served communities, to provide information for people to engage with their government.

I know that my professional reputation is on the line. I came into this with my eyes open. And I did it because the cause is just: A community cant effectively govern itself if it isnt informed. Thats the mission that drives me.

The very first thing we published was an introductory post I wrote back in September 2018. The words I opened that piece with are more true today, as we face a continually shrinking corporate media:

At no point in our nations history has an independent and free press been unimportant, but the necessity of the Fourth Estate has perhaps never been more starkly apparent at any point in the post-Nixon world. In this critical time brimming with fake news and alternative facts, where the truth is seemingly up for debate and in which the most powerful man in the world attacks the free press as the enemy of the people, journalistic pursuits are essential.

I cant promise well be perfect or that well always get everything right, but well own our mistakes and not make them a second time. And I will go to the mat to defend our integrity, because if we dont have that, we have nothing.

Jim Small is a native Arizonan and has covered state government, policy and politics since 2004, with a focus on investigative and in-depth policy reporting, first as a reporter for the Arizona Capitol Times, then as editor of the paper and its prestigious sister publications, the Yellow Sheet Report and Arizona Legislative Report. Under his guidance, the Capitol Times won numerous state, regional and national awards for its accountability journalism and probing investigations into state government operations.

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A few Friday thoughts on what the Arizona Mirror is (and isn't) - Arizona Mirror

The looming fiscal crisis and the wisdom of Obafemi Awolowo – Vanguard

Obafemi AwolowoBy Obadiah Mailafia

IN terms of financial wizardry and sheer genius in economic statecraft, the only master I bow to is the legendary sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo. Former Head of State General Yakubu Gowon once observed: If you know of a man greater than Obafami Awolowo, I would like to meet him. He is in a position to know. He released Awolowo from Calabar prison in July 1966; making him Minister of Finance and Chairman of the Federal Executive Council.

Through prudent management of cocoa revenues, he invested in human capital, in industry, agriculture and rural development and in basic physical infrastructures. He created several institutions to drive the process of social and economic transformation of the region. Among them were: The Western Nigerian Development Corporation, WNDC; the Finance Corporation; and the Western Nigeria Housing Corporation.

The old West had the best civil service in Africa, if not in the emerging Commonwealth. Economist, lawyer and philosopher-king, Awo did not suffer from the inferiority complex of the inferior minds who call themselves leaders today.

He was able to bring into his inner circle men of distinction such as Simeon Adebo, Rotimi Williams, Ojetunji Aboyade, Samuel Aluko, Hezekiah Oluwasanmi, Banji Akintoye, Sam Ikoku, Anthony Enahoro and Alfred Rewane.

While seeking the counsel of wisemen, he was always master of his own brief. In his own words: While many men in power and public office are busy carousing in the midst of women of easy virtue and men of low morals, I, as a few others like me, am busy at my desk thinking about the problems of Nigeria and proffering solutions to them. Only the deep can call to the deep.

Great men are always misunderstood. Our Igbo brethren accuse him of having spread hunger during the Biafran War which led to one million dead, most of them children. They also blame him for the policy of allocating a paltry 20 pounds to all Ndigbo as part of the post-bellum settlement. They also attacked him bitterly for advocating the banning of Okirika, an area of business that is still dominated by Igbo traders to this day.

History has absolved him. He insisted that it was not up to him to feed his adversaries in war so that they would wax stronger to fight him. He also revealed that the 20 pounds policy was a collective ministerial decision rather than that of a single minister. As for Okirika, those who still believe in it should be ready to receive the next consignment of the clothes belonging to Chinese COVID-19 victims rumoured to have been shipped to our shores.

With Awolowo as Finance Minister, Nigeria did not borrow a single dollar from the Washington Institutions, bilateral partners or the international capital markets during 1967-1970. Same goes for the post-war rehabilitation and reconstruction of the war-torn East.

Awolowo was a man of fastidious discipline. The British colonial administrators used to complain that Awolowo would not deign to share a bottle of wine with them. Awo conquered the baser passions to allow himself focus on high and noble goals: I will, more than ever before, subject myself to severe self-discipline. Only men who are masters of themselves become easily masters of others. Therefore, my thoughts, my tongue and my actions shall be brought under strict control always.

Obviously, if you want a good Finance Minister, never go for someone as flamboyant as Okotie Eboh. Go for someone who is lean and mean. Woe betides you if you go for a greedy pig. You will only get a pork-barrel. Go, rather, for someone who is modest and restrained in his ways someone who can say No. A man or woman with courage and convictions who can plug the haemorrhage that defines our fiscal space today.

Awolowo was of such a breed. If he saw you with a woman other than your wife, you were out of his cabinet. He believed that if a man could not be disciplined in his private life, you could never trust him with government assets under his care.

He also led by example. It is remarkable that he never lived in a government building throughout his career, unless you characterise his three years in Calabar prison as being residency in a government building. As Premier of the West, he lived in his own house at Oke-Bola, Ibadan. While serving the Federal Government, he resided in his private house in Apapa. He took financial accountability very seriously.

And most crucially, he always did his homework. Confronted with challenges, he was not one to seek advice from Babalawos or from the crooks that go by the name of prayer contractors nowadays. Rather, he would retreat to the inner sanctums of his study: thinking, analysing and developing original solutions. He had this big thing about Mental Magnitude.

Himself a philosopher, one of his life-long friends was the Austrian-British philosopher of science, Karl Popper, with whom Awo used to spend some of his vacation at his home in the outskirts of London discussing issues about truth, logic, freedom and the prospects for democracy.

According to the philosopher Akin Makinde, Mental Magnitude derives from a combination of the thinking of Plato, the Roman Stoics and Ren Descartes. It is, in his words: A philosophical doctrine which derives from a theory of mind and body, with the assertion that the mental is superior to the physical element of a person, and should take control over the emotions, desires, and actions.

Mental magnitude demands that we embrace the discipline of thinking while using our mind and rational faculties to solve humanitys manifold challenges. It is the antithesis of superstition, ignorance, incompetence, solipsism and stupidity. Awo thought deeply through the issues of economic planning, development strategy and policy management; coming up with highly original and creative solutions.

The late sage was a man of supreme confidence. He was not arrogant, although many of his foes misinterpreted his self-confidence as hubris. He did not suffer fools gladly, if truth be told. He was so sure of himself and of his own God-given endowments that he saw himself as inferior to nobody. This is why he was loathed by a Northern Caliphate that was steeped in feudalism and the false mythology of born-to-rule.

Addressing the youths recently, one of his protgs, eminent historian Banji Akintoye, reminded us: Chief Obafemi Awolowos success was due to his confidence that the British White rulers of Nigeria were not superior to Nigerians, and that Nigerians can indeed achieve great thingsYou are much stronger than you think.

Sure, you do not have the kind of money that the corrupt politicians of these days have; but if you use your head, mobilise your huge numbers and your education sensibly, and if you operate purposefully and with discipline as Chief Awolowo would do in circumstances such as these, you can change the destiny of your peoples for the better.

Nigerias destiny will be made or marred in the coming post-coronavirus new normal. Two roads stare us in the face: the straight and narrow calls for discipline, restructuring, rebirth and economic transformation; while the other of profligacy, banditry, genocide, incompetence- portends disintegration and dissolution. It is a choice that we must make.

How we manage the looming fiscal crisis in the emerging global order will determine whether we survive or perish. Awolowos wisdom must be our guide if we are to overcome and prevail. To quote the American poet Robert Frost: Two roads diverged in a wood and I I took the one less travelled by, and that has made all the difference. Wishing you all very joyful Eid celebrations!

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The looming fiscal crisis and the wisdom of Obafemi Awolowo - Vanguard

The controversy over HR 6666, the COVID-19 Testing, Reaching and Contacting Everyone Act – Valley News

There is a lot of conversation and controversy over House Resolution 6666 introduced by Democrat Rep. Bobby Rush of Illinois with 58 co-sponsors.

H.R. 6666 is the COVID-19 Testing, Reaching and Contacting Everyone Act.

Tracing is not a new idea, but it has been a hot topic on social media and radio talk shows in the last week. Opponents said its likely unconstitutional and violates the First, Fourth, Fifth, Eighth and Ninth Amendments.

The bill itself is short, but it has two sentences which are vague that worry opponents.

The bill grants $100 billion to entities around the country to trace and monitor the contacts of infected individuals and to support the quarantine of such contacts. It would do this through mobile health units at individuals residences and provide services related to testing and quarantines and for other purposes. Priority for funding would go to hot spots and medically underserved communities.

The director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would oversee and send the funds to health clinics, schools, high schools, universities, churches or basically any other entity the CDC chose. One hundred billion dollars in funding would be for fiscal year 2020 and such sums as may be necessary for fiscal year 2021 and any year thereafter when the emergency continues.

The opposition has cited violation of HIPAA and privacy, forced vaccinations and fear that it gives the authorities the right to come into homes and separate family members, including taking children if someone in the home tests positive for COVID-19. The bill clearly does not include verbiage for forced vaccinations or separations, the fear is the vague language will lead to these outcomes. This concern was fueled by at least two items made public.

One was an advertisement that appeared for the Washington State Department of Children, Youth and Families on a Washington state social services job board advertising for workers for child centers, suggesting that child separation for quarantine was already in the works and even giving the addresses of sites where the children would be held.

The DCYF later posted a clarification on the job posting, stating that it was intended only for foster children who had tested positive for COVID-19 or who had been exposed and had no placement available. They furthermore clarified that the addresses they posted were proposed, but they hadnt received previous permission.

A second item was a video circulating on social media which showed Dr. Robert Levin, the director of Ventura County Public Health, speaking before the board of supervisors about a plan to hire up to 50 new contact tracing investigators to find people who have COVID-19 and immediately isolate them, find every one of their contacts, make sure they stay quarantined and check in with them every day.

Levin admitted his poor messaging during a news conference the next day, stressing those who test positive or who are identified by officials as having come in contact with an infected person would not be forcibly removed from their homes.

While Levin walked back his poor messaging, its undeniable that he did say it. The incident fueled important public discussion right now as to how influential employees like health officials should be as it pertains to policy decisions, laws or edicts, limiting citizens rights to leave their home, separate or work in their own business. And again, while citizens typically have complied voluntarily, boundaries are being tested as to how constitutional is it for mayors, county supervisors and governors to limit citizens movements freedoms and their ability to work or be free from forced injections.

There are a couple of petitions on Change.org, a website for activism, addressing HR 6666. One of them states, House proposal HR 6666, The TRACE Act violates the very idea of a civil society. And, it is also a massive waste of $100 billion allocated for 2020 alone.

HR 6666 violates inalienable rights to ones person, home and property, to ones life, freedoms, privacy and security. It is a violation of the Fourth Amendment, as well as the First, Fifth, Eighth and Ninth Amendments of the Bill of Rights. an invasion into our local communities.

Public health officials have also been hoping for technology to help alert them to potential new infections and map the pandemics spread with the help of tech companies. Apple and Google announced in April a joint effort to track the coronavirus by smartphone. This idea also sparked a wave of fear on social media and excitement.

The tech giants have said that their apps would alert someone who had been exposed; however, it wouldnt alert health officials or tell where the meeting took place, making it less helpful than health officials hoped.

While HR 6666 clearly does not include language directly for forced vaccinations, it is another public fear that governors will force the vaccination that President Donald Trump has discussed may be available in the next six to 12 months.

In deciding the constitutionality of a law, there are two ways to challenge them. One is to challenge the law on its face, which could strike the law in its entirety. The other way is to challenge the law as applied to a particular person. For example, a person with health disabilities might challenge the restriction that is preventing them from going outside for needed exercise.

A court could uphold an as applied challenge where a restriction is enforced so rigidly that it creates a harmful outcome in a particular case. While the government must act forcefully to protect public health, its best if restrictions are enforced flexibly, allowing for more personal physical freedom.

Strong government action, with due respect for the governments constitutional limitations and some flexibility in enforcement, seems to be the best approach.

In conclusion, while tracing is not a new idea or action, one of the problems with this contract tracing program is that it is only helpful very early in an epidemic or pandemic. At the stage we are at in the U.S., it is almost useless because we are so far into it and so many people have already been exposed to the virus. As shown by the Stanford University Santa Clara County study and the numbers reported by Bakersfield clinics, much of the population here already has antibodies. But Congress wants to spend an additional $100 billion for this program, creating a huge surveillance system and overreaching program not based on science, and many people disagree with offering money to individuals and groups who agree to monitor their neighbors. The bill is vague on what the outcomes would be for people who have been exposed.

Just like global warming, animal rights, free speech, forced vaccinations, religion, politics, gun rights and myriad other topics, no matter what side people are on, it is most important that they are free to discuss and voice their opinion openly without blatant censorship, such as what is currently happening on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and other social media networks. Our forefathers wrote the First Amendment covering free speech, knowing that it was paramount for the protection of all the other amendments. We must protect our unique American inalienable rights.

Julie Reeder can be reached by email at jreedermedia.com.

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The controversy over HR 6666, the COVID-19 Testing, Reaching and Contacting Everyone Act - Valley News

Algeria’s Perfect Storm: COVID-19 and Its Fallout – EUBULLETIN

Coronavirus is a godsend for Algerias government to introduce restrictive measures beyond those needed to contain COVID-19. But its new leaders are missing a chance to gain legitimacy, which will offset the socio-economic fallout of the drop in oil prices.

Although protests successfully ended Abdelaziz Bouteflikas 20-year sultanistic rule a little over one year ago, demands have been continuing to dismantle the system, get rid of the old personnel, and institute democracy. The controversial election in December of Abdelmadjid Tebboune who has inherited a disastrous situation has not tempered the determination of the Hirak protest movement. As a former minister and prime minister under Bouteflika, the new president has won little legitimacy, and protests have continued. Now COVID-19 is worsening already dire economic conditions, such as a sharp drop in oil prices. By the beginning of May, statistics showed 10% of confirmed cases have ended in fatality, the highest percentage in the region.

Hirak had already called for the suspension of the marches mobilising online instead before the governments measures, which include curfews and lockdowns, demonstrating a high sense of duty. But instead of appeasing Hiraks demands, the government has maintained the authoritarian style of its predecessors. Tebboune released more than 5,000 prisoners on 31 March but kept prisoners of conscience and leaders of the hirak imprisoned, then subsequently imprisoned journalists and activists. It even passed a controversial penal law, that also covers fake news, and may be used to justify actions against journalists. The regime wishes to see an end to the Hirak, and rejects accusations of totalitarianism by insisting freedom and a democratic climate exist in Algeria.

Tebbounes actions contradict his praise for the blessed hirak and his promises of instituting the rule of law. In proclaiming the measures, the government has shown disappointing leadership, acting in an authoritarian fashion. Tebboune also declared proudly that Algeria was fully prepared to fight the coronavirus epidemic, an optimistic claim given the country has only 400 intensive care unit (ICU) beds, or one per 100,000 people. Despite hundreds of billions of hydrocarbon dollars accumulating during the Bouteflika-era, Algerias health system ranks 173 out of 195 countries. Algerians often refer to hospitals as mouroirs, meaning places for the dying. Not only has the state failed to build modern hospitals but basic hygienic conditions are lacking, and government officials prefer being treated overseas. A 2014 project to build five university hospitals was abandoned, leaving the health sector in deplorable shape.

Before Chinese assistance arrived, the glaring lack of equipment to protect caregivers and care for the sick was evident. Prime Minister Abdelaziz Djerad admitted the health system required a total overhaul. The president recently stated Algerias doctors are among the best in the world but didnt address why almost 15,000 Algerian doctors practice in France. Strict containment measures are in sync with most countries but implementation is challenging when most people live in overcrowded urban dwellings. Water shortages in many areas makes good hygiene and decontamination impossible, while schools and universities find online teaching difficult when many students do not possess laptops or internet connections. And only 20% of Algerians have debit cards in a cash-dominated economy because of low trust in the public-dominated banking sector, making online shopping capability low.

An already declining macroeconomic situation is worsening due to COVID-19. The IMF revised its 2020 estimates for Algeria, forecasting a catastrophic contraction of -5.2% in a country where hydrocarbons account for 93% of export revenues and 60% of its budget. Foreign currency reserves are now an estimated $55 billion (expected to fall to $44billion by the end of 2020), down from $200 billion in 2014, and Algerian crude has recently traded close to production costs, with the fiscal breakeven oil price at $157. In line with its historic aversion to external borrowing, Tebboune recently ruled out seeking financial support from the IMF or other foreign banks, as he argued such borrowing undermines sovereign foreign policy because when indebted we cannot talk about either Palestine or Western Sahara, two causes dear to Algeria. Friendly countries most likely a reference to China are said to have offered to grant loans which have been declined for now.

The government is forecasted to face a 20% budget shortfall this year, but Algerias fiscal response to COVID-19 is actually the largest among the regional hydrocarbon exporters at an estimated 8% of GDP, compared to an average of 3.2%. However, the government revised downwards its 2020 public spending by 50%, halting state projects and slashing its $41 billion import bill by 25% while expanding agricultural production. National oil company SONATRACH will also cut planned investment by half to $7 billion but plans have been revealed to develop other natural resources including gold, uranium and phosphates. But recent growth rates are insufficient to create jobs for those entering the labour market. Despite government attempts to support a rather anaemic formal private sector, estimates are 700,000 jobs could be lost due to potential bankruptcies from reduced activity and a loss of markets abroad.

Facing potential social unrest and the quasi-preservation of a tired social contract, the government has committed to upholding public sector wages including for 50% of the civil servants told to stay home protecting sacrosanct, unsustainable subsidies, and increasing health expenditure to strengthen the capacity to combat COVID-19. A supplementary finance law will include various measures that support businesses and the economic fallout. However, while the government is to be commended for its efforts to aid businesses, supporting large swathes of the population is challenging as approximately 50% of the workforce operate in the informal economy. Weak administrative capacity and insufficient data to implement cash transfers makes the planned solidarity allowance of 10,000 dinars ($80) for Ramadan difficult to allocate to those who most need it. Families, communities, and religious organisations continue to be a social safety net.

So COVID-19 has not created new problems, it has merely magnified and exacerbated the numerous inequalities and failures of the Bouteflika regime to sufficiently invest in human security. Typically, whenever oil prices and related earnings dwindle, the political system promises to reform and diversify the economy. Tebboune is repeating this same old tune. There are positive elements, such as the governments realization it must initiate genuine reforms. And local enterprises have been successfully producing artificial respirators, surgical masks, and other materials. Algerians, including the Hirak, are showing great social solidarity. But the government must capitalize on these positive actions by introducing real change. Because, if not, Hirak will certainly be back in force once the crisis is over, and operating in an environment of worsening socioeconomic problems. The medicine of the past will not work.

Algerias Perfect Storm: COVID-19 and Its Fallout Expert Comment by Adel Hamaizia and Yahia H. Zoubir Chatham House / The Royal Institute of International Affairs.

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Algeria's Perfect Storm: COVID-19 and Its Fallout - EUBULLETIN

Whats Ahead for Off-Off Broadway: The Most Vulnerable but Vital Spaces for Theater? – Observer

As the COVID-19 shutdown grinds on, countless questions about theater loom: When can venues reopen? Without a vaccine, will audiences gather in an enclosed space? Are shows canceled for the rest of 2020? But the most basic, existential query is the hardest to answer: Who will survive?

Organizations big and smallfrom the Broadway mega-landlord Shubert Organization to producers who lease 75-seat Off-Off Broadway black boxesare hemorrhaging cash, no longer able to cover rent, mortgage or payroll. Which of them will call it quits? A partial answer came on May 6, when Shetler Studios & Theatres closed its doors permanently after 30 years. Later that day, the Secret Theatre in Queens folded after nearly 13 years. As the Secrets artistic director Richard Mazda lamented in a public statement: The plain truth is that the entire theater business is in such deep trouble now that I expect that we will be only one of many small theaters that will close.

But Off-Off Broadway is mobilizing to save itself. On May 28 at 1:00 pm, the League of Independent Theater and its sister organization IndieSpace will hold a Small Venue Rent Forgiveness Town Hall to call upon elected officials to protect small arts organizations from being displaced.

SEE ALSO:Frozen Isnt the Only Broadway Show Permanently Canceled Due to COVID-19

The alarm is justified. Barring a massive second outbreak and stock market crash, one imagines the 41 Broadway houses now hibernating will eventually wake up, one by one, and the Great White Way will shine again. As for Off Broadwayscores of great, nonprofit institutions such as the Public, the Vineyard, Second Stage, the Signature, New York Theater Workshopwell see if furloughs, Payroll Protection Program (PPP) loans and the largesse of foundations and private donors keep them solvent until its time to emerge.

But whos saving Off-Off Broadway? Thats the scrappy, sprawling confederation of venues with 99 seats or fewer and the hundreds of groups that rent them for limited runs. The League of Independent Theater lists approximately 138 New York City operating venues, plus more than 40 non-traditional spaces (such as galleries or bars). The Indie Theater Fund has 546 member companies. These outfits, with shoestring budgets and loyal, niche audiences, are the most vulnerable in the current crisis. Its horrible enough to contemplate, say, the incomparable Soho Rep going belly up, but what if three-quarters of Off-Off disappears? The loss of this incubator for emerging stage talent would be devastating.

After Shetler and Secret fell, I wanted to check the health of some of the citys most vibrant Off-Off spaces. What emerged were unique but related stories of real estate and relationships, financial planning and month-to-month improvising, and protecting a home even if you cant invite anyone over to play.

Located on the first floor at 312 West 36th Street, The Tank is two spacesa 50- to 60-seat three-quarter black box, and a roomier 98-seat mainstage. Before COVID-19 hit, artistic director Meghan Finn had been overseeing about 80 performances a month: comedy, improv, puppet theater, experimental work, even musicals (the last show I saw before quarantine was there: Greg Kotiss anticorporate road-trip musical, I Am Nobody). We canceled performances through the end of June, Finn says. That was 273 performances by 90 different artists and companies. And that continues on for every week were closed past June.

More than a lot of Off-Off venues, The Tank relies on box office to keep going, hence the high volume. With a monthly rent and maintenance of $18K, Finn has had to rely on a good rapport with the buildings owner while waiting for rent forgiveness legislation to pass in Albany. The Tank has not paid rent for the past two months, but the landlord has been cooperative. In a sense, hes in as difficult a boat as we are, Finn notes. Its just the bottom of the food chain. If theres no rent relief for us and theres no mortgage relief for him, theres no relief.

Like other theaters, the Tank maintains a lively online presence. Every Tuesday, it hosts CyberTank, a virtual variety show. The thing about the Tank is we dont just do theater, Finn points out. Theres poets, musicians, puppeteers, comedians. Theyre pretty adept at creating and accessing online content. Still, Finn admits that CyberTank is far from being a reliable revenue generator. We are working really hard to figure out how were going to continue to fulfill our mission, she says. Fortunately, we have support from the Howard Gilman Foundation, the Mellon Foundation, the Henson Foundation. But there needs to be some relief.

Unlike The Tank, the 27-year-old arts center HERE (145 Sixth Avenue) owns its two-theater space. Yet its billsmortgage payments, occupancy charges, utilitiesalso add up to approximately $18K a month. And while founding artistic director Kristin Marting is not sweating eviction, every days a fight. Frankly, I feel the most stressed and worn down Ive ever felt in my career, Marting says. I feel so much pressure in terms of keeping my 16 staff members employed, keeping our artists paid, keeping the business afloat.

HEREs online programming (including an original Zoom opera by Kamala Sankaram and Rob Handel) have been partly underwritten by an emergency grant from the New York City Community Trust. So artists are seeing some money. Marting says that HERE has kept up with mortgage payments and hasnt been forced to lay off anyone, due to a PPP loan. The federal cash infusion provides eight weeks of support, 75 percent of it for payroll and up to 25 percent to operational costs. The loan is forgiven if the organization meets (evolving) criteria, which Marting must watch like a hawk. Beyond that, the director says that HERE plans to negotiate further mortgage payments with Citibank.

When not drawing and re-drawing budgets, Marting has been thinking big in terms of HEREs artistic future. It helps that she has spent decades exploring multimedia, site-specific staging and audience role-play. Because she understands: No matter how hardcore your audience, its unlikely that 90 people will gather in a room to watch a dance-theater piece. Marting mused on creating socially distanced outdoor events or indoor installation shows, with five or ten audience members promenading through the building, or hyperlocal performances for people who cant travel downtown. Perhaps audience members could download audio guides, which direct them in a scavenger hunt. Thats a really big obstacle, Marting observes. How do you make people feel comfortable gathering again?

One of the things that may help us survive, says Theresa Buchheister, is that we have the lowest paid staff in the entire art scene of New York. The newly crowned artistic director of the Brick Theater (she took over in December) admitted that rock-bottom pay was a situation she had been trying to improve. Founded by actor-writer Robert Honeywell and writer-director Michael Gardner 2002 in a brick-lined former garage at 579 Metropolitan Avenue, the Brick has been a mainstay in the burgeoning Brooklyn theater scene. Buchheister was poised to open the space to a new generationand a new period of growthwhen COVID-19 froze everything.

The Brick paid full rent for April and half-rent for May, and plans on half-rent for June. But honestly, if we have to keep paying rent, then Im scared, Buchheister says. Gardner and Honeywell, she explains, have a good relationship with the landlord, but a long-term agreement needs to be worked out. Without rent forgiveness or major federal support, and if audiences dont return until next year, she says the outlook is potentially apocalyptic.

Where will the money come from? Large institutions can turn to their boards, staffed with millionaires, and ask for emergency donations. The Brick, as with the majority of Off-Off spaces, doesnt have a sugar daddy. Theres fundraising, but Buchheister has a complicated relationship to crowdsourcing at the present momentespecially if it means asking the community to support the Brick. She refers to a recent Dance Magazine article by director-choreographer Raja Feather Kelly critical of institutions asking for donations when they should be helping artists. With so many unemployed or dealing disease and death, how can she pass the hat around? Were not fundraising in that way, Buchheister says, because it just feels, to me, morally fucked up.

No one is breezing through the crisis, but the leaders of the Bushwick Starr sound a measured, confident tone. We feel very lucky because were in a pretty good position under the circumstances, says Noel Allain, the Starrs co-founder and artistic director. We dont have any rentals and the box office is a pretty small amount of our income. I feel like well be able to weather this and not have to lay people off. The Starr employs 10 full-time and four part-time staffers. Another fortunate thing for us is the timing, adds Sue Kessler, co-founder and creative director. Our fiscal year ends June 30, so the season was essentially coming to a close and a lot of our funding was already in place when this happened. Since the Starr already had rent budgeted in, they dont expect awkward conversations with landlords.

More than most Off-Off companies, the Starr offers a number of educational and community programs, events tailored for diverse groups: schoolkids to senior citizens. All our classes and workshops are running online right now, Allain is glad to report. On May 29, the Starr will broadcast Big Green Theater: The Movie, the culmination of their 10-year-old eco-playwriting program for Bushwick and Ridgewood public elementary students. Theyre funded through different city grants, Allain explains. If that gets cut, all of that will come screeching to a halt. So thats worrisome for us. The end of this fiscal year is more or less sorted out.

The futures a mystery for everyone, but at least the Starr stands on stable ground, thanks to foundation and state support. Its a matter of looking at next year, Kessler says, how long this will go on and what will change in terms of fundraising, foundations, government and all that. For once we feel really lucky that we are a small theater. Were a 70-seat house, which we bemoan in normal times, but right now its a real advantage. It also gives the Starr the freedom to ask what large institutions seem to have forgotten: What do artists need? We are totally artist-facing, Kessler says, its in our bones to react in the same way to this moment: What could we do to help? What do our artists want to be doing during this time and how can we support that?

Americans for the Arts has estimated that the financial losses from the COVID-19 crisis for the arts and cultural sector will be about $5.5 billion. The estimated median per-organization impact was estimated, two weeks ago, to be $38K. Every week, that number rises. As Broadway fans pray for reopening, or we watch the fate of regional giants such as the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., Chicagos Goodman Theatre, or the Los Angeles Theatre Center, its important to remember that the smallest outfits have the most direct link to artists. Often theyre run by artists, and give emerging talent its first opportunity. If that layer of cultural growth is wiped out, the whole ecosystem suffers.

On May 28 at 1:00 p.m., the League of Independent Theater and its sister organization IndieSpace will hold a Small Venue Rent Forgiveness Town Hall to call upon elected officials to protect small arts organizations from being displaced. The individual players may be small, but when they collaborate, they form a mighty ensemble.

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Whats Ahead for Off-Off Broadway: The Most Vulnerable but Vital Spaces for Theater? - Observer

New article from Tatton Investment Management: Just as the sun comes out, clouds appear in the East – Marketscreener.com

Over the past week, it felt as if the new normal of enforced idleness paired with less stringent lockdown rules and summer weather would lead to a happier mood across Western Europe, including the UK. The same applied for investors, whose portfolios also enjoyed some time in the sunshine. However, the outlook began to cloud over somewhat again towards the end of the week.

Stock markets jolted upwards at the start of the week on news that a viable coronavirus vaccine may become available before the start of the next cold season. A surprise announcement by Germany and France that they supported the issuance of quasi-joint European bonds - to the tune of half a trillion -Euros - with the aim of pump-priming the European Union's post-COVID-19 recovery added to the positive air within markets. Some thought such Eurobonds could become a very powerful counterweight to US Treasury bonds, and help overcome one of the core fiscal and monetary weaknesses of the Eurozone.

Economic news flow later in the week cheered up economists, who have recently been expecting the worst. As a result, data that is only 'really quite poor' rather than outright 'devastating' is being greeted more warmly than we ever thought recession-indicating numbers possibly could. That, combined with oil prices stabilising at levels above $30 per barrel (see separate article) does tell the story of a tide turning, after so many weeks of economic doom and gloom.

The positive stock market movements of the past weeks have all but anticipated this turning already and it takes considerable, optimistic imagination to see stock markets rising higher without considerable risk of 'altitude sickness' hounding capital markets once more. It is undeniably positive that the loosening of lockdown restrictions across Europe has led to an already notable rise in levels of economic activity, but without - thus far - a rebound in the rate of infections. Quite the contrary, many formerly strongly affected areas are not registering any new cases.

Given the rate of infections is still growing in countries blessed with permanently warmer climes, like India and Brazil, we cannot be sure whether COVID-19 is following the seasonal pattern of influenza, but for the moment it would appear that the coronavirus' decline, together with the prospect of a vaccine before the winter, is providing a better near-term outlook than we could recently have dreamed of.

That's where the 'onward and upwards' narrative ends and pressing concerns have to be discussed. First comes the prospect of negative interest rates and bond yields in the UK. This may be a new and alien concept to UK investors, but it has been the norm across the Eurozone, Switzerland, Sweden and Japan for considerable time (and they have coped with this relatively well in recent years). To put this prospect into perspective, for institutional investors the 'real' interest rate is far more relevant than the 'nominal' rate (i.e. the yield after the impact of inflation).

As the chart below shows, holders of UK inflation-linked government bonds have endured 'negative yields' since 2015, lower than other major nations' inflation-linked bonds. Another way to think about this is that investors expected UK inflation to be higher than elsewhere - so nothing really new there.

The other concern is once again that of international politics. Following Donald Trump's tirades against China of the past weeks, this week was China's turn to strike back. Their once-a-year parliamentary session rubberstamped a proposal to align Hong Kong's legal status much more closely with mainland China, which will give the Chinese authorities far-reaching powers to crack down on the freedom-defending people of Hong Kong. Sadly, this also entirely devalues their parallel announcement of intending to honour the US-China trade truce of January (Phase 1 trade deal), because the US would never be able to do the same if China effectively annexed Hong Kong.

Against this new and unexpected development, we will be assessing whether this move is as much a domestic manoeuvre driven by domestic political needs as Trump's election campaign anti-China rants are. We are not overly optimistic at this point and may have to revise our previous optimism towards China - that has benefitted portfolios nicely so far over the course of this year.

Disclaimer

Tatton Asset Management plc published this content on 26 May 2020 and is solely responsible for the information contained therein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 26 May 2020 08:27:03 UTC

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New article from Tatton Investment Management: Just as the sun comes out, clouds appear in the East - Marketscreener.com

What Kind of Country Do We Want? | by Marilynne Robinson – The New York Review of Books

Magnum PhotosDoa Ana County, New Mexico, 2017; photograph by Matt Black

In my odd solitude I stream the America of recent memory. The pretext for drama, in the foreground, seems always to be a homicide, but around and beyond the forensic stichomythia that introduces character and circumstance there is a magnificent country, a virtual heaven. In a dystopian future, children would surely ask what it was like to live in such a country. Candid memory would say, By no means as wonderful as it should have been, even granting the broad streaks of pain in its history. Before there was a viral crisis whose reality forced itself on our notice, there were reports of declines of life expectancy in America, rising rates of suicide, and other deaths of despair. This is surely evidence of another crisis, though it was rarely described as such. The novel coronavirus has the potential for mitigation, treatment, and ultimately prevention. But a decline in hope and purpose is a crisis of civilization requiring reflection and generous care for the good of the whole society and its place in the world. We have been given the grounds and opportunity to do some very basic thinking.

Without an acknowledgment of the grief brought into the whole world by the coronavirus, which is very much the effect of sorrows that plagued the world before this crisis came down on us, it might seem like blindness or denial to say that the hiatus prompted by the crisis may offer us an opportunity for a great emancipation, one that would do the whole world good. The snare in which humanity has been caught is an economicsgreat industry and commerce in service to great markets, with ethical restraint and respect for the distinctiveness of cultures, including our own, having fallen away in eager deference to profitability. This is not new, except for the way an unembarrassed opportunism has been enshrined among the laws of nature and has flourished destructively in the near absence of resistance or criticism. Options now suddenly open to us would have been unthinkable six months ago. The prestige of what was until very lately the world economic order lingers on despite the fact that the system itself is now revealed as a tenuous set of arrangements that have been highly profitable for some people but gravely damaging to the world. These arrangements have been exposed as not really a system at allinsofar as that word implies stable, rational, intentional, defensible design.

Here is the first question that must be asked: What have we done with America? Over the decades we have consented, passively for the most part, to a kind of change that has made this country a disappointment to itself, an imaginary prison with real prisoners in it. Now those imaginary walls have fallen, if we choose to notice. We can consider what kind of habitation, what kind of home, we want this country to be.

No theoretical language I know of serves me in describing or interpreting this era of American unhappiness, the drift away from the purpose and optimism that generally led the development of the society from its beginnings. This can be oversimplified and overstated, but the United States did attract immigrants by the tens of millions. It did create great cities and institutions as well as a distinctive culture that has been highly influential throughout the world. Until recently it sustained a generally equitable, decent government that gave it plausible claims to answering to the ideals of democracy. This is a modest statement of the energies that moved the generations. Optimism is always the primary justification for its own existence. It can seem naive until it is gone. The assumption that things can get better, with the expectation that they should, creates the kind of social ferment that yields progress. If we want to avoid the word progress, then call it the creative unrest that made 2019 an advance on 1919.

In recent decades, which have been marked by continuous, disruptive change and by technological innovation that has reached assertively into every area of life, a particular economics has become a Theory of Everything, subordinating all other considerations to some form of cost-benefit analysis that silently insinuates special definitions of both cost and benefit. If neither of these is precisely monetizablecalories might have to stand in for currency in primordial transactionspersonal advantage, again subject to a highly special definition, is seen as the one thing at stake in human relations. The profit motive has been implanted in our deepest history as a species, in our very DNA.

This kind of thinking has discredited ideals like selflessness and generosity as hypocritical or self-deceived, or in any case as inefficiencies that impede the natural economy of self-interestsomehow persisting through all the millennia that might have been expected to winnow out inefficiencies, if the pervasiveness of this one motive is granted. I consider the American university to be among the highest achievements of Western civilization. And I know at the same time that varieties of nonsense that would not last ten minutes if history or experience were consulted can flourish there, and propagate, since our entire professional class, notably teachers, go to university. There has always been learned nonsense, of course. But when angels danced on the heads of pins, at least the aesthetic imagination was brought into play.

Much American unhappiness has arisen from the cordoning-off of low-income workers from the reasonable hope that they and their children will be fairly compensated for their work, their contribution to the vast wealth that is rather inexactly associated with this country, as if everyone had a share in it. Their earnings should be sufficient to allow them to be adequate providers and to shape some part of their lives around their interests. Yet workers real wages have fallen for decades in America. This is rationalized by the notion that their wages are a burden on the economy, a burden in our supposed competition with China, which was previously our competition with Japan. The latter country has gone into economic and demographic eclipse, and more or less the same anxieties that drove American opinion were then transferred to China, and with good reason, because there was also a transfer of American investment to China.

The terrible joke is that American workers have been competing against expatriated American capital, a flow that has influenced, and has been influenced by, the supposed deficiencies of American labor. New factories are always more efficient than those they displace, and new factories tend to be built elsewhere. And as the former presidential candidate Mitt Romney remarked, workers in China sleep in factory dormitories. Employing them in preference to American workers would sidestep the old expectation that a working man or woman would be able to rent a house or buy a car. The message being communicated to our workers is that we need poverty in order to compete with countries for whom poverty is a major competitive asset. The global economic order has meant that the poor will remain poor. There will be enough flashy architecture and middle-class affluence to appear to justify the word developing in other parts of the world, a designation that suggests that the tide of modernization and industrialization is lifting all boats, as they did in Europe after World War II.

In the recent environment, I was hesitant to criticize the universities because they are under assault now, as humanist institutions with antique loyalties to learning and to freedom of thought. But the universities have in general bent the knee to the devaluation of humane studies, perhaps because the rationale for that devaluation has come from their own economics departments and business schools. For decades scholars have read American history in these and related terms, excluding those movements and traditions that would challenge this worldview. Freedom of thought has valorized criticism, necessarily and appropriately. But surely freedom of thought is meant to encourage diversity of thinking, not a settling into ideological postures characteristic of countries where thought is not free. If the universities lose their souls to a model of human nature and motivation that they themselves have sponsored, there will be some justice in this and also great loss, since they are positioned to resist this decline in the name of every one of the higher values.

Any reader of early economics will recognize the thinking that has recently become predominant, that the share of national wealth distributed as wages must be kept as low as possible to prevent the cost of labor from reducing national wealth. This rationale lies behind the depression of wages, which has persisted long enough to have become settled policy, a major structural element of American society and a desolating reality for the millions it defrauds. Polarization is no fluke, no accident. It is a virtual institutionalization in America of the ancient practice of denying working people the real or potential value of their work.

Institutionalization may be less a factor here than inculcation. Long before the pandemic struck, the protections of the poor and marginalized that largely defined the modern Western state had been receding, sacrificed to the kind of policy that presents itself as necessity, discipline, even justice tendentiously defined. Wealth can be broadly shared prosperity, or it can be closely held, private, effectively underwritten by the cheapening of the labor of the nonrich, which reduces their demand for goods and services. When schools and hospitals close, the value of everything that is dependent on them falls. Austerity toward some is a tax cut for others, a privatization of social wealth. The economics of opportunism is obvious at every stage in this great shift. And yet Americans have reacted to the drove of presumptive, quasi, and faux billionaires as if preternatural wealth were a credential of some kind.

All the talk of national wealth, which is presented as the meaning and vindication of America, has been simultaneous with a coercive atmosphere of scarcity. America is the most powerful economy in history and at the same time so threatened by global competition that it must dismantle its own institutions, the educational system, the post office. The national parks are increasingly abandoned to neglect in service to fiscal restraint. We cannot maintain our infrastructure. And, of course, we cannot raise the minimum wage. The belief has been general and urgent that the mass of people and their children can look forward to a future in which they must scramble for employment, a life-engrossing struggle in which success will depend on their making themselves useful to whatever industries emerge, contingent on their being competitive in the global labor market. Polarization is the inevitable consequence of all this.

The great error of any conspiracy theory is the assumption that blame can be placed on particular persons and interests. A chord is struck, a predisposition is awakened. America as a whole has embraced, under the name of conservatism and also patriotism, a radical departure from its own history. This richest country has been overtaken with a deep and general conviction of scarcity, a conviction that has become an expectation, then a kind of discipline, even an ethic. The sense of scarcity instantiates itself. It reinforces an anxiety that makes scarcity feel real and encroaching, and generosity, even investment, an imprudent risk.

Lately, higher education has been much on the minds of journalists and legislators and, presumably, potential students and their families, who are given to understand that higher education is crucial to their financial prospects and also that the costs and debts involved may be financially ruinous. Worse, the press speaks of elite universities as if there were only a dozen or so institutions in the country where an excellent education can be had. In fact there are literally hundreds of colleges and universities in this country that educate richly and ambitiously. Many of the greatest of them are public, a word that now carries the suggestion that the thing described is down-market, a little deficient in quality. Anyone who notices where research and publishing are done knows that these schools are an immense resource, of global importance. In the midst of this great wealth of possibility, an imaginary dearth is created, and legislatorsout of an association between political courage and parsimonyrespond with budget cuts that curtail the functioning of these magnificent, prosperity-generating institutions. It should be noted that elite schools are also embracing the joylessly vocational emphasis that is the essence of these panicky reforms.

How is it that we can be told, and believe, that we are the richest country in history, and at the same time that we cannot share benefits our grandparents enjoyed? When did we become too poor to welcome immigrants? The psychology of scarcity encourages resentment, a zero-sum notion that all real wealth is private and is diminished by the claims of community. The entire phenomenon is reinforced by the fact that much of the capital that accumulates in these conditions disappears, into Mexico or China or those luridly discreet banks offshore.

The minimum wage has become the amount an employer can get away with paying. It is neither the amount a worker needs to sustain a reasonable life nor, crucially, to be important enough as a consumer for his or her interests to align with other interests. Because workers are underpaid, they are often treated as dependents, as a burden on the safety net, which is actually a public subsidy of the practice of underpayment. Workers often do not fall into the category of taxpayer, a word now laden with implication and consequence. It implies respectability, a more robust participation in citizenship, and, fairly or not, an extreme sensitivity to demands made on his or her assets for the public benefit. Equitable policies are often precluded in the name of the taxpayer so forcibly that the taxpayerthat is, a fair percentage of the publicis never really consulted. In this time of polarization, such language reflects an ugly, alienating division in our society, with bad faith at the root of it. Proud people are insulted, those same people we now call essential because they work steadily at jobs that are suddenly recognized as absolutely necessary.

Behind all this there is a scarcely articulated variant of an old model, once prevalent throughout the West, that invoked national wealth as the summum bonum of collective life. For the purposes of the theory in its present iteration, the absurd wealth that has accumulated at the top end of polarization is reckoned as part of the national wealth no matter how solidly it is based in poverty. In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, great engines of wealth built global empires that filled the world with colonialism, militarism, and racialism, as well as monuments and marching bands. These trappings of power generated the excited identification of the masses with the nation no matter how hostile the system was to their own interests.

As adapted for what was recently the present, this wealth is still a product of national policiesfavorable taxation, imaginative banking regulations, and low production costs, including depressed wages and lowered safety and environmental standards. The cinch that tightens such slack as remains in the lives of the underpaid is called austerity or fiscal discipline. Austerity has not touched the beneficiaries of these arrangements, nor has fiscal discipline. These policies amount to continuous downward pressure on the accommodations made to the fact that wages are not sufficient to meet basic needs. Austerity and discipline retain their brisk, morally coercive force, amazingly. The work ethic persists through impoverishment, unemployment, deindustrialization driven by pools of cheap labor elsewhere, and the de-skilling that is the effect of all these declines.

This is to say that the kind of shame suffered most sharply by proud people has been put to use to sustain this ugly economic and social configuration, too opportunistic and unstable to be called a system. It offers no vision beyond its effects. Obviously the depletions of public life, the decay of infrastructure, the erosions of standards affecting general health are not intended to make America great again. They are, in the experience of the vast majority of Americans, dispossessions, a cheapening of life.

The theory that supports all this is taught in the universities. Its terminology is economic but its influence is broadly felt across disciplines because it is in fact an anthropology, a theory of human nature and motivation. It comes down to the idea that the profit motive applies in literally every circumstance, inevitably, because it is genetic in its origins and its operations. Selfishness, its exponents call it, sometimes arguing that the word in this context has a special meaning, though the specifics of the sanitizing are unclear. Behind every act or choice is a cost-benefit analysis engaged in subrationally. This is to say that thinking itself is the product of this constant appraisal of circumstance, which is prior to thinking, therefore not subject to culture, moral scruples, and so on, which are merely a scheme of evolution to hide this one universal intention from the billions of us who, in our endless diversity, make up the human species. Greed is good, or at least good enough to have brought us this far. For an important part of any population, these would be glad tidingsmoral considerations not only suspended but invalidated, moralists revealed as hypocrites and fools as well, since they have no idea that the genius and force of evolution are against them. By its nature, this worldview is based in the moment, in any new occasion to seek advantage.

This view of things is radically individualistic, indifferent to any narrative of identity or purpose. It takes a cynical view of people as such, since no ones true motives are different from those of the consciously selfish. Because there is only one motiveto realize a maximum of benefit at a minimum of costthose who do not flourish are losers in an invidious, Darwinian sense. Winners are exempt from moral or ethical scrutiny since advance of any sort is the good to be valued. Progress is likewise exempt from the kind of scrutiny that would raise questions about the real value this process generates, reckoned against other value that is precluded or destroyed.

Americans never believe that Americans are actually influenced by the education they require of themselves and one another, on which they lavish much wealth. To do so would smack of intellectualism, a trait we do not grant ourselves. The same economic model is prevalent in Britain and France, perhaps Europe in general, though it is asserted in other terms. Austerity has prevailed there for decades. The issues raised by the Yellow Vest movement in France are highly consistent with the situation in America. The retraction of policies that acknowledged the claims of the population at large on the wealth of their nation can be described, historically, as the return of the ancien rgime, or as the final triumph of capitalism, or as proof of the waning of Judeo-Christianity, or as recognition of the fact that, when all is said and done, self-interest is indeed the one unvarying human motive. All these could be true simultaneously, each reinforcing the others.

This theory has all the power among us of an ideology, though it lacks any account of past or future, any vision of ultimate human well-being. It promotes itself as nationalism, though its operations are aggressively global. The supposed nationalism plays on a nostalgia for the postwar decades, when the prestige of countries and regions was measured by living standards. Perhaps it derives also from the myth of ideological conflict, the notion that if the Russians had communism, America must have an equal and opposite ideology. This would be called and in time would become capitalism, though the economy Marx critiques under that name is the highly exceptional colonial, industrial, and mercantilist Britain of the nineteenth century.

It is one of the stranger turns in modern history that, for the purposes of this epochal controversy, one man, Karl Marx, named and described both of these ideologies. This is a great concession made to someone whose thought his antagonists claimed to deplore, though it is fair to assume both that they had not read him and that they were simply content to be spared the effort of arriving at definitions of their own. Also, he had the chic of being dangerously European. The pastiche, or the motley, we are inclined to think of as American self-awareness is strange under scrutiny. If we are uniquely characterized by entrepreneurialism, for example, why is the only name we have for it a word of unassimilated French? That sort of thing is usually a signifier for pretentiousness or embarrassment. This little oddity is germane to the larger case against the status quo ante, in which many of our governing assumptions are flimsy and nonsensical, and have stood in the place of meaningful thought, especially in lofty circles, in institutions of great influence, the universities.

Because of this quaint adherence to Marxian categories a narrative has emerged over time that capitalism is the single defining trait of American civilization, the force that has propelled the country not only to unprecedented wealth but also to high levels of personal and political freedom. These assumptions are in need of scrutiny, not by comparison with other countries but of this country with itself a few generations ago. The other half of the great binary, communism, was never realized anywhere, never successful anywhere so far as it was attempted. That somehow legitimizes Marxs schema, even though this is not at all the result he predicted.

Never mind. We are left with the certainty that a civilization can be wholly described by its economy, and that ours is exhaustively and triumphally capitalistmaking anomalous the many well-established features of the culture to which the word public might attach: schools, lands, and, more generally, public works, public services, the public interest. If the furthest implications of the reign of selfishness are not yet fully actualized, no doubt custom, manners, image, shame, or the occasional laws are the obstacle, since the theory itself is so simple and natural in its operation that it should be as small an intrusion on the order of things as multiplying everything by one. It could be used to rationalize stealing the pennies from a dead mans eyes, true, even considering the nugatory value of the contemporary penny. Judgment as to whether it has reached this extreme must await a fuller knowledge of its global impact. Closer to home, it has scuppered the old habit of measuring wealth by standard of living. Averaging helicopters, yachts, and offshore accounts against imminent eviction would not yield a meaningful result.

The cult of cost/benefitof the profit motive made granular, cellularnot only trivializes but also attacks whatever resists its terms. Classic American education is ill-suited to its purposes and is constantly under pressure to reformthat is, to embrace as its purpose the training of workers who will be competitive in the future global economy. What this means, of course, is that universities and students themselves should absorb the cost to industry of training its workforce. Since no one knows what the industries of the future will be, a wrong guess about appropriate training could be costly, which means it would be all the smarter, from a certain point of view, to make colleges and students bear the risk. If this training produces skills that are relevant to future needs, their cost to the employer will be lowered by the fact that such skills will be widely available. In any case, the relative suitability of workers will be apparent in their school history, so industry will be spared the culling of ineffective employees. Those who fail to make the cut will be left with the pleasures of a technical education that is always less useful to them, skills that will be subject to obsolescence as industries change. Certain facts go unnoticed in all this. The great wealth that is presented as endorsing an American way of doing things was amassed over a very long period of time.

Lifetime earnings as well as longevity are adduced to demonstrate the value of university education. Obviously, these are measures of the well-being of people who were educated a generation or two ago. Otherwise, there would be no way of measuring workers peak earnings or their longevity. So there is clear evidence of the economic value of an education based on the humanist model that is now under siege. There is no evidence that education designed to train a workforce would be equally productive of wealth, but it would be profitable in another way, cheapening labor by diminishing the participation of the public in whatever wealth is produced. This is the embrace of inequality, accumulation on one side accelerated by deprivation on the other.

Historically, we have offered our youngthough never enough of themexposure to high thought and great art, along with chemistry and engineering. There is an opulence in all this that has no equivalent in the world. What were those earlier generations thinking when they built our great city-states of research and learning? All those arches and spires induce the belief in undergraduates that they have a dignified place in human history, something better than collaborating in the blind creep of a material culture that values only itself, that is indifferent on principle to the past, and inclined, when it considers a future, to imagine the ultimate displacement of the human worker and at the same time to develop systems of social control of which even Bentham could not dream. Why control people for whom no role or use is imagined? If these futures seem incompatible, the theory of cost/benefit does not admit of such criticism. Present trends, inevitably understood in light of emergent possibilities, are, in the nature of things, ineluctableor they were until a few weeks ago, when the system that had become more or less coextensive with our sense of reality abruptly collapsed.

Emergencies remind us that people admire selflessness and enjoy demands on their generosity, and that the community as a whole is revivified by such demands. Great cost and greater benefit, as these things are traditionally understood. If in present circumstances we are driven back on our primitive impulses, then we should be watching our collective behavior carefully, because it will be instructive with regard to identifying an essential human nature. In more senses than one we are living through an unprecedented experiment, an opportunity it would be a world-historical shame to waste.

Its value as experiment is enhanced by the near absence of leadership from the central government. In various forms, the crisis will persist indefinitely. Over time communities will organize themselves according to their senses of decency and need. Since this crisis is as novel as the virus that has caused it, and since the lack of a helpful central government is unique in the modern period, old thinking and new thinking will emerge over time, and the calculus of cost will be reckoned against the cost of failing to sustain the things that are valued. Benefit will be realized in the fact that needs are identified and served, with all the satisfactions this will entail. Allowing for regional variations, to the degree that democratic habits persist, the country will get by.

As Americans, we should consider our freedomsof thought, press, and religion, among othersthe basic constituents of our well-being, and accept the controversies that have always arisen around them as reflecting their vitality. Not so long ago they were something new under the sun, so if there is still a certain turbulence around them this should remind us that they are gifts of our brief history. We should step away from the habit of accepting competition as the basic model of our interactions with other countries, first because it creates antagonisms the world would be better off without, and second because recent history has shown that the adversary is actually us, and for ordinary people there is no success, no benefit.

And we have to get beyond the habit of thinking in terms of scarcity. We live in the midst of great wealth prepared for us by other generations. We inherited sound roads and bridges. Our children will not be so favored. Since the value of basic investments is not realized immediately, we cannot rationalize the expenditure. We are the richest country in history, therefore richer than the generations that built it, but we cannot bring ourselves even to make repairs. Our thrift will be very costly over time. The notion or pretense that austerity is the refusal to burden our children with our debts is foolish at best. But it is persuasive to those who are injured by it as surely as to those who look at a pothole and see a tax cut. Hiding money in a hole in the ground has seemed like wisdom to some people since antiquity. And there are many who are truly straitened and insecure, and are trusting enough to assume that some economic wisdom lies behind it. Legislators all over America, duly elected, have subscribed to this kind of thinking and acted on it.

We have seen where all this leads. It creates poverty, and plagues batten on poverty, on crowding and exhaustion. If the novel coronavirus did not have its origins in the order of things now in abeyanceother possibilities are even darkerthat order was certainly a huge factor in its spread.

As a culture we have spent a great deal of time in recent decades naming and deploring the crimes and injustices in our history. This is right and necessary. But the present crises have exposed crimes and injustices deeply embedded in the society we live in now. So we provide our descendants with a weighty burden of guilt to lament. This ironytoo mild a wordcasts grave doubt on the rigor of our self-examinations.

All this comes down to the need to recover and sharpen a functioning sense of justice based on a reverent appreciation of humankind, all together and one by one. The authenticity of our understanding must be demonstrated in our attempting to act justly even at steep cost to ourselves. We can do this as individuals and as a nation. Someday we will walk out onto a crowded street and hear that joyful noise we must hope to do nothing to darken or still, having learned so recently that humankind is fragile, and wonderful.

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What Kind of Country Do We Want? | by Marilynne Robinson - The New York Review of Books

Elizabeth Ames: Coronavirus ‘new normal’ Don’t believe all the predictions. Here’s why – Fox News

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Now that the nation has begun reopening, we are seeing a raft of predictions about the coming New Normal.

Not surprisingly, forecasts from our doom-and-gloom political class are overwhelmingly downers.

Sports games will take place without fans. Elbow bumps will replace the warm handshake. Happy hour crowds at restaurants will be replaced by half-empty dining rooms.

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Friendly cashiers at our neighborhood markets will be forever encased behind plexiglass barriers. Facemasks will be the must-have fashion accessory, not only for fall, but beyond.

One prediction heard repeatedly is that the New Normal may consist of recurring contagions followed by lockdowns, kind of like the periodic brownouts experienced by California and third world countries.

It is said that COVID-19 will alter not just our habits, but also our politics.

Were told by pundits on both sides that the gargantuan federal relief spending brought on by the crisis means that expanded government control over our lives is inevitable, especially in sectors like health care. In tomorrows not-so-brave New World, customs and culture, will change forever.

We should be skeptical.

In fact, the nation has lived through a succession of New Normals.

People also agonized over the New Normal in the period following World War I and the 1918 Spanish Flu even if they didnt use that term.

Yet the disillusionment of that era ultimately gave way to the Roaring Twenties. Unfortunately, that exuberant New Normal didnt last. Just when it seemed safe to party like it was 1929, the Jazz Age slammed into the Great Depression and, eventually, the Second World War.

In the 1970s, inflation and energy scarcity were supposed to be the New Normal. But, thanks to changes in government policy including stabilization of the dollar, those disastrous conditions were supplanted by Reagan era prosperity.

In the late 1990s, we were told that the New Normal was the new economy. Stocks of tech companies, however improbable their business models, could only keep going up.

The dot-com bust and the financial crisis of 2008 ended this magical thinking. Faster than you could say red is the new black, belief in progress through wealth creation and growth were suddenly pass.

The New Normal was supposed to be secular stagnation professor-speak for a perpetually stagnant economy and a woke nation that rejected private sector greed.

During that downbeat era, no one could have imagined that, just a few short years later, Americans would elect a president who was the most unapologetic champion of capitalism since Ronald Reagan.

By the time 2020 rolled around before the coronavirus hit the country in the solar plexuscapital creation and growth were back. Secular stagnation seemed destined for extinction.

Based on past performance, todays prognosticators will likely be no better than their predecessors at predicting what the post-contagion world will look like.

Yes, people may be initially reluctant to resume their old activities. But theres no telling how long this reluctance will last, or whether health security measures like temperature checks will become a permanent part of life, like the added airport security after 9/11.

Nor should the left or the right automatically assume that the post-pandemic New Normal will feature an even larger, more powerful Washington.

Fears of the inflationary potential of continued money printing, shared by even some on the left, may help foster some fiscal restraint.

The pandemic is also different than past disasters like the 2008 financial crisis or, for that matter, the Great Depression: Unlike those catastrophes, it is not perceived as a private sector offense requiring entirely new bureaucracies to remedy market failure.

The virus may have kicked off the crisis. But the lions share of suffering that followed has been a consequence of the social distancing responses imposed by the federal and state governments.

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However well-intentioned, those actions have resulted in a loss of freedom never before experienced by Americans.

Citizens were suddenly forced into lockdowns that in some parts of the country seemed excessive and inexplicable.

They are being deprived of access to schools, parks and other public services paid for by their tax dollars.

Forced to sustain substantial financial hardship, many have become enraged by local officials on tax-funded salaries, who have lectured them or otherwise shown little or no concern. The need to flatten the curve is widely appreciated and understood.

Yet there is no telling how the trauma of this black swan loss of liberty will reverberate through the collective psyche of Americans and what black swan results it may produce in the coming election.

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It is natural in uncertain times for people to look to authorities to provide the illusion of certainty. And pundits seeking self-validation are always happy to oblige.

However, if there is one lesson that we can draw from history, it is beware of experts peddling New Normals, especially during an election year.

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Elizabeth Ames: Coronavirus 'new normal' Don't believe all the predictions. Here's why - Fox News

Don’t be afraid of paint automation – Canadian Metalworking

Self-learning robots, which are new to North America, allow a finisher to generate a program very quickly. They tend to have a lighter payload, which is perfect for non-contact applications such as spraying, blowing, and vacuuming.

All it takes to start a spirited discussion in manufacturing is to bring up the topic of robotics and automation. Its a fascinating subject that has been glorified through industry trade publications for decades. The only problem? Most of the systems are geared toward the high-production sectors of Tier 1 and automotive manufacturers that have implemented robotics in every phase of their process. There have been some progressive manufacturers in general industry that have successfully adapted robotics to their high-mix/low-volume applications for welding, part handling, and machine tending.

But many other robotic systems have been harder to implement. Finding information on welding and pick-and-place robotic technology is as easy as picking up a trade publication, as long as the same parts are made repeatedly. But one area that has largely been untouched in general industry is finishing.

As the technology and automation systems for fabrication equipment and welding have dramatically increased the production capabilities of manufacturers, it seems that the available technology runs out at the last step in the manufacturing processfinishing. Most companies still rely on the manual labor of a few key finishers to prep and coat parts in finishing systems even as production and quality expectations continue to increase. This often results in parts sitting in queue, waiting to be finished before shipping. Companies are also struggling to find enough painters to offset these increased production capabilities. Maybe thats because painting and finishing are largely thought of as dirty, dangerous, and repetitive. The next generation is not choosing finishing careers as the industrys experts are retiring. All this adds up to a real problem for manufacturers.

So why then hasnt robotic technology taken root in finishing? Because most companies dont know where to start.

First, finishing areas are considered hazardous environments. Paints and powders create an explosive environment classified as a Class I, Division 1 area where electrical components need to be protected to operate safely. Second, spraying paints and powders have constantly changing variables exacerbated by high-mix/low-volume production requirements. This renders typical programming methods unsustainable. And third, its difficult to add new elements like robotics to existing legacy equipment that is large, expensive, and already integrated for all stages of the finishing process.

All this may sound overwhelming, but it doesnt have to be. This is a problem that North American manufacturers must solve together to stay competitive in the global economy. Blame it on regulations, limited equipment options, or cheap overseas labor; North Americas automated finishing capabilities for general industry are behind. In an effort to add clarity to the situation, here are the primary things any fabricator needs to consider when exploring robotic options for their shop. As one can see, it goes beyond just selecting a robot.

1. Is the Robot NRTL Class l, Division 1-Certified?

Safety regulations in Canada and the U.S. continue to expand, and electrical and OSHA inspectors are beginning to take a closer look at all industrial equipment to make sure its approved by a Nationally Recognized Testing Laboratory such as UL, ETL, or FM. The added safety requirements for an NRTL Class I, Division 1 environment require a completely different robot design, and some industrial robot companies dont even make a robot line for painting.

For the most part, non-North American finishing robot manufacturers work under ATEX certification. However, in order to enter North America, robots must be certified by an NRTL as Class I, Division 1. While these standards are necessary to ensure quality and safety, its challenging for newer players in robotics manufacturing to meet the different requirements of each certification.

2. Has the Application Been Considered?

This robot can be used to suction or blow off moisture on parts before finishing, eliminating moisture that can lead to defects.

In finishing, robots are not one sizeor typefits all. There are many factors concerning part presentation, throughput, reach, and paint quality that determine the proper robotic finishing system to meet every fabricators unique requirements. A robot is only as good as the person teaching it. A robot programmer who doesnt know the nuances and sequences needed to achieve the desired finishing quality of their companys parts may fail at properly programming a painting robot. Here are the three main types of robots that can be used in the finishing industry:

3. What About Software?

To perform a repeatable series of motions, the robot relies on lines of code stored in a file or program. To create this file, programmers have several software methodologies to consider:

Offline programming uses software to create a path and simulate in a 3D world. This type of programming is common in many applications, including painting. Using this type of programming does not stop production while the programmer creates the program. Industrial, collaborative, and self-learning robots can be programmed offline.

Teach pendant programming uses a hand-held pendant or touchpad to create a series of commands and point-to-point positions or paths at the robotic station. It requires production to stop while changes are made. Teach pendants are also used to adjust positions and commands already programmed either manually or from offline. Some teach pendants are very intuitive, while some are limited. Both require a significant amount of time to create programs. Teach pendants are used to program and move industrial and collaborative robots.

Self-learning programming is done by painters rather than engineers or robotic programmers. It takes into consideration the importance of the human eye and intuition that comes from years of experience to avoid missed spots and overcome the Faraday cage effect. It involves disengaging all robotic motors to enter into a weightless free-float learning mode. The painter attaches a control handle, which controls the automatic powder, liquid, and blowoff/suction gun. The robot records all of the painters movements, right down to the subtle variances in gun angle, part coating sequence, and trigger pulls. In other words, all the knowledge and experience of the operator are transferred into the robot program in real time so the robot performs the same human-like movements. From a personnel point of view, this system is able to replicate all the time and investment a fabricator has put into his or her employees. This type of programming can be used only by self-learning painting and finishing robots.

3D scanning/automatic program generation involves a 3D scan of the part and uses software to generate a painting path. This programming method can be used on simple parts without complicated geometries. 3D scanning can be used in all categories of robots (industrial, collaborative, and self-learning).

4. What About Programming Time?

The programming time for different robots can vary significantly. Finding a robot that meets a fabricators production needs and programming capabilities is key to successful integration in a paint or powder system.

In Tier 1 and automotive facilities, it can be quite easy to justify the cost of programming part families because volume is high enough to warrant the time to program. This has allowed these manufacturers to build large robotic painting systems. These systems can be ideally suited for industrial robots because they use higher-payload application equipment that can operate at high speeds. Even though these systems require extensive programming times, once running, they have the capability of high output with high quality.

Lestas self-learning robots mirror intricate human movements without having to rely on offline programming or a teach pendant. The technology is intuitive, and fabricators can start using it on day one following installation.

However, in the high-mix/low-volume world of general industry manufacturers, there can be hundreds of different parts running through the shop at a given time. This can cause programming to become an extremely daunting and cost-prohibitive task. Self-learning paint and finishing robots are suited for this scenario because programs can be made very quickly. Its as simple as using the robot to paint the first part in production. Once the painter has completed teaching the robot how the part is supposed to be finished, the robot is free to replicate it. In certain situations, the painter can even teach these programs in the production line without stopping the conveyor or production.

5. How Will the System Work Together?

A successful automated finishing system needs four key groups to work together: the fabricator, an automation integrator, a finishing system equipment distributor, and a paint/powder distributor.

Each party must know its roles and support each othermuch like the legs of a chairto work successfully. If any one of the four does not support the system, the chair (and system) will fall. Fabricators should look for a robotic finishing system integrator that has experience with the equipment companies they already have relationships with. This creates an easier transition to automation for the team.

6. What About System Design and Investment?

A robotic finishing system has many important variables that can affect overall system performance. Powder and liquid applications are affected by part presentation, environmental conditions, equipment selections, and paint/powder changes. These variables need to be discussed by the four key system groups mentioned in the previous point and work together to decide which need to be addressed for each applications requirements.

A perfectly programmed robot will repeat the same saved program every time, but the results can be affected by many things, including:

In a manual application there are also variables that are addressed and compensated for throughout the application at the gun by the manual painter: flow, electrostatic, speed and distance from the part, atomizing air, and fan pattern.

With a robot, its ideal that all of these potential variables are addressed in advance. The more of these variables that are controlled, the more repeatable the application will be. The more variables that remain in the system, the more vigilant and adaptable the system operators and programmers need to become.

When it comes to robotics, many configurations and accessories are available to make a fabricators life easier. However, its always good to go into such a decision knowing what questions to ask to help make the right choice.

Using automation for finishing involves more than selecting a robot. Operators need to be able to adapt programs and application equipment to be successful using robotics. Discussing options with automation integrators is a good first step as they are the ones to help bring everything together seamlessly.

Paint and finishing robots can be a valuable asset to shops of every size as they create a safer working environment, provide consistent finish quality, and reduce bottlenecks and downtime. Remember, a robot is not a silver bullet. It should be easy to program, adaptable, and empower the team. This creates an engaged workforce with the tools to be in control of the quality they produce. Painting and finishing robots can become an extension of a fabricators team and multiply their efforts for the company to accomplish more.

Derek DeGeest is president of DeGeest Steel Works and LestaUSA Self-Learning Painting and Finishing Robots, 27191 470th Ave., Tea, S.D. 57064, 888-546-2800, http://www.lestausa.com.

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Don't be afraid of paint automation - Canadian Metalworking