Returning to ‘normal’ post-coronavirus would be inhumane – SaltWire Network

Paul R. Carr, Universit du Qubec en Outaouais (UQO)

The world is enmeshed in a significant health crisis that stretches to all levels of society. Containing, controlling and remedying COVID-19 will require concerted efforts, and, importantly, significant social solidarity.

The daily briefings, quantitative graphs, projections, regulations, guidelines, datasets and profiles of those on the front lines, fighting the metaphorical enemy, implore us to consider what we might do after the coronavirus.

Although were still trying to make it through this pandemic, we should also be concerned about how much we really want to get back to what we regard as normal.

COVID-19 has shown us that there is an abundance of good will, harmony, humanity and solidarity in our society. And, conversely, there are also examples in this critically vulnerable time of violence against women, racist attacks against those of Asian origin, the hoarding of limited resources, the corrosive usage of stock-market gambling, unloading and profiteering and some other recalcitrant forces at work, including musings about testing the vaccine in Africa.

Doctors, nurses and many other health professionals and workers are providing exceptional public health services. At the same time, its heart-wrenching to be confronted with the sad reality that many of the people providing essential services are compensated poorly notably people working in seniors residences, daycares and grocery stores.

Within this context, I think it may be helpful to underscore three problems that have laid the groundwork for the present crisis and what I what refer to as societal fault lines: social inequalities, environmental intransigence and economic avarice.

My starting point is what preceded COVID-19 should not be considered normal. A vastly re-imagined society post-pandemic is not only desirable but necessary.

Social inequalities include generational poverty, racism, violence against women, homophobia, xenophobia and discrimination of all sorts.

To examine the life conditions, opportunities, health and education indicators and discrimination related to First Nations Peoples in Canada means acknowledging that, in 2020, the actions, behaviours and beliefs of the Canadian state and Canadian citizens have been highly destructive.

Although not often interwoven into mainstream narratives of societal development, subjects like femicide, suicide (including, notably, among military personnel and veterans) and homelessness must also be addressed.

There must be consideration of a range of potential explanations for why society doesnt fully examine and address these conditions and problems, including negligence, bad faith, ignorance, poor policy decisions, planned marginalization or even cultural genocide in the case of the First Nations.

The clock is ticking toward environmental destruction and catastrophe. We can see and feel the planet change as the climate heats up, oceans reach unforeseen levels, forests are destroyed, shorelines dissipate, islands disappear and ice caps melt into once-frozen waters.

Were losing species, land and Indigenous cultures and languages, smoothing the way for environmental refugees, conflicts and famines.

Read more: Understanding the human side of climate change relocation

Favouring economic development, warfare and unsustainable power structures over serious inclusive engagement and participation with all those who inhabit and share our planet has left us extremely vulnerable. It has also pit people, countries and regions against one another.

The mythology of pulling yourself up by the bootstraps works best when society is designed to break down class differentiations and inequities and is indifferent to dominant power structures.

But the data around social class mobility shows we need to seriously question the belief that capitalism can and will work for everyone.

If were really all in this together, wealth accumulation through nefarious means, slavery, colonialism, imperialism and elitist collusion must be wiped out. Diversity in writing the rules and producing the media to bring about widespread social inclusion is essential.

Who benefits from off-shore banks? Who pays taxes and who accrues benefits from tax deferrals and credits? Why do bailouts systematically support banks, investors and speculators instead of those struggling to provide for their basic needs? Who goes to prison, who is over-policed and why is corruption so infrequently monitored and punished?

At least the fact that the minimum wage is inhumane, especially when considering the near-limitless wealth, privilege and control of the one per cent, has been brought to light through this pandemic.

In the midst of the pandemic, many people in Canada and around the world seem to have an appetite for a transformed social organization and society and a new world order.

That could mean a re-imagined human civilization that no longer prioritizes militarization, conflict, concentrated wealth in the hands of the few, massive social inequalities, environmental catastrophe, delusions of empire and colonization and fictitious notions of democratic freedom, engagement and participation.

The coronavirus is far from being the great leveller, as some have suggested.

Read more: Coronavirus discriminates against Black lives through surveillance, policing and the absence of health data

Its more like the great imbalancer that feeds off social and environmental injustice, exacerbating the wounds, scars and illnesses that existed prior to this pandemic.

Thats why the lessons learned during the pandemic must be used to reconsider and re-imagine social solidarity, one thats hinged on education, democracy and social equality. Returning to normal is no longer a viable option.

Paul R. Carr, Full Professor, Dpartement des sciences de l'ducation & Chair-holder, UNESCO Chair in Democracy, Global Citizenship and Transformative Education (DCMT), Universit du Qubec en Outaouais (UQO)

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Returning to 'normal' post-coronavirus would be inhumane - SaltWire Network

In his bid for the presidency, Joe Biden is stuck in the middle – Maclean’s

On April 14, to no ones surprise, Barack Obama endorsed Joe Biden for president of the United States. The former president came off as eloquent and calming throughout a 12-minute videoalso unsurprising, as he clearly wishes to fill a Donald Trump-sized chasm in the hearts of worried Americans. Obama emphasized Bidens role in helping the U.S. recover from the last recessionmore predictable praise, given the looming post-COVID-19 economy.

Then, six minutes in, Obama said something that took many off guard. After praising Bernie Sanders, the democratic-socialist senator and erstwhile Biden rival, he claimed that Biden already has what is the most progressive platform of any major party nominee in history.

Really? How could Obama claim that Joe Bidena man who argued repeatedly for the governments right to cut Social Security over his years in the Senate, who voted against busing for desegregation decades ago, who has fundraised millions of Wall Street dollars for his current campaign, who infamously backed the Iraq Warhow could this guy helm the most progressive platform in American history?

There is some merit to the claimalbeit the kind that plays best in debating societies. PolitiFact, a fact-checking site run by the non-profit Poynter Institute for Media Studies, calls it half-true, noting that Biden wants to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour, erase past marijuana convictions, shut down private prisons, abolish the death penalty, create a national firearm registry and implement a study into reparations for slavery. He also loudly committed to naming a woman as his running mate, and a Black woman to the Supreme Court. Objectively, these are the most progressive policies Americans have seen in their countrys 243-year history.

READ:Can Joe Biden win the presidency from his living room couch?

The counter-argument: The definition of progressive in 2020 isnt what it was 243 years ago, or even 10 years ago. The title of most progressive can only be examined contemporaneously, not retrospectively. George McGovern, who suffered a huge loss to Richard Nixon in 1972 (fun fact: the same year Biden was first elected to the Senate), pushed an aggressively liberal agenda for his time, including withdrawal from the Vietnam War, amnesty for draft dodgers, a 37 per cent reduction in defence spending over three years, and other environmental and crime policies that, while status quo today, were deemed radical in their day. The question, then, isnt whether Joe Biden is more liberal than any of his predecessors, but whether hes more liberal than any of his contemporaries. That answer is obviously no.

Neither interpretation is wrong. According to David Barker, director of the Center for Congressional and Presidential Studies at American University in Washington, D.C., Bidens progressive promises are less about social progress than frank popularity. That is how Biden has always operated; he modulates his positions based on where the median American voter is, Barker told Macleans in an email. In that way, he has always been squarely in the centre of the Democratic party ideologically, wherever that centre has beennever a lefty and never a true centrist.

That delicate spot, squarely in the middle of a never-ending tug of war between moderates and progressives, is precisely where Biden finds himself trapped right now, as he draws up his platform in the run-up to the November election. Appease the frustrated far left, and he risks alienating the middle; pander too much to the middle, and progressives may simply stay home. For Democrats, this decades-long conundrumhow to advance a liberal agenda without scaring off middle-of-the-road votershas taken on existential implications. Three and a half years ago, a moderately progressive agenda led by the first-ever female nominee pushed middle-of-the-road voters in key swing states into Trumps arms. Has anything changed?

The greatest flashpoint between progressive and moderate Democrats has been Medicare for All, the health-care overhaul pushed by Sanders that would abolish private insurance companies and bring all Americans into a single-payer system. A recent countrywide poll conducted by the Kaiser Family Foundation, an independent non-profit health-care organization, found support among 56 per cent of respondents for Medicare for All, but fully 68 per cent for a so-called public option, which is what Biden is proposing. That would allow anyone to buy into Medicare, an affordable program currently available only to seniors.

Bidens more liberal policies might be better received by conservative voters because of COVID-19 (Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg/Getty Images)

Still, despite the support, Biden has not etched his health-care plan in stone. Shortly after Sanders dropped out on April 8, crowning Biden the presumptive nominee, Bidens camp shot out two policy proposals ostensibly targeting the Berniesphere: He would lower the age of Medicare from 65 to 60 and forgive student debt for low-income and middle-class individuals who attended public post-secondary institutions and historically Black colleges. In the media, this twofer was widely construed as an overture to the left, which sounded odd, since virtually every other presidential candidate, after clinching the nomination, shifts toward the centre. (The theory is that party members on the extremes will vote for you anyway, so you need to start working on undecided centrists and independents.)

In reality, diehard Sanders supporters were not impressed by those policies. Biden struggles with younger voters, says Luke Savage, a Canadian staff writer at Jacobin, a democratic-socialist magazine based in Brooklyn. He doesnt struggle with older votersthats his base. Lowering the Medicare age eligibility by five years isnt really courting Sanders supporters. (Young progressivesespecially womenmay be even more skeptical of Biden after a former aide, Tara Reade, accused him of sexually assaulting and harassing her in the early 1990s. Biden has denied the allegations and prominent Democrat women seem to be rallying around the candidate rather than his accuser.)

READ:Joe Biden:For those that have been knocked down, counted out, left behind, this is your campaign

Optimistic progressive Democrats have portrayed this as merely a first step in a years-long battle. Theyre hopeful about six joint task forces established by Biden and Sanders in Aprilon climate change, health care, criminal justice, immigration, the economy and educationthat comprise members of both camps, which could lead to further leftward policy shifts.

Even if Biden adjusts his messaging, however, those platforms are unlikely to replace any of his current ones, becauseas with his health-care strategytheyre poll-tested and popular. According to Ryan Pougiales, a senior political analyst at Third Way, a centrist Washington-based think tank, Biden was merely throwing a bone to the left with his Medicare age-lowering compromise. Bidens health-care plan, essentially, is a Medicare public option. So literally anyone has the option of buying into Medicare. Any adjustments he makes between now and November will not substantially change that.

Still, the outreach is meaningful, and it extends beyond Sanders. In mid-March, Biden absorbed Elizabeth Warrens progressive proposal on bankruptcy reform, which would help middle-class Americans move on with their lives more quickly after declaring bankruptcy by waiving fees and protecting them from looming debts.

Democrats across the spectrum point to this consolidation as proof of a quality unknown in todays White House: the candidates ability to listen. While critics blast it as flip-flopping, others hail it as open-mindedness crucial to building a strong coalition. Against Donald Trumps authoritarian tendencies, it may be Democrats greatest weapon. Say what you will about Joe Bidenand hell hear you out.

***

Hours after Sanders dropped out, eight progressive youth organizations signed a public letter addressed to Biden, and published it on the website of Tom Steyers climate organization, NextGen. The letter is a blueprint for the program that Gen Z, democratic socialists and their progressive allies are hoping Biden will adopt: support Medicare for All, cancel all student debt, legalize marijuana. Biden will almost certainly not do any of that.

But some requests overlap with what he has already promised. For example, the NextGen authors want him to repeal the Hyde Amendment, which prohibits Medicaid dollars being used for abortions; Biden formerly supported the amendment, but openly changed his mind last June. They want greater accountability and transparency for border patrol guards while expanding the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program; his website promises he will do both. The letter makes no mention of a $15 minimum wagea moot request, since Biden (following Sanderss lead) is already on board.

One could envision the former veep shifting left on other files. His website sketches plansalbeit watered-down versions of what the NextGen authors wantfor investing US$20 billion in crime prevention over incarceration, and laying out a framework for the Green New Deal. Around the same time Biden adopted Warrens bankruptcy proposal, he picked up a 2017 Senate bill, led by Sanders, which would make public colleges and universities tuition-free for students coming from a household with an income less than $125,000.

Promises, however, are one thing; actions are another. Progressives cried out when Biden named Larry Summers, the former president of Obamas National Economic Council, who enjoys close ties with Wall Street executives, as his economic adviser. Serious progressives care as much about appointments as they do about policy. Weve encouraged the Biden campaign to bring on personnel in the campaign, transition and presidency that are committed to fighting for people, not corporations or Wall Street, Chris Torres, a political director at the progressive organization MoveOn, told Macleans in an email.

By including establishment Democrats in his cohort, Biden will never win over all Sanders supporters. But looking at the data, one has to ask: Why bother trying? A Morning Consult poll of 2,300 Sanders fans found that 80 per cent would vote for Biden in November. And while democratic socialists often point to Bidens weakness among younger Americans, who skew progressive, multiple polls from March all showed Biden beating Trump among millennials by at least 10 percentage points. Even if those predictions dont come to pass, younger voters are statistically less likely to vote than older ones, who skew conservative. Crunching the numbers in Vox, the journalist Matthew Yglesias summarized it mathematically: Every voter on the margin between Democrats and Republicans is worth twice as much as every voter on the margin between Democrats and the Green Party.

Yet Biden cannot ignore young Americans, for fear that they might actually vote Green, or not at all, and spoil the outcome in critical states. The delicate political calculation he has to make is how far he can go to mollify the progressive wing, says Matthew Dickinson, a political science professor at Middlebury College in Vermont. He points to Bidens electability argument, that he can win back the disenchanted middle- and working-class white voters in Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania who swung to Trump in 2016 after decades of supporting Democrats. The issue that really divides those Trump supporters is a sense of fairness. They think that the rules have been stacked against them. And anything that smacks of favouritism or elitism, or elevating one group over the concerns of other groups, they tend not to support. For Biden to win back the Rust Belt, hell need to convince voters that a $15 minimum wage, public option and criminal-justice reform are in fact equitable policies.

Luckily for him, that argument may be easier to make in 2020 than it was in 2016, due to the seismic shift brought about by COVID-19. Terry Moe, a political science professor at Stanford University, believes weve been living in a post-Reagan world for decades, where conservative politicians successfully run on anti-government policies, promising retrenchment, lower taxes and less red tape. In the same way the Great Depression led to Roosevelts New Deal in the 1930s, he says, the current pandemic proves how badly we rely on well-funded, effective government. This could be the beginning of a new political era in which politicians run on agendas that promote government capacity and government action in solving social problems, Moe says. That is the progressive agenda.

Democrats will likely link the concept of a strong and equitable government to everything Trump opposes, harkening in some ways to the anything-but-Trump campaign of 2016. The message may sound more convincing after a devastated economy compounds the chaos of Trumps last four years. With a pragmatic, fair, progressive-lite platform, they might be able to convince enough voters to join the blue team.

Policies this early have never been about affecting real change, anyway. Theyre about hope. And at this point, with no standard-bearer left to fight for them, hope is all progressives have.

This article appears in print in the June 2020 issue of Macleans magazine with the headline, Whats left to Biden. Subscribe to the monthly print magazine here.

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In his bid for the presidency, Joe Biden is stuck in the middle - Maclean's

Princess Dianas Former Bahamas Vacation Home Is on the Market for $12.5 Million – HouseBeautiful.com

If you're looking for a luxe beach property, look no further. This five-bedroom, six-and-a-half bathroom home located in the Lyford Cay gated community in the Bahamas is currently on the market for $12.5 million. The 4,492 square foot property is so grand and secluded that even a royal spent some time here with her family.

Brett Davis

The home served as a vacation spot for Princess Diana and her sons William and Harry in the late '80s, according to the listing. Ken Wharfe, the princess's royal protection officer for six years, wrote about Dianna's time spent at the home in his 2017 book, Guarding Diana: Protecting the Princess Around the World, according to CNN. He described the property as "a development that afforded a great deal of privacy, being part of a huge luxury complex, privately policed and spotlessly maintained." Lyford Cay is one of the Bahamas's most elite and private communities. Neighbors include Sean Connery and the Bacardi family, according to the listing.

Brett Davis

The home was designed by architect Happy Ward and built in 1969. It is located at the end of a secluded lane and offers owners 180 feet of private beach frontage. Each bedroom also offers a generous view of the powdery beach. There is also a massive heated swimming pool in the courtyard and various outdoor terraces for entertaining. In 2009, the home was renovated and equipped with new wiring, plumbing, a kitchen, bathrooms, flooring in the entertaining spaces and new ceilings. However, it still retains much of its original charmwe adore the beige-colored shaker-style kitchen.

For more information, contact Philip Hillier of Christie's International Real Estate, who holds the listing.

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Princess Dianas Former Bahamas Vacation Home Is on the Market for $12.5 Million - HouseBeautiful.com

Consulates and COVID-19: How Japan, Bahamas and the United Kingdom Are Coping, Learning – GlobalAtlanta

The work of diplomats is personal by nature, but some leaders of foreign outposts in Atlanta are finding during the pandemic era that this need not mean physical.

In the first virtual edition of its Consular Conversations series sponsored by Miller & Martin PLLC May 8, Global Atlantawelcomed Japanese Consul General Kazuyuki Takeuchi, Bahamian Consul General Astra Armbrister-Rolle and British Consul General Andrew Staunton to provide an overview on their countries approaches to combating COVID-19 and shoring up their economies, as well as how their offices have pivoted to serve the interests of their compatriots during the crisis here in Atlanta.

All have pivoted to some form of remote work, with the Japanese consulate rotating by day and Bahamian consular officials only staying in the office in the early days of Georgias shutdown to support emergency travel and provide passport services that required biometric validation. After initially supporting travelers aiming to get back home on commercial flights, the British consulate moved completely virtual. [See: How to Access Consular Services Amid the Coronavirus Outbreak]

During the hourlong conversation hosted via Zoom, the three diplomats shared these practical insights, along with more philosophical notes on the future of global collaboration as their countries deal with outbreaks of varied intensity.

As of the May 8 forum, the U.K. had the dubious distinction of suffering the largest number of COVID-19 deaths in Europe, exceeding 30,000 on more than 200,000 cases. Some criticized the countrys early approach, which consisted of letting the virus run its course without intense lockdowns.

Soon, however, the plan changed. Having recovered from the coronavirus after days in intensive care, Prime Minister Boris Johnsons government instituted restrictions that wore on for more than six weeks and are only now starting to be relieved. (This week, Mr. Johnson outlined a 50-page plan for phased reopening which aims to balance economic recovery with health advice to avoid a second wave of infections.)

I think theres no real point, at this moment, thinking back to what happened seven weeks ago. Its what confronts us now and how do we move forward to the next stage, Mr. Staunton said in the interview.

He preferred to point to the shared sense of humanity and community action that has emerged in the face of the virus, from the U.K.s 8 p.m. celebrations of frontline workers to his strolls in the neighborhood here in Atlanta.

People are really beginning now to get into that sense of what drives us, what motivates us, whats important in our lives, and thats replicated in the United Kingdom.

Th consulate itself wont be rushing our fences toward reopening but will take its cues both from Georgia authorities and the broader diplomatic network in the U.S.

While Japans outbreak has been slower and more drawn out some 16,000 cases and 600 deaths as of May 8 that has created economic challenges. Japan was just emerging from a two-decade period of stagnation in which finances have been stretched thin; now its put out $1 trillion in stimulus to prop up the worlds third largest economy.

Mr. Takeuchi has been listening to the well-established Japanese corporate community here, and so far the news hasnt been good especially for auto makers and suppliers that make up a good chunk of Japanese investment in the South.

Because of the slump, in domestic and overseas demand, the manufacturing industry has been taking extremely defensive strategy for themselves, Mr. Takeuchi said, noting that Japans strategy of slowing the curve comes at the expense of a quick fix. This week, the country lifted its state of emergency in 39 of 47 prefectures with an eye toward pulling back on some of its voluntary restrictions on movement while taking care of the elderly and fragile. Still, the road ahead is long and uncertain.

For the next several months, we cannot be optimistic about whats coming next.

Meanwhile, already reeling from Hurricane Dorians devastating effects last September, the Bahamas now sees a further hit to tourism, which makes up 80 percent of the economy.

COVID-19 has put a very dramatic halt to that. So were not very optimistic about what the next year or even a year and a half to two years is going to look like for the country, particularly because we are still in recovery mode, said Ms. Armbrister-Rolle.

The Bahamas has been perhaps the most cautious of the three countries on the panel, though it only had 92 cases of COVID-19 as of May 8. Intra-island travel on the archipelago has been at a standstill.

Were very concerned. Were a very small nation. We only have 400,000 people. So every single case is is a really big concern to us. We have a health care system that can very easily become overburdened, she said.

Led by a medical doctor in Prime Minister Hubert Minnis, the government even too a step that some might consider extreme: In March it blocked entry into the country, even for its own citizens stuck abroad. That led to many travelers (especially in Florida) and students (especially in Georgia) being stranded, leaving the consulate here scrambling to help.

A four-phase repatriation plan is being hatched now, with returnees having to be free from the virus before being granted entry. Thats a problem, since many citizens early on werent sick enough to qualify for testing under various state guidelines.

What were doing with the Ministry of Health in the Bahamas is putting those people on separate planes and testing them as they land in the Bahamas, with some being moved to home isolation, she said.

Freshly out of the European Union, the United Kingdom is now negotiating simultaneously trade deals with the bloc and trade officials are beginning talks with the U.S. via videoconference.

The U.K. and U.S. two-way trade is a quarter of a trillion. Thats not to be sniffed at, Mr. Staunton said, noting how the pandemic reveals interconnection of the world in a new way.

What were thinking at this moment in time is that the events of the last three months have shown the importance of smoothness of trade flows. That goes to ensuring that while we can preserve national stocks of key products, we can also access very smoothly those products that other countries are better at making.

He noted the importance of bilateral talks for Georgia, where upwards of 30,000 jobs are supported by British investment.

We want to build that. We want to ensure that we have good harmonization of regulation. So the negotiations are really now getting down to the nitty-gritty, and there will be two weeks of negotiations followed by a short break, followed by another two weeks of negotiations.

He noted that the U.K. is also working to with the nations to ensure the rapid development of a vaccine and equitable distribution to even the worlds most vulnerable. Ms. Armbrister-Rolle said the Bahamas is looking at potential developments in scientific or medical diplomacy that will emerge post-COVID-19.

Mr. Takeuchi added that, if nothing else, diplomats will now be operating in a world where people know the value of both their individual freedom and collective connectivity.

Many people now know that how squeezed they are by sheltering inside their borders and how important interdependence of global society is, we have to develop this idea into common sense of world citizens, perhaps in cooperation with diplomats all over the world.

Editors note:Sign up to receive newsletters from Global Atlanta to gain access to subsequent Consular Conversations, or buy the $40 annual pass for benefits like early and priority registration, access to event recordings and luncheon tickets through 2021.

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Consulates and COVID-19: How Japan, Bahamas and the United Kingdom Are Coping, Learning - GlobalAtlanta

A Completely Private Home in the Bahamas Exclusive Lyford Cay – Mansion Global

Listing of the Day

Location: Lyford Cay, Bahamas

Price: BSD$12.5 million (Bahamas dollars are equal to U.S. dollars)

Casuarina Beach is the last house tucked away at the foot of a secluded lane on New Providences Lyford Cay. Peace and serenity are ensured by the fact that there is never any passing traffic, and there arent really any neighbors visible from the one-acre site, according to the homes agent Philip Hillier.

"Coming to this house," he said, "you feel like youre not on a major island with big hotels. It has an atmosphere that feels more like the smaller family islands that surround New Providence."

Designed and built by Mid-Century Modern architect Robertson "Happy" Ward in 1969, and later refurbished by Bahamian architect Henry Melich in 2009, four generations of one family have called Casuarina Beach home, according to Mr. Hillier.

More: Bahamas Estate Once Home to the Duke of Windsor and Wallis Simpson Hits the Market

Henry Melich, a Brit based in New Providence and known for his classical style, designed a number of houses on Lyford Cay between the 1970s and 1990s. While extending the home and modernizing its amenities, he maintained the original classic beach-house feel, a style that Mr. Hillier describes as "old Lyford Cay."

The house has 180 feet of private, powdery beach frontage and is in easy walking distance of the esteemed Lyford Cay Club.

It is a testament to the homes security and privacy that Princess Diana and her sons William and Harry stayed at Casuarina Beach in 1993, according to CNN. The royals were guests of Kate Menzies of the Menzies family, whose daughter is the homes current owner.

Stats

The 4,492-square-foot home has five bedrooms and six and a half bathrooms, and sits on an acre of land.

More: Lyford Cay in the Bahamas Offers a ClubbyAnd UnflashyVibe

Amenities

Renovations included new wiring, plumbing, kitchen, bathrooms, flooring in the entertaining spaces and the addition of pickled tongue and groove tray ceilings in the living and dining areas.

All bedrooms are en-suite, and all of the principal rooms open onto a central courtyard featuring a heated swimming pool and terraces for entertaining. The majority of the rooms also benefit from having views out to sea as well, and the property boasts 180 feet of sparkling private beach frontage.

Neighborhood Notes

The gated community of Lyford Cay is situated at the western end of the island of New Providence, with about 450 homes on the cay, according to Mr. Hillier. Lyford Cay is one of the Bahamas most exclusive communities, with neighbors including Sean Connery and the Bacardi family.

Mr. Hillier describes Lyford Cay as being like a suburb on the island, though as the whole island of New Providence is just 7-by-21 miles, the capital city of Nassau is less than a half-hour drive away.

The area is known for being home to the exclusive Lyford Cay Club, which features a white sand beach, a golf course, a marina, 12 tennis courts, a spa and fitness center, and an international school.

Lyford Cay is home to a combination of seasonal and year-round homes. "Youve got both the permanent residents and the snow birds who migrate to the Bahamas for the winter," Mr. Hillier said.

From Penta: A Cartier Tutti Frutti Bracelet Breaks Online Record at $1.3M

Lynden Pindling International Airport on New Providence is the primary international gateway to the Bahamas for flights all over the U.S. and Canada in particular.

For year-round residents, according to Mr. Hillier, there are three excellent schools near Lyford Cay: Lyford Cay International, Windsor and Tambearly schools.

"If youre here for two or three months, you can always be busy doing fun things," Mr. Hillier said. "You can hop over to Nassau with its casinos and go for a gamble and a bit of a shop. Youre not stuck with a couple of restaurants and a club eitherthere is a wide range to choose from."

Agent: Philip Hillier, HG Christie, an affiliate of Christies International Real Estate

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Bahamas investigates how person with COVID-19 allowed to board flight from US – Jamaica Observer

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NASSAU, Bahamas (CMC) The Bahamas government says it will launch an investigation into the circumstances that led to a passenger, who tested positive for the coronavirus (COVID-19), boarding a flight from Fort Lauderdale to Freeport in Grand Bahamas last weekend.

In a brief statement, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that it had been directed by Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis to conduct the investigation into all the circumstances relating to the incident that involved a COVID19 positive passenger being allowed to board the repatriation flight from Fort Lauderdale, Florida to Freeport, Grand Bahama on Friday May 8 2020, in contravention of established protocols.

The ministry said that Minnis has asked that this matter be treated with priority.

Accordingly, the ministry is presently conducting enquiries into all matters surrounding the incident and will report its findings to the prime minister on completion, the statement said.

Bahamas Consul General in Miami, Linda Treco-Mackey, is quoted in the Nassau Guardian newspaper on Tuesday as saying that a man who travelled from Fort Lauderdale to Grand Bahama on the state-owned Bahamasair last Friday after knowingly contracting COVID-19 was irresponsible and not considerate of his own fellow Bahamians.

I have to take responsibility for the Consulate because they (Bahamasair) [sought] approval from someone at the Consulate and the person at the Consulate was not at the level to give that approval, but they did, said Treco-Mackey.

The Consulate had organised the return of 183 Bahamians after the government agreed to re-open the airport which had been closed as part of the efforts to curb the spread of the virus that was first detected in China last December and blamed for more than300,000 deaths globally.

The Counsel General said that she presumed that Bahamasair assumed that it was okay for the affected person to have boarded the flight.

They weren't on the list to travel but somebody made a decision, which was out of their framework to do, she told the newspaper, adding because they knew that they were tested, they assumed that they were okay to travel and went over the manifest and approved them to travel. It was an unintentional mistake that has cost us. So, all our work, we feel like it was in vain.

I know that Bahamasair printed the boarding tickets but they did not allow travel until someone from the Consulate, not the proper person, but someone from the Consulate told them, 'It was okay. They were tested.

They would not have known that they [had] tested positive. They went outside the manifest sheet and decided to look into the list of persons who were tested which was not something they were approved to do. But, things happened.

The COVID-positive passenger was among 51 people who disembarked on Grand Bahama and Prime Minister Minnis said that the person had travelled with three others.

The Bahamas has 93 cases of COVID-19 and has recorded 11 deaths so far.

Now you can read the Jamaica Observer ePaper anytime, anywhere. The Jamaica Observer ePaper is available to you at home or at work, and is the same edition as the printed copy available at http://bit.ly/epaperlive

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High chance for tropical development near The Bahamas this weekend – WPBF West Palm Beach

High chance for tropical development near The Bahamas this weekend

Updated: 2:15 PM EDT May 13, 2020

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CRIS? CRIS: WE ARE TALKING ABOUT NOTHING DEVELOPING RIGHT NOW, BUT AS WE GET CLOSER TO THE WEEKEND, THAT COULD BE A DIFFERENT STORY OFF THE COAST OF THE BAHAMAS. SATELLITES SHOWING NOTHING OVER OUR AREA WITH HIGH-PRESSURE IN CONTROL ACROSS SOUTH FLORIDA, A BEAUTIFUL DAY ACROSS THE AREA, BUT IT IS WHAT IS GOING TO HAPPEN AS THIS SYSTEM TOWARD OUR SOUTH GETS BETTER ORGANIZED AS IT MOVES TO OUR SOUTH AND EVENTUALLY TOWARD THE BAHAMAS AS WE GET TOWARD FRIDAY AND SATURDAY. THAT IS WHERE IT GETS TO AN AREA WHERE WE COULD SEE SOME POSSIBLE DEVELOPMENT. THE HURRICANE CENTER UPPING THE ODDS TO 70% CHANCE, THE BEST CHANCE AS WE GET CLOSE TO THE WEEKEND. NO THREAT TO FLORIDA, A BROAD AREA OF LOW PRESSURE EXPECTED TO DEVELOP NEAR THE BAHAMAS, NORTHEAST OF THE AREA. THAT FUTURE TRACK TAKES WHATEVER DEVELOPS COULD BE A SUBTROPICAL DEPRESSION AND MOVES IT INTO THE OPEN ATLANTIC AND AWAY FROM FLORIDA. WE WILL BE TRACKING THE POTENTIAL FOR SOMETHING DEVELOPING, NO THREAT TO US IN SOUTH FLORIDA. BACK HERE AT HOME, ANOTHER GORGEOUS DAY, IT IS ON THE BREEZY SIDE. NUMBERS INTO THE LOWER 80S, RAIN CHANCES ARE LOW. THEY PICK UP ACROSS SOUTH FLORIDA, FOR THOSE WHO HAVE NOT RECEIVED RAIN IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD. WE WILL TALK ABOUT THE TIMING OF THAT AND A LOOK AT

High chance for tropical development near The Bahamas this weekend

Updated: 2:15 PM EDT May 13, 2020

Meteorologist Cris Martinez has the latest.

Meteorologist Cris Martinez has the latest.

Excerpt from:

High chance for tropical development near The Bahamas this weekend - WPBF West Palm Beach

MovieTowne owner picks up cancer patient from Bahamas on way home – Loop News Trinidad and Tobago

Miracles do happen.

For 34-year-old cancer patient Krissa Bissoon, this saying holds true.

Bissoon, who had been stranded in Bahamas due to the COVID-19 pandemic, had been praying for a miracle to allow her to return to Trinidad and Tobago.

According to media reports, the Arima mother of one started a new job in Nassau, Bahamas in February of this year, shortly after which she was diagnosed with cervical cancer.

She underwent emergency surgery in March and had been in stuck in the Bahamas, after Trinidad and Tobago closed its borders.

Even though she was granted an exemption to return to the country last week, there were no available flights and she could not afford to charter a private plane.

Alone in a foreign land, the woman began feeling hopeless and desperate.

However, in an act of humanity and kindness, MovieTowne owner Derek Chin agreed to help the woman return home.

Chin, who had been staying in Miami since February after undergoing a medical procedure, was also granted an exemption to return to Trinidad and Tobago by National Security Minister Stuart Young.

The MovieTowne owner, through his attorney, made arrangements to pick her up on a private plane on his way home.

On learning of the good news, Bissoon said she was elated and screamed in joy.

Describing her journey home as a 'miracle', the woman, in a Facebook post, expressed her gratitude to the Government and the businessman for making it possible.

According to media reports, Chin and Bissoon returned to the country on Monday and are being quarantined at the Cascadia Hotel.

"I screamed with joy because I have been praying and praying for a miracle to happen. God answered my call and sent two of his angels one being the Minister and the other Mr Derek Chin. My journey to return home has left me desperate and to be placed in a situation where it was granted by these earth angels is beyond me. Mr Chin's lawyer Mr Gadsby who was instrumental in organising the fine details of pick up from the Bahamas for myself, left me feeling that there is still so much hope in the world."

"As I waited for my repatriation by this earth angel Mr Chin, I did not sleep the night before due to the excitement. My tears of joy streaming down my face as I anticipated the pick up which was orchestrated with the Honorable Minister Young , Mr Chin and the Bahamian government from Thursday to today.I am extremely please to advise all that Mr Chin and I landed in Trinidad today where we are being quarantined under the state. My family and I can not express our gratitude to these wonderful people," she said.

She is also expected to begin treatment soon.

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MovieTowne owner picks up cancer patient from Bahamas on way home - Loop News Trinidad and Tobago

Bahamas: Rand Memorial Hospital taking precautions ahead of potentially severe weather weekend – Magnetic Media

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#FREEPORT, Grand Bahama, The Bahamas May 13, 2020 With possible severe weather expected to affect the Central and Northwest Bahamas this weekend, officials of the Grand Bahama Rand Memorial Hospital are taking extra precautions ahead of the system to secure patients in Samaritans Purse tents.

Ms. Sharon Williams, Administrator of the Rand, said the hospital is concerned about the report from the Bahamas Met Office about bad weather expected to pass through or near Grand Bahama during the weekend.

Since April 26, our last encounter with severe weather conditions, where our tents hospital at Samaritan was severely impacted by the weather conditions, we have been working very closely with the local Met office in monitoring local weather conditions, said Ms. Williams.

We have been advised that from Wednesday through late Saturday that there will be the possibility of heavy rain and wind that could impact the Grand Bahama area. That, no doubt, brings concern again for our tents at Samaritans Purse and in addition, our modular isolation facilities near our Emergency Room which we have set up for Covid-19 response.

The Bahamas Department of Meteorology issued a statement on Tuesday (May 12) of a frontal boundary over the southeast Bahamas that will back up over the Central Bahamas on Wednesday and stall through Thursday.

During that time conditions are expected to become favorable for the development of an area of low pressure along the frontal boundary by Friday afternoon in the vicinity of Cat Island.

As a result, pockets of squally showers, heavy thunderstorms, strong, gusty winds and the potential for water spouts and tornadic activity can be expected over portions of the Northwest and Central Bahamas from Wednesday through Saturday, according to the Meteorology Department.

The Hospital Administrator said that they have proactively advised their managers to meet with Administration to devise plans for the movement of patients and clients in those areas that could be adversely impacted by bad weather. She said that those plans have already been put in place.

We are looking at our new facilities at the Cancer Association to be able to house some persons if necessary, said Ms. Williams. Also, our Emergency Room facilities is also a consideration, if it isnt too crowded we will have to see what patient load we will have there at the time. Of course, our facility at the Freeport Community Clinic, at our IAT building is also under consideration for use if necessary.

Between those three locations, we will house our patients temporarily until the weather returns to normal.

In terms of preparing for the upcoming hurricane season, the Rand Memorial Hospital Administrator said that the close communication with the Met Office will continue and that all weather systems inclusive of tropical storms and hurricanes will be monitored by the hospitals Administration extra closely and that even more proactive measures will be taken when necessary.

We do this every year, but the only difference this year is that we do not have use of the full hospital, Ms. Williams pointed out. So, we are engaging the various health care facilities, as we usually do around the island, and discussing with them about moving our clients to those areas if it becomes necessary. Of course, we have to solidify those arrangements, before announcing their names to the media.

But we are definitely looking into alternatives for housing our patients, inclusive of the Government working very aggressively to complete the renovations for the Rand in a timely manner. We might not be finished for the beginning of the hurricane season, but we hope to be finished very soon and we are praying that it is before any significantly severe weather patterns hit this area.

The Bahamas Meteorology Department said that the low pressure will move northeast and away from The Bahamas late Saturday night, and partly sunny and drier conditions are expected to return on Sunday.

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Bahamas: Rand Memorial Hospital taking precautions ahead of potentially severe weather weekend - Magnetic Media

Bahamas Social Agencies work ‘hand-in-hand’ to ensure access for the Disabled – Magnetic Media

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#TheBahamas May 13, 2020 Officials at the National Commission for Persons with Disabilities (NCPD) and its Secretariat, and the Disability Affairs Division of the Department of Social Services, have been diligently working hand-in-hand to ensure that both the needs of regular and new clients who are persons with disabilities are being addressed during the COVID-19 Pandemic.

The collaboration is part of the Ministryof Social Services and Urban Developments continued efforts to ensure that allof its human and other resources are brought to bear in the delivery of socialassistance.

Provisions have been made for personswith disabilities who are not clients of the Department, to provide theirinformation via telephone to the Social Workers at the Disability AffairsDivision so that they can receive Emergency Food Assistance. They are requiredto show their IDs upon collection. Persons with disabilities can contact theDisability Affairs Division at telephone: 325-2251/2 for assistance.

Officials at the Disability AffairsDivision have also collaborated with The Bahamas Red Cross to ensure thatpersons with disabilities are part of the Red Cross Meals on Wheels Programme.

Meanwhile, officials at the NationalCommission for Persons with Disabilities, and its Secretariat, have establisheda 24hr call and whats app line at 376-8328 as part of the measures it hasimplemented to ensure that the needs of persons with disabilities are being metand with a view of bringing any outstanding matters to a speedy resolution.

Persons with disabilities can alsoregister online through the Ministrys link on the governments website:www.bahamas.gov.bs. They may also email the Disabilities Commission at Disabilitiescommission@bahamas.gov.bs,or register online at the website: http://www.disabilitiescommissionbahamas.orgor visit the Commissions Facebook Page at disabilitiescommission242.

The Commission and itsSecretariat have also been liaising with the relevant Non-GovernmentalOrganizations to ensure that persons with disabilities have sufficient food,medical supplies, and protective equipment to ensure their safety andprotection during the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Other initiatives haveincluded working closely with members of the Blind Community and theAssociation of Banking and Clearing Houses in The Bahamas to enhance andimprove members of the communitys banking experience, and ensuring that personswith disabilities have access to, and receive the benefits and assistance duethem, and that they remain safe, protected and have the necessary items fortheir continued well-being.

Additionally, they have ensured that personswith disabilities who are Deaf or Hard of Hearing have access to informationbeing disseminated from the media through the participation of a SignInterpreter on all national broadcasts and have assisted persons withdisabilities and other able-bodied persons toobtain wheelchairs byliaising with The Bahamas Association for the Physically Disabled.

Administrators have updated the National Commission for Persons with Disabilitieswebsite to reflect information relative to the COVID-19 Pandemic; answered and responded to emails from family members/persons with disabilities concerns relative to COVID-19, all while performing the general administrative duties of The Secretariat by assisting the fifteen Commissioners of The NCPD who ensure that the Provisions contained in the Persons with Disabilities (Equal Opportunities) Bill, 2014 are adhered to.

BIS News by Matt Maura

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Bahamas Social Agencies work 'hand-in-hand' to ensure access for the Disabled - Magnetic Media

Gov’t test results reveal Grand Bahama repatriation passenger is negative for COVID – Magnetic Media

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#TheBahamas May 13, 2020 Thedebacle deepens when it comes to the evolving story of a returning Bahamian whowas thought to have COVID-19 when he boarded a repatriation flight from Floridalast Friday; now, he reportedly does not have the deadly contagion.

Ina media statement issued Tuesday night by The Bahamas Ministry of Health, it isexplained the passenger has now tested negative, on two occasions, for the coronavirus.

TheMinistry of Health reports today that the Grand Bahama passenger previouslyreported as COVID-19 positive has tested negative for the COVID-19 virus.

Thepassenger was tested twice upon arrival in Grand Bahama by the Ministry ofHealths Surveillance Team.

Bothtest samples returned a negative result, as confirmed by the fully accredited NationalReference Lab in New Providence.

TheGrand Bahama passenger, who is described in media reports as a male, wastravelling with three other family members.

On Sunday,The Prime Minister addressed the issue.

Allfour of these individuals have been tested again on arrival. We are awaiting the test results.

All passengers wore PPEs during the flight,which decreases the risk of exposure. Allpassengers on the flight will remain in quarantine and will continue to be monitored,said Dr. Hubert Minnis, who is also Acting Minister of Health.

It isunstated who confirmed the passenger as positive for Covid-19, but the Ministryof Health says it is now comforted, after having received two negatives from itstouted gold standard testing method that no one on the flight wasinadvertently exposed to the coronavirus.

Healthofficials are satisfied that the passenger did not pose a risk to the otherpassengers traveling on the same aircraft.

The chaoscreated by this false positive resulted in the Prime Minister haltingrepatriation flights. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which coordinated theBahamasair charters from South Florida on May 7, has activated a probe.

TheMinistry of Foreign Affairs is investigating the circumstances surrounding thepassenger being allowed to board the flight.

About200 residents were returned to The Bahamas on Friday; all are in mandatoryquarantine for fourteen days.

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Gov't test results reveal Grand Bahama repatriation passenger is negative for COVID - Magnetic Media

NEW PROTOCOL: Reinforced school classrooms to be used as hurricane shelters – EyeWitness News

NASSAU, BAHAMAS Minister of State for Disaster Preparedness Iram Lewis said today that while the government is not 100 percent prepared for another hurricane were one to impact the country today, extensive preparations were being made with new protocols at the forefront to deal with the unique situation of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) this hurricane season.

In an interview with Eyewitness News, Lewis said the ministry considered how to house evacuees while ensuring there was minimal risk of potentially spreading the virus in a disaster.

We must take the additional dynamic now of COVID-19 in our preparations, he said.

When I came up with the idea, I was thinking about the COVID-19 reality.

We do not have the time now to retrofit all of the auditoriums by putting up dividing partitions.

Being concerned about the spread of COVID-19, having use of the smaller classrooms, it is easier to sanitize; easier to manage smaller groups and its easier to control the spread.

Fortunately, all of the stakeholders thought it was a brilliant idea so, now we are moving in that direction.

According to Lewis, elevated properties and multi-storied schools were being identified and prepared.

One such example is Sister Mary Patricia Junior High School in Freeport.

Right now, that is ready, Lewis said.

Thats a two-story edifice where we have facilities attached to the classroom block.

We have showers and we have kitchens attached the classroom blocks, so again, the two levels the ground floor and the upper floor can be used as shelters, and if there is any flooding in that area, we will use the second story.

St. Georges High School, a multi-level facility in Grand Bahama and Coopers Town Primary School in Abaco, which sits on elevated ground, are two more examples schools which will double as a hurricane shelter on the island, according to Lewis.

While preparing designated school classrooms remains the ministrys primary focus, the minister said the government will continue to prepare gymnasiums as a backup in the event other areas become compromised.

During Hurricane Dorian last September, a number of designated hurricane shelters were compromised, forcing residents and officials to expose themselves to the elements to move to other shelters.

In some instances, people lost their lives.

Today, Lewis said an inventory of all the shelters and schools is being completed; inspections were being and critical supplies were being checked to ensure preparedness from the beginning of the hurricane season; from day one.

He also said all relevant personnel has been identified and meetings were ongoing among stakeholders to ensure we are able to check all the boxes.

The 2020 Atlantic hurricane season begins June 1.

Vulnerable

The Bahamas, particularly Grand Bahama and Abaco, which were pounded by Hurricane Dorian last September, have yet to recover.

When asked if the country was sufficiently prepared for a major hurricane today, Lewis said preparations have not reached 100 percent completion, but we are moving fast.

We are doing our best to ensure that and we must take the additional dynamic now of COVID-19 in our preparations, he said.

Imagine if we had prepared all of the facilities by the beginning of March; and then now with COVID-19 in our face, we would have to make an adjustment. If it difficult to prepare for [another record storm], but Dorian has certainly given us a new benchmark.

Lewis said shelters in south Abaco, were between 95-99 percent prepared.

If the event of a dangerous storm impacting a vulnerable area, Lewis said the government will evacuate.

He pointed out that areas in Grand Bahama and Abaco, particularly the south, were unaffected by Dorian and could be used to evacuate residents depending on the scenario.

Mandatory evacuation legislation was passed in Parliament after Dorian.

He said areas for example in South Abaco and other parts of Grand Bahama were largely unaffected by the Dorian, and shelters there remain available.

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NEW PROTOCOL: Reinforced school classrooms to be used as hurricane shelters - EyeWitness News

More ‘Brick and mortar’ SMEs to consider going digital – EyeWitness News

NASSAU, BAHAMAS Many businesses, particularly small and medium sized companies may look to move from their brick and mortar operations and take their services online if the government imposed lockdown continues beyond another month, a local accountant said yesterday.

Kendrick Christie, a localchartered accountantandcertified fraud examinertold Eyewitness News yesterday the online model is particularly attractive to businesses looking to eliminate rental cost.

I would say that many entities are looking at switching to an online model, Christie said.I would say that if this lockdown goes beyond another month, we will see many businesses close their brick and mortar operations, particularly small and medium sized businesses looking to eliminate that rental cost.

He said: In the commercial arena you have some landlords that are understanding and some that are not. Some of them are still expecting to be paid their rent and that creates a difficulty for entities that are either shut down or cant generate much revenue. A lot of my clients in the retail space are looking at that option.

Christie, principal of Kendrick Christie & Co said that time will tell whether the push to online services is merely a COVID-19 related trend.

There will be some fall-out, he said.

I know that some businesses that dont have a large number of employees may switch to a complete online presence but to quantify that right now is difficult.

Christie who addressed the Rotary Club of West Nassau yesterday also noted that that there are risks associated with e-commerce, as the COVID-19 pandemic has given rise to incident of hacking and fraud.

The risk is always there, Christie added.

When you go online there is still risk. Cyber-crime has gone up significantly. Still, I think we can overcome that with the right measures.

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More 'Brick and mortar' SMEs to consider going digital - EyeWitness News

Michael Jordan Faced Better Competition Than LeBron James – FiveThirtyEight

As we watch Michael Jordan vanquish each of his contemporaries in ESPNs The Last Dance which wraps up with its final two episodes on Sunday its hard not to imagine the best of todays game lacing up against them. What if LeBron James had played against these guys?

The tone of that question goes one of two ways. If you believe the late 1980s and early 1990s were the golden era of the NBA, youre asking it derisively. LeBron against the REAL MEN of Jordans era? No chance. If you arent that nostalgic, youre asking it gleefully. LeBron against those basketball Neanderthals? Its about to get ugly for them.

Unless theres a secret time travel portal out there, we cant test either hypothesis. The best we can do is measure the relative strength of the teams that Jordan and James faced in their many playoff runs. Well use net rating, or the difference between each teams points scored and allowed per 100 possessions. That data cant settle the MJ-LeBron debate entirely, but it can give us insight into whose roads to victory were tougher albeit with some caveats.

Average wins and net rating* for teams led by Michael Jordan and LeBron James and their playoff opponents, 1984-85 through 2018-19 seasons

*Net rating is the difference between points scored and allowed per 100 possessions.

Source: Basketball-Reference.com

The average team Jordan faced in his 37 playoff series posted a regular-season net rating of +4.58, which translates into somewhere between 53 and 54 wins using a Pythagorean win percentage calculator. The average team LeBron faced in his 45 (and counting) series posted a regular-season net rating of +3.97, which roughly equates to a 52-win team. (The difference shrinks when removing Jordans three first-round playoff defeats to much superior opponents, but it still exists.)

Thats not a massive difference, but it is a material one. To put it in LeBronian terms, its only a bit less than the difference between the 2013 Pacers team that pushed LeBrons Heat to seven games in the Eastern Conference finals (+4.5 net rating) and the 2016 Hawks squad that Jamess Cavaliers swept mercilessly in the second round (+3.7 net rating).

The gap widens when considering only series victories. Jordans average playoff victim went 52-30 in the regular season with a net rating of +4.06. LeBrons, on the other hand, went just 49-33 with a net rating of +2.82. Thats the difference between the 1992 Knicks, one of two teams to extend Chicago to seven games during Jordans title runs, and the 2017 Celtics, who fell meekly to LeBrons Cavs in five despite possessing home-court advantage.

This doesnt mean that MJs opponents would beat LeBrons if they were to play head-to-head. But it does show that Jordans victims were generally better in the specific season they faced the Bulls.

So why does MJ come out on top? There are two obvious reasons. One is that Jordans teams were much better than LeBrons. Jordans Bulls averaged more than 58 wins a season with a net rating of +7.29, while Jamess average club won 55 games. Jordans Bulls were also the Vegas betting favorite in 91 percent of their series beginning in 1988, the first year those odds are available, compared with just 76 percent for LeBrons. Youll never believe this, but better teams tend to win more in the playoffs than worse teams.

Were Jordans teams better because Jordan is that much better than LeBron individually? Maybe. Were they better because Jordan had teammates that fit better alongside him? Maybe. It likely helped Jordan that he stayed with one franchise that built around him throughout his playoff career, as opposed to James, who hopped around from Cleveland, to Miami and back to Cleveland. But even LeBrons Heat teams that were supposedly loaded with stars had a lower average net rating than the Bulls did over Jordans entire tenure.

The second obvious reason explains why LeBron both got to the NBA Finals more often and lost more often once there. Yes, the East really was stronger in MJs day.

Average wins, losses, Simple Rating System strength and net ratings* of the seven other Eastern Conference playoff teams during the playoff runs of Michael Jordan and LeBron James

*Net rating is the difference between points scored and allowed per 100 possessions.

Wins in the lockout-shortened 2011-12 season were prorated for an 82-game season.

Source: Basketball-Reference.com

The average East playoff team in Jordans era was much better than the average East playoff team in LeBrons, even though Jordans Bulls were also better than LeBrons Cavs and Heat. If anything, this table undersells the difficult East that Jordan (usually) defeated. Jordans average Eastern Conference finals opponent was nearly a point better in net rating than Jamess.

The flip side is that Jamess NBA Finals opponents were much tougher than Jordans. MJ never faced a finals foe as dominant as the 2015, 2016 and 2017 Warriors and only once bested a team better than the Spurs that swept Jamess upstart Cavaliers in 2007. But James also faced four of the five worst finals opponents of the bunch, at least based on regular-season net rating.

NBA Finals teams and opponents of Michael Jordan and LeBron James by regular-season net rating* and wins

*Net rating is the difference between points scored and allowed per 100 possessions.

Wins in the lockout-shortened 2011-12 season were prorated for an 82-game season.

Source: Basketball-Reference.com

There are two silver linings for LeBron defenders:

James had the best overall playoff series victory of the two: The 2015-16 Warriors had a net rating of +10.7, more than a point higher than the toughest team Jordan beat. In fact, James has three of the five most impressive victories by this measure, though Jordan occupies 11 of the next 13 spots on the list.

Top 15 playoff series won by LeBron James or Michael Jordan by regular-season net rating* of opponent

*Net rating is the difference between points scored and allowed per 100 possessions.

Wins in the lockout-shortened 2011-12 season were prorated for an 82-game season.

Source: Basketball-Reference.com

LeBrons teams outperformed their regular-season benchmarks more than Jordans teams in the playoffs: Jordans playoff series followed a familiar script - he won when he had the better regular-season team and lost when he didnt. James, on the other hand, more often won with a worse team than Jordan, or at least came closer than expected.

To calculate this, I found the net rating for each series the two stars played. Then I subtracted the regular-season net rating differential between their team and their playoff opponent. A high positive number suggests that James or Jordan overachieved with their series result. A high negative number suggests the opposite.

Look at all the times LeBrons teams pop up at the top of the list.

NBA playoff series for teams led by Michael Jordan or LeBron James with the biggest positive difference between the series net rating* and the regular-season ratings gap between the two teams

*Net rating is the difference between points scored and allowed per 100 possessions.

Source: Basketball-Reference.com

The flip side is that he also lost more often or came closer to losing than expected with better teams.

NBA playoff series for teams led by Michael Jordan or LeBron James with the biggest negative difference between the series net rating* and the regular-season ratings gap between the two teams

*Net rating is the difference between points scored and allowed per 100 possessions.

Source: Basketball-Reference.com

This method is a bit misleading because Jamess later teams had a tendency to conserve energy in the regular season. Still, James ripping apart his toughest East opponents instead of just beating them is a feather in his cap. James turned it on more in the playoffs than Jordan at least by this method.

(Makes you wonder how the same star who pushed the great 2008 Celtics to seven with a horrid supporting cast could also lose decisively to a Spurs team in 2014 that was closer to his teams equal than the final series margin would suggest, as well as fall to three teams from 2009 to 2011 that were worse than his.)

Otherwise, though, Jordan did in fact face tougher opposition than LeBron. This alone shouldnt settle the debate over whos the GOAT, but it at least gives Jordan backers more supporting evidence to use.

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Michael Jordan Faced Better Competition Than LeBron James - FiveThirtyEight

Michael Jordan’s daughter, Jasmine, used to Google her dad to find out why he was so important – CBS Sports

On Sunday night, "The Last Dance" will, unfortunately, come to an end. The 10-part documentary series covering Michael Jordan and the 1997-98 Chicago Bulls has brought up plenty of great memories, and also been revelatory in many ways, as young fans learn about the older generation, and everyone enjoys never-before-seen footage and untold stories.

But while it's no surprise that viewers are gaining a new understanding of Jordan and the Bulls, you may be surprised that his daughter is as well. In a recent interview with the Associated Press, Jasmine Jordan explained what the experience has been like for her. Just a young kid during Jordan's playing days, she said she's been texting him non-stop to talk about the episodes, and admitted she's basically watching like a fan, rather than a family member.

Jasmine Jordan's comments:

I'm harassing him. He's probably tired of me texting him. I think my brothers and I are doing it, probably alongside all his friends. But for me, it's like, hey, as I said, I was super young so I'm really taking this in as a fan. And I'm also trying to corroborate all those stories you were telling me all those years. Trying to make sure you weren't just fabricating and making it bigger than what it was. I'm definitely texting him nonstop. I think there hasn't been an episode, a Sunday where I haven't been like, 'This happened-let me know your thoughts.'

When I was a child, and growing up during the time, I didn't really understand what was happening because I was so young, and it just didn't really resonate until I got older. I laugh because I actually Googled my dad at one point just to figure it out. I was like why is everyone so intrigued by you, you're just dad, you're not that cool. But lo and behold, he was kind of a big deal. So it's definitely something that's been eye-opening.

It makes sense because she was so young back then, and Jordan is her dad, but the idea of hitting up Google to find out information about your father is pretty funny. You don't really think too much about the family members of athletes and celebrities, but it must be a strange experience to see so many people talking and writing about someone so close to you.

Jasmine also talked about what Jordan is like as a father and a grandfather to her son. While she revealed that these days her son "has him wrapped around his fingers already," she also said his competitiveness carried off the court as well when she was growing up.

"I know when it comes to the game, his passion is unmatched. His energy's unmatched. So when he's going at Steve Kerr or checking Scottie and trying to get that fire and tenacity out of them, I'm like, 'Oh, yeah, that's Dad.' I mean, he'll do that to me just so I can get an A out of a test or two. (laughs) And I'm just trying to pass school, I'm not even winning championships. So that is definitely totally him."

It's not exactly surprising that Jordan couldn't quite turn off that competitiveness when he stepped off the basketball court, but it's still interesting to hear what that experience was like for Jasmine. While he was obviously coming from a good place of wanting her to succeed, it couldn't have always been that easy to live up to his standards.

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Michael Jordan's daughter, Jasmine, used to Google her dad to find out why he was so important - CBS Sports

Netanyahu’s Annexation Plans Threaten to End Israel’s Relationship With Jordan – Foreign Policy

On April 30, Jordans foreign ministry announced that Israeli farmers would no longer be allowed to work their fields in an enclave of southern Jordan, putting a discordant end to an arrangement long seen as a symbol of the peace agreement signed between the countries in 1994.

According to that agreement, Israel returned to Jordan two small areas of land along their common border held by Israel since 1948. As a gesture of good will, Jordan granted Israel a 25-year lease on the land. On the 250-acre area at the confluence of the Yarmouk and Jordan rivers in the north, Israel developed the Island of Peace park, visited by tens of thousands of tourists each year. Jordan demanded that land in November 2019, agreeing to postpone the return of the other area farther south until now.

In March, Jordanian Prime Minister Omar Razzaz warned that relations between the countries had reached their lowest level. The situation is still likely to get worse. Under the recently agreed unity coalition led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his opponent-turned-deputy Benny Gantz, Israel could move forward with plans to annex the Jordan Valley. Annexation would dash any hopes for peace with the Palestinians, on which the Israeli-Jordanian relationship relies. The situation is compounded by U.S. President Donald Trumps Middle East peace plan, which includes a call for annexation.

The historic 1994 agreement between Israel and Jordan is formally still in place. But Jordans refusal to extend the lease on the two enclaves, along with the fact that neither side held any ceremony to mark the 25th anniversary of the signing of the accord, indicates just how far Israeli-Jordanian relations have deteriorated.

The 1994 peace agreement formally put an end to a 46-year state of war. Both Jordans monarch at the time, King Hussein, and then-Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin regarded it as central to their foreign policies, and their grand gestures set a tone of mutual trust. When King Hussein flew back to Amman after the second ceremony, an honor squad of Israeli fighter jets accompanied his plane as it crossed over Jerusalems Old City. When a Jordanian soldier crossed the border and killed seven Israeli schoolchildren in the Island of Peace in 1997, the king flew to Israel, visited their families, and humbly asked for forgiveness.

With the signing of the accords, Israel had struck an agreement with a second Arab nation, after signing a peace deal with Egypt in 1979. Israelis soon flocked to Jordans tourist sites and conceived of joint business ventures. In contrast, Jordans public viewed the agreements as a necessary evil at best that promised security, a solution to Jordans chronic water shortages, stronger ties with the United States, and potential economic advantages such as free trade zones.

But much has changed. Rabin was assassinated just one year after the accords were signed. King Hussein never formed the same warm relationship with Netanyahu, who took office in 1996. Netanyahu and Jordanian King Abdullah II, who succeeded his father, have met publicly on occasion but issued no joint statements. Israel and Jordan settled into a cold peace, with no high-level strategic talks in over a decade. Connections are maintained at a tactical level by midlevel diplomats, advisors, and security and economic personnel. Describing the status of Jordan-Israel relations, Abdullah said in a recent interview, The rhetoric coming out of Israel is creating tremendous concern. [The Israelis] are moving off into a new direction that can only create more instability.

This direction includes the lack of progress on a Palestinian-Israeli agreement, the unqualified support provided to Israel by the Trump administration, and the failure of joint economic projects. The Trump administration is aggressively pro-Israel, including unequivocal support for the right-wing Likud government. Trump moved the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem, in violation of the Oslo Accords, and his Israeli-Palestinian peace plan was written with little or no consultation with the Jordanians or the Palestinians.

In Jordan, Israels relations with and treatment of the Palestinians are viewed as a domestic issue. More than half of Jordans citizens are of Palestinian origin, and more than 2 million are registered as refugees from Israels 1948 War of Independence and their descendants. Israel recently approved plans to build what former Defense Minister Naftali Bennett calls the sovereignty road, which would bisect the West Bank to allow a quick route from Jerusalem to Jewish settlements and prevent the future establishment of a contiguous Palestinian state. The plan makes it even more difficult for Abdullah to justify the relationship with Israel to Jordans citizens.

The Haram al-Sharif site in Jerusalems Old Citywhich is home to the Dome of the Rock and the al-Aqsa Mosque complexis the third-holiest site in Islam. Known to Israelis as the Temple Mount, the site is a perennial source of tension. In the 1994 accords, Israel promised to respect Jordans historic role in the Muslim holy shrines in Jerusalem. Jews are permitted to visit the Haram al-Sharif but are not allowed to pray there; they are restricted to the Western Wall, the holiest site where Jews can pray, which lies beneath the al-Aqsa complex. But Israeli religious hard-liners have demanded a greater presence on the Mount, including the right to visit regularly and to pray.

Trumps plan calls for maintaining the status quobut it also contradicts itself, stating that People of every faith should be permitted to pray at the site. The coronavirus pandemic led to rare cooperation between Israel and the Waqf, the Muslim religious trust that manages Islamic holy sites in Israeli territory on behalf of Jordan, allowing the Haram al-Sharif to close down to slow contagion. The move was a rare exception: Most interactions surrounding the site have been tense, especially since 2017, when Palestinian gunmen killed two Israeli police officers at the site.

Among the Jordanian public, anger against Israel is rising. Israel is led by right-wing nationalist extremists and does not respect the rights of the Palestinians or of any other country. The Israelis take us for granted, and they are arrogant, Omar, a Jordanian journalist who asked to be identified only by his first name, told Foreign Policy. The relationship feels like a long series of broken promises.

The sentiment is echoed by Oded Eran, a former Israeli ambassador to Jordan. Opposition to the peace treaty serves as a glue for the oppositions disparate components, and as a socially and politically acceptable vehicle for criticizing the ruling family, he told journalists last year. Jordan, however, is bound to the 1994 peace agreements by its own financial and security concerns. Because of its small size, lack of resources, large refugee population, and chronic debt, Jordan is highly dependent on international financial aid, especially from the United States.

But many of the promises that followed the 1994 agreement havent come to fruition. Then, Israel pledged to build a canal to transfer water from the Red Sea to the Dead Sea to ease Jordans frequent water shortages. It subsequently became clear that the was too expensive to be feasible. Another plan to establish a joint industrial area in Israel as a free trade zone has also failed to move forward, although Israel does allow Jordan to use the port of Haifa for access the Mediterranean Sea.

Jordans national electricity company has said that Israel is the only available source for natural gas, and the countries recently finalized a 15-year import deal that should stabilize energy prices and help to reduce Jordans chronic budget deficit. Despite the apparent advantages to the Israel-Jordan pipeline, there were large-scale demonstrations in Amman against the deal. On Jan. 19, Jordans parliament approved a draft law toban the import of Israeli gas, and one member even called on Jordanian citizens to blow up the pipelines that transfer the gas.

At the same time, Israel provides crucial intelligence to Jordans government, which fears regional instability and domestic insurgency.

Jordan is in an untenable position, said Ksenia Svetlova, a former member of the Israeli Knesset and an expert in Israeli-Arab affairs. The king is torn in many different directions. He needs American financial support, despite the administrations one-sided support for Israel. He needs Israel for security, despite the hatred for Israel on the street.

Israeli experts say that Israel relies on Jordan, too. The 1994 agreement means that Israel has a buffer zone with Iraq and Syria. Israels security border is not on the east with Jordan, but hundreds of miles farther to the east, Nimrod Novik, a former senior foreign-policy advisor to the Israeli government, said at a press briefing in Jerusalem in January. If the regime in Jordan collapsed, he added, the cost to Israels security would be unimaginable.

So both Israel and Jordan have an interest in maintaining the agreements, but the deteriorating situation means that the resumption of high-level strategic dialogue isnt likely, according to Svetlova. The new Israeli government is not likely to be any less hard-line than the previous one and, with Trumps support, it is likely to maintain the same policies, or at a minimum the same rhetoric, she said. Gantz, who will replace Netanyahu as prime minister after 18 months, has frequently stated his opposition to annexation. But he has little leverage. The coalition agreement signed on April 21 includes a provision that allows Netanyahu to bring an annexation bill before the Knesset, where it will have a majority.

The ball is in Israels court, since it is Israel that has changed its political direction, Svetlova said. Israeli policymakers have to ask themselves what is more important: sovereignty in the Jordan Valley and Jerusalem and annexation of the territories, or our vital interests in maintaining our relationship with Jordan, she said.

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5 lessons from watching Jordan on the diamond – MLB.com

Michael Jordan would be sitting in the middle of the Minor League clubhouse playing dominoes with his new teammates and looking like the happiest man in the world. He laughed loudly, trash-talked continuously and appeared to be right at home. As a reporter for the Washington Post, I spent only

Michael Jordan would be sitting in the middle of the Minor League clubhouse playing dominoes with his new teammates and looking like the happiest man in the world. He laughed loudly, trash-talked continuously and appeared to be right at home.

As a reporter for the Washington Post, I spent only a week with Jordan during his baseball summer, but this scene apparently played out pretty much every single day. Incredibly, he fit in almost overnight with these kids chasing Major League dreams.

The real story of MJs baseball career

Thanks to ESPNs 10-part documentary, The Last Dance, Jordan and the Chicago Bulls are once more a topic of conversation. He was 31 when he gave baseball a try, which was seven years older than the average Birmingham player. Nevertheless, he seamlessly transitioned from the rock-star life of the biggest star on one of the greatest dynasties to settling into a folding chair at a rickety table on a bare concrete floor and announcing: Lets go.

With that in mind, here are five things I learned about Michael Jordan during our little odyssey through Birmingham and Chattanooga:

1. The stories about Jordan's competitiveness are definitely true.Hes quoted in the documentary saying, I dont have a gambling problem; I have a competition problem. He was serious about everything. Hed begin his days with a round or two of golf, and the stakes were not casual. He would show up in the clubhouse and recount his hole-by-hole successes. He took the card games seriously. Also, bunting drills, driving in a run from second, everything.

2. Jordan was serious about baseball and would have played in the Majors.If you ask his manager, Terry Francona, and his hitting coach, Mike Barnett, about Jordans 127 games, heres what theyd say: He poured himself into the effort, cut no corners and wanted to be treated like every other player. In that way, he was a joy to be around.

He's the type of person that puts you at ease, Birmingham shortstop Glenn DiSarcina said. After a while, you just see him as another guy working on things, just like you're working on things.

Jordan took so much batting practice -- early afternoons, late nights, you name it -- that there were days his hands were a bloody mess. He absorbed everything, too, or tried to. Pitchers tested him with fastballs early, and when that didnt work, they overwhelmed him at times with breaking stuff. But Jordan was getting better. He was picking up pitch recognition.

He believed that if he willed himself to do something, hed do it. He knew no one would outwork or outthink him. To see it in that light, his 127 games with the Barons were not a success. If you look at it another way, it was a monumental success. How many 31-year-old men with exactly zero time in professional baseball slip on a uniform and play 127 games?

MJ's baseball career wasn't the failure you think

He walked in off the street and hit .202 in Double-A, and then went to the Arizona Fall League -- a finishing school usually reserved for top prospects on the cusp of MLB -- and hit .252. This is the thing that blows my mind. Only a freakishly talented athlete could do such a thing. Also, he was adjusting to breaking stuff, and if he stayed with it, I have no doubt he would have played in the Majors. Even Francona says the same in the doc, estimating that Jordan needed 1,500 Minor League plate appearances to be a Major Leaguer.

My guess is Jordan was always going to return to the NBA the following spring -- that, as the documentary points out, he was worn out by basketball and needed baseball to recharge his batteries. Conventional wisdom is that baseballs 1994-95 work stoppage sent him back to the NBA. Well never really know about that.

3. Hes comfortable in his own skin in a way few people are.I've never been silver-spooned," he told me one day. That's not me. This isn't the first time I've ridden a bus. To understand part of what made Jordan the basketball player great apart from all the physical gifts, his season in Birmingham is a pretty good tip-off. Fear of failure? Embarrassing himself? Please.

'I love the guy': Tales from MJ's White Sox days

Jordan approached Minor League baseball the same way he approached everything else in his life. He feared no one and could not comprehend that he might fail. He had the same attitude when the Washington Wizards put him in charge of their basketball operations in January 2000. He believed he would build a champion. He came to learn the challenges were different. One day, when point guard Rod Strickland showed up late, Jordan pointed at his watch and said, "Rod, you're late." To which, Strickland shot back, "Mike, I've been on time all day, but my car has been running late."

4. Jordan sprang for a bus and lots of clubhouse meals.Jordan bought the Barons a luxury bus -- equipped with a table, television and refrigerator -- for those trips across the South, and he picked up the tab on plenty of clubhouse meals. But in, say, Chattanooga, he would endure the full Minor League experience, including the cold showers and splintery benches.

People thought this was a flash in the pan for me, Jordan said that week. "They thought I'd try awhile and then quit if I didn't make the Major Leagues.

But I'm serious about coming down here and learning the fundamentals. If I had done it like people expected me to, it would have been a disgrace to the game. But I didnt.

5. He was good for baseball.Crazy crowds followed Jordan that summer. In Chattanooga one night, they packed 13,416 in and around a 7,500-seat facility. Hundreds waited for hours for Jordan to sign Air Jordan T-shirts or sneakers. For Jordan, this was same old same old.

The first time in a city you deal with it, he said. I did it in the NBA. There's a curiosity with a lot of people saying, 'What's this guy up to?' Some people just can't believe what I'm doing.

That was also the year Jordan decided to write a book. It was just 36 pages long with an appropriate title: I Can't Accept Not Trying.

Richard Justice has been a reporter for MLB.com since 2011. Listen to his podcast and follow him on Twitter at @RichardJustice.

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The CEO who beat Michael Jordan one-on-one, and how he did it – The Undefeated

Michael Jordans days of victimizing the Gary Paytons, George Karls and Reggie Millers were over.

So, in 2003, just a few months after his tenure with the Washington Wizards had come to an end, Jordan spent time laying waste to a bunch of old heads who had dropped $15,000 each to attend the Michael Jordan Senior Flight School camp in Las Vegas.

The campers brought a wide array of experience: the basketball novices who received the trip as gifts, the ballers who were proud of their top dawg status in their local rec leagues and the former college players who thought they could still bring it.

It didnt matter to Jordan, who each year spent a session during the camp taking on volunteers in a game of one-on-one, game to three. If you were bold enough to raise your hand to step on the court to play him, it was his intent to treat you to a quick and complete embarrassment.

As the session came to a close on this day, Jordan requested one last victim after having already destroyed more than 20 campers.

John Rogers, attending his third straight camp, sheepishly raised his hand. Jordan called him to center court.

The tale of the tape:

Jordan was 40, a 6-foot-6, six-time NBA champion, five-time NBA MVP and 14-time NBA All-Star with a career 30.1 points per game scoring average. As a basketball player, Jordan is considered by many to be the greatest of all time.

Rogers was 45, a 6-foot former Princeton point guard who averaged 3.5 points in the 23 games he played in during his college career. As a businessman, Rogers, the founder and CEO of Ariel Investments (often described as the largest minority-owned investment firm), is considered to be one of the nations leading financial executives.

This wasnt the first time Rogers competed against Jordan. When Jordan was considering a return to basketball in 2001 following his retirement in 1998, Rogers was one of the local players invited to play in the pickup games that helped Jordan build his stamina.

I was there for about a half-dozen games, but eventually got cut when some of the top college players who were finishing their seasons came home, Rogers said. I got switched off on Michael from time to time during those games, and I remember he was going up for a shot once and I thought for sure I was going to block it. I whiffed.

Rogers would get his revenge two years later.

From Isiah Thomas to Maurice Cheeks to Tim Hardaway, the city of Chicago has produced a long list of talented basketball players. You wont find Rogers on any of those lists, but he played against many of those greats.

A scoring point guard in high school at the University of Laboratory Schools, Rogers had interest from a few Division III programs as a senior in 1976. But his classroom brilliance had him eyeing Ivy League schools. And on each campus visit, he made sure to meet with the schools basketball coach.

At Penn, that was future Hall of Fame coach Chuck Daly. Spent an hour with him, Rogers recalled. You could tell Chuck Daly was not interested in me at all. But Rogers visit to Princeton left a different impression. He came away impressed by the schools history, which includes Bill Bradley going on to a Hall of Fame career with the New York Knicks and Armond Hill becoming a first-round pick by the Atlanta Hawks that year.

The people at Princeton were kind to me, Rogers said. It felt like a really special place with a great history of basketball excellence.

John Rogers (center) shoots a jump shot while on Princetons basketball team.

Rogers was one of nine recruits entering Princeton in 1976, but soon realized there were only four guys on the freshman team who were expected to reach the varsity squad and he wasnt one of them. Rogers, however, got lucky when an extra varsity spot opened after a player left school. Rogers, having played his way from the seventh man to the starting point guard by the end of his freshman season, earned the varsity spot as a sophomore.

He played a total of just seven minutes in four games for Princeton as a sophomore, scoring two points. His college coach, the legendary Pete Carril, was harsh. In a 5-on-5 game, Rogers is legally blind, Carril said of Rogers. He has no vision, and I cant teach vision. So he cant play here.

Despite that rather harsh assessment, Carril, who rarely passed on compliments, did admire one quality in Rogers game.

He said I was a good one-on-one player, Rogers said. Because I was good at driving and making tricky shots with either hand.

As Jordan checked the ball to the bespectacled and slightly balding Rogers at the start of their 2003 game, he attempted to get inside his opponents head.

Dont be mad at me, Im just good, Jordan said.

Jordan hitched up the right side of his shorts as he dropped in a defensive stance.

Yall think I had this camp just so you can beat me? he said.

Jordan had yet to complete that sentence as Rogers took two power dribbles to his right and drove in for a double-clutch layup as Jordan challenged.

Bucket.

It went in and I said, Oh, this is a nice feeling, Rogers said. I didnt want to embarrass myself, I didnt want to shoot an airball. I thought going in it would be great to make one basket, so Im thrilled.

Campers roared. Jordan, known to let campers score a bucket before crushing them, just smiled. Rogers, walking toward the 3-point line with a one-point lead, offered one of those nice try, kid pats to Jordans stomach.

Thats just something that I always do, Rogers said. Just a habit.

The game is make-it, take-it, so Rogers got the ball again and faked as if to launch a jumper, then took two power dribbles to his left before launching his body into Jordans chest. This created enough separation for him to let fly a left-handed circus shot that kissed off the glass.

Rogers 2, Jordan 0.

Few people had high expectations for Rogers as a basketball player when he entered Princeton, but toward the end of his junior year, he demonstrated a few flashes of talent. He scored 14 points against Yale and a career-high 20 against Brown.

It was startling to Carril.

A reporter from a local paper asked [Carril] about my play, Rogers recalled. And he told him, If Johnny Rogers could pass or dribble a little bit, he could have been playing a long time ago.

Rogers started only three games as a junior (and played in five games total), but he was named captain of the Princeton team as a senior. That season, the Tigers would go on to be the co-champions of the Ivy League before missing the NCAA tournament by losing a one-game playoff game to Penn 50-49.

He was the guy who would take charges and dive for loose balls, said Craig Robinson, the two-time Ivy League Player of the Year who played a season with Rogers. His hustle allowed him to become our captain.

In 2003, John Rogers beat Michael Jordan in a game of one-on-one.

John Rogers

Although Rogers had one clear career desire at Princeton I told the coaches that I wanted to be a basketball coach when I graduated, Rogers said three years after graduating, Rogers founded Ariel Capital Management (now Ariel Investments), a Chicago-based company that manages portfolios worth more than $10 billion. Rogers was recognized in the book The Worlds 99 Greatest Investors in 2014, alongside the likes of Warren Buffett and Peter Lynch. He has served on the boards of McDonalds, Nike and The New York Times, and served as the co-chair of the Presidential Inaugural Committee after the election of his longtime friend, President Barack Obama.

After launching his business, Rogers also found ways to maintain his love for basketball. Along with Robinson and other former Princeton players, he formed a squad that played in rec leagues throughout Chicago and beat teams that boasted talented players, including Juwan Howard and Michael Finley. That squad later recruited Arne Duncan (the former Harvard standout who was later appointed the secretary of education by Obama) into the fold and taught him the Princeton offense. Their 3-on-3 teams, meanwhile, went on to win several regional, national and world 3-on-3 basketball titles.

When we played 3-on-3 tournaments, Id be eating a cheeseburger while John would be scouting opponents and the courts wed be playing on, said Kit Mueller, a two-time Ivy League Player of the Year (1990, 1991) who is the second all-time leading scorer in Princeton history.

Hes addicted to basketball and addicted to winning, Mueller said. It consumes him to find every little thing that would give him an edge.

Up 2-0 with a chance to win the game, Rogers drove to his right again against Jordan, who was still playing soft defensively. But Rogers missed the clear look.

Years later, Rogers is still upset that he didnt pitch a shutout.

Its a shot I normally make, Rogers said. The ball just spun out.

Jordan, finally with the ball, teased Rogers for wearing Adidas just before launching his first shot from beyond the 3-point line.

Good.

Jordans second shot beyond the arc was also good. Rogers, who assumed the shots beyond the arc were worth two points each, thought the game was over and began to walk away. But Jordan called him back.

It was 2-2.

The game continued with the two trading misses. Finally, Rogers got the ball back with another shot at glory.

Im thinking Im going to see where he is defensively, and follow my instincts, Rogers said. I thought about shooting a jump shot, but decided to drive to the basket.

Rogers took two dribbles to his left and, again, drove into Jordans body before launching a prayer.

I can still remember watching the ball go up as I was falling out of bounds, Rogers said. I can hear him say, Oh, no before the ball went in.

He knew that was one of my patented shots.

The two embraced as the crowd which included actor/comedian Damon Wayans (who played a Senior Flight School camper who got zipped by Michael Jordan in a 2004 episode of the My Wife and Kids TV show a year later) roared in approval. Rogers had earned everyones respect.

Take that picture down, Wayans said, pointing toward the wall at an image of Jordan, and put up Rogers right there.

With the game over, Rogers faced a more pressing matter: securing the footage.

I asked for it immediately, and it seemed like it took forever, Rogers said. I was worried it would get lost. I kept bugging the camp and finally, maybe two months later, they sent me the tape.

With the tape in hand, Rogers dubbed copies for his closest friends, who now had visual proof of the game he had told them about.

He was pretty proud of it, said Mueller, one of the recipients. And I dont blame him he beat Michael Jordan!

Robinson, the brother of former first lady Michelle Obama and current vice president of player development with the Knicks, was also eager to see video proof.

When you hear him say, I beat Michael Jordan one-on-one, youre thinking Michaels just messing around, Robinson said. You see the tape, and see its legit.

Is he a legend for doing that? Absolutely. Its something few people can say theyve ever accomplished. Do something like that today, and it would go viral.

Rogers was walking down the street last year in Chicago when a random man stopped him. Youre that guy, he said. I recognize you.

Similar reactions have come during stays at hotels he frequents. They would happen to come across it on YouTube, Rogers said. They would tell me, I had no idea.

The video is out there. The Wall Street Journal got a copy of it from Rogers and posted an edited version in 2008.

Its awkward at times because Im a low-key kind of guy, Rogers said. I go on the road and do a lot of speeches, and the person who introduces me will invariably bring it up as kind of a lighthearted point of my resume.

Rogers, 62, has had a lot of sports highlights in his life. He has played basketball multiple times with President Obama (Rogers has known the former president since the 1990s), beat 176 competitors at the Warren Buffett-sponsored NetJet poker tournament, and is now working with USA Basketball as it introduces 3-on-3 basketball to the Olympics (several former Princeton players were scheduled to represent the USA in the 2020 Games in Tokyo).

So where does the victory over Jordan rank in all of his accomplishments?

Playing Jordan is right up there, Rogers said. But had I never made the basketball team at Princeton, I never would have had a chance to play for Coach Carril and none of what followed the 3-on-3 tournaments, the Jordan camp, the friendships I made through basketball would have ever happened.

Rogers, who is five years removed from basketball after having hip replacement surgery, is a realist when it comes to his game against Jordan: that day he was more lucky than good.

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We all know that if I had played him 100 times, he would have beat me the next 100 times, Rogers said. But it was a memorable moment that Ill always cherish.

One that lives on with video evidence.

In all, Rogers said with a laugh, Ive watched it a million times.

Jerry Bembry is a senior writer at The Undefeated. His bucket list items include being serenaded by Lizz Wright, and watching the Knicks play an NBA game in June.

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The CEO who beat Michael Jordan one-on-one, and how he did it - The Undefeated

Mark Cuban: I tried to convince Michael Jordan to join Mavericks instead of Wizards – Yahoo Sports

Michael Jordan lost as Wizards president. Jordan lost as Wizards player. Then, he lost his presumed job back in the Wizards front office.

But Jordan apparently couldve spent his post-Bulls years with another team.

Mavericks owner Mark Cuban on 105.3 The Fan:

The day he signed with the Washington Wizards to come back, David Falk thats right when I was buying the Mavs and David Falk said, Why dont you go meet him? So, I went to David Falks office, and all the papers were right there. And I was trying to convince MJ to not sign them and do something with the Mavs.

The story doesnt exactly line up. Cuban bought the Mavericks in January 2000. The Wizards also hired Jordan as president and sold him a share of ownership in January 2000. But Jordan signed to play for Washington in September 2001.

Did Cuban try to get Jordan in the front office or on the roster?

The Mavericks were rising with Dirk Nowitzki and Steve Nash. Dallas could have used another wing next to Michael Finley. Jordan could have fit well in the starting lineup.

Of course, a good fit on paper wouldnt have necessarily translated onto the court. Jordan had the stature to commandeer the offense. Maybe he wouldve been less likely to do that if playing with the Mavericks talent. But this was still Michael freaking Jordan. He was used to everything running through him.

If Cuban tried to hire Jordan for the front office, there would have been even more room for peril. Jordans personnel record, including with the Hornets, is pretty poor. At least he was still a good player during his second comeback.

Im sure Cuban wouldve enjoyed associating himself with Jordan. But Cuban might be better off with this what if? story.

Mark Cuban: I tried to convince Michael Jordan to join Mavericks instead of Wizards originally appeared on NBCSports.com

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Mark Cuban: I tried to convince Michael Jordan to join Mavericks instead of Wizards - Yahoo Sports

Ray Lewis on where he thinks Michael Jordan’s leadership style came from – and how it affected his own – Yahoo Sports

During this past Sunday's episode of 'The Last Dance' documentary on Michael Jordan's final championship season with the Chicago Bulls, the film dove deep into his leadership style and how much it wore on himself during his career.

Former Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis, an incredible leader in his own right, told Rich Eisen on Wednesdayhis opinion of where Jordan's leadership style originated from, and why the Bulls star's leadership style may have been seen as harsh or dictator-esque to some.

"That leadership came from being denied something," Lewis said on the Rich Eisen Show."It's one thing to watch it now and be like 'I can't believe he was like that.' It's another thing to ready his story enough to understand that one kid that was cut from his basketball team that said he wasn't good enough to do it. That builds a mentality."

As earlier episodes of the docuseries showed, when Jordan was cut from his high school basketball team as a sophomore, his entire work ethic changed. He grinded for hours each day, and two years later, he was one of the best high school basketball players in the country.

"When you think about how Jordan did it, a lot of it comes from the things he didn't have or things that were taken away from him before he was Michael Jordan," Lewis said."He didn't have a Plan B. When you watch this last ride of Jordan, all you saw was the essence of 'I don't have a Plan B. There's no other option for me. I'm built to do this. Born to do this. There's no other direction than straight to get this done.'"

When he was drafted by Chicago in 1984,Jordanimmediately became the face of the franchise and quickly turned the team around. By the late 1980s, Jordan was considered one of the best players, if not the best, in the league, but had yet to get the Bulls a championship.

After losing to the Detroit Pistons in two straight conference finals -- two physically and mentally draining series -- Jordan upped his training regiment to an even greater extent, determined not to lose to Detroit once more.

The documentary captured glimpses of Jordan in practice, often challenging his teammates, and in some cases, potentially going over the line to make a point. Jordan held his teammates to an incredibly high standard, but as he stated in the documentary, he would never ask any of his teammates to do something that he wouldn't do himself.

"Sometimes, you can look at it as a dictator and really being harsh. Some of it can be viewed that way," Lewis said on Jordan's leadership style. "But if you get results they way they had, they got results. I don't condone disrespecting a man in any way.

"Everybody in the locker room may not have you same drive, may not have your same opportunities, may not have your same ability," Lewis continued. "They don't have it. So now, you have to find it differently. You have to find a way to push their buttons and hopefully do it in a way where they don't say 'I hated him.'"

Eisen pointed out to Lewis that several of his teammates had told Eisen in the past that they would be afraid to look the Ravens linebacker in the eyes after they made a mistake on the field. Lewis explained that was because, like Jordan, he held his teammates to an incredibly high standard and wanted 100 percent effort the entire time.

"That was a different point of accountability. That was me saying, 'I'm going to hold you accountable. We went over this,'" Lewis said."So when you come to the sideline, don't give me [any] excuse. Are you going to blow a coverage? Absolutely. Are you going to forget an assignment? Absolutely. But I'm talking about pure effort. My standard was I'm going to set the bar so high that when you look at your leader, this is the way your leader leans."

The former Ravens captain credited his old coach and Hall of Fame linebacker Mike Singletary for developing his own leadership style. By the end of his decorated career, Lewis wasn't trying to just lead his teammates to become better football players. He wanted them to become better men.

"My leadership changed because I wanted to make men better men," he said. "If you got a better man, you got a better football player, you got a better teammate, you got a better husband, you got a better father. You have all of these things if you make the man better. But you must make him hold himself accountable."

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Ray Lewis on where he thinks Michael Jordan's leadership style came from - and how it affected his own originally appeared on NBC Sports Washington

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