How the novel coronavirus is mutating, and if you should be concerned – ThePrint

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Bengaluru/New Delhi: As the coronavirus outbreak continues to spread across the world, the cyberspace has been abuzz with claims that the Covid-19 strain in India is a less virulent mutation than the one travelling abroad. BJP leader and Rajya Sabha MP Subramanian Swamy and gastroenterologist D. Nageshwar Reddy are among those who have made such claims.

While Swamy quoted an American friend in a tweet last week to say the Covid-19 strain in India can be defeated more effectively by our bodys natural defense mechanism than the strains abroad, Reddy in an interview floated similar claims without quoting any research.

Some users responded to Swamys tweet posting a link to a study that they claimed supported his notion. But this study, which is yet to be peer reviewed, has faults of its own, including use of limited data.

A number of experts in the field have termed such assertions baseless. Dr Gagandeep Kang, executive director at the Translational Health Science & Technology Institute in Faridabad, called Reddys comments appalling & misleading.

As such claims circulate online, ThePrint highlights the science of virus mutation and whether you should be worried.

Also read:WHO says coronavirus outbreak in Europe could be approaching peak

The overarching problem is the use of the term Indian SARS-CoV-2 strain that is in itself misleading.

A strain is a sub-type of a virus, characterised by different cell surface proteins, eliciting a different immune response from other strains. A mutation, however, is very minor genetic errors in genome sequences made during replication that doesnt fundamentally change the nature or behaviour of the virus.

So far, only two isolates from India have been genetically sequenced. Both are from coronavirus patients in Kerala who had arrived from Chinas Wuhan in late January. The strains are nearly identical to the ones sequenced in Wuhan and cannot be identified as a separate Indian strain.

Anu Raghunathan, a scientist at the Council of Scientific and Industrial Researchs (CSIR) National Chemical Laboratory in Pune, told ThePrint that the researchers of the aforementioned study used computational biology to analyse the genomic data from different strains around the world.

Theinitial attempt of the team from the International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biology, New Delhi, at analysing the virus strain is not sufficient to conclude that all Indian strains would have only one unique mutation, said Raghunathan.

The mutations themselves are composed of changes in base pairs.

The novel coronaviruss genome is made up of 30,000 base pairs, while a human genome contains over 3 billion. The small numbers make it easy for scientists to track changes and new lineages as they evolve.

To understand what these mutations mean for India, the country will have to sequence a much larger set of the viral isolates from the patients here.

Rakesh K. Mishra, director of CSIRs Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology in Hyderabad, told ThePrint that his institute has the capacity to run the genome sequencing of the isolates from at least 500 people within a couple of weeks. This can help scientists decide the correct course of action for treating the disease.

For example, if a virus mutates too fast, vaccines being developed now will potentially become useless, and pharmaceuticals will have to constantly keep up with the mutations by developing new vaccines all the time, a financially unviable prospect.

Also read:China now wants people to shop, eat out while rest of the world locks down

Regularly switching up the genetic code is an essential part of how a virus evolves. Some viruses, such as the coronaviruses that cause flu, change their genetic code extremely rapidly. This is the main reason why its so difficult to find a vaccine for coronaviruses. They evolve quickly, making vaccines defunct.

The flu vaccine, now available and recommended especially for older people, needs to be taken annually for this reason. By the time the next season comes along, the vaccine is no longer effective on the circulating form of the virus.

Coronaviruses are ribonucleic acid (RNA) viruses, containing just RNA strands (single or double) as its genetic material. They have about 26,000 to 32,000 bases or RNA letters in their length.

RNA viruses mutate continuously. Such a mutation is what made SARS-CoV-2s jump from animals to humans possible.

The virus multiplies inside living organisms cells by creating copies for the RNA. However, the process it uses to make these copies is not perfect, and often introduces tiny errors in the sequence of letters much like a game of Chinese whispers.

The errors that do not help the survival of the virus eventually get eliminated, while other mutations get embedded. It is these mistakes that help scientists track how the virus travelled around different geographic locations.

For example, by genetically sequencing over 2,000 isolates of samples from different countries, scientists tracked how the novel coronavirusspread to different countries, and how the virus evolved and geographically mutated in different areas.

The word mutations often conjures images of humans with superpowers thanks to Hollywood movies but it doesnt mean the virus acquires superpowers. The genetic changes are normal in the evolution of the virus. In some cases, the changes are extremely rapid because the replication is not rigorous or thorough.

The only problem with mutations is the problem of development of vaccines, which would require constant upgrade.

Also read:Why asymptomatic coronavirus carriers arent as contagious but still a big danger

The novel coronavirus, unlike its cousins, mutates slowly. It seems to have a proofreading mechanism in place that reduces the error rate and slows down the speed of mutation. But the mutations are completely random.

One mutation that supports the virus replication and transmission from human to human or any other host sustains whereas the virus that cannot infect many eventually dies out, explained Shweta Chelluboina, clinical virologist at the Interactive Research School for Health Affairs in Pune.

These are random events and such a phenomenon has caused the outbreak in the first place.The newcoronavirushad mutated successfully enoughthat it jumped from animal tohuman, allowingit to infect manywith still no containment in sight, said Chelluboina.

There were reports earlier about how the novel coronavirus has mutated into two strains so far the original S-type which originated in Wuhan, and the subsequent L-type that evolved from the S-type and is more prevalent in countries like the US. Scientists at the Peking Universitys School of Life Sciences and the Institut Pasteur of Shanghai announced these findings.

The L-type is the more aggressive one, and spreads rapidly but is no more or less virulent than the S-type. The researchers urged everyone to take preventive measures because the mutation indicates that more could be coming.

But these arent really two strains as such. A strain is a genetic variant characterised by different forms of surface proteins. But the L-type and the S-type are not quite different enough to call them strains just yet. They are just mutations, referred to as types, according to the study.

To explain the lower population of S-type, the authors of the study suggested that human-adopted measures of curbing contact contained the S-type to the Wuhan region, and allowed the L-type to spread elsewhere uncontained. While the S-type emerged around the time the virus jumped from animals to humans, the L-type emerged soon after that within humans, the team suggested.

Experts think there is also a definite sampling bias for the L-type, which was just sampled more, and uniformly, resulting in higher representation. The mutations were discovered in a preliminary study, as cautioned by the authors as well, and was performed on a limited population of 103 samples.

The study is not peer-reviewed yet, and as most Covid-related studies are under the open community, is a pre-print for now. It was uploaded on 4 March.

These findings strongly support an urgent need for further immediate, comprehensive studies that combine genomic data, epidemiological data, and chart records of the clinical symptoms of patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19), said the study.

The science is evolving rapidly, as more and more genome data is collected from around the world.

Newer research data gathered from genetic sequences uploaded to open source website NextStrain.org indicate that anywhere from eight to 18 different sequences of the coronavirus are making their way around the globe, according to researchers who have genetically sequenced over 1,400 isolates from around the world. These are extremely tiny differences within the viruses in their nucleotide sequences, and none of the sequenced groups seem to be growing any more or less lethal than others.

Most importantly, none of them are new strains despite their coverage as such in the mediaand subsequent clarifications by Nextstrain, who have the data for 2,243 SARS-CoV-2 genomes, of which 1,150 have minor mutations.

On Nextstrain, nearly every virus reveals a slightly different genome. But there are very few mutations and none are strong or vital enough to affect the way the virus spreads, attacks, or lives. The sequences are all named by location where they were first sequenced.

It is very common that during an outbreak, especially during a global pandemic, the genome sequence of earlier isolates from one particular geographical location will differ from that of the later isolates collected elsewhere, said Sreejith Rajasekharan, virologist and post doc at the International Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB) in Trieste, Italy, over an email.

This is what is observed in the current pandemic as well. The first sequence collected from positive patients in Rome, Italy was from a Chinese tourist. This and the one collected after, from an Italian citizen returning from China resemble those that were isolated in China, said Rajasekharan.

However, the ones isolated later in Lombardia and Friuli Venezia Giulia regions (in Italy) match the European clad and not the one from China.

The mutations in the virus are like moving targets, which cant be hit because they keep changing their genetic sequence.

Genome sequencing on a large scale can tell us whether viral isolates are different in different countries from what we saw from China. So this will help us decide whether the treatments being contemplated in those places will be applicable for our strains or not, Rakesh Mishra said.

It will also help decide if the different strains vary so much that developing vaccines may not be viable, Mishra said.

Some behaviours are unique in different strains like how we know that aged people are at high risk but we saw in India young people have also died, said Chelluboina. Some variations in the virus cause the virus to behave in a certain way.

The sequencing will provide a fundamental understanding of how to address the problem without it, the treatments are based on what is known of other viruses which may or may not work for the novel coronavirus, and also likely take up a long time.

That is why it is important to understand the sequence of the virus in local infections to know which countries have a similar virus, so that we can attempt to better predict the outcome, added Chelluboina.

However, Rajasekharan added, The general public needs not be concerned in this regard as the genome of SARS-CoV-2 is quite stable, and therefore the rate of mutation is low.

The novel coronavirus will continue to mutate and pose a challenge to researchers developing a vaccine. Nonetheless, the idea of viruses mutating is not something that needs to worry people in terms of their health when it comes to Covid-19.

Also read:Seasonal flu far more common than coronavirus, but its vaccine is not popular in India

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Mapfre to donate 5 million to Spanish National Research Council – Times of Malta

Mapfre will donate 5 million to the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) to accelerate research in Spain and, especially, investigations related to COVID-19.

The contribution will allow a comprehensive study of this pandemic, deepen the knowledge of the virus and its transmission mechanisms, and promote not only a vaccine against it, but also a scientific basis to better protect the population against future pandemics.

This action is announced within the framework of a Mapfres strategy against COVID-19 based on three lines of action: protect people, safeguard economic activity, especially employment, and help society to overcome the impact in the medium and longer term.

The National Center for Biotechnology (CNB) of CSIC was already a pioneer, and decisive with its genetic engineering techniques, for the achievement of the SARS vaccine in 2002.

Companies, as corporate citizens, must also have a relevant role participating in public-private alliances such as this that allow the fight against the pandemic to be accelerated, said Antonio Huertas, Mapfre president.

It is at these times when we have to take firm steps that help society to overcome this extraordinary situation, and contribute to the way out of this crisis with the least possible impact. We are all called to coordinated action, we are very proud to contribute to the research that CSIC is leading, and we hope that more entities will join this effort to achieve the vaccine that the world population needs.

Mapfre also wants to vindicate the work of scientists and researchers not only at specific times like those present, but in general as an essential activity for the progress of individuals and societies.

Rosa Menndez CSIC president, said: This donation represents a considerable boost for the CSIC teams. We are already working to unravel the keys to the new coronavirus, but we are also launching more than 50 coordinated projects to jointly address the challenge posed by the pandemic. These are projects that range from biotechnology and diagnostic nanosensors to mathematical models to understand the spread of the disease. Mapfres support will allow us to accelerate these projects.

The donation will be made through Fundacin Mapfre, with immediate effect. Fundacin Mapfre is a non-profit entity that has been working for the benefit of society for more than 45 years, executing social actions aimed at the most vulnerable groups.

The Mapfre Group continues to deploy a broad action plan against the coronavirus in all the countries where it is present. In addition to the widespread implementation of teleworking, it is guaranteeing the service in essential coverage with the maximum protection measures for employees, collaborators and clients.

Likewise, the company has just announced a set of measures in Spain, worth 30 million, to protect the activity of self-employed and SMEs through the duration of the crisis: Mapfre will discount in its policies the part of the insurance premiums that cover the professional activity corresponding to the confinement period.

Independent journalism costs money. Support Times of Malta for the price of a coffee.

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Mapfre to donate 5 million to Spanish National Research Council - Times of Malta

UC San Diego Engineers and Doctors Team Up to Retrofit and Build Ventilators with 3D-Printing – UC San Diego Health

Students, staff and faculty address one of the key challenges of COVID-19 outbreak

Manual to automatic: A team of engineering students and faculty at Jacobs School of Engineering at UC San Diego have developed a device to convert a manual ventilator into an automatic ventilator. This system uses 3D-printed parts to compress the bag to push air into a patients lungs.

Even as university campuses close across the nation in an effort to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus, a team of engineers and physicians at the University of California San Diego is rapidly developing simple, ready-to-use ventilators to be deployed if the need arises.

The project kick-started several weeks ago when news started to trickle in that communities in Northern Italy with widespread COVID-19 were in dire straits.

One of the biggest things we heard was that there werent enough ventilators to treat all of the patients coming into the hospitals, said James Friend, a professor in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering and the Department of Surgery at UC San Diego. Its clear that if were not careful, we might end up in the same situation.

Ventilators are medical devices that push air in and out of a patients lungs when they are unable to breathe on their own. One of the primary symptoms of COVID-19 is difficulty in breathing; approximately 1 percent of people who contract the virus require ventilation to support their recoverysometimes for weeks.

The situation in Italy spurred Dr. Lonnie Petersen, an assistant professor in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at UC San Diego and an adjunct with UC San Diego Health, to reach out to her medical and engineering colleagues, proposing a new collaboration to quickly produce simple ventilators that could be easily built and readily used to support patients in a crisis.

We immediately had a lot of support from staff and faculty, all working to get this project off the ground, Petersen said. Our community is taking this threat very seriously and acting accordingly.

The first step was to seek consensus with anesthetists and respiratory therapists about minimum requirements for a ventilator. The next was to determine whether engineers could reasonably produce them, and how quickly.

Within days, a team of researchersfrom the Friend and Petersen labs, including graduate students Aditya Vasan, William Connacher, Jeremy Sieker and Reiley Weekes, began building devices using premade parts and 3D printers. Their first goal was to convert an existing manual ventilator model to automatic, able to provide breathing assistance without human intervention.

Engineering students and faculty are developing a simple device using 3D-printed parts and off-the-shelf components to convert an existing manual ventilator system into an automatic one.

The existing manual design features a mask fitted over a patients face and a bag that can be squeezed by hand to push air into the patients lungs. The team is designing a machine that can do the squeezing instead, freeing doctors and nurses to address other concerns.

Were 3D-printing parts that can be attached to a motor to compress the bag of the manual ventilator, said Ph.D. student Vasan. This allows us to control the speed and volume of the compressions to help patients breathe.

The advantage of 3D printing is that it can be used to quickly produce customized parts. Devices can be made on a small scale much faster than by traditional manufacturing methods.

As long as the correct materials are used, 3D printing can be used to produce a wide variety of tools in the fight against COVID-19, said Shaochen Chen, a professor of nanoengineering at the Jacobs School of Engineering. Its not good for, say, entire N95 masks, but it can be used for producing testing swabs or even face shields for healthcare workers.

Meanwhile, Petersens team is awaiting a few more parts to build a more sophisticated ventilator using an electric pump. Our aim is to have functional devices as soon as possible, she said. Once weve got the bare bones system up and running, we can start adding layers of sophistication and automation. Those additional layers will include advanced regulation of air pressure and flow to allow for a more disease-specific and patient-tailored respiratory support.

The first ventilators will be simple, but the goal is to have something readily at hand when the need arises.

But a simple design isnt the teams only goal.

We are preparing for a shortage of both ventilators and specialized staff to run them, said Petersen. The questions quickly became How can we tweak the ventilators that are available to support multiple patients? How can we create more ventilators that are easier for staff to use?

Other projects include collecting and inventorying oxygen supplies in preparation for increased demand by local hospitals; converting other air pressure machines, such as CPAPs and Bi-PAPs into ventilators; and adapting existing ventilators to serve more patients.

Dr. Sidney Merritt displays an in-house pressure measurement device, currently in testing for use on a system designed to split a single ventilator to serve up to four patients.

The team hopes to have functional prototypes within a few days and are ready to test them in simulators, in collaboration with anesthesiologists, before potentially applying to patients.

Normally, the production timeline on something like this would be months, or even years, said Petersen. By building on existing technology and taking multiple steps at once, we aim to reduce that timeline to weeks.

While grappling with challenges in locating parts that cant be 3D-printed and obtaining them from outside vendors, the biggest roadblock right now is gathering enough people to assemble the devices.

The UC San Diego campus is largely closed and empty, due to efforts to minimize coronavirus exposure and slow the spread of COVID-19. The graduate student team continues work, thanks to a special exception granted by the Dean of the Jacobs School of Engineering.

This is a team effort, said Petersen. And we can use the assistance of other engineers. We would love to hear from students, staff, and faculty with hands-on engineering experience who can help us with this project.

Qualified volunteers should email: UCSDVentilatorEngHelp@gmail.com

Meanwhile, Petersens colleague Dr. Sidney Merritt, an associate clinical professor of anesthesiology at UC San Diego Health, is working with a team that includes U.S. Navy and Lockheed Martin personnel to develop a 3D-printable system for splitting a ventilator designed for one patient so that it can be used by up to four patients at a time.

We found a file online that showed us how it could be done, said Merritt. Weve been working with the Navy and others to print them in different materials and test them on a ventilator, and, so far, it works. We were able to get enough pressure on each line that it should be adequate for serving four patients at a time.

The challenge now is finding valves that can regulate the pressure for each patient on the system and monitor individual air pressure for each one, allowing for the fine control needed to support each patients specific needs. As soon as we have the valves worked out, well be just a couple days out from getting them set up and running, said Merritt.

Using 3D-printed parts, Dr. Sidney Merritt and a team at the U.S. Navy and Lockheed Martin are developing a system to convert ventilators designed for a single patient to be used by up to four patients at a time.

This situation is going to be very severe, she continued. We need to have every tool available to us, so we are ready to treat patients because we still dont know how many people will get sick.

Despite obstacles, the team said it has been overwhelmed by support and advocacy from colleagues and university leadership. For example, the University of California's Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation (IGCC) has contributed $10,000 to assist in the development of prototypes.

The UC San Diego family is really pulling together on this one, said Petersen. From the dean, through chairs, faculty and students, regardless of who weve spoken to, everyone has gone above and beyond to help with this project as much as they can. Its really bringing the community together. Everyone is moving in the same direction. While the work may be preparing for something unpleasant, its very good to be working in such a supportive environment.

Dr. Casper Petersen, an assistant project scientist in the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, is co-leading this project alongside Lonnie Petersen. Other members of the continuously growing team include Dr. Daniel Lee; Dr. Preetham Suresh; Dr. William Mazzei; Dr. Matthew Follansbee; Dr. Micheal Vanietti; Dr. Hemal Patel; Theodore Vallejos of UC San Diego Health; Mark Stambaugh of the Qualcomm Institute; and Tania Morimoto, a professor in the Department of Aerospace and Engineering at the Jacobs School.

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UC San Diego Engineers and Doctors Team Up to Retrofit and Build Ventilators with 3D-Printing - UC San Diego Health

Bare-Bones Ventilator Circuit Board Moving Toward Production with Radio Amateurs’ Help – ARRL

04/01/2020

Radio amateurs continue to play key roles in developing the electronic control system for an open-source/architecture, modular, low-cost human patient ventilator. The device itself was designed by researcher Sem Lampotang and his team at University of Florida Health the schools academic health center using such commonly available components as PVC pipe and lawn-sprinkler valves. The idea is to create a bare-bones ventilator that could serve in the event of a ventilator shortage.

The way I looked at it is, if youre going to run out of ventilators, then were not even trying to reproduce the sophisticated ventilators out there, Lampotang said. If we run out, you have to decide who gets one and who doesnt. How do you decide that? The power of our approach is that every well-intentioned volunteer who has access to Home Depot, Ace, Lowes, or their equivalent worldwide can build one.

His team is working on adding safety features to meet regulatory guidelines, then they will run engineering tests to determine safety, accuracy, and endurance of the machine, which can be built for as little as $125 to $250.

Dr. Gordon Gibby, KX4Z a retired associate professor of anesthesiology at the University of Florida and an electrical engineer is among those involved in the project, developing control-system prototypes. He reports that a trial printed circuit board is being created, populated, and tested prior to large-scale fabrication. This should lead to a documented open-source design that can be replicated or improved upon by any interested manufacturer, Gibby said, noting that the board could be built anywhere in the world, based on the Arduino Nano microcontroller.

A huge amount of work has gone on in the design of the circuit boards, Gibby told ARRL. We have at least two, maybe three designs, ready for fabrication. Current design specifications and a video of prototypes have been posted online. The Arduino-based control software will set the respiratory rate and other key parameters in treating critically ill coronavirus victims. Other radio amateurs involved in the control system aspect of the project include Jack Purdum, W8TEE, and uBITX transceiver maker Ashhar Farhan, VU2ESE.

Using a Groups.io forum, up to 140 volunteers have been studying or working to push the project to completion. Software is being created by multiple volunteers, with amateur radio operators involved in that phase as well.

The ventilators valves will precisely time the flow of compressed oxygen into a patient with lungs weakened by viral pneumonia in order to extend life and allow time for the body to clear the infection.

Among the projects assumptions: The Food and Drug Administration will waive clearance for the bare-bones design, if a massive shortage develops; traditional medical components and supplies used in ventilators will be in short supply, and transportation will be impaired or disrupted.

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Bare-Bones Ventilator Circuit Board Moving Toward Production with Radio Amateurs' Help - ARRL

Foundational step towards a quantum internet – News – The University of Sydney

Dr John Bartholomew in the Quantum Integration Laboratory at the University of Sydney Nano Institute. Photo: Stefanie Zingsheim

Quantum computers promise to revolutionise information technology this century. Based on the rules of quantum mechanics, the very nature of their hardware means they will be able to solve problems beyond the reach of classical computers. And scientists are also working on how best to build a network of these machines in order to create a quantum internet of sorts.

Engineers at Caltech, the California Institute of Technology, have discovered that by embedding atoms of the rare-earth element ytterbium in an optical cavity they are able to control and measure a stable form of quantum information in a solid. The system they have developed has the potential to share that information over thousands of kilometres using photons.

"This ticks most of the boxes, said Caltechs Professor Andrei Faraon, who led the research team. It's a rare-earth ion that absorbs and emits photons in exactly the way we'd need to create a quantum network.

This could form the backbone technology for the quantum internet."

Dr John Bartholomew is a co-author of the Nature paper and worked on the project at Caltech. This year he joined the University of Sydney Nano Institute and School of Physics.

He said: These rare-earth atoms have great appeal for quantum technologies but several challenges had to be overcome to get things working at the single atom level. Ive worked on overcoming these challenges since starting my PhD at the Australian National University 12 years ago.

I saw the nanophotonic cavities pioneered at Caltech as the best shot for making this breakthrough.

Dr Bartholomew now leads the Quantum Integration Laboratory at the University of Sydney. Here he hopes to build on the Universitys demonstrated strengths in photonics and quantum technologies.

The next big steps are to increase the performance and scale of this hardware and I can't wait to tackle these challenges at the University of Sydney by designing new materials and building integrated devices, he said.

As they can with classical computers, engineers would like to be able to connect multiple quantum computers to share data and work together creating a quantum internet. This would open the door to several applications, including solving computations that are too large to be handled by a single machine and establishing provably secure communications using quantum cryptography.

In order to work, a quantum network needs to be able to transmit information between two points without altering the quantum properties of the information being transmitted. The idea is to use one of the fundamental quantum properties of matter, which is entanglement. This is where the information of quantum objects remains dependent on each other, even if separated by an arbitrary distance.

One current model works like this: a single atom or ion acts as a quantum bit (or qubit) storing information via one if its properties, such as the direction of its angular momentum, known as spin. To read that information and transmit it elsewhere, the atom is excited with a pulse of light, causing it to emit a photon whose spin is entangled with the spin of the atom. The photon can then transmit the information entangled with the atom over a long distance via fibre-optic cable.

Doing that is harder than it sounds, however. Finding atoms that you can control and measure that also aren't too sensitive to magnetic or electric field fluctuations that cause errors, or decoherence, is challenging.

"Solid-state emitters that interact well with light often fall victim to decoherence; that is, they stop storing information in a way that's useful from the prospective of quantum engineering," said Caltechs Dr Jon Kindem, lead author of theNaturepaper.

Meanwhile, atoms of rare-earth elements, which have properties that make the elements useful as qubits, tend to interact poorly with light.

To overcome this challenge, researchers led by Professor Faraon constructed a nanophotonic cavity about 10 microns (0.01 millimetres) in length, sculpted from a piece of crystal.

The crystal was made in such a way that light inside it would bounce around in predictable patterns.

They then identified a charged atom, or ion, of the rare-earth element ytterbium was then placed at the centre of the cavity where it could receive a beam of photons. The optical cavity allows for light to bounce back and forth down the beam multiple times until it is finally absorbed by the ion.

In theNaturepaper, the team showed that the cavity modifies the environment of the ion such that whenever it emits a photon, more than 99 percent of the time that photon remains in the cavity, where scientists can efficiently collect and detect that photon to measure the state of the ion. This results in an increase in the rate at which the ion can emit photons, improving the overall effectiveness of the system.

In addition, the ytterbium atoms store information for 30 milliseconds. That doesnt sound long, but its long enough for light to transport that information nearly 6000 kilometres about the distance from Sydney to Jakarta and enough time to cross continental Europe, Asia, Australia or the US.

The team's current focus is on creating the building blocks of a quantum network. Next, they hope to scale up their experiments and connect two quantum bits, Professor Faraon said.

This research was funded by the US National Science Foundation, the US Air Force Office of Scientific Research and theInstitute for Quantum Information and Matterat Caltech and used theKavli Nanoscience Institute Laboratoryat Caltech.

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Foundational step towards a quantum internet - News - The University of Sydney

IIT and Stanford alumni develop machine to sterilise public places to prevent the spread of coronavirus – YourStory

The novel coronavirus has infected over 7 lakh people worldwide, and has claimed nearly 38,000 lives, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).

While humanity is racing against time to find a cure for the disease, Delhi-basedPerSapien Innovation has come up with amachine called Airlens Minus Corona (-Corona) to counter the spread of the disease.

Started by Stanford University researchers Debayan Saha and Shashi Ranjan in 2017, PerSapien strongly believes that good health is the birthright of each (Per) human being (Sapien).

Shashi says, the machine is like a Robo Sapien (a human-like machine) that operates on the mechanism of charged/ionised water droplets, which is ionised using the corona discharge. The machine disperses the ionised water droplets, which in turn oxidises the viral protein, and hence reducing it to a non-harmful molecule.

Airlens minus Corona

Debayan adds thatalcohols (like ethanol or IPA) are known to inactivate viruses by denaturing their protein coat. But alcohol-based hand sanitisers are useful on a smaller scale. For example, it is useful for individuals to sanitise their hands, and is also helpful to sanitise surfaces at home, offices, etc.

However, this is insufficient in such an emergency as it is impractical to use alcohol for sanitising cities. Thus, to combat the virus at a larger scale, the entire city needs to be sanitised, for which Airlens Minus Corona (-Corona) has been created, he adds.

The machine can travel on the streets and spray the ionised water droplets, targetting crowded places like hospitals, bus stops, railway stations, markets, etc., to sterilise the city from the spread of the virus.

According to the founders, the startup, which is funded by Gas Authority India Limited (GAIL) and Yes Bank Foundation, is not looking to derive business gains from their invention.

Rather, the co-founders assert that the device is not for commercial sale, and they are planning to open the technology on their website so that anyone can make the device by themselves.

Considering the deadly situation India is exposed to, in order to curb the menace created by the virus, the government authorities will need such technology. Therefore, while the entire country has come together to fight the virus, we would like to contribute by giving Airlens Minus Corona technology to the government to check the spread of the virus, he says.

The founders say they have already tested the device, and the test turned out to be positive. After seeing successful results, they have been in touch with the government to implement the device in order to sterilise public places.

Debayan Saha worked in a drone development sector after completing his bachelors in technology from IIT Kharagpur. He says, an interesting turn of events led him to pursue Global Biodesign Fellowship at Stanford University, California, where he invented couple of medical devices for the US healthcare system.

To create an impact in the healthcare sector back home, he returned to India and joined AIIMS in New Delhi, where he started working on air pollution as a SIB Fellow, mentored by Padmashree Prof. Randeep Guleria, Director of AIIMS, and co-invented a technology.

Shashi Ranjan started his technical career with an engineering degree in Biotechnology from BIT Mesra. He pursued PhD in Biomedical Engineering from National University of Singapore, and authored various research publications in reputed peer reviewed journals like Nature Communications, and got his techniques patented.

Co-Founders of PerSepian Innovations (LtoR) Debayan Saha, and Shashi Ranjan

Shashi says, he is extremely eager to utilise his research to help people. He met Debayan at Stanfords Biodesign fellowship. During his stay at the Stanford University, he developed an innovative and frugal medical device to solve the problem of pace-maker lead dislodgement.

After returning to India, he identified air pollution as one of the biggest problems affecting lives of all. To solve this problem, he developed a novel air purification technology with support from Pfizer IIT Delhi Innovation & IP programme.

(Edited by Megha Reddy)

How has the coronavirus outbreak disrupted your life? And how are you dealing with it? Write to us or send us a video with subject line 'Coronavirus Disruption' to editorial@yourstory.com

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IIT and Stanford alumni develop machine to sterilise public places to prevent the spread of coronavirus - YourStory

Global Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market: Industry Analysis and Forecast (2019-2026): By Technology, Application and Region – Publicist360

Global Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market was valued US$ XX Bn in 2018 and is expected to reach US$ 98.2 Bn by 2026, at a XX% CAGR of around during a forecast period.

Various novel technologies for developing effective drug delivery systems came into existence among which nanotechnology platforms for achieving targeted drug delivery are gaining prominence nowadays. Research in the medical field includes the development of drug nanoparticles, polymeric and inorganic biodegradable nano-carriers for drug delivery, and surface engineering of carrier molecules.

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The report contains a detailed list of factors that will drive and restrain the growth of the Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market. Such as, rapidly expanding areas of research and development to develop novel nano-medicine are expected to drive the nanotechnology drug delivery market growth in the future. Additionally, one of the major factors assisting market growth is the growing prevalence of infectious diseases and cancer, developing nanotechnology research, and increasing demand for novel drug delivery systems. However, high cost coupled with stringent regulatory scenario hinders the market growth to some extent.

Nanoparticles are expected to account for the largest XX% market share by 2026. The segment dominated the market as key nanoparticles like gold nanoparticles, dendrimers, and fullerenes are used in pharmaceutical drug delivery.The report offers a brief analysis of the major regions in the global nanotechnology drug delivery market, namely, APAC, Europe, North America, South America, and the Middle East & Africa. North America dominated the nanotechnology drug delivery market in 2018, because of high medical reimbursement facilities, and technological advancement. The APAC is projected to have the fastest growth, owing to a rapidly increasing population, an increase in consumer awareness, favorable government policies, modernization of healthcare infrastructure, and growing medical tourism industry in developing economies such as China, and India in this region.

Nanotechnology drug delivery market report gives a competitive analysis of the individual standing of the companies against the global landscape of the medical industry. The forecast also provides the estimated trends in demand for the global market and their impact on the sizes of these companies to help the reader curate profitable business strategies. Such as Pfizer, Inc., AstraZeneca and Amgen signed agreements to collaborate with BIND Therapeutics to develop nano-medicines. These initiatives are expected to fuel the growth of the nanotechnology drug delivery market in the upcoming future.

The objective of the report is to present comprehensive analysis of Global Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market including all the stakeholders of the industry. The past and current status of the industry with forecasted market size and trends are presented in the report with the analysis of complicated data in simple language. The report covers the all the aspects of industry with dedicated study of key players that includes market leaders, followers and new entrants by region. PORTER, SVOR, PESTEL analysis with the potential impact of micro-economic factors by region on the market have been presented in the report. External as well as internal factors that are supposed to affect the business positively or negatively have been analyzed, which will give clear futuristic view of the industry to the decision makers.

The report also helps in understanding Global Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market dynamics, structure by analyzing the market segments, and project the Global Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market size. Clear representation of competitive analysis of key players by type, price, financial position, product portfolio, growth strategies, and regional presence in the Global Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market make the report investors guide.

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Scope of the Global Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market

Global Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market, by Technology

Nanocrystals Nanoparticleso Dendrimerso Gold Nanoparticleso Dendrimerso Fullereneso Others Liposomes Micelles Nanotubes OthersGlobal Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market, by Application

Neurology Oncology Cardiovascular/Physiology Anti-inflammatory/Immunology Anti-infective OthersGlobal Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market, by Region

North America Asia Pacific Europe Middle East & Africa South AmericaKey players operating in the Global Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market

Johnson & Johnson Merck & Co Roche Bayer Novartis Pharmaceuticals Pfizer AstraZeneca Amgen Celgene Corporation Angiotech Pharmaceuticals Capsulution Pharma AlphaRx Inc. Calando Pharmaceuticals Copernicus Therapeutics Elan Corporation Nanotherapeutics PAR Pharmaceutica Taiwan Liposome Co. AbbVie, Inc Amgen, Inc

MAJOR TOC OF THE REPORT

Chapter One: Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market Overview

Chapter Two: Manufacturers Profiles

Chapter Three: Global Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market Competition, by Players

Chapter Four: Global Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market Size by Regions

Chapter Five: North America Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Revenue by Countries

Chapter Six: Europe Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Revenue by Countries

Chapter Seven: Asia-Pacific Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Revenue by Countries

Chapter Eight: South America Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Revenue by Countries

Chapter Nine: Middle East and Africa Revenue Nanotechnology Drug Delivery by Countries

Chapter Ten: Global Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market Segment by Type

Chapter Eleven: Global Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market Segment by Application

Chapter Twelve: Global Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market Size Forecast (2019-2026)

Browse Full Report with Facts and Figures of Nanotechnology Drug Delivery Market Report at: https://www.maximizemarketresearch.com/market-report/global-nanotechnology-drug-delivery-market/39035/

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Charge a Car Battery in 5 Minutes? Thats the Plan – WIRED

Anna Tomaszewska, a chemical engineer at Imperial College London who recently coauthored a review paper on fast-charging lithium-ion batteries, says one possible solution to lithium plating is to add silicon to the anode. Silicon is cheap, abundant, and can change the anodes crystal structure in such a way that makes lithium plating less likely. Silicon has been particularly popular with the manufacturers because it can also improve the energy capacity of the battery, adds Tomaszewska.

Indeed, many companies, including Tesla, have added silicon or silicon oxide to graphite anodes to squeeze some more energy from their lithium-ion cells. But Enevate, an energy storage company based in Southern California, wants to take graphite out of the picture. For the last 15 years, the company has been perfecting an XFC, or extremely fast charging lithium-ion battery with a pure silicon anode.

Earlier this year, the companys researchers announced that their latest generation of batteries could be charged to 75 percent in just five minuteswithout sacrificing energy density. We can have a fast charge without losing out on energy density because were using an inexpensive, pure-silicon approach, says Ben Park, Enevates founder and chief technology officer.

Battery companies are well known for announcing performance breakthroughs in experimental cells that never make it to market. But what sets Enevates technology apart, according to Jarvis Tou, the companys executive vice president, is that its anode material can be readily integrated into existing battery manufacturing processes. Tou says Enevate is already in talks with lithium-ion manufacturers to start integrating Enevates anode into commercial batteries. The first applications for the fast-charge batteries will be for power tools, but that Enevate is working with car manufacturers to include it in EVs as early as 2024.

Other companies are also racing to bring fast-charge anode chemistries to market. StoreDot, an Israeli energy storage company, is developing an EV battery that they expect will charge in under 10 minutes. And last month, researchers from the English battery startup Echion claimed to have built a lithium-ion battery that can charge in just six minutes using an anode made from mixed niobium oxide that is nanoengineered to efficiently transport lithium ions. Weve engineered the material to have a specific crystal structure, says Jean de la Verpillire, the CEO and founder of Echion. You can think of it as these little tunnels at the molecular scale that allow lithium ions to travel very fast into the anode.

These bespoke XFC batteries havent made it out of the lab and into the real world yet. Producing lithium-ion batteries at scale is challenging, and manufacturers have to be persuaded to add new materials into their assembly lines. Thats why companies like Echion and Enevate have prioritized developing anode materials that can be dropped in to existing battery production processes. Both say theyre in talks with battery manufacturers to integrate their anode material in commercial cells. Were not trying to reinvent the wheel, adds de la Verpillire. Going from lab discovery to a product is difficult, but its not black magic.

But building a cheap XFC battery might not require new anode chemistries at all. At NREL, Keyser and his colleagues are focused on optimizing graphite anodes, which are already widely used in EVs. Keyser says the team uses computer models to optimize the routes lithium ions take as they move through an anode and to influence this route by manipulating the size and shape of the graphite particles.

Nanoengineering anode structures is difficult to implement at scale, but Keysers team is also exploring solutions to XFC batteries that dont involve modifying the structure or chemistry of a battery anode at all. For example, intelligent algorithms could be implemented at charging stations to ensure that a battery is never overwhelmed by energy while its charging, which can lead to lithium plating. Tesla does this already, to some extent. Its charging stations and cars communicate so that the charging station delivers the right amount of power for the age and make of the car being recharged.

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Charge a Car Battery in 5 Minutes? Thats the Plan - WIRED

Darwinism: Survival without Purpose | The Institute for …

Humans have always wondered about the meaning of life...life has no higher purpose than to perpetuate the survival of DNA...life has no design, no purpose, no evil and no good, nothing but blind pitiless indifference.1 --Richard Dawkins

Evolution is "deceptively simple yet utterly profound in its implications,"2 the first of which is that living creatures "differ from one another, and those variations arise at random, without a plan or purpose."3 Evolution must be without plan or purpose because its core tenet is the natural selection of the fittest, produced by random copying errors called mutations. Darwin "was keenly aware that admitting any purposefulness whatsoever to the question of the origin of species would put his theory of natural selection on a very slippery slope."4 Pulitzer Prize author Edward Humes wrote that the fact of evolution was obvious but "few could see it, so trapped were they by the humandesire to find design and purpose in the world." He concluded:

Darwin's brilliance was in seeing beyond the appearance of design, and understanding the purposeless, merciless process of natural selection, of life and death in the wild, and how it culled all but the most successful organisms from the tree of life, thereby creating the illusion that a master intellect had designed the world. But close inspection of the watchlike "perfection" of honeybees' combs or ant trailsreveals that they are a product of random, repetitive, unconscious behaviors, not conscious design.5

The fact that evolution teaches that life has no purpose beyond perpetuating its own survival is not lost on teachers. One testified that teaching evolution "impacted their consciences" because it moved teachers away from the "idea that they were born for a purpose something completely counter to their mindset and beliefs."6

In a study on why children resist accepting evolution, Yale psychologists Bloom and Weisberg concluded that the evolutionary way of viewing the world, which the authors call "promiscuous teleology," makes it difficult for them to accept evolution. Children "naturally see the world in terms of design and purpose."7 The ultimate purposelessness of evolution, and thus of the life that it produces, was eloquently expressed by Professor Lawrence Krauss as follows: "We're just a bit of pollution. If you got rid of usthe universe would be largely the same. We're completely irrelevant."8

The Textbooks

To determine what schools are teaching about religious questions such as the purpose of life, I surveyed current science textbooks and found that they tend to teach the view that evolution is both nihilistic and atheistic. One of today's most widely-used textbooks stated that "evolution works without either plan or purpose. Evolution is random and undirected."9 Another text by the same authors added that Darwin knew his theory "required believing in philosophical materialism, the conviction that matter is the stuff of all existence and that all mental and spiritual phenomena are its byproducts." The authors continued:

Darwinian evolution was not only purposeless but also heartless--a process in which...nature ruthlessly eliminates the unfit. Suddenly, humanity was reduced to just one more species in a world that cared nothing for us. The great human mind was no more than a mass of evolving neurons. Worst of all, there was no divine plan to guide us.10

Another text taught that humans are just "a tiny, largely fortuitous, and late-arising twig on the enormously arborescent bush of life" and the belief that a "progressive, guiding force, consistently pushing evolution to move in a single direction" is now known to be "misguided."11 Many texts teach that evolution is purposeless and has no goal except to achieve brute survival: the "idea that evolution is not directed towards a final goal or state has been more difficult for many people to accept than the process of evolution itself."12 One major text openly teaches that humans were created by a blind, deaf, and dumb watchmaker--namely natural selection, which is "totally blind to the future."

Humans...came from the same evolutionary source as every other species. It is natural selection of selfish genes that has given us our bodies and our brains. Natural selectionexplainsthe whole of life, the diversity of life, the complexity of life, |and| the apparent design in life."13

The Implications

Many texts are very open about the implications of Darwinism for theism. One teaches that Darwin's immeasurably important contribution to science was to show that, despite life's apparent evidence of design and purpose, mechanistic causes explain all biological phenomena. The text adds that by coupling "undirected, purposeless variation to the blind, uncaring process of natural selection, Darwin made theological or spiritual explanations of the life processes superfluous."14 The author concludes by noting that "it was Darwin's theory of Evolution that provided a crucial plank to the platform of mechanisms and materialismthat has been the stage of most western thought."15 Another text even stated directly that humans were created by a random process, not a loving, purposeful God, and:

The real difficulty in accepting Darwin's theory has always been that it seems to diminish our significance. |Evolution| asked us to accept the proposition that, like all other organisms, we too are the products of a random process that, as far as science can show, we are not created for any special purpose or as part of any universal design.16

These texts are all clearly teaching religious ideas, not science. An excellent example is a text that openly ruled out not only theistic evolution, but any role for God in nature, and demonstrated that Darwinism threatened theism by showing that humans and all life "could be explained by natural selection without the intervention of a god." Evolutionary "randomness and uncertainty had replaced a deity having conscious, purposeful, human characteristics."

The Darwinian view that present-type organisms were not created spontaneously but formed in a succession of selective events that occurred in the past, contradicted the common religious view that there could be no design, biological or otherwise, without an intelligent designer. In this scheme a god of design and purpose is not necessary. Religion has been bolstered by the comforting idea that humanity was created in the image of a god to rule over the world and its creatures. Religion provided emotional solace, a set of ethical and moral values. Nevertheless, faith in religious dogma has been eroded by natural explanations of its mysteries. The positions of the creationists and the scientific world appear irreconcilable."17

Darwin himself taught a totally atheistic, naturalistic view of origins. He even once said, "I would give nothing for the theory of natural selection if it requires miraculous additions at any one stage of descent."18 John Alcock, an evolutionary biologist, therefore concluded that "we exist solely to propagate the genes within us."19

Leading Darwin scholar Janet Browne makes it very clear that Darwin's goal was the "arduous task of reorienting the way Victorians looked at nature." To do this Darwin had to convince the world that "ideas about a benevolent, nearly perfect natural world" and those that believe "beauty was given to things for a purpose, were wrong--that the idea of a loving God who created all living things and brought men and women into existence wasa fable."

The worldsteeped in moral meaning which helped mankind seek out higher goals in life, was not Darwin's. Darwin's view of nature was dark--black. Where most men and women generally believed in some kind of design in nature--some kind of plan and order--and felt a deep-seated, mostly inexpressible belief that their existence had meaning, Darwin wanted them to see all life as empty of any divine purpose.20

Darwin knew how difficult it was to abandon such a view, but realized that for evolution to work, nature must ultimately be "governed entirely by chance." Browne concludes:

The pleasant outward face of nature was precisely that--only an outward face. Underneath was perpetual struggle, species against species, individual against individual. Life was ruled by death...destruction was the key to reproductive success. All the theological meaning was thus stripped out by Darwin and replaced by the concept of competition. All the telos, the purpose, on which natural theologians based their ideas of perfect adaptation was redirected into Malthusian--Darwinian--struggle. What most people saw as God-given design he saw as mere adaptations to circumstance, adaptations that were meaningless except for the way in which they helped an animal or plant to survive.21

Neo-Darwinist Richard Dawkins recognized the purposelessness of such a system:

In a universe of blind physical forces and genetic replication some people are going to get hurt, other people are going to get lucky, and you won't find any rhyme or reason in it, nor any justice. The universe we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil and no good, nothing but blind, pitiless indifference.22

How widely is this view held by scientists? One study of 149 leading biologists found that 89.9 percent believed that evolution has no ultimate purpose or goal except survival, and we are just a cosmic accident existing at the whim of time and chance. A mere six percent believed that evolution has a purpose.23 Almost all of those who believed that evolution had no purpose were atheists. This is only one example that Sommers and Rosenberg call the "destructive power of Darwinian theory."24

Purpose and Christianity

Christianity teaches that God made the universe as a home for humans. If the universe evolved purely by natural means, then it just exists and any "purpose" for its existence can only be that which humans themselves attribute to it. But our own experience and intellectual attainments argue against this. The similarity of human-constructed machines and the orderly functioning of the universe is the basis of the design argument. Just as a machine requires a designer and a builder, so too the universe that we see requires a designer and a builder.

Determining the purpose of something depends on the observer's worldview. To a nontheist the question "What is the purpose of a living organism's structure?" means only "How does this structure aid survival?" Eyesight and legs would therefore have nothing to do with enjoyment of life; they are merely an unintended byproduct of evolution. Biologists consistently explain everything from coloration to sexual habits solely on the basis of survival. Orthodox neo-Darwinism views everything as either an unfortunate or a fortuitous event resulting from the outworking of natural law and random, naturally-selected mutations. Conversely, creationists interpret all reality according to beliefs about God's purpose for humans. Evolutionists can usually explain even contradictory behavior, but creationists look beyond this and try to determine what role it plays in God's plan.

Conclusions

Orthodox evolution teaches that the living world has no plan or purpose except survival, is random, undirected, and heartless. Humans live in a world that cares nothing for us, our minds are simply masses of meat, and no divine plan exists to guide us. These teachings are hardly neutral, but rather openly teach religion--the religion of atheism and nihilism. The courts have consistently approved teaching this anti-Christian religion in public schools and have blocked all attempts to neutralize these clearly religious ideas.

As the Word of God states, "For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers, having itching ears; And they shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto fables" (2 Timothy 4:3-4).

References

* Dr. Bergman is Professor of Biology at Northwest State College in Ohio.

Cite this article: Bergman, J. 2007. Darwinism: Survival without Purpose. Acts & Facts. 36 (11): 10.

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Darwinism: Survival without Purpose | The Institute for ...

As Netanyahu and Gantz prepare for unity, social Darwinism is at the gates – Haaretz

Worse than the enormous waste of establishing a cabinet with 34 ministers is the fear that this crazy idea signals the greatest danger facing Israel at this time: Social Darwinism. The message being sent by what will apparently be the government coalition headed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a rotation with Benny Gantz is that in order to form a stable government you must hand out jobs, while inflating the cabinet to an unprecedented size.

All this is going on at the height of a sudden economic crisis that has increased the number of unemployed from 150,000 to one million in less than a month. This is an unemployment rate of 23 percent, which Israel has never come anywhere near even in the times of its greatest crises. Add to this hundreds of thousands of self-employed and freelance workers who have lost their livelihoods.

Haaretz Weekly Ep. 72

The public needs a functioning, efficient and effective government at this moment, and leadership that it can trust. The proliferation of government ministries entails heavy costs of hundreds of millions of shekels a year and even larger indirect and hidden costs because of the bureaucracy and complications it leads to. The cabinet may have announced an economic aid plan costing 80 billion shekels ($22.3 billion), but its real test will be in the effectiveness in which this money trickles into the economy and in whether it reaches the right places.

The pressures on the new government will be incredible. There is almost no household or business that has not suffered from the crisis. But there are casualties in critical, serious, moderate and mild condition. There is serious concern that we will not be able to identify which is which and provide them with an effective response with a government that has expanded to its largest size ever. In fact, it is likely this will cause the very opposite and send the message that the government is worrying about jobs for 34 ministers and the politicians and their desires come before everything else. That without satisfying them first no government can be formed and no political stability can be reached.

This might be true in calmer times, but at the height of a severe economic crisis it is a double-edged sword. A cabinet of 34 ministers testifies to our political leaders being totally cut off from reality and their ignoring the fundamental principles needed to get through this crisis period: Trust, solidarity, responsibility for one another, restraint and serving as an example. Anyone who thinks a demand for a slimmed down government is just populism does not understand the depths of the crisis and the heavy price the public is being asked to pay for it. It is not just those who are infected by the virus, but also those who will be forced to pay the economic and social price of this crisis.

A cabinet of 34 ministers sends this message to the public: We are taking care of ourselves first and dont care about you. In practice, it is license for every interest group to use its power to extort and grab what they can. It is a time-tested recipe to create social chaos, increase inequality and trample the weak.

After the government is formed and a state budget is created, the entire public will feel the cost of the crisis. The government will have to find means to fund and create sources of growth that will enable the economy to recover. It will face a great number of dilemmas: Who to help and who not, who to save and who to let fall, from whom to take and to whom to give.

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When Netanyahu and Gantz are preparing the ground for an oversized cabinet, which places the self-esteem, status and power of the politicians before anything else, they are sowing the seeds of the catastrophe of the next campaign: Extortion by interest groups, who will do everything possible to ensure that they are not the ones paying the price for the economic crisis.

A lot of victims will fall in this battle and they will put Israeli solidarity, which emerges sometimes during security crises, to the test. But here the cost will be much heavier, and there is no physical enemy that can serve to unite the ranks. Those who think that the proliferation of cabinet ministers guarantees political stability will discover that social Darwinism could very well develop here and undermine it. It is still not too late to settle for a slimmed down government of 18 ministers.

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As Netanyahu and Gantz prepare for unity, social Darwinism is at the gates - Haaretz

Culling the old & weak: Eugenics and social Darwinism rear their ugly heads in the Covid-19 pandemic – RT

The coronavirus pandemic has seen some great and heroic acts of humanity, but weve also seen the re-emergence and mainstreaming of the morally repugnant survival of the fittest ideology.

One thing about a health crisis, it sorts out the humane from the inhumane. Those who think all lives are equally precious from those who seem to think that some lives count more and that the weak are a burden who have to be sacrificed so the strong can continue to dominate.

Probably the most repulsive take Ive heard so far on Corona is the one which goes: What are we having these lockdowns and social distancing for? Its only or predominantly the old and already ill who are dying from Covid-19 and they didnt have too long to live anyway.Writing for the Critic, UK commentator Toby Young, who has previously advocated what he called progressive eugenics, said that spending 350bn to prolong the lives of a few hundred thousand mostly elderly people is an irresponsible use of taxpayers money.

What, I wonder, does he regard as a responsible use of taxpayers money? Invading Iraq? Bombing Libya? Bailing out the bankers? And how much monetary worth would he put on the lives of a few hundred thousand mostly elderly people? The Oscar Wilde epigram about the man who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing springs readily to mind.

Young complains that the UKs so-called lockdown (it isnt actually a proper one because flights from Covid-19 hotspots are still coming in unchecked) is extending the lives of 370,000 people by an average of one-and-a-half-years. He wants the lockdown to end straight after Easter, and if this leads to a surge in Covid-19 cases and the NHS being overwhelmed, well, thats ok because the majority of people whose lives could have been saved only have one or two years left and those will not be good years.

I wonder if Young has elderly parents or grandparents alive, and if so, what they think of his views?

Youngs piece quite rightly was roundly attacked on social media, but hes not the only one whos been pushing this odious, anti-human line. On March 3, in the Daily Telegraph, financial writer Jeremy Warner opined: Not to put too fine a point on it, from an entirely disinterested economic perspective, COVID-19 might even prove mildly beneficial in the long-term by disproportionately culling elderly dependants.

Got that? As one tweeter put it: Weve gone from only the vulnerable will die to its good that the vulnerable will die. How absolutely sickening.

Even Establishment-licensed, Inside the Tent over-70s have joined in on the psy-ops to make the elderly feel guilty for wanting to stay alive in the Age of Corona. What we have to worry about is being a dead-weight on the NHS, the author and former newspaper editor Max Hastings said on the radio. We must try and promote getting economic activity going again. If we the elders, must pay an additional price for this then so be it.

In similar the elderly should be sacrificed vein, Sir David King, the Blair/Brown governments former chief scientific adviser (and former senior scientific adviser to UBS Bank), urged over-90s to stay away from hospitals to avoid overburdening the NHS.

Leaving aside the shocking callousness of such a statement, did it not occur to King that the 90-year-olds whose lives he so loftily dismisses have probably paid between them millions if not billions in their lifetime, through taxes and National Insurance contributions, to the NHS?Were being encouraged to think that healthcare needs to be rationed in the Age of Corona, but theres more than enough money in Britain to make sure that every patient is treated equally, regardless of their age. The real scandal is not 90-year-olds clogging up hospitals but the fact that in November 2019, NHS beds were at a record low in England. The Guardian reported that 17,230 beds had been cut from the 144,455 that existed in April-June 2010, just before the austerity-imposing Conservative/Lib Dem coalition came to power.

Weve seen bed cuts at a time when we should have seen bed increases. But instead of holding the politicians to account for underfunding the health service, and their failure to plan or prepare in any way for a pandemic, certain commentators want us to blame the most vulnerable for being a burden.

Its not just the very old who the new social Darwinists (now billed euphemistically as contrarians or free thinkers) are happy to throw under the bus. Its also those who have underlying health conditions. Coronavirus is taking a high percentage of these people, were told, so whats the big fuss? They were sick anyway! But people with underlying health conditions can live meaningful, quality lives for a long time. I personally know of one person who was told in 1944 that he had only six months to live because of an acute heart problem. Hes still alive in 2020.

The idea that in a pandemic, the lives of those with underlying health conditions are dispensable or worth less than those without underlying health conditions is again totally repugnant to anyone in possession of a moral compass.

Most people are rightly appalled by the utterly heartless eugenicist and social Darwinistic ideology and thought theyd seen the end of it several decades ago. But its back and mainstreamed and in the long run it arguably poses as big a threat to society as the wretched coronavirus itself.

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The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

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Culling the old & weak: Eugenics and social Darwinism rear their ugly heads in the Covid-19 pandemic - RT

No, MJ is not the greatest college basketball player ever – NBCSports.com

The Bulls beat the absolute brakes off the Magic in Game 1 of the 96 Eastern Conference Finals 121-83. This team has largely cruised through the playoffs to this point, but their best basketball still lies ahead. Observations:

Not last years Bulls

The more I watch of this Bulls team, the more obvious it becomes how ahead of their time they were. The lineup of Ron Harper, Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen, Toni Kukoc and Dennis Rodman is so modern in its defensive versatility and devastating fastbreak ability a pace-and-space, switch-everything death lineup before it was cool.

And even with Luc Longley inserted at the center spot, every player 1-4 could switch anything defensively, make plays offensively and get out on the break, all with a more-than-solid post defender anchoring the middle. The Bulls largely shied away from doubling Shaquille ONeal tonight with Longley in the game, and Big Luc held up admirably. At one point in the third quarter, he and ONeal were level in scoring, and Longley graced this game with a number of thunderous dunks en route to 14 points on 7-for-9.

Moreover, this didnt look like the 1995 Bulls, who fell to the Magic in the secondround of the playoffs. They made that clear from the jump, bursting out to an 11-0 run to start the game and never letting up. Their league-best defense hadnt looked this smothering in this entire run to this point (they swiped 12 steals tonight, ever a persistent, festering whirlwind of limbs) from start to the absolute finish.

Ahmad Rashad reported just before tip that the key to the Bulls finding an advantage in this postseasons go-around with Orlando was that they had their edge back. Id say so.

Numbers that stood out

Normally, a 62-28 rebounding advantage imbues a blowout (this one was) in which the losing side misses a seismic amount of shots. But not so fast: The Magic shot 47.9% from the field and actually missed less shots than the Bulls (Orlando was 35-for-73 from the field, Chicago 53-for-96).

The difference was the offensive glass. Behind seven offensive rebounds (21 total) from Dennis Rodman, who feasted on tip-ins all night, the Bulls as a team corralled 20 offensive boards in this one. The Magics leading total rebounder was Shaquille ONeal with six, and they had just 22 defensive rebounds as a team. These arent the bruising Knicks anymore who, for the record, the Bulls dominated on the glass, as well.

Crisp passing from both sides, but especially the Bulls, also leapt off the screen. Much was made throughout this one of the Bulls focus on improving their ball movement from that series against New York. Put simply, they did. Though Jordan led the team in scoring with a pedestrian 21 points, they had six players in double-figures and every Bull who played scored. Separate behind the back feeds from Pippen, Kukoc, and Kerr, as well as savvy touch passes from Kukoc and Rodman (off rebounds) were beautiful.

And Drumroll, please The Bulls slung 37 assists. Jim Boylen would be proud.

Hey look, its that guy!

Big Penny had a game-high 38 points and was so damn smooth throughout.

Horace Grant was back in town one year after being carried off the floor in Orlando when the Magic knocked out the immediate post-Jordan-return Bulls in '95. He visibly struggled with an injured elbow throughout, then left the game in the third quarter after a collision with Shaq re-aggravated it. He wont return this series.

This deafeningly loud suit donned by an injured Darrell Armstrong is splendid:

Bill Walton was featured in the NBC broadcast crew for this one, slightly softening the blow of saying goodbye to Tom Dore and Johnny Red Kerr for the remainder of this run. It was a relatively tame day from Walton but hopefully, he had his moments. Side note: NBC interviewed the Magics general manager in the United Center tunnel on Grants injury. How times have changed.

Not a guy, but these are Something:

Game 2 Friday. Hopefully the Magic join us.

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No, MJ is not the greatest college basketball player ever - NBCSports.com

How Jordan business owners are coping during the pandemic – SW News Media

The silence in downtown Jordan on one of the first beautiful spring days serves as a stark reminder that the COVID-19 outbreak is most clearly observed by the absence of everything else.

A 50-degree day would usually bring foot-traffic downtown, where shop owners open their doors to welcome the fresh air. Kids, on spring break, might be seen hanging around on bikes for the first time in six months.

But in 2020, that just isnt happening.

By the time Minnesotas shelter-in-place order went into effect, several downtown restaurants were already temporarily closed. The Pickled Pig Pub shut their doors before St. Patricks Day.

While we wish we could be open, we understand the bigger picture which is to do what we can for the safety and health of our fellow Minnesotans, a Pickled Pig Pug Facebook post said March 28, after the second order went into effect.

Other restaurants, like Clancys Bar & Pizza Parlor, Linseys BBQ & Grill and Suzettes, are adapting their services to the homebound. All three offer curbside pickup. Linseys offers delivery and Clancys recently began offering pizza deliver on Mondays and Tuesdays.

Delias All-in-One is facing challenges on two fronts, as Highway 21 bridge construction limits road access near their restaurant. Fortunately for the newly-opened restaurant, the store was designed with take-out in mind. They are now only accepting orders online or over the phone and pickup has been moved to a table at the very front of the store to reduce contact.

People walk in, see their item and pick it up, Manager Gabriel Lopez said.

Lopez said they considered offering curbside services, but ultimately decided to limit contact as much as possible, since the business is staffed completely by family.

We are the business and we need to be at 100% health, he said. We cant risk ourselves getting sick.

Boutiques, like Sassy Kat and Bluff Creek, closed down early before the shelter-in-place order. With other options available online, Melissa Orthun at Bluff Creek Boutique closed down early in the name of customer safety.

I do a lot of online business, so its a little bit different, Orthun said. But its a big impact, thats for sure. You have to stay positive.

Non-retail businesses are seeing changes, too. Jordan Veterinary Clinic has reduced their services to focus on emergency care. Contact with pet owners is limited as staff offers curbside pet pickup and dropoff.

Across Highway 169, its largely business-as-usual for Jordans industrial park. Some companies even, like W.W. Will and Sons, a distributor of refrigerated grocery products, has seen a boom in business as grocery stores struggle to keep up with demand.

Construction firms like Minger and JL Theis continue working on projects while observing social distancing and safety guidelines. The timing of the outbreak has catered to the industrys slower time of year, with road restrictions in effect, minimizing any loss in productivity.

And in the midst of all the uncertainty, some local businesses are taking advantage if they can of the slowdown. Tim Roets and his sons, who own Roets Jordan Brewery, scaled back brewing and closed the taproom for the time being.

We just decided to pull the pin, Roets said. Were a family business, the brewers that I have work part-time and all have other jobs.

In the meantime, Roets and his sons are taking advantage of the empty taproom by tackling some spring cleaning and maintenance.

Were going to make a few modifications to the brew house and tap room simple stuff, but time-consuming stuff thats always on that list you never get to, Roets said.

But business hasnt come to a complete halt. On March 21 Roets was open for off-sale business, selling brews that are best enjoyed early, rather than weeks from now.

It was incredible, Roets said. We virtually filled and sold every piece of glass we had in about two-and-a-half hours.

Roets said theyll take a couple weekends off, but will return in April with another Saturday off-sale event probably. Like most business, its all up in the air for now.

This may be the new normal for a while, Roets said.

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How Jordan business owners are coping during the pandemic - SW News Media

A Wedding In Jordan Leads To A Coronavirus Cluster And Closure Of A Major City – NPR

Jordanian soldiers keep watch in the capital Amman as Jordan takes measures to fight the spread of the coronavirus. Khalil Mazraawi/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

Jordanian soldiers keep watch in the capital Amman as Jordan takes measures to fight the spread of the coronavirus.

Jordan has sealed off its second biggest city and the surrounding province after dozens of guests at a wedding held two weeks ago tested positive for the coronavirus.

Army vehicles drove through the streets of Irbid, about 60 miles north of Amman, Thursday night telling people their city of 2 million was now effectively under military control and not to leave their homes.

Security forces deployed along entrances to the province to prevent people from going in or out, blocking even those with permits that had exempted them from a travel ban. The government said it would arrange delivery of food and water.

Jordan's crisis management center said that 26 of the 40 new coronavirus cases reported on Thursday had been guests at the Irbid wedding. The party was held despite a ban on large gatherings.

The bride's sister, interviewed in the hospital by the Al Arabiya satellite channel, said she had flown in from Canada for the wedding and the guests had not realized the danger. Her 2-year-old son also tested positive for the virus.

Irbid now accounts for at least 70 of the 235 confirmed cases in Jordan, as of Friday.

Health Minister Saad Jaber said in a news briefing Thursday that the rise in cases put Jordan "at a crossroads" in dealing with the pandemic. "We all saw what happened in large countries that had to put patients in [hospital] corridors ... to die. We will not allow this to happen in Jordan," he said.

Jordanian officials have indicated they could further tighten restrictions on movement already among the most stringent in the world. Police have implemented a driving ban for all but essential personnel and have banned most people from leaving their homes. They've impounded cars and arrested violators.

The authorities on Tuesday eased the regulations to allow small neighborhood grocery stores to open for limited hours but have shut down supermarkets and delivery services.

Police said they were readying four new jails for those who repeatedly violated the curfew.

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A Wedding In Jordan Leads To A Coronavirus Cluster And Closure Of A Major City - NPR

Tim Kurkjian’s baseball fix – When Michael Jordan went to the minors and cheated at Yahtzee – ESPN

You love baseball. Tim Kurkjian loves baseball. So while we await its return, every day we'll provide you with a story or two tied to this date in baseball history.

ON THIS DATE IN 1994, Michael Jordan was assigned to the Double-A Birmingham Barons.

This began a fascinating year in baseball and a lifelong relationship with manager Terry Francona.

History tells us that Jordan failed at baseball. Quite the contrary. He was an average high school player who spent 16 years away from the hardest game to play, then tried to play it at the Double-A level.

The full "On this date ..." archive

I quoted more than one major league player who thought Jordan would hit .050 at Double-A. Instead, he willed himself to hit .203 with 51 RBIs and 30 steals. When he went back to basketball after one season, he acknowledged that every player on his team was stronger from the tip of the fingers to the elbow -- that's baseball strength -- than he was.

"No one was more competitive,'' Francona said. "So we come home from a road trip and we park next to a basketball court, and a bunch of guys start hooting at Michael to play. Finally, he'd had enough. He told four of his coaches, including me, 'We're playing!' I said no. I was in charge of him, I couldn't let him get hurt. They would have fired me if he got hurt. So the first time down the court, I set a pick for him. He screams at me, 'Get the hell out of the way! I don't need a pick!' Then he goes and dunks on this guy. Another guy starts chirping. Michael dunks on him too and literally bends the rim. Then he stands over the top of him, screaming at him. I jumped in. 'OK, that's it, this game is over!'''

Francona continued: "We'd play Yahtzee on every road trip on the bus [the Jordan Cruiser]. He's the richest man in America, the best basketball player ever, and I'm making $29,000 a year. And he's cheating at Yahtzee to take my money because he just can't bear to lose.''

In 1982, I saw Al Oliver, a great hitter, at the All-Star Game in Montreal. He was hitting .321 with a .919 OPS at the break. I asked him how the first half had gone. "I've had 75 line drives caught,'' he said.

In 2008, a statue of Cubs great Ernie Banks was displayed outside Wrigley Field. The sculptor wrote on the statue "Lets Play Two" instead of "Let's Play Two."

In 1998, Craig Biggio grounded into a double play in his second at-bat of the season. The previous season, he became the only player to qualify for the batting title and not ground into a double play all season.

In 2014, coach Don Baylor, one of the strongest men ever to play, broke his femur after moving awkwardly while catching a ceremonial first pitch. Baylor was hit by a pitch 267 times in his career. I asked him which one hurt the most. He said: "None of them.''

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Tim Kurkjian's baseball fix - When Michael Jordan went to the minors and cheated at Yahtzee - ESPN

Minimizing the spread in Jordan’s Camps – Jordan – ReliefWeb

As the number of registered cases of Covid-19 continues to grow in Jordan, and with five deaths confirmed so far, rigorous measures have been implemented to contain the outbreak.

AS OF 2ND APRIL THERE WERE 278 CONFIRMED CASES OF COVID-19 IN JORDAN WITH 5 DEATHS AND 36 RECOVERIES.

In a country that has already experienced an influx of refugees, the epidemic puts increased pressure on an already overlburned healthcare system. In Jordan, refugees are among the most vulnerable populations, as they often face difficulties accessing adequate healthcare.

ACTED has a long-standing presence in Zaatari refugee camp, which hosts 76,000 Syrian refugees, and King Abdullah Park Refugee Camp, which houses over 500 Palestinian refugees. Between 8th 12th March, 2020, ACTED initiated a Covid-19 preparedness campaign in both camps, organizing awareness raising sessions on personal hygiene and handwashing etiquette, reaching over 6,700 camp residents directly. Moreover, in King Abdullah Park, ACTED distributed 515 soap bars, one for each camp resident.

On 21st March, Jordan imposed a nation-wide lockdown, with everyone restricted to their households except for essential needs, in the hope of preventing further infections. With access to the refugee camps restricted, ACTED continues to inform camp residents on updates and key hygiene messages, through the use of WhatsApp instead of personal visits or awareness sessions.

These initial measures urgently need to be supplemented in order to increase preparedness and response capacities in Jordan. ACTED is planning a major scale-up of its Covid-19 activities to this end in the weeks and months to come

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Minimizing the spread in Jordan's Camps - Jordan - ReliefWeb

‘Summer House’: Jordan and Jules’ Fallout Put Them on the Chopping Block – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

The short-lived romance between Jules Daoud and Jordan Verroi may have put them both on the chopping block at the Summer House.

Daoud tried to make a romance happen with Verroi but he shared behind her back with the crew that he just wasnt that into her. Now that theres tension, what could happen? Verroi was a full-time cast member on the show last season. He only returned as Daouds guest. So is he trying to get her bounced to retrieve his spot in the house?

Meanwhile, Daoud was invited to be part of the house this summer. If shes done with Verroi, shouldnt she be in the position to ask him to leave? Or does the cast want to wash their hands of both of them?

The cast assembles without Verroi and Daoud to discuss their status at the house. Lets have a serious house talk, Paige DeSorbo says in a whisper. I feel like Jordans trying to get Jules out. And I feel like Jules wants to get Jordan out.

Kyle Cooke agrees, saying the situation is awkward. Meanwhile, Carl Radke lays on a bed seemingly uninterested in the discussion. Daoud is downstairs unaware of the discussion going on in a bedroom. I thought we were supposed to have a dinner, what happened here, she wonders to Danielle Olivera. Verroi sits outside alone and comes back inside the house.

Five weeks ago, you go, Im gonna bring her home to mom,' Cooke recalls Verroi telling the group. Now theyre fighting over whos in the house? Amanda Batula reminds Cooke to keep his voice down. I know, I would have been a horrible librarian, he says which sends the group into gales of laughter.

Carl Radke insists Daoud and Verroi need to work it out. Like its disrespectful to us that they cant look at the bigger picture, he says. DeSorbo says that they should tell Daoud and Verroi if they cant figure it out on their own, they need to alternate weekends at the house.

Hannah Berner notes that Radke and Lindsay Hubbard were fighting and no one suggested someone gets kicked out. But Cooke reminds her that Hubbard and Radke werent trying to get each other booted either. Theyre already trying to f**king like get us to choose a side, he says. Guess what? No side, see ya tomorrow.

Berner says she feels stuck in the middle. She was the one who invited Daoud to come to the house this summer. When Im originally Jordans friend, she says. I know you hate Jordan, but hes my little crazy weirdo friend. And I will always love him. He does bring good energy. When he comes to the house you guys get really excited.

Berner continues to defend Verroi. I think Jules is insecure, she says. And wants to be liked by everyone. Cooke pipes in asking if anyone in the house has connected with Daoud.

Crickets, until DeSorbo says, I feel like I have, she says raising her hand. Ive hung out with Jules like one on one. And we connect on like, everyday s**t. Luke Gulbranson jokes, Instagram? DeSorbo adds that even though they havent gotten any deeper, there hasnt been any opportunity either.

So how do they vote? If it was up to Radke, they both would leave. Cooke joins in with the notion that both should leave. And they are getting kicked out that night too.

Do they go through with it? Summer House airs Wednesday at 9/8c on Bravo.

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'Summer House': Jordan and Jules' Fallout Put Them on the Chopping Block - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

When Kobe Runs Over Michael Jordan, Jordan Said: Well The Whole F*****g Building Knew You Weren’t Gonna Pass’ And They Both Burst Out Laughing -…

There was this one play during Michael Jordans last days in the NBA, while he was part of the Washington Wizards, where Kobe Bryant tried to attack him, with Jordan getting the foul, teasing Kobe while on the floor.

Several years after that, we finally know what was said between the two legends. It was all laughs between them, but what we didnt know was that MJ actually trash-talked Kobe during that sequence. According to actor John Cusack, who witnessed the play very closely, Jordan told Kobe he wasnt going to pass anyway.

Everyone cleared out so Kobe could have MJ one on one -MJ took the charge / won the battle they paused a beat , looking at each other wryly well the whole fucking building knew you werent gonna pass mj said and they both burst out laughing ..:), he wrote on Twitter.

Jordan and Bryant had a great relationship, with the former even calling Bryant his little brother during his memorial service last February. You could see they were just great during that play, showing the love and respect they had for each other.

Mike would retire after two seasons with the Wizards, having good matchups against Kobe, who scored 55 against him in his last duel.

KB24 tragically passed away last January 26 in a helicopter crash, shocking the NBA and the world of sports in general. Jordan was one of the most outspoken people when that happened, showing how much he loved Kobe.

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When Kobe Runs Over Michael Jordan, Jordan Said: Well The Whole F*****g Building Knew You Weren't Gonna Pass' And They Both Burst Out Laughing -...

Pack, Saints among teams virtually visiting Love – NFL.com

Former Utah State quarterback Jordan Love continues to create buzz as we barrel towards the 2020 NFL Draft later this month.

Love combines tantalizing skills with a big arm and athletic ability and can make plays in and out of the structure of the offense. His inconsistent play in 2019, surrounded by lesser weaponry, however, could give teams pause to pull the trigger on the quarterback early in the first round.

With the NFL lockdown in place due to the COVID-19 pandemic, teams continue to do groundwork on the young signal-caller.

NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport reports that the New Orleans Saints, Green Bay Packers, Los Angeles Chargers, Las Vegas Raiders, Miami Dolphins and Indianapolis Colts have been in contact with Love via FaceTime and other virtual methods, per a source informed of the meetings.

With Love projected to go anywhere from the top-10 through the back half of the first round, the bounty of teams speaking with the quarterback isn't a surprise.

The Packers (pick 30) and Saints (pick 24) are in search of potential long-term solutions at the position behind two future Hall of Fame quarterbacks Aaron Rodgers and Drew Brees, respectively. Each could offer Love the chance to learn from a veteran for a year or two -- ala Patrick Mahomes or Rodgers himself -- to refine his raw skill set. Many scouts believe Love would benefit from a year of seasoning before being tossed into the fire.

Love previously met with the Dolphins (picks 5, 18, 26) before the NFL shuttered pre-draft visits. The virtual follow-up meeting with the quarterback typifies the length teams go to scout and get to know quarterbacks. If Miami doesn't snag the quarterback they desire in the top-5, they could make a play for a signal-caller like Love later in the first-round.

The Raiders (picks 12, 19) continue to do their due diligence on quarterbacks despite having starter Derek Carr and Marcus Mariota on the roster. The Vegas brass already had a video call with Oregon's Justin Herbert. GM Mike Mayock has consistently said he'd consider drafting a quarterback if it presented a potential upgrade. Meeting Love and Herbert continues that trend. If either fall to the Raiders, would coach Jon Gruden stump for a potential future face of the franchise?

The Chargers (pick 6) seem destined to draft a signal-caller high in the draft with veteran Tyrod Taylor the only viable option at this point. L.A. also previously virtually met with Herbert.

The Colts could be an interesting option for Love with Phillip Rivers signing just a one-year deal in Indy and backup Jacoby Brissett also a free agent after 2020. In Indianapolis, Love would have the potential to sit for a season as the Colts see how much Rivers has left in the tank. Without a first-round pick, Indy could jump back into the first round if Love falls to the later stages (as the Ravens did to land Lamar Jackson). GM Chris Ballard could also be doing his due diligence in case Love drops out of the first-round altogether, with the Colts sitting at No. 34 overall.

Given the broad range of where Love could land, it's unsurprising a cornucopia of teams is checking in on the Utah State product. The most important position in sports necessitates deep dives to ensure every effort to select the right player. With that in mind, it wouldn't be a shock if additional teams put Love on their FaceTime schedules in the coming weeks.

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Pack, Saints among teams virtually visiting Love - NFL.com

The Appearance Of Kobe Bryant In Michael Jordan’s ‘Last Dance’ Documentary Is Heartbreaking – Fadeaway World

Amid the COVD-19 pandemic, all of America is stuck spending their afternoons at home for the foreseeable future. Per the resounding request of fans, ESPN made the whole ordeal a little bit easier by announcing that the upcoming Michael Jordan Documentary The Last Dance would be moved up to April 19th.

No doubt, the sports world is excited to get a behind-the-scenes look at that iconic Bulls team. But its also rather heartbreaking because of someone who will be making an appearance during the program: the late Kobe Bean Bryant.

In an exclusive trailer, Bryant is announced as one of the guests who appeared on the show. Its his first appearance since his death in January.

Obviously, we know that Kobe had profound respect for Jordan. In fact, he implemented many of the moves used by the Chicago legend into his own game. He had that same drive and passion for the game that Jordan did. To this day, Kobe Bean is considered by many to be the closest player to Jordan weve ever seen.

One can only imagine what the Mamba had to say about the GOAT and how he impacted the game. Fortunately, we only have to wait a few more days before we get to find out

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The Appearance Of Kobe Bryant In Michael Jordan's 'Last Dance' Documentary Is Heartbreaking - Fadeaway World