Hospital Related Policy Changes due to COVID-19 (Rutherford County and Ascension Saint Thomas Facilities) – Wgnsradio

SAINT THOMAS RUTHERFORD and Saint Thomas in Middle Tennessee:Scroll DOWN for information on TriStar StoneCrest Medical in Smyrna, TNAscension Saint Thomas Facility Visitation & Associate Screening Policies As part of a comprehensive response to the COVID-19 outbreak, Ascension Saint Thomas has evaluated our visitor policies. Our guidance addresses your safety and the safety of our associates, physicians, and community, while ensuring that we continue to deliver optimal care. Our priority is to reduce transmission and to protect people who are at higher risk for adverse health complications. Please comply with the following revised guidance, which goes into effect today (3/19/20) at 8 p.m.

Visitation Policy | Effective Thursday, March 19, 2020 at 8 p.m.

Visitors are temporarily restricted to: Virtual visitation only If you need support in the virtual visitation process, please ask your nurse or patient care technician

Exceptions to our visitation policy may be made by hospital leadership balancing the health risks and the patient's right to receive visitors.

Predefined exceptions include:

Neonatal ICU and pediatric patients; limited to one legal guardian Women giving birth; limited to one birthing partner Patients undergoing surgery/testing; limited to one visitor End of life care as determined by our care team; limited to one visitor

Mandatory Associate Screening Policy | In Effect

The COVID-19 mandatory associate screening is intended to provide additional safeguards for our patients, families, visitors and caregivers through decreased exposure to individuals who may have been exposed to the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19. Effective March 17, 2020, all associates, contingent workers, aligned medical staff, volunteers, residents/students, and other healthcare workers entering our sites of care will be screened for symptoms of COVID-19.

Sites will be placed on restricted ingress for all associates, contingent workers, aligned medical staff, residents and other healthcare workers, and any authorized students and volunteers. Screeners will be stationed at designated entrances to conduct screening assessments of all individuals entering the building.

We expect the screening should take no more than a few minutes per person; however, anticipate that in some locations the volume could cause some delays. Associates not exhibiting symptoms assessed in the screening will be cleared to report to their work area and start their shift.

Associates who indicate positive for the symptoms of fever, cough or flu-like symptoms will be directed to contact the Associate Health Clinical consultation line immediately for further assessment. A triage nurse will discuss your symptoms and may refer those with symptomology consistent with COVID-19 for definitive testing.

Based upon the findings you may be directed to: (1) Remain off of work for up to 14 days with self monitoring; (2) Return to work with self monitoring; (3) Return to work with no monitoring.

Non-Associate contingent workers, aligned medical staff, volunteers, residents/students, and other healthcare workers who indicate positive for symptoms of fever, cough or flu-like symptoms will be directed to call the local Ascension Associate Health Department and their employer and/or healthcare provider as applicable. Associate Health will discuss your symptoms.

Based upon the findings you may be directed to: (1) Remain off of work for up to 14 days with self monitoring; (2) Return to work with self monitoring; (3) Return to work with no monitoring.

For off-site practice locations (eg. Ascension Medical Group practice sites) the practice manager or supervisor should ensure that all practice associates are free of fever, cough and difficulty breathing. If any practice associate screens positive for one of these screening criteria, they should follow directions as outlined above.

All visitors will be screened upon entry into the facility. No visitors under the age of 18 Screening questions will include: Do you have a fever? Do you have a cough? Do you have difficulty breathing? If the answer to any of these is "yes", the visitor will be not be allowed to enter our facility

We encourage any potential visitors to use alternate methods of communication to stay in contact with loved ones, such as calling, video chatting, or texting. Thank you for your support in adhering to these guidelines, and thank you for trusting Ascension Saint Thomas for your care.

TriStar StoneCrest Medical Center (Smyrna, TN):TriStar StoneCrest currently has a 'No Visitation' policy in effect.

There are a few exceptions and allowances to the policy, including:

Pediatric Patients: 1 parent or caregiver OB Patients: 1 birthing or care partner Outpatient Surgery or Outpatient Testing: 1 caregiver Further exceptions will be considered on a case by case basis.

Greeters will be screening at the designated entrances with a list of basic questions to help ensure that individuals who might spread the virus get the care they need while not exposing patients, staff and other guests.

During this time, visitors may want to consider alternative communication options, if available, such as phone, FaceTime, text or email.

Thank you for your help in maintaining a safe environment for our patients, colleagues and community.

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Hospital Related Policy Changes due to COVID-19 (Rutherford County and Ascension Saint Thomas Facilities) - Wgnsradio

Ascension to open drive-thru coronavirus testing sites for people with milder symptoms – WTMJ-TV

MILWAUKEE COUNTY People having trouble getting a test for the coronavirus will soon have more places to do so. By next week new testing sites will be open to patients with a variety of symptoms.

Daryl Kirchen from St. Francis has wanted to get tested for the coronavirus for the past week.

"I think there's a lot of people in their 30s and 40s that will get sick that don't expect it," Kirchen said.

He doesn't have a fever but said he does have a severe cough, pressure in his chest, and shortness of breath. A person at his workplace also tested positive.

However, when Kirchen called both his health care provider and others in the area, he said they wouldn't approve him to be tested.

"Basically said that testing isn't available for my group," Kirchen said.

Right now, coronavirus testing is available at various health care providers, each with their specifications but all requiring a phone or virtual screening ahead of time.

The only drive-thru testing site currently up and running is at Froedtert South's Pleasant Prairie Clinic, with more expected to open in the next week at Aurora St. Luke's Medical Center in Milwaukee.

Thursday, TMJ4 News also learned Ascension Medical Group would open multiple drive-thru testing spots early next week, including in West Allis, Franklin, and Milwaukee.

Medical Director Dr. Patricia Golden said as they treat more critical patients at their hospitals, they're designating these new drive-thru sites to those with milder symptoms and no fever.

"This is going to be the opportunity for us to do testing in you know more of the general population and help with the epidemiology of understanding this virus," Dr. Golden said.

She said the samples from critical patients are getting sent to the state and city labs for testing. They don't want to overburden those workers and will be sending the samples from the patients with milder symptoms to commercial labs.

By separating patients with different symptoms, Dr. Golden hopes to avoid cross-contamination.

"These are the patients really truly, we want to know that they're positive, but we also want to help recommend the social distancing as well as the quarantining at home while they test positive, and avoid being the spread of this into the general population," Dr. Golden said.

This is precisely what Kirchen hopes to do.

"I think that you know the key to fixing this is figuring out how to treat people earlier," Kirchen said.

Anyone who is an Ascension patient and wants to get tested first has to get screened by a nurse by either calling Ascension's coronavirus hotline at (833) 981-0711 or virtually using Ascension Online Care.

If you're not an Ascension patient, you can also get tested by calling Ascension's coronavirus hotline.

The nurse who screens you will then decide whether testing is warranted and whether you should be hospitalized or get tested at one of the drive-thru sites.

The first Ascension drive-thru testing sites in Southeastern Wisconsin will be located at the following places:

The three locations are expected to open next week. The opening date and times are still in the works.

Later on, Ascension drive-thru testing sites will also be at the following places:

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Ascension to open drive-thru coronavirus testing sites for people with milder symptoms - WTMJ-TV

Drive-Thru Donation Site Launches at Ascension Health Up News Info Detroit – Up News Info

WARREN, Mich. (DETROIT Up News Info) In response to the community's generous outreach and in anticipation of serving an increasing number of coronavirus patients (COVID-19), beginning Wednesday, Ascension Southeast Michigan hospitals will have a donation site for protective gear staff open at their Corporate Services Building located at 28000 Dequindre in Warren.

The donation box is located at the entrance of the central building opposite Dequindre under the portico. Donations may be accepted Monday through Friday from 7 a.m. at 4 p.m. and on Saturdays from 8 a.m. at 4 p.m.

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Supplies accepted for donation include:

The safety of our patients, care teams and the community is our top priority, as we all work to stoptransmission of the coronavirus (COVID-19) and care for all those in need. Michigan Ascension alwaysFollow the latest guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) regarding the use of personal protective equipment. We are accepting donations from companies and community members as a precautionary measure for unpredictable circumstances as we work to contain theCOVID-19 spread.

2020 Up News Info Broadcasting Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Drive-Thru Donation Site Launches at Ascension Health Up News Info Detroit - Up News Info

Ascension Lourdes and UHS Continue to stress virtual walk-ins for COVID-19 screenings – WIVT – NewsChannel 34

Posted: Mar 22, 2020 / 05:40 PM UTC / Updated: Mar 22, 2020 / 05:40 PM UTC

Ascension Lourdes and UHS Continue to Stress Virtual Walk-Ins for COVID Screening

Due to a limited supply of personal protective equipment and tests for COVID-19, in order to best treat our patients, we are limiting testing to only those patients who are most critical.

Because of this, we ask patients to not use our Primary Care practices, walk-ins or Emergency Departments simply because they want to be tested.

If you feel you may be ill, the best first step is to utilize a virtual walk-in visit at https://ascension.org/onlinecare or https://nyuhs.zipnosis.com.

Patients will be screened and evaluated by a provider in the safety of their homes.

If you cannot utilize the virtual walk-in, patients may call their primary care offices for telephonic screening first.

Patients who do not receive a COVID 19 test will be evaluated with careful consideration to their needs and given a plan of care to best support their recovery.

We are taking these measures to ensure the safety of our patients and staff by limiting unnecessary exposure.

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Ascension Lourdes and UHS Continue to stress virtual walk-ins for COVID-19 screenings - WIVT - NewsChannel 34

Ascension, Assumption, St. James, and 23rd Judicial District Courts to function on limited schedule – WBRZ

ASCENSION PARISH - Parish officials are taking the lead in living in accord with health and safety guidelines set out by the federal government.

Along those lines, beginning Friday, March 20, the 23rd Judicial District Court and Ascension Parish Court along with the Ascension, Assumption, and St. James Clerks of Courts will be open on a limited basis.

Their new hours will be from 8:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.

This limited schedule will end Thursday, April 2.

The Court will continue to hear emergency and/or time-sensitive matters in criminal and civil cases as determined by each judicial division.

Anyone with questions regarding a case or court appearance should contact the appropriate judge's office.

Their office numbers are listed below:

Judge Verdigets of Division A, Judge Turner of Division E, Judge Stromberg of Division C, Judge Lanoux of Parish Court, and Hearing Officer Pat Douglas:

(225) 621-8500

Judge Kliebert of Division B:

(225) 562-2280

Judge St. Pierre (Ad Hoc) of Division D

(985) 369-8001

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Ascension, Assumption, St. James, and 23rd Judicial District Courts to function on limited schedule - WBRZ

One Medical and Ascension Texas to Collaborate – Patch.com

One Medical is bringing its modernized, membership-based primary care model to Austin, and will partner with Ascension Texas to facilitate more seamless access and coordinated care across primary care and specialty care services.

One Medical's consumer-driven primary care platform combines seamless digital health and inviting in-office care convenient to where people work, shop, live and click. One Medical plans to launch in Austin with new medical office locations and its digital health services over the next 12 months, and will clinically and digitally integrate with Ascension Texas providers and sites of care in the community. Through this partnership, the two organizations aim to achieve greater care coordination between primary and specialty care settings, advance an exceptional experience for consumers and employers, and reduce administrative burdens and costs. Austin will be One Medical's 13th metropolitan market, following its anticipated entry into Atlanta, Georgia, Portland, Oregon, and Orange County, California in 2020.

"We greatly look forward to expanding to Austin in collaboration with Ascension Texas. Together, we will deliver streamlined access and a heightened experience across primary and specialty care settings, furthering our vision to delight our members with better health, better care, and lower costs," said John Singerling, Chief Network Officer of One Medical."

"As Ascension Texas primary care providers continue to serve the rapidly growing needs of the expanding Austin market, both in person and through virtual care, we look forward to welcoming One Medical providers to further care for the community," said Samson Jesudass, MD, Chief Clinical Officer, Ascension Texas. "Through this collaboration, our specialists will work with primary care providers to offer seamless specialty care and services to those we together are privileged to serve."

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One Medical and Ascension Texas to Collaborate - Patch.com

Ascension distillery uses alcohol to create sanitizer; giving it to those in need – WBRZ

ASCENSION- A distillery in Ascension Parish recognized the demand for sanitizer and the materials around them that could be used to make the product.

Now they are producing it and giving it away to customers and nonprofit organizations for free.

Sugarfield Spirits, which normally produces adult beverages, has switched gears to make another alcohol-based product that consumers like Ed McCloud can't wait to get their hands on.

"We've been looking for hand sanitizer all over the city of course and nobody has it," says McCloud.

Thursday, the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau lifted its federal restrictions, allowing distilleries like Sugarfield Spirits to turn their alcohol into hand sanitizer.

"Everybody is really scared right now. There's a lot going on. Anything a business can do, we're going to do," Owner Andrew Soltau says.

Since the outbreak of coronavirus spread in Louisiana, Soltau saw an opportunity to fill a void.

Soltau has already made several gallons of hand sanitizer to hand out to those in need.

"We donated everything that we had to a local daycare that was in need.They were completely out so we gave them all that we had," says Soltau.

Sugarfield Spirits is still in the liquor business, but they say they will be doing their part to help in this time of need.

They hope to hand out a new batch of hand sanitizer to the general public and nonprofit groups as early as Friday.

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Ascension distillery uses alcohol to create sanitizer; giving it to those in need - WBRZ

Amid COVID-19 outbreak, Ascension Parish family holds birthday party for loved one in nursing home – WBRZ

GONZALES - At Ascension Oaks Nursing and Rehab Center, Cecil Vaughn is recovering from a stroke. For the many months he's been there, family visits have been a constant.

"My mom is here every day and she spends most of the days with him," Cecil's daughter Becky Smith said. "Then his family, his children, myself, my brother, his sisters, his mom, brothers-in-law, other family members are in and out every day, almost every day."

That big family is used to spending a lot of time together.

"Lots of hugs and touches and kisses," Smith said. "So this is really, really difficult for us."

Since last week, however, Cecil's family hasn't been able to visit him after new restrictions at nursing homes and assisted living facilities went into effect. Technology has helped keep them in touch.

"We've been seeing him through FaceTime and through the window," Smith said. "That's just the best we can do right now."

But not being able to physically visit the man they call 'Poppie' didn't stop his family from celebrating his 67th birthday Friday.

"It was no second thought about it," Smith said. "Even though there's a window between us, we had to celebrate his birthday and let him know we love him just as much if he's on this side of the glass or the other."

The party was complete with balloons, streamers, party hats, and even cake.

"He liked his cake so much he didn't want to share," Smith said. "He didn't want to share his cake, but he had a great day today. It was a great day."

Even though no one in Cecil's family could have predicted this was how they'd have to celebrate their patriarch, the party proved one thing.

"There's no social distancing that can stop the love of family," Smith said. "Love can go through windows and I believe that."

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Amid COVID-19 outbreak, Ascension Parish family holds birthday party for loved one in nursing home - WBRZ

Coronavirus handmade masks: What hospitals are accepting them? – Stevens Point Journal

Health care systems across central Wisconsin need help dealing with shortages of personal protective equipment and loose-fitting surgical masks as they combat a global pandemic.

Marshfield Clinic Health System and Aspirus facilities are accepting handmade surgical masks to help during the COVID-19 outbreak, the official name for the new coronavirus. Ascension Wisconsin is not accepting handmade masks.

All three healthcare systems are accepting donations of much-needed N95 masks, those tight-fitting masks that filter out 95% of small and large airborne particles, and other medical supplies.

Handmade masks can't replace the N95 masks or disposable surgical masksbecause their material can varyand are not rated for medical use by the FDA, but they will play a role as hospitals run out of masks and need ways to control the spread of the virus from patients.

The main benefactors of these masks will be patients with the coronavirus to help control the disease's spread when they're outside of quarantine or in the vicinity of uninfected people.For some health care workers across the country, using these handmade masks will be an absolute last resort and should be paired with some sort of face shield, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Here's how to donate and what standards to follow for handmade masks.

The do-it-yourself nature of handmade masks leaves a lot of potential variability in materials, sewing and quality and so JOANN fabrics created a program last Fridayto give away free fabric, elastic and other materialsso people can make facemasks.

Marshfield Clinic is also providing guidance on how to make masks through instructions created by the Turban Project, aministry created by the women of the 4th Degree Knights of Columbus Assembly #0830 in Ohio.

Andrew Krauss, an Aspirus spokesman, said people can donate handmade masks at the loading dock of any Aspirus hospital. He said to label such donations as "Donation: handmade masks."

Krauss said Aspirus facilities have enough supplies for now but the situation is fluid, and the health system continues to seek donations and find avenues to acquire more supplies.

"We have a great supply chain at Aspirus and continue to find new avenues for supplies such as (personal protective equipment). However, we are aware that this is a marathon and we continue to prepare for the long-haul," Krauss said in an email. "Were in a good spot for now, but this is a very fluid situation and we are monitoring our supplies very closely."

Marshfield Clinic over the weekend sent out a call for volunteers to donate sewn masks.

Teri Wilczek, the chief philanthropy officer for the clinic, told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel the clinic should be getting thousands of masks through its various drop-off spots from teachers, church groups, clubs and families.

The handmade masks at the clinic will be used by patients and family members at the clinic's facilities because they're not surgical masks. The clinic plans to wash and use them a second time.

"Sewn masks will help alleviate the shortage and will be distributed to patients to help provide a protective barrier, so that medical-grade N95 masks may be conserved for our health care providers," Marshfield Clinic wrote on its Facebook page.

RELATED: People are making DIY masks to fight coronavirus. But do they actually work?

RELATED: Wisconsin hospitals are short on on medical masks, so church groups, a flag factory and others are making them

Volunteers can reach Melissa Darr, who works in volunteer services at the Marshfield Medical Center, at darr.melissa@marshfieldclinic.org or at 715-387-7198. The clinic is updating its request for donations daily on its Facebook page.

Donation locationsfor Marshfield Clinic are:

Ascension will not accept handmade masksbut is taking donations of other medical supplies:

Contact Ascension Wisconsins Foundation partners at AscensionWIFoundations@ascension.org to make a donation. The foundation will arrange to pick up and deliver the donation to an Ascension facility. Ascension asks people to not drop off donations at a hospital.

"At this time, Ascension Wisconsin cannot accept donations that are handmade (ex: sewn face masks) and is working with local and state health officials to determine if such items could be an option in the future," according to a statement from Ascension.

Contact reporter Alan Hovorka at 715-345-2252 or ahovorka@gannett.com. Follow him on Twitter at @ajhovorka.

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Coronavirus handmade masks: What hospitals are accepting them? - Stevens Point Journal

Scholars Call for Limits on Freedom of Speech – The Heartland Institute

Speakers at an academic conference at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro (UNCG) criticized freedom of speech and called for tighter limitations on public discourse.

The National Communication Association, an organization of communications professors, and UNCGs Department of Communication Studies sponsored the meeting titled Finding Expression in Contested Public Spaces, held October 24 and 25. Seven panels of academics discussed free speech, racism, and groups of people marginalized by society.

Free speech is elevated by claims that it is a viewpoint-neutral concept, but it empowers hate speech, Marina Lambrinou, a teacher at UNC-Greensboro, told the audience ata panel titled Pedagogy and the 1st Amendment.

Our work is predicated upon understanding free speech as a form of oppression, Lambrinou said in her remarks. Free speech is weaponized to spread hate, elevate white supremacy, and incite acts of violence. However, free speech is also legitimated by the protections it is afforded and by the position it occupies in popular discourse as a race- and disparity-neutral construct.

Implicated in Racism

The conference was designed to affirm principles of free speech, states a notice on UNCGs website. During the opening keynote speech, however, Eric King Watts, an associate professor of communication studies at UNC-Chapel Hill, spoke in opposition to free speech in his address titled Tribalism, Voicelessness, and the Problem of Free Speech.

The concept of free speech developed in a slaveholding culture that did not recognize the rights of non-Europeans, Watts told the conference audience.

In particular, freedom of speech is conceptualized and found in documents as a universal human capacity and right requiring legislative and judicial protections, Watts told the audience. But this late 18th-century idealism obscures the manner in which freedom of speech is always already implicated in racism.

It is particularly dangerous to allow todays Republican Party freedom to speak, Watts told the audience.

Over the last two decades, the GOP has mutated from a traditional conservative party into an insurgent force that threatens the norms and institutions of American democracy, Watts said.

Put bluntly, the Left is not really intolerant of conservative values, Watts said. Indeed, many of us here probably wish for the good old days when we just had to deal with the neocons. Rather, the Left is intolerant of racism, homophobism, xenophobism, and misogyny.

Calls for Censorship

The allegedly negative consequences of free speech could require additional regulation, Lisbeth Lipari, a professor at Denison University who participated in a session titled Academic Freedom & Campus Free Speech, told the audience.

[In regard] to whether or not we should restrict free speech in some new ways: possibly, Lipari said.

A European model of speech that would move society from a forum of free speech to one with the duty to listen, was discussed by Lambrinou and Yacine Kout of the University of North Georgia.

Not everyones perspective needs a place to be listened to, Kout said.

Single-Minded Diversity

A UNCG student noted the one-sidedness of the conference during a question and answer session.

[You all] talked a lot about power dynamics and oppression, but Ive only seen examples coming from one point of view, the student commented to the presenters.

Other viewpoints should be considered, but the expression of some ideas could be harmful, Mark Congdon Jr. of the College of Saint Rose said in response to the student.

Yes, [diversity of opinion] is important when we talk about how do we incorporate these other voices, Congdon said. But then understanding ... how free speech can also be used to oppressand it gets at power and authorityin terms of how you might be using your free speech to silence and harm others. And thats not okay, regardless of anyones political views.

Says Minorities Benefit Most

Free speech protects minority voices, says Robert Shibley, executive director of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education.

The idea that protecting free speech for everyone ends up benefiting the powerful over the powerless is both ahistoricalour nation's movements for abolition and civil rights attest to thatand nonsensical, Shibley told School Reform News. After all, powerful majorities can rely on that power to ensure their right to be heard. It is those who are marginalized who need free speech the most.

Academics should acknowledge the importance of contesting viewpoints, says Jenna A. Robinson, president of the James G. Martin Center for Academic Renewal.

Its disappointing that communications scholars are so skeptical of the value of free speech, Robinson said. Id like to see more support among professors for open debate, free inquiry, and the marketplace of ideas.

Branson Inscore (branson.inscore@jwpf.org)is a Blundell Fellow at the John William Pope Foundation. An earlier version of this article was published by the James G. Martin Center for Academic Renewal. Adapted and reprinted with permission.

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Scholars Call for Limits on Freedom of Speech - The Heartland Institute

Opinion | Have hope – alreporter.com

Healthcare professionals and scientists seem to indicate that we are closer to the beginning of the COVID-19 calamity than at the middle or the end.

But even in times of real human crisis, hope isnt dead but remains a vital thread in the fabric of what we know as the human spirit.

In his eighth State of the Union address in 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt said, We have always held to the hope, the belief, the conviction that there is a better life, a better world, beyond the horizon.

This is part of the message Roosevelt relayed to the American people as he prepared the nation to enter World War II.

Across the nation and here in Alabama, everyone is experiencing disruption to daily life.

Worry, doubt and fear is everywhere as minute-by-minute bad news rolls in like a spring deluge.

Hope Springs Eternal, is a phrase from the Alexander Pope poem An Essay on Man in which he wrote:

Hope springs eternal in the human breast;

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Man never Is, but always To be blest.

The soul, uneasy, and confind from home,

Rests and expatiates in a life to come.

Hope is, of course, the belief one holds during difficult circumstances that things will get better, writes Saul Levine M.D., Professor Emeritus in Psychiatry at the University of California at San Diego in Psychology Today. It is unique to our species because it requires words and thoughts to contemplate possible future events.

Dr. Levine concludes that hope is the very nature of the optimism that drives us to work toward overcoming.

It has religious meaning for believers in God, who through prayer trust that their future will be protected by their Deity, said Levine. But the presence of hope is secular and universal, and serves as a personal beacon, much like a lighthouse beckoning us during periods of darkness and stormy seas.

There is a reason for alarm as the governments response to the COVID-19 pandemic has been uneven, ineffectual and at times bordering on dereliction of its duty.

For years, there has been a movement to shrink government to a size where it can be drowned in a bathtub. The response by the federal government to the COVID-19 outbreak is a manifestation of that thinking.

Except for Gov. Kay Ivey, most state officials have remained near mute or totally silent during the crisis. Lt. Gov. Will Ainsworth has offered encouragement. Still, others seem to be in hiding except for a few Republicans who have sought to politicize the moment by criticizing U.S. Sen. Doug Jones and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi.

These times call for decisive leadership, frank words about the realities facing our State but not political pandering.

Diseases like COVID-19 are not partisan, seeing neither Democrat or Republican. The States political leadersthe real onesneed to offer solutions, not partisan finger pointing.

Gov. Kay Ivey and her staff are doing their best, Press Secretary Gina Maiola is keeping the press informed almost hourly, likewise Communications Director Leah Garner is guiding the governors message so that the public is informed. Health officer, Dr. Scott Harris, briefings are realistic, sobering and needed. Iveys chief of staff, Jo Bonner, is a steady hand quietly and methodically aiding the governor and the various agencies who need support.

There have been missteps and blunders, but the governors office is meeting a Herculean challenge with calm and efficiency.

If good intentions and best efforts are worth anything, if giving it ones all is the best any of us can do, then Gov. Ivey and her staff deserve appreciation.

The situations in the State will worsen before it is better.

No one knows how long COVID-19 will plague our State, but be assured that hope and faith beat worry and fear every time.

In what has become known as the Four Freedoms Speech, FDR also had a message for the world. Men of every creed and every race, wherever they lived in the world are entitled to Four Freedoms: freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from want, and freedom from fear.

Our present danger will pass and we will once again need to work to preserve the four freedoms that FDR spoke about so many years ago.

Hope is one of our greatest assets in times like these. Please remain safe, have courage and believe that better days are ahead.

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Opinion | Have hope - alreporter.com

Dissent in a time of Covid – Spiked

Two nasty ailments have gripped Britain in recent days. The first is Covid-19. The second is intolerance of dissent. The authoritarian instincts of the chattering classes have been on full display in this crisis. You can see it in their daily pleas for Boris Johnson to turn the UK into a police state. You can see it in their sneering at people who visit parks or take a walk on a beachfront. And you can see it most disturbingly in their implacable rage against anyone who deviates from the Covid-19 script and asks if shutting down society really is the right thing to do. Like medieval scolds, they brand such people dangerous, insane, a virus, accessories to manslaughter. Shut them down!, they cry, thinking they are signalling their concern for the publics health when really they are advertising their profound contempt for freedom of thought and critical debate.

In an emergency, freedom of speech doesnt stop being important. It becomes more important. The vast majority of people accept there will be restrictions on their everyday freedoms in the next few months. They know they wont be able to socialise very much and will have to stay indoors for long periods of time. We accept this because, in contradiction of the anti-masses hatred coming from the media class at the moment, who are fuming over photographs of what they view as thick, ignorant scum walking in parks, people actually have a strong sense of social solidarity. They are concerned for the health of their friends, families, community and society. They accept restrictions to that end. But even in a moment like this there should be not a single restriction on freedom of speech. The right to dissent from the middle-class apocalypticism enveloping the Covid-19 crisis is the most important liberty right now.

And its a liberty under threat. The speed and intensity with which questioning extreme responses to Covid-19 has become tantamount to a speechcrime is alarming. I had a taste of it this weekend, when I found myself in the eye of a storm over a Spectator piece I wrote questioning the wisdom of closing pubs. Peter Hitchens did too, after he wrote a Mail on Sunday piece questioning the Covid shutdown of society. Others who have wondered out loud if the freezing of social and economic life is the right response to this novel new virus have been hounded, shamed, reported to the Silicon Valley authorities. David Lammy calls us insane and dangerous and says our words should be unpublished. Unpersoning will be next. Questioning the lockdown will see you blacklisted from polite society.

How swiftly we become McCarthyites. How naturally intolerance comes to that section of society that thinks it knows best. Partly, of course, this is always its default mode. As we know from the past couple of decades of social shaming, No Platforming and outright state assaults against people who are deemed to hold hateful or wrongthink views, the new elites are not exactly friends of freedom of speech. But the rising tide of Covid-19 censoriousness also suggests that these people think that when things get serious, when society faces a genuine threat, then freedom of speech becomes a negotiable commodity. Words potentially become dangerous. Bad ideas can lead to loss of life. So police speech, shame the dissenters, silence the virus of incorrect thought. This is as wrong as it is possible for someone to be. It is precisely moments like this that show why freedom of speech is the most important value in a civilised, democratic society.

Right now, our societies are doing something historically unprecedented. They are asking us to change our lives in ways that would have been unimaginable just a couple of weeks ago. Some European societies have completely shut down. This week the UK will likely introduce a Coronavirus Bill that will give our government extraordinary power over individuals and public space. The right to question this is essential, for two reasons. First, because we should never feel comfortable with restrictions on freedom. Even if we accept them as short-term measures in a mass act of social solidarity to protect life, they should still make us bristle and balk and constantly ask questions: Why is this necessary? When will it end? When will the Coronavirus Bill be repealed?

And the second reason freedom of speech becomes even more important in a crisis is because of one of the key things that freedom of speech does it encourages intellectual humility. Freedom of speech is the means through which all of us entertain the possibility that we are wrong. The great service of freedom of speech is that it helps us question ourselves. The unfettered existence of all kinds of interesting, challenging, strange and offensive views is the great and essential guard against our own tendencies to dogma. It invites rethinking, re-evaluation. It gives us that great liberty: the liberty to change our minds.

Dogma, in contrast, does the opposite. Dogma emerges where people shield themselves, normally courtesy of censorship, from the thoughts and questions and criticisms of others. Forcefielding oneself and ones ideas from criticism gives rise to lazy, sclerotic thinking. It nurtures orthodoxies and blind beliefs, ideologies that are cleaved to not because their worth and substance have been properly tested through rigorous public debate but because we just know they are right. Doing that in normal times is bad enough. Doing that in a time of unprecedented crisis is lethal. It means this: society might go down a route that is wrong. Im not saying it is wrong. But shouldnt we entertain the possibility that it is? Shouldnt we nurture the conditions of freedom in which the potential wrongness of what we are doing could be exposed? Shouldnt we be humble rather than dogmatic about the overhaul of modern life, and open to the possibility that it is a mistake?

I want to hear from dissenters who think that what we are doing is wrong. Their voices are immeasurably important right now. They will protect us from the disease of dogma. I want to hear from people like David L Katz, founding director of the Yale-Griffin Prevention Research Center, who says the lockdown might be a mistake; that this near total meltdown of normal life schools and businesses closed, gatherings banned [might be] long-lasting and calamitous, possibly graver than the direct toll of the virus itself. I want to hear from those, like Katz, who are asking if the lockdown itself could actually help to spread the disease, for example by closing colleges and schools and sending young people of indeterminate infectious status to huddle with their families.

I want to hear from people like Professor Michael T Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, who says a national lockdown is no cure. Who says we must urgently consider the effect of shutting down offices, schools, transportation systems, restaurants, hotels, stores, theatres, concert halls, sporting events and other venues indefinitely and leaving all of their workers unemployed and on the public dole. The likely result, he says, would be not just a depression but a complete economic breakdown.

I want to hear from people like Gerd Gigerenzer, director of the Harding Center for Risk Literacy at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in Berlin, who reminds us that apocalyptic predictions were made about earlier viral diseases and they did not come true. Who reminds us that the UK government predicted that 65,000 Brits would die from swine flu in 2009, but actually fewer than 500 died. Who says there are dangers both to underreaction and overreaction to Covid-19 and that our society must learn to live with this uncertainty.

I want to hear from these voices because they can help to hold at bay the desire for unflinching certainty and dogmatic responses in the face of Covid-19, neither of which are helpful, and both of which could end up causing as much harm to society and our wellbeing as the disease itself. The instinct to demonise and shut down anyone who says we are overreacting to Covid-19 is not only irritatingly censorious and anti-intellectual it is potentially dangerous, too, since it will erase those opinions that are holding out the possibility that what we are doing is wrong. Am I wrong? has never been a more important question to ask ourselves. And freedom of speech is the thing that makes that question possible, makes it meaningful, and gives it the extraordinary power to protect society from good intentions that might have terrible consequences.

Brendan ONeill is editor of spiked and host of the spiked podcast, The Brendan ONeill Show. Subscribe to the podcast here. And find Brendan on Instagram: @burntoakboy

Picture by: Getty.

To enquire about republishing spikeds content, a right to reply or to request a correction, please contact the managing editor, Viv Regan.

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Dissent in a time of Covid - Spiked

How Bad Is Online Harassment? – Reason

In September, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), an American organization that monitors attacks on freedom of the press worldwide, issued a report on what it called a major threat to journalistsparticularly female journalistsin the United States and Canada: online harassment. The report opened with an anecdote meant to illustrate the problem. A Texas-based freelancer suddenly found her inbox flooded with spam, from sale promotions to fake job offers, and realized that someone had subscribed her to dozens of email lists; she suspected that the culprit was a bigoted commenter previously banned from a website for which she wrote. It was, the report quoted her as saying, "kind of scary."

Given that CPJ deals with issues that range from censorship to beatings, kidnappings, and even murders of journalists, junk-mail bombing seems like the epitome of a First World Problem. (I say that as someone targeted by a similar prank a couple of years ago.) Yet such trivial annoyances show up quite frequently in accounts that treat online abuse as an extremely grave social problem.

CPJ is far from the only organization to address the issue. A 2018 report from Amnesty International, a globally revered human rights advocacy group, was titledToxic Twitterand examined "violence and abuse against women online." The same year, PEN America, the nearly 100-year-old nonprofit that promotes freedom of speech, issued a statement describing online harassment as a "clear threat to free expression." The United Nations has also weighed in, holding its first hearing on the subject in 2015.

Some of the behavior that falls under the general umbrella of "online harassment" is not only noxious but genuinely frightening and even criminal. The article by journalist Amanda Hess that set off the current panic"Why Women Aren't Welcome on the Internet," published byPacific Standardin January 2014discussed Hess' own experience of being cyberstalked by a man who progressed from tweets to emails to threatening phone calls. In other cases, harassment in cyberspace crosses over into real life via "swatting": prank emergency calls that dispatch law enforcement to handle a supposed dangerous situation. In 2017, police in Wichita, Kansas, shot and killed an unarmed 28-year-old man after one such fraudulent 911 call.

The rapid evolution of the internet has often outpaced the law's ability to deal with cybercrime, including stalking and threats. Unfortunately, as with many other issues, the discussion of online harassment easily lends itself to catastrophizing. Every "go jump off a cliff" tweet becomes virtual terrorism, grounds for social media banishment if not criminal investigation. The sense of urgency is amplified by shoddy analysis, politically driven double standards, and "do something!" calls to actionaction that often involves speech suppression.

The great thing about the internet is that you can reach just about anyone, anywhere, in an instant. The awful thing about the internet is that just about anyone, from anywhere, can reach you in an instant. As a journalist, you can reach vast numbers of new readers, connect with fans, and find information that would once have been out of reach; you can also get nasty messages from hundreds of haters who no longer have to take the effort to mail a letter.

Online harassment is far from the first internet-related panicremember sex fiends lurking in chat rooms? But while earlier alarmism about online horrors usually came from the right and was not overtly political, the panic about internet harassment has come primarily from the left and is transparently politicized in its selection of "deserving" victims.

Hess'Pacific Standardarticle came just two weeks after a woman named Justine Sacco watched her life fall apart because of an internet mob. On her way from London to Cape Town, Sacco tweeted a joke meant to mock the privileged "bubble" of affluent Americans: "Going to Africa. Hope I don't get AIDS. Just kidding. I'm white!" The tweet went viral, and by the time Sacco landed she was not only jobless but so infamous some hotels canceled her bookings.

This was a textbook example of online harassment. Yet neither Hess' article nor the ensuing conversation mentioned Sacco's ordeal. When British journalist Jon Ronson wrote about it a year later inSo You've Been Publicly Shamed(Riverhead Books), many faulted him for being too sympathetic. AWashington Postessay by academic and author Patrick Blanchfield chided those who would turn this "30-something, well-educated, relatively affluent white woman" into the "martyr of choice" for internet abuse. Blanchfield's own martyrs of choice included successful white feminists targeted by right-wing trolls.

"People are much more likely to view things done or said to their side as harassment and to view what happens to people they don't like as just something they should deal with, or not that bad, or maybe made up," says Ken White, a Los Angelesbased criminal defense attorney and First Amendment litigator who blogs and tweets under the handle "Popehat."

In the case of online harassment, narratives from the progressive tribe have dominated mainstream media coverage and advocacy. That means concerns about online harassment don't usually extend, for instance, to outrage cycles targeting alleged bigots, even when the outrage is misplaced.

In November 2018, a Portland, Oregon, woman nicknamed "Crosswalk Cathy" had to scrub her online presence after a viral video pilloried her for calling the cops on a black couple over a bad parking job. But subsequent reports revealed she called a parking hotline about a car partially blocking a crosswalk while the owners, who were getting takeout food nearby, were away from the carmeaning she had no idea they were black.

Nor do progressive concerns about harassment extend to victims of online vigilantism for ostensibly noble causes. A few years ago, in the wake of a teen girl's highly publicized sexual assault by two high school football players in Steubenville, Ohio, many locals experienced egregious harassment by members of the "hacktivist" group Anonymous. Emails were hacked and personal data posted online. Jim Parks, the webmaster of the football team's fan site, was accused of being the mastermind of a teen porn ring because of supposed photos of nude underage girls found in his email account. (The subjects all turned out to be adult women, and the principal hacker, Deric Lostutter, who was later identified and questioned by the FBI, issued a public apology to Parks for the "embarrassment" he had suffered.) Othersadults and teenagerswere smeared as accomplices to rape and barraged with threats. Yet when Lostutter faced possible criminal charges several months later, much progressive opinion treated him as a hero. Parks, who described Anonymous as "terrorists," would no doubt have disagreed.

In late 2014, a few months after Hess' influential article, the internet conflagration known as GamerGatein which various members of the video game community battled over sexism in the gaming industry and pressbroke out. Death threats eventually forced feminist video game critic Anita Sarkeesian to temporarily leave her home and cancel a lecture.

Yet progressive critics of GamerGate quickly began to conflate actual threats with mere disagreeable speech.Perspectives on Harmful Speech Online, published in 2017 by Harvard's Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society, includes a discussion of "sealioning," defined as "persistent questioning [combined] with a loudly-insisted-upon commitment to reasonable debate." (The term originates from a 2014 web comic in which a couple is pestered by a talking sea lion.) Testifying before a 2015 U.N. panel, Sarkeesian insisted that "cyberviolence" includes not only actual threats but "the day-to-day grind of, 'You're a liar,' 'You suck,'" as well as "hate videos" attacking her critiques of sexism in video games.

GamerGate spurred on anti-harassment measures by many big tech companies, usually developed in close collaboration with social justice activists. A roundtable discussion of Silicon Valley's efforts to curb online harassment, published inWiredin late 2015 and prominently featuring Twitter Vice President for Trust and Safety Del Harvey, was notable for its explicit assumption that solutions to harassment should focus on "marginalized" victims"women, people of color, and LGBT people"and should help progressive causes. In early 2016, Sarkeesian's Feminist Frequency website was officially listed as part of Twitter's Trust and Safety Councilalong with about 40 other organizations, many of which have a censorious bent.

Some anti-harassment measures by social media platforms have been uncontroversial. Twitter, for instance, has made it easier to ignore hostile messages by blocking and muting or receiving notifications only from known accounts. But other, more heavy-handed measuresaccount restrictions, suspensions, and banshave resulted in pitched battles over double standards, political biases, and uneven enforcement.

In February 2016, Twitter abruptly perma-banned far-right blogger Robert Stacey McCain for "targeted abuse," without ever pointing to actual abusive tweets. McCain, who has peddled racist fare and posted rants against homosexuality, is not a sympathetic figure. But unlike, say, formerBreitbartwriter and professional troll Milo Yiannopoulos, who joined him in Twitter exile a few months later, McCain neither instigated nor participated in online attacks. Plenty of people who found his views abhorrent nonetheless felt that his banishment was a clear sign of biased enforcement; some wondered if it was related to his vitriolic polemics against Sarkeesian, newly elevated to Twitter's Trust and Safety Council.

McCain's ban boosted complaints on the right about the social media platforms' left-wing biasa theme incessantly flogged byBreitbartbut also echoed by more moderate conservatives. Around the same time, First Amendment attorney and blogger Marc Randazza reported an unscientific but plausible experiment in which he tracked both actual Twitter users and his own "decoy" handles and found that conservatives were disciplined for nasty tweets far more than social justice or feminist accounts.

The online wars have since escalated to an even higher pitch, with Donald Trump and the Trumpian right on one side and the "Resistance" and hyper-"woke" left on the other.

The alt-right's manic trolling, which included bombarding anti-Trump journalists with grotesque racist and anti-Semitic memes, has solidified the view that online harassment is something that comes predominantly from right-wingers and bigots. Meanwhile, on the left, new clashes over free speech and social media harassment have focused on the battles between transgender activists and radical feminists who believe that allowing trans women access to single-sex female spaces jeopardizes women's safety. In November 2018, shortly after Twitter amended its policy to prohibit "misgendering" as a form of "hateful conduct," Canadian feminist author and activist Megan Murphy was banned for using male pronouns to refer to Jessica Yaniv, the notorious litigant in British Columbia who (unsuccessfully) demanded that beauticians who wax women's pubic hair be forced to serve transgender women with intact male genitals.

Does biased enforcement on social media platforms pose a free speech problem? To free speech advocates such as White, the answer is a clear no: Twitter, Facebook, et al. are private entities with their own free association rights. "If they don't want Nazis, or they don't want vegans, that's them and that's part of their expression," White says. If social media companies restrict too much legitimate speech, he adds, "the best remedy is for people to create their own communities or vote with their feet."

White emphatically rejects the ideaadvanced, for instance, by current Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Ajit Paithat speech policing by social media platforms weakens essential liberal values and norms. Pai, then an FCC commissioner, toldThe Washington Examinerin 2016 that "there are certain cultural values that undergird the [First A]mendment that are critical for its protections to have actual meaning." White sees it very differently: If anything, he says, voluntary speech moderation by social media companies is a "safety valve" that protects "a culture of legal free speech" by letting people have online spaces in which they don't have to deal with verbal abuse or overt bigotry.

At the other end, people as politically different as conservative talk show host Laura Ingraham and the Electronic Frontier Foundation's William Budington believe that big social media companies should be regulated as public utilities. Facebook and Twitter, Budington writes by email, are "closed platforms with no socially viable alternatives." While he would much rather see them "exchange freely with newcomers" in a competitive environment, he says, the realistic option is to regulate them to ensure fair access.

Somewhere in the middle, legal scholar and author Nadine Strossen, a former head of the American Civil Liberties Union whose most recent book isHate: Why We Should Resist It With Free Speech, Not Censorship(Oxford University Press), agrees that the internet giants are not obliged to abide by First Amendment speech protections and have the right to moderate content without government interference. But she also believes that powerful institutions have a moral responsibility to safeguard speech. "It would behoove them from a business perspective" as well, she says, since politically fraught speech restrictions will never satisfy everyone and will only invite attack from both sides. (And so they do.)

At worst, the policing of broadly defined internet harassment can cross the line into the suppression of speech by lawparticularly in countries without First Amendmenttype speech protections.

In England, where the Malicious Communications Act of 2003 prohibits electronic messages that cause "annoyance, inconvenience or needless anxiety," several people have faced criminal charges for alleged online harassment of transgender activists, based largely on "misgendering." One defendant was self-described transsexual Miranda Yardley, whose case was dismissed on the first day of trial. (Yardley was accused of outing an activist's transgender child, but evidence showed that the activist herself had frequently mentioned the child on Twitter.) Others, including prominent Irish comedian Graham Linehan, have been questioned and warned by the police for using the wrong pronouns.

In Canada, Toronto-based graphic artist Gregory Alan Elliott was prosecuted for criminal harassment over Twitter fights with two local feminists, Stephanie Guthrie and Heather Reillywhich started, ironically enough, when Elliott criticized Guthrie for proposing to "sic" internet mobs on the creator of a video game that allowed players to digitally "beat up" Sarkeesian. Elliott created a #FascistFeminists hashtag to denounce Guthrie and Reilly; they and their supporters monitored his tweets and repeatedly blasted him as a misogynistic creep. There was a lot of mutual sniping and name-calling, but even the police conceded that none of Elliott's tweets were threatening or sexually harassing.

When Elliott was finally acquitted in January 2016 after a three-year legal battle that destroyed his business, Canadian and American feminists deplored the verdict as a failure to take online harassment seriously. (Disclosure: I participated in a fundraiser for Elliott's defense in 2015.)

In the U.S., the First Amendment remains a strong bulwark against criminalizing speech in the war on internet harassment (despite a couple of cases in which misguided judges have issued unconstitutional restraining orders forbidding someone to "harass" a public figure by writing about him or her online). One potential weak spot, however, is Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which rightly exempts internet platforms from liability for user-posted content.

"That's the thing that people are taking the most shots at, and I think people underestimate how important it is to how the internet works," White says.

As often happens, the pressure is coming from both directions. In 2015, left-wing commentator and self-styled "social justice stormtrooper" Arthur Chu wrote an article forTechCrunchurging the repeal of Section 230 to combat the scourge of online harassment. Four years later, Sen. Josh Hawley (RMo.) introduced legislation to amend Section 230 by requiring large tech platforms to be "politically neutral" in moderating content, largely in response to conservative complaints about unfair enforcement of harassment policies.

How bad a problemisinternet harassment? The Pew Research Center's most recent study, in 2017, found that over 40 percent of Americans had experienced online harassment and nearly one in five had been subjected to "severe" harassment, defined as physical threats, sexual harassment, sustained harassment, or stalking. Yet the Pew report also acknowledged that its conclusions were complicated by subjective definitions. Notably, even among people classified as victims of "severe" online harassment, 28 percent did not consider their experiences to be harassment and another 21 percent were not sure. Gender makes a difference: Only 31 percent of men who had experienced online harassment as defined in the report felt that the term applied to their most recent incident, but 42 percent of women did.

This gap points to the complex gender dynamics at playand the trouble with framing the problem as a particular burden on women. "You would have to show pretty extensive evidence about disproportionate impact and intent," says Strossen, who cautions against the notion that "women are inherently more vulnerable to this kind of attack because of who we are."

In fact, studies consistently show fewer women than men saying they experience internet harassment of every kind, except for sexual harassment. Counterintuitively, even so-called revenge pornnonconsensual exposure of intimate imagesmay happen to men more often, according to the 2017 Pew survey. And while women in the survey were considerably more likely than men to rate their online harassment experiences as extremely or very upsetting, they were no more likely to report negative consequences ranging from mental and emotional stress to problems at work or school. More women70 percent vs. 54 percent of mensaw online harassment as a major problem, but only 36 percent of women (compared to a quarter of men) wanted stronger laws to deal with it.

There is no question that online harassment can be terrifying, or at least severely disruptive. In 2016, a Jewish real estate agent in Whitefish, Montana, was deluged with threatening calls after the neo-Nazi siteThe Daily Stormertargeted herand posted her phone numberfor supposedly trying to pressure the mother of white nationalist Richard Spencer into selling her home. Last November, a Honolulu man was arrested for using both online ads and the telephone to direct hundreds of unwanted service calls and food deliveries to the home of his former girlfriend over the course of a year.

Most of what is commonly labeled "online harassment" is far less extreme, though some of it, like other human conflict, can be extremely stressful and injurious. The internet makes both a negative and a positive difference: Malicious gossip can now spread much faster and wider than before, but its targets also have many more opportunities to learn about it and counter it.

Some supposed harassment is vaguely and subjectively defined: One person's "callout" is another's "cyberbullying." Even "doxing," or public disclosure of private information, turns out to be a flexible concept: A Twitter user once accused me of doxing her because I mentioned a job listed in her public Twitter profile. Ultimately, most so-called internet harassment is simply trash talka minor annoyance that we can learn to handle by, as Strossen puts it, "developing resilience."

The current panic has also made it possible to use accusations of harassment as a weapon to silence criticismand even to harass one's critics. In February 2016, I watched a blow-up in which a male Twitter user repeatedly asked a fairly big-name progressive female journalist to correct a tweet containing erroneous information; the journalist responded by tweeting at the man's employer to accuse him of "hounding strange women on Twitter during work hours" (and by mobilizing her followers to dogpile him as a harasser).

At its core, the online harassment crusade is a push for political control over speech. It is happening in the midst of growing authoritarian sympathies on the right and growing hostility to First Amendment protections for "harmful" speech on the left. Legally, those protections remain as robust as everfor now. But in these unpredictable times, it would be reckless to assume that the erosion of basic freedoms is something that can't happen here.

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How Bad Is Online Harassment? - Reason

BrainsWay Reports Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2019 Financial Results and Operational Highlights – Yahoo Finance

Fourth quarter revenues were $6.3 million, up 32% over the same quarter in the prior year

PATTERSON, N.J., March 23, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- BrainsWay Ltd. (NASDAQ & TASE: BWAY) (BrainsWay or the Company), a global leader in the advanced non-invasive treatment of brain disorders, today reported financial results for the quarter and full-year ended December 31, 2019, and provided an operational update.

We are very pleased with our solid fourth quarter and full-year 2019 results. Our strong results are indicative of the continued growing demand for our deep transcranial magnetic stimulation (Deep TMS) system in major depressive disorder (MDD) and obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD). In addition, we have achieved key progress in advancing our clinical pipeline for future potential applications, stated Christopher von Jako, Ph.D., President and Chief Executive Officer of BrainsWay. Like other organizations, BrainsWay continues to monitor the rapidly evolving impact of the coronavirus closely, and our thoughts are with all of those affected. Without question, our top priority is the health and well-being of our loyal and growing customer base, their patients, and our employees. We have already taken steps to minimize the spread of coronavirus, while at the same time ensuring our customers that we remain fully operational as patients continue to receive their Deep TMS treatments.

Financial Results for the Full-Year Ended December 31, 2019

Financial Results for the Fourth Quarter Ended December 31, 2019

Recent Corporate Developments

Conference Call and WebcastBrainsWays management will host a conference call on Monday, March 23, 2020, at 8:30 a.m. Eastern Time to discuss these results and answer questions.

Monday, March 23, at 8:30 AM Eastern Time:

Telephone conferenceDial in information:Standard international: +44 (0) 2071 928000Israel, Tel Aviv (Local):+972-3 721 7998 United States, New York (Local):+1 631-510-7495 Confirmation Code: 7074659

To listen to a live webcast, please visit the Investors section of the BrainsWay website at http://www.BrainsWay.com. The webcast replay will be available on the website for two weeks following the completion of the call.

About BrainsWay BrainsWay is a commercial stage medical device company focused on the development and sale of non-invasive neuromodulation products using the Companys proprietary Deep Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (Deep TMS) technology for the treatment of major depressive disorder (MDD) and obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD), for which BrainsWay received marketing authorization from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2013 (for MDD) and in August 2018 (for OCD). BrainsWay is currently conducting clinical trials of Deep TMS in other psychiatric, neurological and addiction disorders.

Forward Looking StatementsThis press release contains "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such statements may be preceded by the words intends, may, will, plans, expects, anticipates, projects, predicts, estimates, aims, believes, hopes, potential or similar words. These forward-looking statements and their implications are based on the current expectations of the management of the Company only and are subject to a number of factors and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements. For example, such uncertainties include the recent outbreak of theCoronavirus (COVID-19), whichhas led governments and authorities around the globe to take various precautionary measures in order to limit the spread of theoutbreak, including government-imposed quarantines and other public health safety measures. These measures could have an adverse effect on the global markets and its economy, including on the availability and pricing of materials, manufacturing and delivery efforts, sales to existing and potential customers and leads, collections from accounts and other aspects of the global economy. Therefore, theCoronaviruscould disrupt production and cause delays in the supply and delivery of products used in our operations, may further divert the attention and efforts of the medical community to coping with theCoronavirus, impact the recruitment of subjects to existing and planned clinical trials, disrupt the marketplace in which we operate, and may have a material adverse effects on our operations, sales, revenues, collections, and R&D efforts. In addition, historical results or conclusions from scientific research and clinical studies do not guarantee that future results would suggest similar conclusions or that historical results referred to herein would be interpreted similarly in light of additional research or otherwise. The following factors, among others, could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements: inadequacy of financial resources to meet future capital requirements; changes in technology and market requirements; delays or obstacles in launching and/or successfully completing planned studies and clinical trials; failure to obtain approvals by regulatory agencies in the Companys anticipated timeframe, or at all; inability to retain or attract key employees whose knowledge is essential to the development of Deep TMS products; unforeseen difficulties with Deep TMS products and processes, and/or inability to develop necessary enhancements; unexpected costs related to Deep TMS products; failure to obtain and maintain adequate protection of the Companys intellectual property, including intellectual property licensed to the Company; the potential for product liability; changes in legislation and applicable rules and regulations; unfavorable market perception and acceptance of Deep TMS technology; inadequate or delays in reimbursement from third-party payers, including insurance companies and Medicare; inability to commercialize Deep TMS, including internationally, by the Company or through third-party distributors; product development by competitors; inability to timely develop and introduce new technologies, products and applications, which could cause the actual results or performance of the Company to differ materially from those contemplated in such forward-looking statements.

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Any forward-looking statement in this press release speaks only as of the date of this press release. The Company undertakes no obligation to publicly update or review any forward-looking statement, whether as a result of new information, future developments or otherwise, except as may be required by any applicable securities laws. More detailed information about the risks and uncertainties affecting the Company is contained under the heading Risk Factors in the Companys filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Contacts: BrainsWay Ltd. Hadar Levy Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer Hadarl@BrainsWay.com

Investors:Bob YedidLifeSci Advisors646-597-6989Bob@LifeSciAdvisors.com

BRAINSWAYLTD.

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BRAINSWAY LTD.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE LOSS

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CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS

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BrainsWay Reports Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2019 Financial Results and Operational Highlights - Yahoo Finance

Posted in Tms

EDAP TMS SA to Announce Fourth Quarter and Year Ended December 31, 2019 Financial Results on Monday, March 30, 2020 – Associated Press

Press release content from Globe Newswire. The AP news staff was not involved in its creation.

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Press release content from Globe Newswire. The AP news staff was not involved in its creation.

EDAP TMS S.A.March 24, 2020 GMT

Company to host conference call and webcast on Tuesday, March 31st @ 8:30 am EDT

LYON, France, March 24, 2020 - EDAP TMS SA (Nasdaq: EDAP), the global leader in robotic energy-based therapies, today announced that it will release its financial results for the fourth quarter and year ended December 31, 2019 after the markets close on Monday, March 30, 2020.

An accompanying conference call and webcast will be conducted by Marc Oczachowski, Chief Executive Officer and Franois Dietsch, Chief Financial Officer, to review the results. The call will be held at 8:30am EDT on Tuesday, March 31, 2020. Please refer to the information below for conference call dial-in information and webcast registration.

Conference Call & WebcastTuesday, March 31st @ 8:30am Eastern TimeDomestic: 877-451-6152International: 201-389-0879Passcode: 13700921Webcast: http://public.viavid.com/index.php?id=138743

About EDAP TMS SAA recognized leader in the global therapeutic ultrasound market for almost 40 years, EDAP TMS develops, manufactures, promotes and distributes worldwide minimally invasive medical devices for urology using ultrasound technology. By combining the latest technologies in imaging and treatment modalities in its complete range of Robotic HIFU devices, EDAP TMS introduced the Focal One in 2013 in Europe and in 2018 in the US as the answer to all requirements for ideal prostate tissue ablation as a complement to the existing FDA-cleared Ablatherm Robotic HIFU and Ablatherm Fusion. As a pioneer and key player in the field of extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL), EDAP TMS exclusively utilizes the latest generation of shock wave source in its Sonolith range of ESWL systems. For more information on the Company, please visit http://www.edap-tms.com, and us.hifu-prostate.com.

CONTACTS:Blandine ConfortInvestor Relations / Legal AffairsEDAP TMS SA+33 4 72 15 31 50bconfort@edap-tms.com

Investor ContactJeremy FefferLifeSci Advisors, LLC212-915-2568jeremy@lifesciadvisors.com

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EDAP TMS SA to Announce Fourth Quarter and Year Ended December 31, 2019 Financial Results on Monday, March 30, 2020 - Associated Press

Posted in Tms

VIDEO: What is TMS-65U? Soviet-era MiG-15 fighter jet engine powered special vehicle deployed by Russia to battle coronavirus in Italy – International…

Russian President Vladimir Putin has ordered the country's military to extend all help to Italy, following which among other things the Russian military will be deploying a Soviet-era jet engine power disinfection machine, TMS-65U.

TMS-65U is a special disinfection truck with a jet engine mounted in the back, which the Russian military uses to clean vehicles coated in chemical agents or create massive smokescreens to hide friendly movements on the battlefield.

A TMS-65U vehicle is made up of a Ural-375 6x6 4.5-ton truck with a modified Klimov VK-1 turbojet engine first used in the MiG-15 fighter jet in 1947 mounted inside a turret on the rear of the vehicle.

These military vehicles are handled by Russia's Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Protection Troops, also known collectively by the acronym RKhB.

The RKhB is a chemical warfare unit, which was formed during the Soviet era in 1918. In modern Russia, RKhB is tasked with identifying nuclear, biological, and chemical hazards and decontaminating impacted areas.

The RKhB provides similar services after any terrorist attack involving weapons of mass destruction or man-made or natural disasters involving similar threats.

Russia extends all help to Italy

As per a statement by the Russian Defense Ministry, President Vladimir Putin has issued the order to the country's military sanctioning all support to Italy by sending medical help from Sunday. The Russian military has been briefed to provide all help to Italy to battle the new coronavirus (COVID 19).

The order was dispatched from President Putin's officer after Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte held a long conversation over the phone with Putin on Saturday.

In the conversation, the Russian leader offered his support and help in the form of mobile disinfection vehicles and specialists to help the worst-hit Italian regions, reported The Moscow Times.

On Saturday, Italy recorded its worst death count from coronavirus of almost 800, taking the toll in the world's hardest-hit country to over 5,000.

The Russian Defense Ministry said military transport planes would deliver eight mobile brigades of military medics, special disinfection vehicles and other medical equipment to Italy starting from Sunday. A total of seven cargo planes will be flying to Italy from Russia to drop all the necessary items and the team.

Russia will also be deploying about 100 military personnel from the virology and epidemics department, Interfax cited the Defense Ministry as saying.

In Russia, until now there has been only one coronavirus related deaths, and 306 reported cases of COVID 19 infection.

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VIDEO: What is TMS-65U? Soviet-era MiG-15 fighter jet engine powered special vehicle deployed by Russia to battle coronavirus in Italy - International...

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GTreasury Supports New Survey of Corporate Treasurers That Gathers Industry Response Data to the COVID-19 Pandemic – Yahoo Finance

Led by Strategic Treasurer, the Treasury Coalition is collecting weekly impact & reaction data from businesses treasury departments

CHICAGO, March 25, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- GTreasury, a treasury management platform provider, today announced that it is supporting the Treasury Coalition Global Crisis Monitor: An Immediate & Ongoing Survey of COVID-19 Impact & Response.

This ongoing, weekly survey is designed to give treasury and finance professionals an updated view of what their colleagues are thinking in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, how they are reacting to it, and the industry changes they expect to see because of it.

About GTreasury

For more than 30 years, GTreasury has delivered the leading digital Treasury Management System (TMS) to corporate treasurers across industries. With its continually innovating Software-as-a-Service platform, GTreasury provides customers with a single source of truth for all their cash, payments, and risk activities. The TMS solution offers any combination of Cash Management, Payments, Financial Instruments, Risk Management, Accounting, Banking, and Hedge Accounting seamlessly integrated, on-demand worldwide and fully secured. Headquartered in Chicago with offices serving EMEA (London) and APAC (Sydney and Manila), GTreasurys global community includes more than 750 customers and 30+ industries reaching 160+ countries worldwide.

Contact:Clement | Peterson Public Relationsbret@clementpeterson.com

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GTreasury Supports New Survey of Corporate Treasurers That Gathers Industry Response Data to the COVID-19 Pandemic - Yahoo Finance

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When Should You Buy EDAP TMS S.A. (NASDAQ:EDAP)? – Simply Wall St

EDAP TMS S.A. (NASDAQ:EDAP), which is in the medical equipment business, and is based in France, saw a double-digit share price rise of over 10% in the past couple of months on the NASDAQGM. Less-covered, small caps sees more of an opportunity for mispricing due to the lack of information available to the public, which can be a good thing. So, could the stock still be trading at a low price relative to its actual value? Lets take a look at EDAP TMSs outlook and value based on the most recent financial data to see if the opportunity still exists.

See our latest analysis for EDAP TMS

Great news for investors EDAP TMS is still trading at a fairly cheap price according to my price multiple model, where I compare the companys price-to-earnings ratio to the industry average. In this instance, Ive used the price-to-earnings (PE) ratio given that there is not enough information to reliably forecast the stocks cash flows. I find that EDAP TMSs ratio of 15.21x is below its peer average of 32.89x, which indicates the stock is trading at a lower price compared to the Medical Equipment industry. Although, there may be another chance to buy again in the future. This is because EDAP TMSs beta (a measure of share price volatility) is high, meaning its price movements will be exaggerated relative to the rest of the market. If the market is bearish, the companys shares will likely fall by more than the rest of the market, providing a prime buying opportunity.

Future outlook is an important aspect when youre looking at buying a stock, especially if you are an investor looking for growth in your portfolio. Buying a great company with a robust outlook at a cheap price is always a good investment, so lets also take a look at the companys future expectations. EDAP TMSs earnings over the next few years are expected to increase by 99%, indicating a highly optimistic future ahead. This should lead to more robust cash flows, feeding into a higher share value.

Are you a shareholder? Since EDAP is currently below the industry PE ratio, it may be a great time to accumulate more of your holdings in the stock. With an optimistic outlook on the horizon, it seems like this growth has not yet been fully factored into the share price. However, there are also other factors such as financial health to consider, which could explain the current price multiple.

Are you a potential investor? If youve been keeping an eye on EDAP for a while, now might be the time to make a leap. Its buoyant future profit outlook isnt fully reflected in the current share price yet, which means its not too late to buy EDAP. But before you make any investment decisions, consider other factors such as the strength of its balance sheet, in order to make a well-informed investment decision.

Price is just the tip of the iceberg. Dig deeper into what truly matters the fundamentals before you make a decision on EDAP TMS. You can find everything you need to know about EDAP TMS in the latest infographic research report. If you are no longer interested in EDAP TMS, you can use our free platform to see my list of over 50 other stocks with a high growth potential.

If you spot an error that warrants correction, please contact the editor at editorial-team@simplywallst.com. This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. Simply Wall St has no position in the stocks mentioned.

We aim to bring you long-term focused research analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Thank you for reading.

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When Should You Buy EDAP TMS S.A. (NASDAQ:EDAP)? - Simply Wall St

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Strategy Analytics: Coronavirus Expected to Add 5% to Global Video-on-Demand Subscriptions In 2020 – Business Wire

BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Strategy Analytics has recently published its latest forecast for Subscription Video-on-Demand (SVOD) services such as Netflix. The forecast took account of the expected impact of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, and although the longer term impact clearly remains uncertain, early evidence suggests that a boost to SVOD usage globally can be expected. As a result the forecast for global subscriptions was increased by 5% in comparison to the pre-pandemic model. The projection is now 949 million paid subscriptions globally by the end of 2020, suggesting an increase of 47 million compared to earlier forecasts.

Longer term, the forecast predicts that paid SVOD subscriptions will grow by 621 million between 2019 and 2025, reaching 1.43 billion, according to Strategy Analytics, TV & Media Strategies (TMS) Global SVOD Forecast, by Service (2010 - 2025), Currently, China and the U.S. combined account for nearly two-thirds (65%) of paid SVOD subscriptions globally, however, as these markets mature and approach market saturation and paid subscriptions, particularly in Southeast Asia grow, their share of global SVOD subscriptions will fall to 55% in 2025.

One significant factor affecting future SVOD growth is the impact of the Coronavirus in both the short and long term, said Michael Goodman, Director, TV & Media Strategies. In the near term the Coronavirus will actually boost SVOD subscriptions, as well as viewing of these services, as an ever growing number of consumers adopt social distancing or are forced into quarantine. In the mid-to-long term much depends on the length of the pandemic and resulting economic damage. As businesses shut down and individuals are laid off consumers are going to have to make hard decisions about how they spend their money and as wonderful as Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Disney+ and other SVOD services may be, they are not essential services.

Despite declining global share, China will remain the largest SVOD market with 438 million paid subscriptions in 2025, up from 131 million from 2019. The U.S. will follow with 342 million subscriptions in 2025, up from 125 million from 2019. With nearly three-quarters of U.S. TV households subscribing to one or more SVOD service the U.S. SVOD market is becoming saturated, Goodman added, but with U.S. SVOD households continuing to add additional services such as CBS All Access, Disney+, and the soon-to-launch HBO MAX the total number of SVOD subscriptions in the U.S. will continue to grow.

#SA_Media&Services

Source: Strategy Analytics, Inc

About Strategy Analytics

Strategy Analytics, Inc. is a global leader in supporting companies across their planning lifecycle through a range of customized market research solutions. Our multi-discipline capabilities include: industry research advisory services, customer insights, user experience design and innovation expertise, mobile consumer on-device tracking and business-to-business consulting competencies. With domain expertise in: smart devices, connected cars, intelligent home, service providers, IoT, strategic components and media, Strategy Analytics can develop a solution to meet your specific planning need. For more information, visit us at http://www.strategyanalytics.com

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Strategy Analytics: Coronavirus Expected to Add 5% to Global Video-on-Demand Subscriptions In 2020 - Business Wire

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Newly-discovered comet Atlas could shine as bright as the MOON when it makes its closest approach to Earth in May – as long as doesn’t break up on its…

A comet called Atlas discovered in December is on its way towards Earth and could appear as bright as a crescent moon - unless it breaks up from the Sun's heat first.

Atlas is close to Mars' orbit at the moment but is increasing in speed as it makes its way towards the Sun, making its closest approach to Earth at the end of May.

It was discovered by the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert system (ATLAS) in Hawaii and takes its name from the initials of the system.

When it was discovered on December 28, 2019 it was faint and required a telescope, but as it comes closer it is getting brighter and can now be seen with binoculars.

Seeing a comet with the naked eye would be a rare event for astronomers - the last bright comet in the northern hemisphere was Hale-Bopp in 1997.

Provided by Daily Mail This is an image of a comet captured by the Hubble Space Telescope - it is not ATLAS. If it manages to hold itself together ATLAS could be as bright as a a crescent moon

At the end of May it will be just 0.25 astronomical units to the Sun - that is a quarter of the distance the Earth is from the star.

While it is there it will get brighter as seen from the Earth as its glow will be amplified by the Sun.

'Comet ATLAS continues to brighten much faster than expected,' Karl Battams of the Naval Research Lab in Washington DC told SpaceWeatherArchive.

'Some predictions for its peak brightness now border on the absurd.'

It's original name was C/2019 Y4 when it was first discovered but has been nicknamed ATLAS due to the system that spotted it.

It has seen a 4,000-fold increase in brightness since it was first discovered and could be visible to the naked eye as early as April.

When it was first stopped it was in the area of Ursa Major and was very faint - it was about 398,000 times dimmer than stars visible to the naked eye appear.

At that point it was 273 million miles from the Sun but it has been increasing in brightness at an unprecedented speed since then.

Unfortunately there is a real chance it will break up from the heat before it gets a chance to put on a show for astronomers.

'Right now the comet is releasing huge amounts of its frozen volatiles (gases),' says Battams. 'That's why it's brightening so fast.'

The only way it will survive long enough to get as close to the Sun as Mercury it would need to have a large nuclear with stores of frozen gas.

If not it will likely 'run out of gas' leading to it crumbling and fading as it approaches the Sun, according to SpaceWeatherArchive.

Battams is not optimistic, though, he said it will likely break up.

'My personal intuition is that Comet ATLAS is over-achieving, and I wouldn't be surprised to see it start to fade rapidly and possibly even disintegrate before reaching the sun,' he says.

The head (or coma) of Comet ATLAS is big, albeit 'very faint and ghostly,' John Bortle, an expert in comets told Space.com.

'If it's a truly significant visitor, it should be considerably sharper in appearance. Instead we see, at best, a quite modestly condensed object with only a pinpoint stellar feature near its heart.'

If it does break up as it approaches the Sun it may still be possible for NASA spacecraft to capture images of the end of its life.

'The Heliospheric Imager on NASA's STEREO spacecraft will get a great view of ATLAS from mid-May through early June,' says Battams.

'The camera is very sensitive, so we might be able to observe ATLAS's tail interacting with the solar wind and outflowsas well as any potential breakup events.'

There is some speculation this could be related to the Great Comet of 1844 as it follows a similar trajectory and orbit.

Its trajectory would require a 6,000 year orbit around the Sun that would take it beyond the outer edges of the solar system - about 57 billion miles from the Sun.

Astronomers predict this comet and the Great Comet both broke off from a much larger comet born in the early days of the solar system.

It's a hyperbolic comet which means its orbit stretches deeper into the cosmos and the Sun only acts as a gravitational slingshot to hurtle it further out of the solar system.

This may be a one time shot - we may never see the comet again after it makes its closest approach.

In the meantime when it gets dark it will be visible halfway up in the north-northwest sky and potentially visible with the naked eye from April.

'It's going to be fun the next few weeks watching Comet ATLAS develop (and provide a nice distraction from the current state of the world), Carl Hergenrother, a comet observer based in Arizona, wrote. 'Here's to good health and clear skies!'

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Newly-discovered comet Atlas could shine as bright as the MOON when it makes its closest approach to Earth in May - as long as doesn't break up on its...