Resisting The Deregulation Of Environmental Protection – HuffPost

When the fundamental structure of American environmental law was put into place in the 1970s and 1980s, protecting the environment was a consensus, a nonpartisan goal supported by over two-thirds of the American public. Support was so widespread that the 1972 Clean Water Act was enacted over then President Richard Nixons veto. There was a real debate about how to best protect the environment, and Congress knew how to compromise. The deal that led to the Superfund toxic waste clean-up bill in 1980 was a compromise between conservative Senator Jesse Helms and liberal then-Representative (later New Jersey Governor) Jim Florio. The political attack on environmental regulation from the right began with Ronald Reagan as an attack on big government regulation, not on the goal of protecting the environment. Since that time, the environment has become a more partisan issue. Huge majorities of Democrats and Independents support environmental regulation, and while Republican support often exceeds 50 percent, it is lukewarm at best. The problem remains, how do you keep the environment from being polluted without laws making pollution illegal?

The answer is you cant prevent pollution without rules, and because all air pollution crosses state boundaries and many water pollution problems also cross state borders, some of the rules must be set by the federal government. In the case of climate change, greenhouse gas pollution crosses both state and national boundaries. Still, many environmental issues are local and state specific. In these cases, state and local rules can be very effective in maintaining environmental quality. Additionally, over the past several decades, a central strategy of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has been to delegate federal regulatory authority to the states. EPA did this, in part, due to federal resource constraints, and in part due to a belief that environmental rules needed to be adjusted to the specific needs of Americas diverse local conditions. Each community has its own economic, social, political, cultural and ecological environment and what works in Portland, Oregon, might not work in Portland, Maine.

Today we have an EPA Administrator who is willfully and aggressively deregulating elements of environmental protection. He is not trying to repeal environmental laws, since he knows he will lose those battles. Instead he is focusing his attention on regulations, starting with rolling back rules issued under the Obama Administration. He is revising rules without the advice of long-time EPA professionals and instead consulting with outside think tanks, industry representatives, and conservative advocates to redraft rules. While this means that many Obama-era rules will not be implemented, it does not mean that the new weaker rules will automatically be put into effect. Courts will be reviewing these changes, and some will be rejected due to an inadequate process of public participation prior to revision, while others will be rejected because they do not fulfill the intended mandates of the law. Regardless of federal action, states may well continue their own more stringent rules. We are in uncharted territory with a determined, anti-environmental EPA Administrator. The only point that is certain is that environmental lawyers will be fully employed during Scott Pruitts shameful term as EPA Administrator.

One of the key arguments for national environmental standards nearly half a century ago was the fear that states and localities would use lower environmental standards to compete for industry. However, in the last several decades the connection between pollution and health became widely understood, and the desire to protect housing values and a communitys way of life led to the development of NIMBY the not in my backyard syndrome. Local opposition to new factories, waste treatment facilities, power plants, and, in some cases, any construction at all has resulted in local anti-development politics that can be quite powerful. When development is permitted it is often only allowed once developers commit to specific measures designed to limit pollution, traffic, and other factors that impact local quality of life. This local and state level political force was not widespread when EPA was established in 1970. It is not universal since there are communities that will accept any kind of development they can get, but NIMBY is a major political force in a majority of American communities.

Another change since 1970 has been the growth of environmental liability law and the development of internal practices of sustainability management in many large corporations. Companies are more careful about their environmental impacts because they fear being sued by those who suffer damages due to those impacts. They are also more careful about their use of energy, water and other materials due to the rising costs of those resources.

I mention these factors not to argue that EPA is unimportant, because the agency is very important, but because EPA is not the only institution available to protect the environment. Its no longer the 1970s or 80s. Environmental protection is hardwired into Americas governmental, nonprofit and private institutions. It can be weakened, and unscrupulous businesses may take advantage of Trumps approach and could start drilling soon on public lands and in fragile ocean environments. But when the first leak, spill or environmental disaster takes place, these folks will come to learn that Americans do not want to see their beaches or national parks damaged or destroyed. Most people really like to breathe and they expect government to ensure that their air, water and land is free of poisons.

The starting point for opposing environmental deregulation is the recognition that the U.S. federal government is not all powerful. The founders designed a political structure of checks and balances and shared sovereignty. States, cities, corporations and large nonprofits have enormous power and resources. While it would be helpful for the federal government to do its fair share of the heavy lifting in protecting the environment, it is not essential. Federal deregulation should and will be fought in the courts. States will be suing, as will environmental interest groups. The environmental groups will need private money to battle the federal government. But in addition to fighting weakened rules, we should focus our attention and creativity on state, local and private institutions. Lets not be defined by opposition. Lets not be overly engaged with stopping foolish federal policies and instead look to develop more creative and positive approaches that ignore and bypass the federal government.

Weve been used to a dysfunctional and deadlocked federal government for decades. What weve not seen since the days of Anne Gorsuch in the early Reagan years is an effort to attack and dismantle fundamental environmental rules. As in those years, it is not clear how successful Pruitt will be in modifying his corner of the administrative state. After two years of noise, President Reagans political advisors convinced him to cut loose his Interior Secretary and EPA Administrator, after which Reagan brought back the first EPA Administrator, William Ruckelshaus, a serious and creative environmentalist. It is far from clear that anything like that could ever happen under Trumps very strange decision-making process.

But just as Trump and his attention-getting antics are a distraction from the difficult work of governance, Pruitts moves at deregulation must be countered, but not obsessed over. The long and difficult transition from a finite resource to a renewable resource based economy was never going to originate in Washington anyway. The main engine of change will be communities, businesses, nonprofits and cities. So, while we resist federal cutbacks in environmental protection policies and programs, we need to continue to keep our eye on the daily, operational tasks of creating sustainable homes, businesses, cities and communities. We need to build the public-private partnerships that will transform the way we live. We need to counter the effort of state-level electric utilities that want to destroy the household solar industry. And we should remember to offer Scott Pruitt a discount when he stops by in a few years, finally in the market for a used Tesla.

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Resisting The Deregulation Of Environmental Protection - HuffPost

Automation’s power: Streamlining for speed – The Enterprisers Project

Is automation poised to replace people?Politics and trade deals aside, I believe that technology innovation creates jobs in places you never thought there could be jobs before and enables people to take on more interesting, strategic work.

[Automation and blockchain have hugepotential to change business as we know it. Learn more in our related article, Blockchain: 3 big implications for your company.]

Heres an example. We have a new risk intelligence platform, which adds a credit limit recommendation, among other things, to our previous platform. In the past, companies would buy data from D&B, then look at the credit scores and make decisions about whether or not they were going to do business with that company based on the credit reports.

"This takes a step out of the process through automation, but it also delivers that data and that decision faster."

Now D&B is using internal analytics combined with our new product to deliver actual credit limit recommendations to the customer. This takes a step out of the process through automation, but it also delivers that data and that decision faster. So were bringing data and decisioning to places where its all being usedand where it can help our customers drive more revenue. Which creates more jobs.

In essence, weve opened up the entire product through APIs that the customers can integrate into their own systems so that automation flows straight through to whatever system theyre using. In addition, we are actively going out and partnering with some of the major software platforms that can use these systems, and bringing those credit scores and intelligence and decisioning right into those interactions.

Now our customers dont have to have their IT crews go and implement APIs with us because were partnering with that accounting platform. Which means they can deploy that staff to more strategic and interesting work.

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Automation's power: Streamlining for speed - The Enterprisers Project

Rockwell Automation Upgraded to Buy on Bright Prospects – Zacks.com

On Jul 11, Rockwell Automation Inc. (ROK - Free Report) was upgraded by a notch to a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy). Going by the Zacks model, companies carrying a Zacks Rank #2 have better chances of performing above the broader market over the upcoming quarters.

Why the Upgrade?

Market sentiments has been favourable to Rockwell Automation for quite some time now, especially after the company reported better-than-expected results in the first half of fiscal 2017. Earnings surprise was a positive 20.69% in the first quarter while in the recently reported second-quarter fiscal 2017, earnings surpassed the Zacks Consensus Estimate by 10.71%. The company reported adjusted earnings per share of $1.55 in second-quarter fiscal 2017, up 13% from $1.37 earned in the prior-year quarter.

Year to date, Rockwell Automations shares yielded a return of 23.7%, outperforming the 22.8% gain recorded by the Zacks categorized Industrial Automation and Robotics sub industry.

Backed by strong performance in first-half fiscal 2017, the company had increased fiscal 2017 sales growth guidance to the range of 4.57.5%. Further, it now anticipates adjusted earnings per share in the range of $6.45$6.75. Compared with earnings per share of $5.93 in fiscal 2016, the mid-point of the range depicts a year-over-year climb of 11%. As the macro environment continues to improve, the consumer and transportation verticals are expected to deliver consistent growth. Heavy industries are anticipated to grow in 2017 despite the prevailing softness in oil and gas and mining.

Rockwell Automations new Connected Enterprise (CE) integrated supply chain management system will be a catalyst. The company is increasing the number of industries, applications and geographies, as well as improving investments to expand the value of CE. With average profitability well above the corporate average, CE sales will be an integral part of Rockwell Automations incremental growth and provide boost to margins over the next few years. Further, it remains active on the acquisition front. The company made three acquisitions during fiscal 2016 Automation Control Products, MagneMotion and MAVERICK Technologies which further strengthened its technology differentiation, increased domain expertise and expanded presence in the markets.

Rockwell Automation continues to target long-term revenue growth of 68%, delivering double-digit EPS growth, return on invested capital (ROIC) of more than 20% over the long term and cash flow of around 100% of adjusted income. These long-term goals will be supported by the companys strategy of diversifying sales streams by way of expanding products portfolio, solutions and services as well as global presence. The company also aims to achieve growth rates in excess of the automation market by expanding its served market, strengthening competitive differentiation, and serving a wider range of industries and applications.

Rockwell Automation, Inc. Price and Consensus

Rockwell Automation, Inc. Price and Consensus | Rockwell Automation, Inc. Quote

Investors seem to be optimistic about Rockwell Automations future prospects, as evident from year-over-year earnings growth of 11.96% for fiscal 2017 and 9.44% for fiscal 2018.

Other Stocks to Consider

Other top-ranked stocks in the same industry include Apogee Enterprises, Inc. (APOG - Free Report) , Deere & Company (DE - Free Report) and Lakeland Industries, Inc. (LAKE - Free Report) . All the three stocks flaunt a Zacks Rank #1 (Strong Buy). You can see the complete list of todays Zacks #1 Rank stocks here.

Apogee has an average positive earnings surprise of 3.41% in the trailing four quarters. Deere generated an average positive earnings surprise of 70.41% in the last four quarters. Lakeland has an average positive earnings surprise of 49.26%.

More Stock News: 8 Companies Verge on Apple-Like Run

Did you miss Apple's 9X stock explosion after they launched their iPhone in 2007? Now 2017 looks to be a pivotal year to get in on another emerging technology expected to rock the market. Demand could soar from almost nothing to $42 billion by 2025. Reports suggest it could save 10 million lives per decade which could in turn save $200 billion in U.S. healthcare costs.

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Rockwell Automation Upgraded to Buy on Bright Prospects - Zacks.com

Does the Fed Think Black Lives Matter? – The American Prospect

Black Lives Matter protesters march in Seattle.

For many Americans, the countrys 241st birthday last week was an unqualified cause for celebration. For many other Americans, however, this Fourth of July was a reminder that United States policy has yet to live up to the Declaration of Independences aspirational language. When the words life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness were written, in fact, many groups of people were excludedincluding enslaved black Americans.

It required our bloodiest war to banish slavery. And while we elected our first black president in 2008, and while todays Congress, though still overwhelmingly white, is more diverse than its ever been, racism persists in all our institutions. A multitude of structural barriers block pathways to economic opportunity across generations of black families, imperil many black Americans physical safety, and diminish investment in black communities and businesses.

Stubborn racial disparities jump out of the data. The unemployment rate for black workers has averaged about twice the unemployment rate for white workers for as long as weve been tracking it. Median income for black households has remained at about 60 percent of median income for White households since the late 1960s (and wage gaps are particularly wide for black women). When it comes to wealth, the difference is even larger and has grown in recent years; median white net worth today is about 13 times as high as median black wealth. Middle-class black families are significantly more likely than middle-class white families to live in high-poverty neighborhoods that suffer from a lack of investment in public goods.

Differences in educational attainment explain only a small fraction of the gaps noted above, but theyre also significant. While test score gaps by race have declined in recent decades and the gap in high school completion by race has almost disappeared, black students are still much less likely than their white peers to both enroll in and complete college. Our criminal justice system, including policing practices, disproportionately oppresses black Americans: Despite being no more likely than people of other races to use or sell drugs, for example, black Americans are arrested for marijuana possession at almost four times the rates of white Americans. Less than 15 percent of the American population is vlack, but in American prisons, black people comprise just under 40 percent of the population.

A black child born into the bottom two-fifths of the income scale is more likely than not to end up in the bottom 20 percent as an adult; similarly, 56 percent of black children born into the middle quintile end up in the bottom 40 percent when theyre older, compared to only 34 percent of middle-quintile white children.

Policies that explicitly target some of these obstacles facing black Americans, like criminal justice reforms and the restoration of voting rights, are a key part of the racial justice agenda. Proposals to help low- and middle-income people across the board are also an important way to push back on these inequalities; since black Americans suffer disproportionate economic hardship, they are disproportionately helped by policies that improve economic security. Weve written about many such proposals on these pages. Raising the minimum wage to $15 by 2024, for instance, would be expected to give 40 percent of black workers a raise. Expansions of safety net programs like SNAP (food stamps), Medicaid, and the Earned Income Tax Credit, which carry long-term benefits for children in the families that receive them, would help millions of black Americans as well. Bold ideas like a federal job guarantee and Medicare For All would, if enacted and realized, substantially reduce disparities in unemployment and health outcomes by guaranteeing that every American had access to a job and health care.

Maintaining full employment conditions in the labor market is also essential for working-age black families. New research from the Federal Reserve underscores both that periods of high unemployment are particularly damaging for black employment and that persistently tight labor markets disproportionately raise black wages, employment, and incomes. In a forthcoming paper with Keith Bentele, we show that the real annual earnings of low-income, working-age black households doubled between 1994 and 2000, from about $4,600 in 1994 to about $9,600 in 2000 (2015 dollars). We estimate that two-thirds of that total earnings growth can be attributed to the tight labor market, which helped connect previously jobless or underemployed people with more work opportunities.

These findings suggest that the Federal Reserve plays a key role in shaping the condition of black lives when it decides whether to maintain full employment. Yes, the central bank must manage its dual mandate: full employment at stable prices. But especially given the low correlation between inflation and unemployment in recent decades, the Fed would do well to consider the racial impacts of its decision-making.

Still, the fact that black Americans would benefit substantially and disproportionately from the policy reforms listed above does not make them sufficient. In a widely read article from a few years ago, Ta-Nehisi Coates made a forceful case for considering reparationsthat is, some form of direct compensation to Black Americans for past injustices that reverberate across centuries and remain embedded in the many institutions noted above. Both the Black Youth Project (BYP) and Movement for Black Lives have outlined reparations proposals more recently. Recognizing that more details need to be worked out and that a reparations program may well include some of the ideas mentioned aboveas the BYP argues, reparations can take many forms, including but not limited to cash payments, land, and economic development, scholarship funds, and textbooks/other educational materials they all recommend the passage of H.R. 40, the Commission to Study Reparation Proposals for African-Americans Act, which would set up a commission to determine the most appropriate course of action. The questions before such a commission would be complicated: How exactly does one make restitution for several hundred years of injustice? What is the appropriate scope of the injustices addressed? Dont Native Americans have a strong claim to reparations as well? But they would also surely be answerable.

Though full democracy remains an elusive goal in America, the persistence of social movements striving to make the country better is also one of Americas enduring attributes. The best way to celebrate our nations birthday is to work together to bring our reality closer to the rhetoric upon which it was founded.

Tax Cuts for the rich.Deregulation for the powerful.Wage suppression for everyone else.These are the tenets of trickle-down economics, the conservatives age-old strategy for advantaging the interests of the rich and powerful over those of the middle class and poor. The articles in Trickle-Downers are devoted, first, to exposing and refuting these lies, but equally, to reminding Americans that these claims arent made because they are true. Rather, they are made because they are the most effective way elites have found to bully, confuse and intimidate middle- and working-class voters. Trickle-down claims are not real economics.They are negotiating strategies. Here at the Prospect, we hope to help you win that negotiation.

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Does the Fed Think Black Lives Matter? - The American Prospect

Young visual artists depict reality, nature – The Express Tribune

LAHORE:A group exhibition called Next, showcasing the works of six young visual artists, is underway at the O Art Gallery and is set to continue till July 21.

Abdul Aziz, a fresh graduate of National College of Arts, says he has used his own body as a medium for his work in mix media to make impressions on paper, treated with Siah Qalam and Neem Rang.

Aziz adds that through this technique, he has achieved a tactile texture of the body with distorted forms formed in the feeling of ambiguity. I see certain elements of fear and suffering in my work and when I stand in front of it, I feel a rush of memories hitting me like waves.

Art brings Lahores Walled City to life

One of the artists, Noorul Ain, reveals she usually finds it hard to explain her artwork in limited words. It has been developed and influenced over time through innumerable interactions with nature, places and people at different stages of my life, particularly during my educational career.

I think studying and practicing arts academically has made me a keen and sensitive observer. I take inspiration from many scenarios and it comes to me from the least expected places.

Noorul Ain adds she is always on the lookout for inspiration and revelations from her own surroundings drive her artistic works. Art has influenced me personally on a very deep level. I now look at and engage with my surroundings differently.

Another artist Haya Zaidis practice involves making works which indirectly question the patriarchal nature of society. For Haya, her work is a commentary on elements such as the universal capitalistic rituals, blind conformity tied to a geographical code of conduct and superiority, selfishness and righteousness present in human nature. She says her inspirational process began by questioning everything.

I was struck by various questions on right and wrong, fair and unjust, faith and fact, personal choice and forceful enforcement, religion and control, minimum wage and modern slavery. These drove my thinking process, she said. Since then, Ive been on a quest to surprise viewers and disturb them at the same time.

Starter forum: Young and old come together for art show

On the other hand, artist Kiran Waseems work is about glimpses of long busy routes while traveling. The images portrayed in her work are often hazy, depicting the chaotic yet attractive city life. Kiran says that she took inspiration from busy lives as well as long routes and distances which are, somehow, so much more relatable.

Travelling has always been the turning point for my subject matter. Like a small moment of joy, which can only be felt and not described in words, has been my inspiration, she said. According to Kiran, her concern is to look at the personal human journey from one place to another in the form of impressions, where everything is temporary and the present does not exist.

Published in The Express Tribune, July 11th, 2017.

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Young visual artists depict reality, nature - The Express Tribune

Mandatory retirement age may be abolished – Irish Examiner

The Citizens Assembly is to tell the Government to abolish mandatory retirement ages, eliminate the time gap between retirement and eligibility for the old age pension, and to link that pension to average earnings, writes Caroline ODoherty.

The recommendations follow a weekend of hearings at which the assembly discussed a wide range of issues to do with income, work, and pensions for older people.

Sixteen proposed recommendations were voted on and will form the basis for a detailed report to be sent to the Dil and Seanad.

On the question of abolishing mandatory retirement ages, 86% of the assembly members present said this practice should be outlawed, while 96% said the anomaly whereby people who are forced to retire at 65 but can not get the State pension until they are 66 should be removed.

A recommendation to seek the introduction of some form of mandatory pension scheme to supplement the state pension was backed by 87%, and 88% said the pension should be benchmarked to average earnings.

A large majority also voted to recommend the rationalisation of private pension schemes.

On general issues of care for older people, the majority voted to recommend the allocation of more resources, with the preference that funding be ringfenced and come from a compulsory social insurance payment.

They want that money spent primarily on improved home care services and supports, and want statutory regulation of the home care sector.

Assembly chairwoman Ms Justice Mary Laffoy said she aims to have the report written and ready for the Oireachtas by the end of September.

The recommendations were decided following presentations by experts in law, finance, social care, and human rights, but not all the ideas put forward made the final cut.

Earlier, the assembly heard from Micheal Collins, assistant professor of social policy at University College Dublin, who suggested a radical change in policy to end tax breaks for people who invest in private pensions.

He said State pensions were the most important source of income for retired people in Ireland, accounting for 53% of their income as compared to 32% from private and occupational pensions.

The policy of supporting private pension provision through tax breaks is skewed towards those on higher incomes, said Prof Collins.

It is worth considering whether society should more efficiently use its resources to provide an improved basic living standard for all pensions, one well above the minimum income standard, and discontinue subsidising private pensions savings.

Justin Moran of Age Action and Ita Mangan of Age and Opportunity argued strongly for the abolition of mandatory retirement ages, and UCD professor Liam Delaney warned that any move towards mandatory pension enrolment for workers should first examine the likely impact on wages, on administrative burdens for small businesses, and on other forms of financial provision that people made for their future such as investments. None of these impacts had off-the-shelf answers, he warned.

The assembly will next meet in September to discuss what Ireland should do about climate change.

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Mandatory retirement age may be abolished - Irish Examiner

Judge calls for abolition of ‘ineffective’ parental supervision orders – Irish Legal News

A Children Court judge has called for the abolition of a law which criminalises parents who can be punished as a result of their childrens misbehaviour.

Parental Supervision Orders may be imposed on parents of children who commit crimes.

Under the Children Act 2001, an order may be imposed if a court is satisfied that a wilful failure of the childs parents to take care of or control the child contributed to the childs criminal behaviour.

The court can tell a parent to adequately and properly control or supervise the child to the best of their ability.

Failure to comply with an order is deemed as contempt of court and can result in fines or periods of custody.

However, District Court judge John OConnor said in an address to lawyers, garda and social workers that there should be no punishment of parents for the offences committed by their children and parental supervision orders should be abolished.

Such orders, he said, are unlikely to contribute to parents becoming active partners in the social reintegration of their child.

They are ineffective in practice and it isnt acceptable internationally to criminalise parents of children in conflict with the law.

Judge OConnor made his comments during a speech entitle What Works and What Could Work Better in Irish Youth Justice Policy at the annual Irish Criminal Justice Agencies conference.

10 July 2017

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Judge calls for abolition of 'ineffective' parental supervision orders - Irish Legal News

After GST launch, J&K plans to abolish toll tax to ease business – Hindu Business Line

State says new tax system is stabilising

New Delhi, July 10:

After implementing the Goods and Services Tax, Jammu and Kashmir is now also planning to abolish toll tax.

It goes against the spirit of GST. Most traders have sought the abolition of toll tax. It also impacts consumers. We will try and take up it up in the next meeting of the Cabinet, said Ajay Nanda, Minister of State of Finance, Jammu and Kashmir.

A toll tax is levied on vehicles as well as goods including consumables entering and leaving the State.

This can be as low as 1 per loaf of bread, or as high as 4,000 per quintal of cigarettes. Similarly, the toll rates on vehicles also vary. The State earned over 3,000 crore from toll tax last fiscal, according to official data.

Toll, mandi charges and fee on vehicle entry into States are not subsumed in the GST and will continue to be charged by local bodies or state governments.

However, opposition parties as well as traders unions have sought that the toll be abolished as it will work as a tax on tax and will hike prices of goods coming into the State.

The removal of toll tax would also mean smoother movement of goods across the State borders.

GST was implemented in Jammu and Kashmir nearly a week after its July 1 launch across the rest of the country.

On July 6, President Pranab Mukherjee gave his assent to the Constitution (Application to Jammu and Kashmir) Amendment Order, 2017. Completing its roll out, the President on July 8 promulgated two Ordinances for extension of Central and Integrated GST to the State.

Nanda told BusinessLine that the businesses in the State are ready for GST and it has been fully implemented in the State.

Taxpayers had been asked to enrol for GST when the registration windows were opened by GST Network.

The new system will take some time to stabilise. We are monitoring the situation, he said, adding that supply of goods to the State is also now normalising.

Nanda said that there are no differences in the structure of the GST in Jammu and Kashmir and rest of the States.

It is the same tax. Some local exemptions will continue, he said.

Since Jammu and Kashmir enjoys a special status under Article 370 of the Indian Constitution, it had to amend its own Constitution for implementing GST.

The State has decided to allow taxpayers with an annual turnover of up to 50 lakh to opt for the composition scheme.

(This article was published on July 10, 2017)

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After GST launch, J&K plans to abolish toll tax to ease business - Hindu Business Line

Why are so many people dying from opiate overdoses? It’s our broken society – The Guardian

Most street opiates (including heroin) are now laced or replaced with fentanyl the drug that killed the singer Prince and its analogues. Photograph: Joe Amon/Denver Post via Getty Images

The number one killer of Americans under the age of 50 isnt cancer, or suicide, or road traffic accidents. Its drug overdoses. They have quadrupled since 1999. More than 52,000 Americans died from drug overdoses last year. Even in the UK, where illegal drug use is on the decline, overdose deaths are peaking, having grown by 10% from 2015 to 2016 alone. The war on drugs continues but its a war were losing.

Most drug-related deaths result from the use of opioids, the molecules that are marketed as painkillers by pharmaceutical companies and heroin by drug lords. Opioids, whatever their source, bond with receptors all over our bodies. Opioid receptors evolved to protect us from panic, anxiety and pain a considerate move by the oft-callous forces of evolution. But the gentle impact of natural opioids, produced by our own bodies, resembles a summer breeze compared to the hurricane of physiological disruption caused by drugs designed to mimic their function.

Most street opiates (including heroin) are now laced or replaced with fentanyl the drug that killed the singer Prince and its analogues, far more powerful than heroin and so cheap that drug-dealing profits are skyrocketing at about the same rate as overdose deaths. The UKs National Crime Agency said that traces of fentanyl have been found in 46 people who died this year. Users dont know what theyre getting and they take too much. Fentanyl is recognised as a primary driver of the overdose epidemic.

Societys response has been understandably desperate but generally wrongheaded. We start by blaming addicts. Then we blame the pharmaceutical companies for developing and marketing painkillers. We blame doctors, for overprescribing opiates, which pressures them to underprescribe, which drives patients to street drugs cheaper, home delivery via the internet, and zero quality control. We say were going to reignite the war on drugs, recognised by experts as a colossal failure from the 1930s onward. We also continue to view addiction as a chronic brain disease, so the benefits of education, social support, psychological intervention, and personal empowerment receive far too little attention. Yes, addiction involves brain change, but ongoing medicalisation does little to combat it.

There has been some progress: There are pockets of activity here and there where prescribed opiates like methadone and Suboxone are made more easily available to addicts. Thats a good thing, because increasingly desperate addicts are often driven to the street, where theyre most likely die. The availability of naloxone, which works as an antidote, is slowly wending its way through the drug policy jungle, providing a simple resource to deal with an overdose on the spot. But in most segments of most communities in the US and elsewhere, it is still too difficult to obtain.

There are smarter answers at hand but also smarter questions to be asked. The overdose epidemic compels us to face one of the darkest corners of modern human experience head on, to stop wasting time blaming the players and start looking directly at the source of the problem. What does it feel like to be a youngish human growing up in the early 21st century? Why are we so stressed out that our internal supply of opioids isnt enough?

The opioid system evolved to allow us to function, not panic or shut down, when we are under threat or in pain. Support from other humans also helps us cope with stress, but that support is underpinned by opioids too. Our attachment to others, whether in friendship, family or romance, requires opioid metabolism so that we can feel the love. Opioids grant us a sense of warmth and safety when we connect with each other.

You get opioids from your own brain stem when you get a hug. Mothers milk is rich with opioids, which says a lot about the chemical foundation of mother-child attachment. When rats get an extra dose of opioids, they increase their play with each other, even tickle each other. And when rodents are allowed to socialise freely (rather than remain in isolated steel cages) they voluntarily avoid the opiate-laden bottle hanging from the bars of their cage. Theyve already got enough.

In short, mammals need opioids to feel safe and to trust each other. So what does it say about our lifestyle if our natural supply isnt sufficient and so we risk our lives to get more? It says we are stressed, isolated and untrusting. Thats a problem we need to resolve.

Many have proposed targeted education, community support and interpersonal bonding through group activities. Johann Haris powerful book, Chasing the Scream, reviews how such initiatives have worked in diverse societies. An intriguing example is the compassionate, blame-free dialogue that has evolved among high-school students in Portugal, highlighting the dangers of hard drugs and urging the most vulnerable to abstain not because theyre going to get in trouble, but because addiction is miserable and dangerous. This dialogue has paralleled the decriminalisation of drug use.

Portugal had an astoundingly high heroin addiction rate 16 years ago. It now boasts the second lowest overdose rate on the continent. Social inclusion actually works against addiction while punishment only fuels it.

But the peculiar appeal of opioids tells us more about ourselves as a society, as a culture, than the tumultuous ups and downs of addiction statistics. Todays young people come of age and carve out their adult lives in an environment of astronomical uncertainty. Corporations that used to pride themselves on fairness to their employees now strive only for profit. The upper echelons of management are as risk-infected as the lowest clerks. Massive layoffs rationalised by the eddies of globalisation make long-term contracts prehistoric relics. I ask the guys who come to the house to deliver packages how they like their jobs. They cant say. They get up to three six-month contracts in a row and then get laid off so the company wont have to pay them benefits.

People pour out of universities with all manner of degrees, yet with skills that are rapidly becoming irrelevant. But people without degrees are even worse off. They find themselves virtually unemployable, because there are so many others in the same pool, and employers will hire whoever comes cheapest. The absurdly low minimum wage figures in the US clearly exacerbate the situation. As hope for steady employment fizzles, so does the opportunity to connect with family, friends and society more broadly, and there is way too much time to kill. Opioids can help reduce the despair.

The opportunity to settle into a viable niche in ones family and ones society is being blown away by the winds of unregulated capitalism in a globalised world. As for the intimacy and trust we humans have always sought in each other, in friends, colleagues, and lovers, the bonds are shaky these days. Even if we have the opportunity to connect were still too stressed and depressed to get to know each other well, to develop trust, to give and receive compassion. Urban life requires juggling high-stress relationships past the point of mental and emotional exhaustion.

The early 21st century offers less structure and stability through religion or extended family than we humans have experienced in millennia. And maybe thats just the way it is. But we dont have to throw away the basic currency of security and interconnectedness entirely. We can build social structures governments, corporations, community organisations, and systems of education and care that encourage stability, hope, and trust in our day-to-day lives. Like the school kids in Portugal, we can offer compassion and inclusion as an alternative over heroin. If we fail to do that, we may as well hook ourselves up to an opioid pump. Just to endure.

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Why are so many people dying from opiate overdoses? It's our broken society - The Guardian

Audi seeks to eclipse emissions scandal with new technology-packed A8 car – Reuters

BARCELONA Battered by its emissions scandal, Audi launched its latest technology-packed A8 luxury saloon on Tuesday, aimed at overtaking rivals Mercedes-Benz and BMW as it struggles to overcome its biggest-ever corporate crisis.

Last week Munich prosecutors arrested an Audi employee in connection with "dieselgate", the latest setback to Volkswagen's (VOWG_p.DE) luxury car arm and main profit driver, after the German government a month earlier had accused Audi of cheating on emissions tests.

On Tuesday Audi shifted the focus back to its products with its top management hosting 2,000 guests in Barcelona to unveil the new A8, whose Level-3 self-driving technology enables the car to completely control driving at up to 60 kilometers (37 miles) per hour, beating the Mercedes S-Class and the BMW 7-Series.

Having slipped behind its two German rivals on global sales last year, Audi has risked stalling without innovation and needed a new prestige product, said Stefan Bratzel, head of the Center of Automotive Management think-tank near Cologne.

"Innovation is key in premium car-making," Bratzel said. "The new A8 will polish the brand's image and line-up at a critical time."

Even Audi acknowledged that amid ongoing investigations, persistent pressure on its chief executive for his crisis management and analysts' criticism of Audi's ageing vehicle design, the new A8 creates an opportunity for a clean break.

"It's gratifying that we are able to set a positive sign for real 'Vorsprung durch Technik', advancement through technology," R&D chief Peter Mertens said.

Mercedes and BMW have accelerated their autonomous-driving development programs with Mercedes owner Daimler joining forces with car parts maker Robert Bosch [ROBG.UL] in April and BMW collaborating with other firms including U.S. parts maker Delphi and chipmaker Intel.

Featuring a more distinctive design and a foot massager for rear-seat passengers, the new A8 heralds the start of a series of redesigns and new model launches at Audi including an electric sport-utility vehicle (SUV) to take on Tesla's Model X, the all-new Q4 and Q8 SUVs and redesigned A6 and A7 model lines.

A source at Audi said development of the A8, which took about five years, suffered from changes at the brand's research and development department, though assiduous work by division heads helped ensure that delays were kept in check. The A8 will reach German dealerships in the fourth quarter.

Audi is on its third development chief since dieselgate broke in late 2015, with Mertens, who took office in May, the brand's fifth R&D boss since 2012.

"The top brass at VW group and Audi are so preoccupied with the diesel issue that the company's management is lastingly distracted," said Christian Strenger, a supervisory board member at Deutsche Bank's retail asset management arm DWS.

With the new A8's retail price up almost 8 percent on its predecessor at 90,600 euros ($103,000), Audi will also struggle to narrow the gap with its traditional rivals, research firm IHS Markit said.

A8 sales in the core markets of Europe, China and the Americas may climb 3.2 percent to 35,571 cars by 2025 from 34,468 next year, IHS said.

By comparison, IHS expects deliveries of BMW's 7-Series to fall 7.6 percent to 52,238 cars by 2025 and deliveries of Mercedes' S-Class to jump 24 percent to 85,389 cars.

S-Class and 7-Series prices start at 88,447 euros and 78,100 euros respectively, according to company data.

(Editing by Greg Mahlich)

WASHINGTON U.S. House Republicans expect to introduce bills later this week that would bar states from setting their own rules for self-driving cars and take other steps to remove obstacles to putting such vehicles on the road, a spokeswoman said.

LONDON Cyber attackers are regularly trying to attack data networks connected to critical national infrastructure systems around Europe, according to current and former European government sources with knowledge of the issue.

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Audi seeks to eclipse emissions scandal with new technology-packed A8 car - Reuters

South Korea says North doesn’t have ICBM re-entry technology – Reuters

SEOUL South Korea's intelligence agency does not believe North Korea has secured re-entry capabilities for its intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) program, a South Korean lawmaker said on Tuesday, disputing Pyongyang's account.

North Korea launched what was said to be a nuclear-capable ICBM last week as it presses on with its nuclear and missile programs in defiance of United Nations sanctions.

Pyongyang's state media said last week's test successfully verified the atmospheric re-entry of the warhead loaded on the test-launched missile, which experts say may be able to reach the U.S. state of Alaska.

However, Yi Wan-young, who is also a member of South Korean parliament's intelligence committee, told reporters during a televised briefing that South Korea's National Intelligence Service has not been able to confirm that re-entry was successful.

"Considering how North Korea does not have any testing facilities (for re-entry technology), the agency believes (North Korea) has not yet secured that technology," he said.

Yi said the agency believed the missile launched last week was a modified version of the KN-17 intermediate range missile that was tested in May.

He also said the agency had not detected any unusual activity at North Korea's Punggye-ri nuclear test site.

(Reporting by Se Young Lee; Editing by Paul Tait)

DOHA U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson told reporters in Doha on Tuesday that Qatar had "reasonable" views in the month-old diplomatic row with Arab neighbors and he was hopeful of progress toward a resolution.

BERLIN Germany welcomes signs the United States is engaging with Russia on Ukraine and Syria, but worries it will struggle to play a constructive role as long as its policy aims remain confused and the furor rages on over Moscow's role in the U.S. election, a senior German official said.

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South Korea says North doesn't have ICBM re-entry technology - Reuters

Why technology is driving the City’s office boom – Telegraph.co.uk

In the past month, the pace of change in Londons office market has moved up a gear.

Despite the start of the Brexit negotiations, uncertainty on the future of Londons financial cluster, and the inconclusive general election result, demand for office space has increased.

Office demand in the first half of 2016 was 6.4 million sq ft up from 5.5 million sq ft in the six months to June2016.

On the face of it, this feels disingenuous, given the very real obstacles facing the London economy. While no one has seen the final Brexit deal, one would have to be a huge optimist to imagine the capital will not lose some financial jobs to EU cities like Dublin or Frankfurt.

Yes, the London office market would probably be seeing higher demand today without the political uncertainty, but Brexit has not been an insurmountable barrier to doing deals.

This is because in the property world now, the bread-and-butter...

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Why technology is driving the City's office boom - Telegraph.co.uk

How technology is being used to fight disease-carrying mosquitoes – Hindustan Times

American technology companies are bringing automation and robotics to the age-old task of battling mosquitoes in a bid to halt the spread of Zika and other mosquito-borne maladies worldwide. Firms including Microsoft Corp and California life sciences company Verily are forming partnerships with public health officials in several US states to test new high-tech tools.

In Texas, Microsoft is testing a smart trap to isolate and capture Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, known Zika carriers, for study by entomologists to give them a jump on predicting outbreaks. Verily, Alphabets life sciences division based in Mountain View, California, is speeding the process for creating sterile male mosquitoes to mate with females in the wild, offering a form of birth control for the species.

While it may take years for these advances to become widely available, public health experts say new players brings fresh thinking to vector control, which still relies heavily on traditional defenses such as larvicides and insecticides. Its exciting when technology companies come on board, said Anandasankar Ray, an associate professor of entomology at the University of California, Riverside. Their approach to a biological challenge is to engineer a solution.

Pregnant women are at greater risk of contracting Zika virus. (Shutterstock)

The Zika epidemic that emerged in Brazil in 2015 and left thousands of babies suffering from birth defects has added urgency to the effort. While cases there have slowed markedly, mosquitoes capable of carrying the virus Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus are spreading in the Americas, including large swaths of the southern United States. The vast majority of the 5,365 Zika cases reported in the United States so far are from travellers who contracted the virus elsewhere. Still, two states Texas and Florida have recorded cases transmitted by local mosquitoes, making them prime testing grounds for new technology.

In Texas, 10 mosquito traps made by Microsoft are operating in Harris County, which includes the city of Houston. Roughly the size of large birdhouses, the devices use robotics, infrared sensors, machine learning and cloud computing to help health officials keep tabs on potential disease carriers. Texas recorded six cases of local mosquito transmission of Zika in November and December of last year. Experts believe the actual number is likely higher because most infected people do not develop symptoms.

Pregnant women are at high risk because they can pass the virus to their foetuses, resulting in a variety of birth defects. Those include microcephaly, a condition in which infants are born with undersized skulls and brains. The World Health Organization declared Zika a global health emergency in February 2016.

The Microsoft machines differentiate insects by measuring a feature unique to each species: the shadows cast by their beating wings. When a trap detects an Aedes aegypti in one of its 64 chambers, the door slams shut. Other companies, meanwhile, are developing technology to shrink mosquito populations by rendering male Aedes aegypti mosquitoes sterile. When these sterile males mate with females in the wild, their eggs dont hatch. The strategy offers an alternative to chemical pesticides. But it requires the release of millions of laboratory-bred mosquitoes into the outdoors. Males dont bite, which has made this an easier sell to places now hosting tests.

At MosquitoMates labs in Lexington, immature mosquitoes are forced through a sieve-like mechanism that separates the smaller males from the females. These mosquitoes are then hand sorted to weed out any stray females that slip through. Thats basically done using eyeballs, said Stephen Dobson, MosquitoMates chief executive.

Enter Verily. The company is automating mosquito sorting with robots to make it faster and more affordable. Company officials declined to be interviewed. But on its website, Verily says its combining sensors, algorithms and novel engineering to speed the process. Verily and MosquitoMate have teamed up to test their technology in Fresno, California, where Aedes aegypti arrived in 2013.

Officials worry that residents who contract Zika elsewhere could spread it in Fresno if theyre bitten by local mosquitoes that could pass the virus to others. That is very much of a concern because it is the primary vector for diseases such as dengue, chikungunya and obviously Zika, said Steve Mulligan, manager of the Consolidated Mosquito Abatement District in Fresno County. The study, which still needs state and federal approval, is slated for later this summer.

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How technology is being used to fight disease-carrying mosquitoes - Hindustan Times

Saving Face: Investment in Recognition Technology Heats Up in China – Wall Street Journal (subscription)


Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Saving Face: Investment in Recognition Technology Heats Up in China
Wall Street Journal (subscription)
SHANGHAIA Chinese startup that sells facial recognition systems to police forces secured venture-capital funding that values it at more than $1.5 billion, underscoring the sector's emergence as one of technology's hottest areas of interest. Beijing ...

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Saving Face: Investment in Recognition Technology Heats Up in China - Wall Street Journal (subscription)

Intel seen losing to Nvidia amid ‘tectonic shift’ in technology – MarketWatch

Computing is undergoing a massive shift, and the company known for making the brains behind many of the worlds computers and servers has not shifted as fast as competitors.

Jefferies equity analyst Mark Lipacis came to that conclusion Monday, reporting in a note that Intel Corp. INTC, -0.36% stands to take a hit in its data-center business amid a move to a new computing paradigm focused on artificial intelligence and connected devices that he believes represents a tectonic shift in technology. Instead, Nvidia Corp. NVDA, +0.03% is best-positioned to be the chip leader in the new landscape, Lipacis wrote.

With dominant market share in the data center, we think Intel has the most to lose as the industry shifts, Lipacis wrote in the more all-encompassing note in a pair issued Monday morning, while suggesting that Nvidia is years ahead of its competition.

A shorter note included a downgrade of Intel, from hold to underperform, and dropped Jefferies price target on the stock to $29 from $38. Intel stock declined to a 52-week intraday low of $33.23 in Mondays session following the downgrade, before closing down 0.7% at $33.65. Shares have dropped 6% in the past three months, as the S&P 500 index SPX, -0.22% has gained 3%.

Lipaciss thesis on the semiconductor industry is that computing paradigms undergo dramatic shifts roughly every 15 years, with mainframe-focused technology giving way to minicomputers and then personal computers, and later to mobile phones and cloud data-center architecture. While Intel was a dominant player in the second and third epochs of the computing era, with its chips finding a home in PCs and data-center servers, Lipacis believes the current shift to parallel processing and the so-called Internet of Things will belong to different chip makers.

Dont miss: Nvidia upgraded as cybercurrency miners go bonkers for its chips

Parallel processing has been important to the development of AI-focused developments in neural networks and deep learning, with the ability to work faster in tandem than the single microprocessor architecture espoused by Intel for the past two decades. With connected devices scattered throughout the world collecting data, the advanced computing techniques developed through those efforts will be better able to crunch and understand that data, which Lipacis believes will become a core function of technology.

We believe we are at the start of the fourth tectonic shift now, to a parallel processing/IoT model, driven by lower memory costs, free data storage, improvements in parallel processing hardware and software, and improvements in AI technologies like neural networking, that make it easy to monetize all the data that is being stored, he wrote.

While Intel offers parallel processing solutions and plans to launch new chips aimed at data centers this year, Lipacis believes the worlds largest chip maker is too far behind other players that jumped on the trend earlier.

We think those companies that have architected their hardware and software platforms from the ground up for parallel processing are best positioned to benefit, Lipicis wrote, specifically mentioning Xilinx Inc. XLNX, +0.28% Cavium Inc. CAVM, +0.74% and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. AMD, +0.98% as beneficiaries, along with Nvidia. Jefferies upgraded Xilinx and Cavium to buy ratings in conjunction with the note while maintaining a buy rating on Nvidia with a $180 price target.

Read also: Upcoming Nvidia cryptocurrency GPUs pose a threat to AMD

Nvidia may be the first major tech company to find large financial gains from AI, as its server revenue nearly tripled year-over-year in the most recently reported quarter, thanks to large cloud players like Alphabet Inc.s Google GOOGL, -0.11% GOOG, -0.23% and Amazon.com Inc.s AMZN, -0.70% Amazon Web Services gobbling up its graphics-processing units for advanced workloads.

Those gains have helped spark a huge jump for Nvidia stock, which is up 57.2% in the past three months and more than 200% in the past year. Shares increased another 4.7% Monday, after Needham analyst Rajvindra Gill pushed his price target to $200 from $130.

Gill focused more on another business Nvidia has championed with its AI focus, self-driving cars. Gill wrote that Nvidias deal for autonomous-driving technology with Toyota Motor Corp., announced at the chipmakers annual GTC conference in May, could bring in $1 billion to $1.7 billion in revenue during the next two years, based on discussions with Toyota execs on their plans to deploy the technology.

See also: Nvidia forges more partnerships with auto makers for self-driving tech

Intel is also trying to catch up to Nvidia in self-driving cars, with its $15.3 billion bid for Mobileye NV MBLY, +0.02% . That deal has not yet closed.

As Nvidias stock price has skyrocketed, so have analysts price targets on the stock. The average target price for Nvidia was $93.30 at the end of last year, and is now $135.16, according to FactSet.

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Intel seen losing to Nvidia amid 'tectonic shift' in technology - MarketWatch

Fire crews report progress – Rutland Herald

CalFire firefighter Jake Hainey, left, and engineer Anna Mathiasen watch as a wildfire burns near Oroville, Calif., on Saturday. AP PHOTO

OROVILLE, Calif. Following a searing weekend, slightly cooler temperatures and diminishing winds were helping firefighters Monday as they battled several California wildfires that have forced thousands of residents to flee. Crews also made progress on wildfires in Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico.

Crews in California made progress overnight on a blaze that swept through grassy foothills in the Sierra Nevada, about 60 miles north of Sacramento.

Containment was up to 35 percent, said Mary Ann Aldrich, spokeswoman for the state fire protection agency.

About 4,000 people remain under evacuation orders. But Aldrich said if winds continue to die down, authorities are hopeful some will be able to return to their homes Monday.

The fire has burned nearly 9 square miles of grass, injured four firefighters and destroyed at least 17 structures.

The area burning was southeast of Oroville, where spillways in the nations tallest dam began crumbling from heavy rains this winter and led to temporary evacuation orders for 200,000 residents downstream.

It leaves you feeling like you cant catch a break, said Sharon Reitan, who sought shelter at an evacuation center with her boyfriend Sunday night.

They were in Oroville on Friday when the fire broke out and roads to their hillside homewere blocked. Theylater saw photographs of their home burned to the ground.

The wildfire was one of more than a dozen across California that about 5,000 firefighters battled Monday.

In Southern California, at least 3,500 people remain evacuated as a pair of fires raged at separate ends of Santa Barbara County. The largest of the two has charred more than 45 square miles of dry brush and is threatening more than 130 rural homes. Its 15 percent contained.

The fires broke out amid a blistering weekend heatwave that toppled temperature records and made conditions dangerous for firefighters. Slightly cooler weather was expected to give crews a break in the coming days.

About 50 miles to the south, a 17-square-mile blaze shut down State Route 154, which was expected to remain closed for days. Its just 5 percent contained.

At least 20 structures burned, but officials didnt say if they were homes.

The fire broke out near a campsite and sent hundreds of campers scrambling, including about 90 children and 50 staff members at the Circle V Ranch who had to take shelter until they could be safely evacuated.

Some of the firefighters working to contain the Santa Barbara County blazes were sent to nearby San Luis Obispo County when a fire broke out Sunday and threatened numerous structures near the town of Santa Margarita. Officials said the fire burned less than 1 square mile.

The fight against a wildfire that temporarily forced the evacuation of hundreds of people near the resort town of Breckenridge, Colorado, is winding down.

Firefighters had built containment lines around 85 percent of the blaze as of Monday, and residents of nearby homes were no longer on standby to evacuate. Crews and equipment were starting to be sent to other fires burning around the West.

The fire 2 miles north of the Breckenridge ski area hasnt spread significantly was burning on less than 1 square mile.

Elsewhere, residents who fled a rural Arizona community over the weekend because of a wildfire that destroyed three homes have returned.

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Fire crews report progress - Rutland Herald

Slow Food Nations to Take Stock of Progressand Challengesof the Growing Food Movement – Civil Eats

When an estimated 50,000 activists, eaters, and food systems thinkers gathered for Slow Food Nation in San Francisco in 2008, it was with the goal of catalyzing a huge shift in how Americans perceive and prioritize food. And, by many accounts, it worked.

Nine years later, farm-to-plate is a household term, but greenwashing and localwashing is nearly as abundant as farmers market kale. Nearly every week we hear examples of the way the food industry has responded to consumers questions about the source of their foodin both real anddisingenuous ways. And after eight years of forward movement in Washington, D.C., the Trump administration is now hard at work to slash regulationsand funding in rural areas, create a climate of fear among immigrant farmworkers, and do away with recent school lunch gains, potentially setting food systems progress back a generation.

Its against this national backdrop that Slow Food USA, the domestic branch of the international group founded by Carlo Petrini, is hosting its latest national gathering. Slow Food Nations will bring together approximately 500 food and farm leaders from around the nation (and several from outside the U.S.) for an internal summit in Denver, Colorado, followed by a three-day street festival on July 14-16.

The plan, says Richard McCarthy, executive director of Slow Food USA, is to reach those whove just come to the table and seek how best to navigate good food choices. And with interactive workshops, tastings, farm tours, educational talks, and hosted meals, the organization will likely reach that goal. But at a time when food is one of the more accessible lenses on justice, the groupand the larger food movementhas higher ideals as well.

Our goal is to present food as a bridge in this age of walls so that visitors can experience food traditions and the people they represent, says McCarthy. The street festival includes several events focused on food sovereignty and food justice, thanks in part to partnerships with groups such as the Turtle Island Slow Food Association, which McCarthy describes as a relatively new assembly of First Nations advocates and experts who are working for food sovereignty.

Alice Waters, chef and owner of the iconic Chez Panisse restaurant in Berkeley, California, and founder of The Edible Schoolyard Project, is going to cook a meal for Slow Food leaders in hopes that she can encourage the group to get on the same page about the value of free, sustainable school lunch for all students K-12.

Im going to pretend theyre in sixth grade, says Waters,who has served as a vice president of Slow Food International since 2002. Im going to serve them a Mexican meal like we could in a local school. Ill buy all the food in Colorado and connect it to the academic study of the three-sisters agriculturebeans, corn, and squash growing together.

The larger goal, she says, is tomake school lunch an academic subject and a part of the curriculum.This provides a nourishing school lunch to all children and, most importantly, gives them time to sit down and eat together.

These are essential places for social justiceat the school cafeteria table and in the fields, she told Civil Eats. When we provide our children with free school lunches and pay the organic farmers and workers fairly and directly, we are focused on ending childhood hunger and supporting the people who take care of the land. I would love for that idea to be embraced by the whole Slow Food movement, so we are all united and were going there together.

Decade of Change

The gathering in Denver will be a place to take stock of the last decade of change and growth in the good food movement. Waters points tothe online Edible Schoolyard Network, which today consists of 5,500 school gardens, kitchens, school cafeterias, and academic classrooms worldwide, as an example of this very real momentum.

McCarthy says the movement should be proud of what it has accomplished. Ten years ago, school gardens, DIY baking and canning, farmers markets as strategic mechanisms to trigger consumer change for vulnerable families these were considered to be boutique, fuddy-duddy, or distractions from the real issues, he says. But, he adds that the combined effects of civil society persistence, growing market pressures, and occasional wise public policies have conspired to aid everyday people make the cultural shift to begin to value food differently in our lives. These changes are especially remarkable given how little funding has gone into the effort, says McCarthy.

Chef and author Deborah Madison, who is participating at Slow Food Nations, has also seen an expansion. There are competitive cooking shows, school gardens, more home gardens, greater awareness of GMOs and the dangers they represent to us and other living creatures, she says. There are now over 9,000 farmers markets, and for some there is much more awareness about where our food comes from and a keenness to know; for others, there is still a big disconnect.

Waters agrees that not all the awareness is positive. She sees greenwashing from fast-food companies that are trying to take the value of our movement and apply it to the way theyre selling food thats not real, with an effort to deceive rather than inform.

Moving Forward

Slow Food began in 1986 when Petrini and a group of activists staged a protest at the planned site of a McDonalds at the Spanish Steps in Rome. That history of resistance, says Ricardo Salvador, director of the Food & Environment Program at the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), offers an opportunity to continue thinking about whats behindthe curtain.

That self-awareness and alternative worldview rooted in egalitarianism and ecology is needed now, as ever, says Salvador, who will be speaking on two panels with his colleagues Jos Oliva of the Food Chain Workers Alliance (FCWA) and Navina Khanna of the HEAL Food Alliance. Both UCS and FCWA are members of the burgeoning alliance, which seeks to transform the food system from a perspective that is rooted in social and racial justice.

As Salvador sees it, the U.S. is at a crossroads and must decide whether government exists to serve the public good and well-being, or to concentrate wealth and protect the interests of a plutocracy. Issues as fundamental as the survival of any semblance of democracy are at play in the evolution of the food system. Slow Food Nations should provide us all an opportunity to discuss these existential matters and develop shared strategies appropriate to our times.

FCWAs Oliva agrees. Slow Food has grownideologically and materiallytremendously since its beginnings and is now poised to take on larger issues of inequity, ecological devastation, and overall health created by our current food system, he says. With its hundreds of conviviums (chapters) around the nation, he believes the organization has the potential to bring along millions of people into a deeper understanding of what is wrong with our food system and how it can be healed.

Despite that, 86 percent of workers report earning subminimum, poverty, and low wages, resulting food high rates of food insecurity, Oliva adds, the people behind our meals are still not at the forefront of most eaters minds when it comes to issues of equity or fairness in the food system.

This vision would be a far cry from the wine-and-cheese-club image that Slow Food has often been subject to over the years.

This caricature conforms rather nicely with similar arguments intended to discredit proponents of the soda tax, tobacco legislation, and other excesses of the nanny state. So, first of all, its a purposeful and cynical portrait of us as elitists, says McCarthy. And yet, he makes clear that the organization is still focused on promoting the idea of a universal right to pleasure, and the Denver event is clearly an effort to balance foodie culture (or cocktail culture) with more thought-provoking discussion. A group of coffee-focused panelists will look at the beverage through a climate change lens, for instance.

In the end, McCarthy is clear about the fact that the delicious part of Slow Foods work is as important to the organization as the political. [Slow Foods] ideas are more relevant than ever before; and people are thirsting for change, he says.

However, it might actually be in the gentler side of our work where we matter most. People are overworked, overstimulated by technology and the 24/7 world, and desperately lonely. Food should be valued as a source for profound joy; it should be valued as an important sense of identity; and finally, it should be used as a bridge between people whove lost track of what we may have in common, McCarthy says. The growing interest in food as identity and entertainment is an opportunity to forge new ties, new shared history, and a new politics that finds place for people, their dreams, and hope.

Civil Eats is a media partner of Slow Food Nations.

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Slow Food Nations to Take Stock of Progressand Challengesof the Growing Food Movement - Civil Eats

Butch Jones, Tennessee players defend program’s progress [video] – Chattanooga Times Free Press

Related Article Wiedmer: Can positive leadership from coach Butch Jones lift the Vols? Read more

HOOVER, Ala. Hundreds of reporters lurked, waiting for Butch Jones, the third and final coach to appear in the main hall on the first day of SEC media days, armed with questions like, "What do you think you've got to do to take that next step, you know, to get to Atlanta?"

One inquiry centered on where the 2017 Tennessee football team will turn for leadership with six NFL draft picks departed from a team that fell short of Atlanta, site of the SEC championship game.

Another question concluded bluntly with "Do you view that last season as a disappointment?"

Jones came prepared with answers from a perspective that reached further into the past than a 2016 season derailed by losses to South Carolina and Vanderbilt that was the subject of many questions Monday on the first day of the annual preseason frenzy at the Wynfrey Hotel.

"I think if you step back and really look at the narrative, there are a lot of great things and a lot of positive momentum that continues to really progress in our football program," Jones said.

The narrative he pitched goes back to December of 2012, after Derek Dooley's three losing seasons as coach. Tennessee, Jones accurately recalled, was perilously close to being penalized for subpar performance in the Academic Progress Rate when Jones accepted the job. He and his staff have corrected the classroom woes.

"And then on the field, we're very proud of the fact that it's very, very difficult to win in the Southeastern Conference, and we're one of only three programs that have won nine games two years in a row," Jones said. "We've been very fortunate to have three straight bowl victories for the first time in 20 years in our great program's history and tradition."

But as Jones enters his fifth season as the Volunteers' coach, nine-win seasons and improved APR scores are not what he sees as the jewels of the Vols' future.

"There's so much more out there to be accomplished, and we've only started," he said. "And that's what I like about this year's football team, is there they're very, very driven, very, very motivated."

He painted a picture of progress, stopped short of calling 2016 a disappointment and laid out an optimistic view of the future that will first be carried out by a 2017 team he described as "blue collar" and "workmanlike."

The players he brought to the media event seemed to fit that description. Defensive tackle Kendal Vickers, a relatively unheralded high school prospect, has been a steady contributor for three seasons. He enters his senior year without the preseason accolades garnered by players such as Derek Barnett last year.

"Those guys are great, but they're not on the team anymore, so we've got to deal with it," Vickers said, referencing Barnett and other departed defensive playmakers. "We've got great players on our team now and guys that can step up and play those roles."

Tennessee's player delegation also included cornerback Emmanuel Moseley and offensive lineman Jashon Robertson and stressed a "next man up" mentality within the locker room.

Last year's team was led by stars. This year's team, Jones, said, will be led by committee.

"Leadership is the key to any successful football team, and we do have to replace some individuals there," he said. "But that's the exciting thing about this football team is it's really been leadership by the entire team. It started with our 17 seniors. They've done a great job of really educating our younger players about the standards and expectations within our football program, and this is probably the best collective leadership that we've had in our football program to date."

Jones apparently avoided any questions about his job security. But Vickers was asked about the sentiment that Jones could be on the "hot seat" this season.

He, too, took a broad view in assessing the job performance of his head coach.

"It's a little disrespectful," Vickers said. "When I got here, we were 5-7 and I was redshirted. Things were bad. For us to win three straight bowl games, us being 9-4, we haven't won every game and we go out there to win every game. He's changed this program so much, and he's done everything he's possibly been able to do to change the culture at Tennessee."

Contact David Cobb at dcobb@timesfreepress.com.

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Butch Jones, Tennessee players defend program's progress - Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tillerson Says Syria Progress Could Be Replicated With Turkey – Bloomberg

The U.S. and Turkey are beginning to rebuild trust and could come to an agreement about northern Syria, where the U.S. backs a Kurdish militia that Turkey considers a terrorist organization, U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson told staff at the U.S. consulate-general in Istanbul.

I think were beginning to rebuild some of that trust that we lost in one another: they lost our trust to a certain extent, we lost theirs, Tillerson said on Monday while in Istanbul to attend an oil conference. Were making some progress down in Syria, were hopeful that we can replicate that with Turkey on some areas in the north part of Syria.

Tillersons remarks come after a meeting in Hamburg between President Donald Trump and Russias Vladimir Putin delivered a cease-fire in southwest Syria. Putin, the most significant backer of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, called the deal a breakthrough on July 9. In a tweet the following day, Trump said the cease-fire seemed to be holding and many lives can be saved.

The U.S.-Turkey relationship has been strained by the U.S. partnership with the Syrian Democratic Forces, an umbrella opposition group whose main fighting force is the Kurdish YPG. The U.S. chose to partner with and arm the YPG for an assault on the Islamic States stronghold of Raqqa despite Turkish protests and offers that it could provide an alternative military option. The YPG is affiliated with the PKK, a Kurdish group that has been fighting for autonomy inside Turkey since 1984, and which both Turkey and the U.S. consider a terrorist organization.

Tillerson said he hoped for an improvement in ties between the two allies after some six hours of meetings with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on three different occasions.

Our relationship here in Turkey, which has been under some stress for some time, I hope we are beginning to put it on the mend, he told the consular staff. This is an extraordinarily important relationship to the United States for many, many reasons that you would well understand, from a security standpoint to the future economic opportunities as well, and the important geography just by luck of mother nature that the citizens of Turkey occupy at this crossroads of the world.

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Turkey, the only Muslim-majority member of NATO, borders Iran, Iraq and Syria to its east and Greece to the west, making it the main land buffer between the Middle East and Europe. The nation hosts some 3 million refugees from the Syrian and Iraqi conflicts and has suffered dozens of terrorist attacks since the Syrian war began, prompting the U.S. to draw down consular staff in the country and order families home.

I know were not back to full normalization yet but were working on it," Tillerson told them, thanking them for operating in what he called a challenging post. I want to thank our Turkish nationals who I know in particular are operating under some very difficult conditions as this relationship has been strained.

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Tillerson Says Syria Progress Could Be Replicated With Turkey - Bloomberg

Film Review: War for the Planet of the Apes – Consequence of Sound (blog)

Cast

Andy Serkis, Woody Harrelson, Steve Zahn

At some point, the balance of our planet turned, and everything down to the title ofWar for the Planet of the Apesmakes this abundantly clear.Where Earth was once a human planet, and the time of apes rose and dawned, now the tide has shifted. Now humanity must affirm itself against a civilization sliding away from it by the day. If the first two films argued for mankinds inability to restrain itself from pursuing a final reckoning, this is a film about what happens when mankind gets everything it asked for and more still. This is no longer a planet of humans, it is a planet of apes. Each encounter simply inches both species further beyond the rubicon theyve already crossed.

War for the Planet of the Apes is a bleak summer blockbuster even by the increasingly nihilistic standards of the last two installments. One film envisioned a world in which humanitys desperation to stave off old age begat something dangerous, and then another saw man blow past a series of final exits on its way to obsolescence. Much of humanity has perished by the time the film begins, and the majority of those remaining have been driven mad by survivalism, enlisted into military tribes of ape hunters. Where the apes once lived in fear of humanity, now humanity lives in fear of its own future.

In this same way, Caesar (Andy Serkis) worries about what will come of the apes. Mankinds numbers may be dwindling, but their desperation has made their armies vicious. Even at the beginning of War, Caesar still attempts to reach some kind of armistice, knowing how futile his attempts will likely be. When a squadron of humans moves hazardously close to their long-held encampment in the woods, Caesar sends them away with a clear warning: Leave us the woods, and the killing can stop. But for The Colonel (Woody Harrelson), there is no end as long as a single ape continues to walk the Earth. Soon the bloodshed of so many battlefields follows the apes home, and Caesar is forced to deal with the displacement of his kin, and the violent road to any future they might have.

The terror of Planet of the Apes as a concept was always borne from mans anxiety about its end. From its birth during Vietnam to its post-apocalyptic echoes of a nuclear holocaust, the series has long been rooted in the possibility of man destroying itself as a matter of natural course. War takes that concept to its logical ends, but one of director Matt Reeves many bold choices (alongside co-writer Mark Bomback) is to frame much of the pivotal human drama in the films background. There are only two notable human characters in the entire film, and one of them is Harrelsons Colonel, a Kurtzian type who believes that humans as they once existed cannot peaceably coexist in a world with the evolved ape. The other is a young girl, Nova (Amiah Miller), whos been left silent by forces that War takes its time in teasing out.

This is a patient film, so much so that War feels nearly radical by modern Hollywood standards. As with Dawn, the apes preferred communication mode of sign language allows for Reeves to build the films power out of conspicuous quiet. When the film spends extended periods of time unfolding its tale with little (spoken) dialogue, the remarkably acute sound design lets the auspicious presence of silence dominate the mix. Where once the sounds of ape-human strife could be heard off in the distance, or dominated the screen, Reeves imagines an emptier world, where the absence of death and the accompanying vacuum of sound fosters its own kind of dread. Accordingly, when fighting does arise and the film grows more hectic, its all the more deafening for Reeves keen manipulation of these dynamics.

Even the new introductions have an aura of sadness around them. Nova is only discovered in the wake of tragedy, and her kindness to the apes is understandably returned with a mixture of empathy and looming unease. Bad Ape (Steve Zahn) offers another perspective on the war, from an ape left to fend for himself without the close-quarters decency of Caesars tribe. That hes rattled to the point of constant alarm is hardly surprising, although Reeves finds a handful of lightly comic moments out of the character throughout. Those are few and far between as the film goes on, however, given that Caesar eventually finds himself captured and pulled behind enemy lines, along with the majority of the remaining apes. His torture and suffering there, compounded by his guilt over his necessary slaying of Koba (Toby Kebbell) in Dawn and the us-or-them reality of the ongoing situation, forces Caesar to question what more he can possibly give to save himself, and his kind.

The thoughtful continuity between films plays another notable role in Wars unsettling portrayal of a conflicts waning days. Central to Caesars arc in this film is Serkis continuously astounding work in the role; whatever debate might have remained about the actors role in the series boundary-pushing motion capture work should hopefully be laid to rest here. Caesar is not just a marvelous creation of special effects (the work on his and the other apes design, by Weta Digital, remains groundbreaking), but a character whos evolved from the star child of a dominant new species to one of the last beings on Earth capable of remembering mankinds onetime decency. Much of that complexity emerges from Caesars gaze, and its not ultimately a VFX who finds it. Its Serkis, and his work here is as powerful as any hes done.

Like any great villain, this ethos is mirrored in the Colonel, who has more than enough reason to fear what might come next. War for the Planet of the Apes may be part of a trilogy thats always taken a sympathetic stance about mans treatment of the apes, but Reeves introduces a moral conundrum that asks far more difficult questions than before. At what point can two opposing groups truly fail to coexist? What is the morality of one beings survival over another? Can there be morality in a binary life-or-death scenario? Harrelson plays him as a man who abandoned such questions and answers long ago, whos chosen the brutal simplicity of genocide or extinction. His fear is real, and this makes it all the more palpable. If the actor has played roles like this one before blithely deadpan in the face of the unimaginable Harrelson nevertheless lends the Colonel a tremor that seethes under his crueler moments. Hes a man who chose to accept savagery out of necessity, and expects no less than the same from those following him.

The most remarkable accomplishment of War, then, is how the film seeks to articulate both sides as clearly as it can. Reeves visualizes the waning human world as a despairing progression of hiding places and mercenary strongholds, where the apes fret about where a migration would even take them and the humans cling to their last bolstered prison encampment as tightly as they can. Caesar is forced to endure the worst of one species to protect another, and the combination of Serkis resonant work and Reeves unflinching direction cement War as one of the more thoughtful and unyielding blockbusters of its time.

As with the previous films, Caesars entire mission is defined by the idea that all beings have a right to live, and live well, and that someday they will. Here its reflected in Bad Apes daffy commitment to goodness, or in the apes protective kindness toward the Nova. (One of the films loveliest scenes features one of its only vibrant swatches of color, as she shares a flower with one of her protectors.) But its also a film with an astute understanding of how cancerous vengeance can be, and how even the best among us can act hideously when pushed to the limits of anger and need. In its way, War also makes a painful case for how avoidable inter-faction violence usually is, and how quickly thats forgotten when such violence erupts.

Reeves and cinematographer Michael Seresin juxtapose the purity of the vibrant white snow surrounding the encampment and the exhaustion of the gunmetal-dark human territory to breathtaking effect. The films color palette may be muted, but War is an impeccably shot film, the uncanny CGI fitting perfectly against the films unforgiving environments. At times the production design is truly eerie, suggesting a world where man exhausted itself and was slowly, quietly replaced. Between the lustrously shot expanses of untouched land and Michael Giacchinos nervous, sometimes dominant score, War builds a world made frightening by its absences.

The humans are so ultimately secondary that some of the films only questionable narrative decisions have a diminished impact. A good bit of the films prison section is built upon some suspect-to-unlikely human decisions and errors; for a legion of futuristic Marines, theyre inept as prison guards to the point of audience distraction. That said, even the panic and indecision of the soldiers can still be tied into into Wars thesis about scared, under-trained warriors who never asked to be placed in their position. Regardless, War has predominantly moved beyond its human characters, for better or worse. (Well argue its the former.) Wartime has no true victors, and War never cheats on its established stakes, and those of the series to date, by attempting to comfort its audience.

War for the Planet of the Apes is a formidable conclusion (if indeed it is) to one of the more well-considered modern series to date. This is a film of difficult, lingering questions and painful revelations. Beyond that, its also a film where a beloved CGI creation is tortured onscreen for dramatic effect. This is pop filmmaking nearing its darkest heights, but verging on its artistic heights as well, a movie that will undoubtedly have its place as long as two nations somewhere around the world are struggling over land or hubris or, as it is here, to endure. It treats the end of the world as the apocalypse weve always been racing ourselves into, and the one we wont be able to prevent even as we see it coming. Yet there is still always another way forward, no matter how much blood is shed. Theres always a new horizon, and a new tomorrow. The only question, then, is how many get to see it.

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Film Review: War for the Planet of the Apes - Consequence of Sound (blog)