Daily Archives: February 27, 2020

B.C. to track the origin and spread of COVID-19 with ‘genomic technology’ – Vancouver Is Awesome

Posted: February 27, 2020 at 1:17 am

The BC Centre for Disease Controls (BCCDC) Public Health Laboratory has announced a newpilot project that will enable researchers to identify and track new cases ofthenovel coronavirus (COVID-19) in British Columbia.

On Feb. 20, Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry reported thatasixthcase of the novel coronavirus hadbeen diagnosed in B.C.after a woman in her 30s returned to the province this week from travel in Iran. However, she addedthat thewoman's presumptive case is relatively mild anda number of her close contacts have already been put in isolation.

So, while the risk of disease spread in British Columbia remains low at this time, the number of laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases worldwide has climbed to over a staggering70,000. As such, the BCCDC has responded by adding, "a critical new dimension to its outbreak response capabilitiesby incorporating genomic analysis into tracking."

Supported by Genome BCs Strategic Initiatives Fund, the$150,000 pilot studywill be able to identify where new cases of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) in B.C. are coming from and monitor any spread in the community.

Found mostly in animals, coronaviruses are a large family of viruses. In humans, they can cause diseases ranging from the common cold to more severe diseases such as Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) and Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS-CoV).

The new coronavirus has been namedSARS-CoV-2, and the disease that it causes is calledCOVID-19. The symptoms ofCOVID-19 are similar to other respiratory illnesses, including the flu and common cold. They include cough, sneezing, fever, sore throat and difficulty breathing.

The BCCDC notes that people can trace their history as a family tree, based on prior knowledge of relationships or the sequence of our DNA the building blocks of all living things. Similarly, the health authority can can place each new strain of a virus on a larger family tree.

"For each new strain, in each new patient, the sequence (of DNA, or related RNA depending on the virus) allows us to place that strain in the larger family tree. If the new strain has a close relative we've seen already in BC, for example, it may be part of a locally-transmitted cluster; if the new strain is more closely related to virus strains recorded in another country, it might be a new introduction to BC. This information enables BCCDC to work with local public health authorities to guide and evaluate interventions. Since this kind of information informs real time decision making, it's essential that this work take full advantage of new rapid, potentially mobile, sequencing technologies," it states.

The new project, "Responding to Emerging Serious Pathogen Outbreaks using Next-gen Data: RESPOND," is designed as a rapid response pilot that will use the fast Oxford Nanopore and other sequencing platforms to simultaneously produce sequence and family tree information.

Leading the team for the pilot project is BCCDC Public Health Laboratory Medical Director Dr. Mel Krajden, one of the investigators from the first team in the world to produce the complete sequence of the SARS virus genome. The team is co-led by UBC faculty Dr. Richard Harrigan, a scientist with decades of experience performing translational HIV studies based on genomics, and Dr. Natalie Prystajecky, a microbiologist overseeing the COVID- 19 test development at the BCCDC.

With SARS, it took the world six months to obtain one virus sequence and BC was first. said Dr. Richard Harrigan. With COVID-19, we are aiming to turn around sequences from each patient in under 24 hours.

This type of project provides an example of the immediate impact Genome BC can have in an emerging public health scenario, like we are seeing for COVID-19, as well as promoting innovative genomic thinking to overcome scientific challenges. This work will improve our ability to respond to this emergency and ultimately benefits public health and the residents of BC, said Prystajecky.

"This experienced team is developing critical tools for response to this and any future outbreaks in BC," said Pascal Spothelfer, President and CEO, Genome BC. "It is a clear demonstration of the power of genomic analysis, and we are proud to be in a position to move it forward quickly."

Prystagjecky adds that it is important for anyone with further questions about the virus to consult the BCCDCCoronavirus(Novel) page. This source gives accurate and up-to-date information about what the virus is, how it is contracted, and what to do to keep yourself safe.

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New Ken Burns doc on genetics explores ethical implications of new treatments, history of human genome – scenester.tv

Posted: at 1:17 am

THE GENE: AN INTIMATE HISTORY

EXECUTIVE PRODUCED BY

KEN BURNS AND DR. SIDDHARTHA MUKHERJEE,

TO PREMIERE ON PBS APRIL 7 & 14, 2020

WASHINGTON, D.C. February 19, 2020 WETA Washington, D.C., the flagship public broadcasting station in the nations capital, announced today thatKEN BURNS PRESENTS THE GENE: AN INTIMATE HISTORY, a two-part, four-hour documentary based on Pulitzer Prize-winning author Dr. Siddhartha Mukherjees book of the same name, will premiere on Tuesdays, April 7 and 14, 2020 from 8-10 pm ET on PBS stations nationwide. The film airs at a critical moment for the scientific community, as geneticists around the world wrestle with the ethical implications of new technologies that offer both promise and peril.THE GENEweaves together science, history and personal stories for a historical biography of the human genome, while also exploring breakthroughs for diagnosis and treatment of genetic diseases and the complex ethical questions they raise.

Groundbreaking treatments will improve the lives of millions of peoplepotentially treating diseases like sickle cellbut there are worries that scientists will take gene-editing technology too far, using it to modify germline DNA in order to enhance certain traits deemed preferable. AsTHE GENEdemonstrates, those fears have already been realized: in November 2018, Chinese researcher He Jiankui stunned and horrified the scientific community with an announcement: he had created the first genetically edited babies, twin girls born in Chinaa medically unnecessary procedure accomplished well before scientists had fully considered the consequences of altering the human genome.

These revolutionary discoveries highlight the awesome responsibility we have to make wise decisions, not just for people alive today, but for generations to come, said Dr. Mukherjee, assistant professor of medicine at the Department of Medicine (Oncology), Columbia University and staff cancer physician at Columbia University Medical Center.At this pivotal moment when scientists find themselves in a new era in which theyre able to control and change the human genome,THE GENEoffers a nuanced understanding of how we arrived at this point and how genetics will continue to influence our fates.

The documentary includes interviews with pioneers in the field including doctors Paul Berg, Francis Collins, Jennifer Doudna, Shirley Tilghman, James Watson, Nancy Wexler and Mukherjee himself. As with Burnss other projects,THE GENEuses a remarkable trove of historical footage, including Rosalind Franklins Photograph 51 from 1952, to track the journey of human genetics. Beginning with the remarkable achievements of the earliest gene hunters and their attempts to understand the nature of heredity, the film traces the history of genetics from Gregor Mendels pea plant studies in the 19thCentury and Watsons and Cricks discovery in 1953 of the structure of DNA to the efforts by Sydney Brenner and Marshall Nirenberg, among others, to understand how the genetic code is translated in human cells. We also witness the massive technological transformation from the 1970s through the 2000s from the sequencing of individual genes by Fred Sanger to the sequencing of the whole human genome. AsTHE GENEintroduces us to the scientists solving these great mysteries, the film also examines the insidious rise of eugenics, which bore horrific results in the United States, Europe and, in particular, in Nazi Germany.

THE GENEjuxtaposes this dynamic history with compelling, emotional stories of contemporary patients and their families who find themselves in a desperate race against time to find cures for their genetic diseases. The film follows the inspiring, heart-wrenching journeys of people such as Audrey Winkelsas, a young scientist born with Spinal Muscular Atrophy researching a treatment for her own condition, and Luke Rosen and Sally Jackson, parents on a tireless quest to raise awareness for their daughters rare degenerative disease. Hopes rise and fall with new discoveries and setbacks, revealing how intimate and profoundly personal this science can be for families affected by genetic diseases.

As it traces groundbreaking developments in genetics that promise to revolutionize life for millions of people,THE GENEalso documents the thorny ethical questions some of these new treatments raise. Today, geneticists find themselves on the brink of curing diseases long thought fatal but given the harrowing history of eugenics, both the scientific community and the public are forced to grapple with the ethical implications of these new technologies. Are there unintended consequences to changing human genomes? Could changes accidentally unleash cancer or some novel new genetic disease? From the prospect of genetic therapies to CRISPR, the film explores the complex web of moral, ethical and scientific questions facing this generation.

The series is directed by Chris Durrance and Jack Youngelson, with award-winning filmmaker Barak Goodman serving as senior producer and Ken Burns as executive producing alongside Dr. Mukherjee.THE GENEhas largely the same production team as CANCER: THE EMPEROR OF ALL MALADIES, which premiered on PBS in 2015 and was the Emmy Award-nominated adaptation of Mukherjees 2010 book,The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer.

THE GENEexplores the ultimate mystery story it unpacks the once-impenetrable science of what makes us who we are, said senior producer Barak Goodman.This is a moment for the general public and the scientific community to engage in a national conversation about the thrilling future of genetics and the ethical challenges posed by new science.

We want people to leave our film feeling both hopeful about these stunning developments and sensitive to the ethical questions facing the field, said directors Chris Durrance and Jack Youngelson.

I was thrilled to reunite with Sid and Barak on this project, said Ken Burns.For me, science, like history, is the exploration of what has come before and the promise of the future.THE GENEuntangles the code of life itself.

THE GENErepresents a groundbreaking opportunity to broaden public understanding of this important subject, and Sid, Ken and Barak are the ideal team to bring the fascinating book to film, noted Sharon Percy Rockefeller, president and CEO of WETA, the producing public media station forTHE GENE.

Integral to the project is an extensive engagement program created by WETA in collaboration with an array of partners, in particular the National Institute of Healths National Human Genome Research Institute, the projects primary Outreach and Education Partner. The project will enable the film to reach an even larger audience, engaging researchers, physicians and patients in the national conversation about the history of genetics and the state of the field today. Partners and funders will host screenings and discussions in cities across the country, working with local public media stations and a wide range of educational, medical and scientific organizations.

In conjunction with the broadcast, WETA is developing an expansive interactive website and social and digital media components, including a multi-media educational initiative designed to engage teachers and students through multiple platforms.including a six-part animated series, that delves into the complexities of genetics. Using mixed illustration styles, each episode will focus on a particular approach to genetics, including How Things Work, When DNA Goes Sideways, The Future of DNA, and more. WETA has also developed a companion teaching guide. The series will be distributed through various digital platforms by the National Institutes of Healths National Human Genome Research Institute, PBS, and member stations.

For more information about KEN BURNS PRESENTS THE GENE: AN INTIMATE HISTORY, visit pbs.org/thegene.

#TheGenePBS

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New Ken Burns doc on genetics explores ethical implications of new treatments, history of human genome - scenester.tv

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Is It as Impossible to Build Jerusalem as It is to Escape Babylon? (Part Two) – CounterPunch

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(Part Two of Three)

An interview withPeter Harrison by GYRUS.

The late French anthropologist Pierre Clastres seems to be a big influence on your work, and I was interested to gather from your work that he seems to be influencing quite a bit of recent anthropology. His theories are a kind of subversion of the usual Hobbes vs. Rousseau dynamic, in that he valorises pre-state societiesbecauseof their penchant for violence since he believes the structure of their violence resists the consolidation of power by a State, and thus preserves autonomy. How did his theories impact your thinking?

I have only read Clastres in very recent years but his work is pivotal to the perspectives I attempt to elaborate in the book. I am not sure that his writing is yet having an influence on modern anthropology in general terms, but it is significant that the Brazilian anthropologist, Eduardo Viveiros de Castro, not only makes clear the key concepts that emerge from Clastres ethnology but has also endorsed Clastres rejection of the teleology of exchange as the basis of all human societal interaction something that was, of course, effectively inaugurated by Marcel Mauss (which is evident if one follows Claude Lvi-Strauss elaborations rather than David Graebers attempt to escape the notion of the immature exchange relationship as the motor of pre-State human behaviour in his gamble on the critique of debt). The archaeologist Severin Fowles, has also, following Clastres, explored the centrifugal logic that appears to lie at the heart of primitive society through his studies of violence in Puebloan societies.

It is by examining Clastres understanding of the violence in primitive society that I have also been able to provide a perspective on the feud in non-State societies that abandons the summoning up of motives derived from the perspectives of economics and exchange, and which also abandons the notion that all societies must operate under the premise of social control. All these perspectives economics (survivalism), exchange, and social control are part of our modern-day logos and they are relentlessly and crudely employed to understand all other social forms and peculiarities. So, scholars as varied as Fernand Braudel, Christopher Boehm, William Miller, and Yuval Noah Harari, feel able to use their modern Sherlock Holmesian magnifying glass to explain the motivations of non-State peoples from their own perspective of exchange, trade, social control, and human nature with no awareness, I contend, that their magnifying glass only reveals to them the human story they are able to see. This does not mean that I am claiming to understand how non-State societies work, this is something I stress as being impossible. But I am claiming that if one takes the actual words and actions of non-State peoples seriously (as Viveiros de Castro does, for example), along with generating an awareness of how the way we live today impacts our view on everything, then there is the possibility of recognising that in other societies other things are going on.

But we can extend Clastres observations of the centrifugality of primitive society, in which dependence in any shape or form, or at any level, is anathema, into an investigation into the problematic that exists within the interconnecting discourses of freedom, universality, and peace. What Clastres tells us, in perhaps a roundabout way, is that all political phenomena since the emergence of the State must always, if become reality, be made manifest as methods for managing the population and that this necessary management naturally and unavoidably denies independence and what we understand as freedom. What I do with this vertiginous insight is to then simply reveal the impossibility of removing the State form in a mass society. This has implications for all political tendencies that claim to offer a way to dispense with the State and/or to institute a realm of freedom, as Marx terms it.

Have you found holes in Clastres model of pre-State societies relying on violence and feuding to keep social units small? Without suggesting that any particular form of contemporary foraging life is necessarily typical of early human life, Clastres case studies were in the Amazon, and cultures there can have very different dynamics to those in other areas, e.g. Inuit, San, or Hadza. Clastres seemed to make no effort to correlate his Amazonian findings with wider ethnography, which seems myopic for generating general theories. Also, what do you make ofDavid Graeber and David Wengrows recent proposition, that seasonal gatherings played a crucial role in the origins of hierarchy?

No, I havent found holes as such in Clastres intuitions in regard to the position of violence, feuding, or war in non-State societies. What I have found is support for his conjectures in the work of diverse anthropologists who do not usually intend to promote such conclusions, or who leave significant questions hanging in the air, such as the question of why tribal rivalries are the last primitive predisposition that generates heat in certain Indigenous communities.

Perhaps if Clastres had lived longer he would have searched for and found evidence for his theories in studies of other societies. I have, of course, recklessly extrapolated his theory across the gamut of non-State societies across the world but, for me, in general, his perspective holds.

In regard to the work of David Graeber and David Wengrow, that you mention, I tend to think three things. Firstly, that there is an assumption based on radical Enlightenment thinking as we have inherited it in the West, particularly as expressed in the idea of communism (or radical democracy, as the French economist and activist, Frdric Lordon, terms it), that it is possible for a mass society to operate on the basis of egalitarianism and individual freedom. Secondly, that there is a deep desire amongst these types of scholars to find justification for their radical democratic views in past social organisation. Thirdly, that if one tries to use the categories of egalitarianism or freedom as descriptors for social organisation in non-State societies one is immediately skewing what those societies may actually be like in favour of the promotion of a teleological bias or political agenda.

This is where, for example, the very fine thinker and anthropologist R. Brian Ferguson takes a dubious route, I think, in his objection to Steven Pinkers Hobbesian judgement of non-State peoples (see Pinkers book,The Better Angels of Our Nature). Ferguson cant accept the violence of non-State societies, and therefore cant connect this to their autonomy and independence, because to do so would be to destabilise his (leftist) argument that it is the State that prevents peace and the universalising of good will (following, and adapting, Rousseau).

In fact, the State does facilitate peace through its strategy of assuming the monopoly of violence, as Max Weber indicated. It is interesting that most leftists around the world will currently be favourably comparing countries with strict gun laws to the present situation in the USA where, for historical reasons, the US government has never apparently quite understood the benefits for a State in more properly disarming the population.

Graeber and Wengrow, whose paper was presented in the same year as Brian Haydens similarly-themed book,The Power of Feasts: From Prehistory to the Present, but extended and published the following year, occupies the same territory in regard to pondering the origin of the State as did tienne de La Botie nearly 500 years ago. La Botie described the establishment of the State as a misfortune caused by the phenomenon of tyrants or gangs taking control of society (by force or deception) that was then normalised by the population as it, slowly or quickly, accepted this new state of affairs. That is: the masses, ultimately, voluntarily,frustratingly and annoyingly, subjected themselves to servitude.

These are the twin myths that underlie radical leftist political discourse, or perhaps theexistential angstat its core. The first one is that bad people gained control over others (or at least that unchecked power corrupts), at some point in the past, inaugurating a tradition of hierarchy and domination. The second one is that the retarded, or false, consciousness of the masses does not allow them to see that they contribute voluntarily to the misery that envelops their lives.

The radical leftist strategy to escape this situation is, therefore, to replace the government, or dispense with it, and to simultaneously or at a later date awaken the consciousnesses of the entirety of the masses.

On the other hand, in reference to how the State began and what Wengrow, Graeber, and Hayden propose, Gilles Deleuze and Flix Guattari, following and extending Clastres intuitions, have suggested that there is no evolution of the State and no one thing, such as fire, or the scattering of seeds, or the invention of pottery, or feasting, or the settlement of an alluvial valley, that initiates the inexorable rise of the State. Instead, they further deepen the mystery, but in another direction, by claiming that the State was always already there. This is how they rationalise that societies that wereagainst the State, in Clastres terms, could exist when there was no discernible State in the area. This is also why, in their conception, the State was able to appear all at once and fully armed.

But their solution to the question of the State is more a provocation than a simplification. The problem, as I see it, is that too much hocus pocus is being invested into what the Stateactually is. So much so, that the notion of the State becomes a mystery like the mystery of God. My proposal is that the State is simply the natural (necessarily managerial) solution to the fact of a large population which is why, for example, the Russian Revolution, irrespective of whether it was a communist or a capitalist phenomenon, became what it always had to be: a managerial solution. The mystery, which is now, under these terms, much more prosaic than the mystery of the origin of the State, is simply how populations got too large.

But there is a spanner in the works of my argument concerning mass society, as I indicate in the book, and it is found in the example of atalhyk as it has been interpreted by archaeology. This, apparently, was a large settlement of perhaps up to 8,000 people at its height that existed for up to a thousand years, from about 6,500 BC, that yields no evidence in the archaeological record of any form of hierarchy. The phenomenon of atalhyk is not only viewed as an egalitarian society by modern scholars, it is also viewed as a warless one. But this makes me wonder about the motivations of the interpreters of atalhyk. It is possible that atalhyk might be used as a practical, historical example of the modern concepts of egalitarianism and individualism as it has been used in the recent past in support of the claimed virtues of matriarchal society in order to gain leverage within, and for radical democratic discourse. If atalhyk is to be used as a proposal for moving present society forward, or as an example of how we might fix our problems, then it must be suspected that atalhyk is being misunderstood, fabricated even, for employment within a modern political agenda.

Drawing on Eduardo Kohns work, you describe capitalism as the most effective system for rendering us soul blind. Could you outline this concept, as something from indigenous cultures which has relevance for understanding the modern world? I found the perspectivism here to haveinteresting resonancewith psychologist James Hillmans use of the word soul.

Marx identified the concept of alienation as being a separation, or estrangement, from ones labour. And for Marx the consistent ability to labour, to work purposefully and consciously, as opposed to instinctively, towards apre-imaginedgoal, was the trait that distinguished humans from other animals. This means also that humans are able to be persuaded to work creatively, with vigour and passion, for the goals of others, or for some higher goal than the maintenance of daily survival. As long as they are able see some tiny benefit for themselves, which might be service to a higher cause, or even just simple survival, since working for the goal of others may be the only means of obtaining food. So, Marxs definition of alienation was more specific than an existential definition because it specified labour as the defining human characteristic. But he was also aware that the general conditions of capitalism made this alienation more acute and that this escalated estrangement of humans from immediately meaningful daily activity led to a sense of being a stranger in ones own world, and not only for the working class. This estrangement (I want to writetranger-ment, to reference Camus, but this is not a word) afflicted all classes, even those classes that seemed to benefit from class society, since capitalism had, even by his own time, gained an autonomy of its own. Life is as meaningless [or better: as anti-human] for a cleaner as it is for the head of a large corporation. This is why Marx stated that all people under capitalism were proletarian.

When I discovered the idea of soul blindness in Eduardo Kohns book,How Forests Think, I was struck by it as another useful way of understanding the idea of alienation. The concept of soul blindness, as used by the Runa people described by Kohn, seems to me to be related to the widespread Indigenous view of the recently deceased as aimless and dangerous beings who must be treated with great care and respect after their passing to prevent them wreaking havoc on the living. In Kohns interpretation, to be soul blind is to have reached the terminus of selfhood, and this terminus can be reached while still alive, when one loses ones sense of self through illness or despair, or even when one just drifts off into an unfocussed daze, or, more profoundly, sinks into an indifference similar to to reference Camus again that described by the character Meursault, inLEtranger.

There are some accounts of Indigenous people first encountering white people in which the white people are initially seen as ghosts, one is recorded by Lvi-Strauss for Vanuatu. Another is embedded in the popular Aboriginal history of the area I live in. On first contact the white people are immediately considered to be some kind of ghost because of their white skin. This may have something to do with practice of preserving the bodies of the dead. This involves scraping off the top layer of skin which, apparently, makes the body white. This practice is described by the anthropologist, Atholl Chase, in his reminisces of Cape York. But for me there is more to the defining of the white intruders as ghosts because of their white skin. These foreigners also act as if they are soul blind. They are like machines, working for a cause that is external to them. For the Indigenous people these strangers do not seem to have soul: they are unpredictable; dangerous; they dont know who they are.

But it is the anthropologist Eduardo Viveiros de Castro who, I think, connects most clearly to the work of James Hillman on the notion of the soul. James Hillman uses the term soul but he does not mean a Christian soul and he is not ultimately meaning the mind. For him the soul is a form of mediation between events and the subject and, in this sense, it might be similar to Bourdieus conception of disposition. For Viveiros de Castro, A perspective is not a representation because representations are a property of the mind or spirit, whereas the point of view is located in the body. Thus, Amerindian philosophy, which Viveiros de Castro is here describing, perhaps prefigures Hillmans notion that soul is a perspective rather than a substance, a viewpoint towards things rather than a thing itself.

To be continued

Originally published in 2018 by Dreamflesh blog.

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Is It as Impossible to Build Jerusalem as It is to Escape Babylon? (Part Two) - CounterPunch

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Veteran Analyst Warns of XRP Crash to $0.20 as Price Stumbles – Ethereum World News

Posted: at 1:16 am

As Bitcoin has collapsed over the past day, so too has Ripples XRP.

Since peaking at around $0.34 last week on the back of FOMO buying, the popular altcoin, the third-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, has plunged as low as $0.26 a drop of around 25%. Ouch.

While the cryptocurrency has already plunged heavy, underperforming Bitcoins relatively measly 10% loss, a top analyst is fearing that more pain is on the horizon.

Legendary commodities trader Peter Brandt recently remarked that XRP is in the midst of forming a potentially extremely bearish chart pattern: a head and shoulders top, marked by two shoulder-like price action and a blow-off top.

Brandt remarked that should this textbook pattern play out, the cryptocurrency could fall to $0.2071 around 23% lower than the current market price around $0.27 for that is where the measured move for this pattern lies.

Should XRP fall this low, that would mean bulls would be put back to the drawing board, for the cryptocurrency would have broken through the crucial daily and weekly support around $0.27.

While a strong drop in something like Ethereum would normally be accompanied by a plunge in Bitcoin, XRP can move independently of the market leader due to certain market dynamics; indeed, in 2019, the altcoin fell 50% against the U.S. dollar, dramatically underperforming Bitcoins 94% yearly performance.

That means for this bearish pattern to unfold for XRP, it isnt a necessity for Bitcoin to fall that much lower than it is now.

While Brandt is warning (not predicting) of a potential crash in the altcoin, there are some sure the asset remains bullish, citing a confluence of technical analysis trends.

Financial Survivalism, the trader who called Bitcoins surge to $9,200 by mid-January weeks in advance, almost nailing the timing and magnitude of the move, said that XRP could be forming a medium-term bull trend.

In a tweet published Tuesday, he posted the below chart, showing that he expects the price of the cryptocurrency to rocket towards $0.70 160% above the current $0.27 price in the coming months.

Financial Survivalism backed this lofty forecast by looking to a few factors on the long-term chart of the cryptocurrency: the Heiken Ashi candles have turned green on a weekly basis, implying reversal, the cryptocurrency has turned a key horizontal into support, and it has broken above a falling wedge pattern, adding to the bull case.

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XRP Could Be on Verge of Explosive Breakout Higher, Taking It 100% Higher – Ethereum World News

Posted: at 1:16 am

XRP hasnt done too well ever since finding a local top last week. Since peaking at $0.34, the price of the leading cryptocurrency has fallen off dramatically, tanking over 20% to as low as $0.265 or so on Wednesday.

Despite this strong pullback, there remain many analysts that expect for XRP to surge even higher in the coming months. Heres why.

Prominent market commentator Cal recently noted that XRPs long-term chart is starting to look bullish, falling through horizontal support that stretches back two years to bounce and smash straight through it shortly afterward, showing that bullish momentum is building. Indeed, he wrote that I think a lot are underestimating the importance of this, accentuating that traders may be sleeping on the performance of the cryptocurrency.

He remarked that this move considered, he expects a pullback into the two-year support around $0.21 to $0.24, prior to a strong bounce that will catapult XRP higher very, very quickly. His rough forecast estimates a $0.60 XRP price by the end of the year.

This forecast was echoed by Financial Survivalism, a trader who called Bitcoins surge to $9,200 by mid-January weeks in advance, almost nailing the timing and magnitude of the move.

He remarked in a recent tweet that e expects for the price of the cryptocurrency to rocket towards $0.70 160% above the current $0.027 price after a pullback to the region that Cal expects, around $0.024.

The analyst backed this forecast by looking to a number of factors: the Heiken Ashi candles have turned green on a weekly basis, implying reversal, the cryptocurrency has turned a key horizontal into support, and it has broken above a falling wedge pattern, adding to the bull case.

While XRPs long-term outlook is starting to look optimistic once again

Indeed, Cals own chart, which is long-term bullish, shows XRP retracing slightly in the coming months, prior to heading higher as 2020 elapses.

Not to mention, a leading analyst of traditional markets, Peter Brandt, recently suggested that XRP could soon print a bearish chart pattern: a head and shoulders top.

Per previous reports from Ethereum World News, Brandt remarked that should this textbook pattern play out, the cryptocurrency could fall to $0.2071 around 23% lower than the current market price around $0.27 for that is where the measured move for this pattern lies.

Should XRP fall this low, that would mean bulls would be put back to the drawing board, for the cryptocurrency would have broken through the crucial daily and weekly support around $0.27.

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XRP Just Flipped a Key Resistance Into Support: Why This is Bullish – Ethereum World News

Posted: at 1:16 am

Over the past two days, the crypto market hasnt fared too well. After peaking last week, the prices of digital assets across the board have tanked. XRP, the third-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, tanked from the multi-month high just a smidgen above $0.34 to as low as $0.265 a hurting loss of over 25%.

Despite this brutal crash, which made the biases of many traders flip negative after a short period of bullish optimism, a strong technical signal just formed that may support buyers moving forward.

While cryptocurrencies seemingly move without rhyme or reason, the movements of these assets (and assets in other classes) can be chalked down to price points here and there; a close above a certain price point can imply bulls are in control, and a close under a certain level may suggest bears are ready to graze, so to speak.

Trader Mexbt recently shared the chart below, which shows XRPs one-day chart with data stretching back to last November. The main point of the chart is that XRP has recently flipped $0.25-$0.26 a crucial monthly resistance into support, boding well for the bullish narrative of the asset.

Indeed, this level could act as a base for the cryptocurrency to rocket higher.

The turning of the monthly resistance into support isnt the only thing that has analysts, well, over the moon about XRPs prospects in the coming weeks and months.

Financial Survivalism, the pseudonymous trader that called Bitcoins January price action to a tee some weeks in advance, argued in a recent tweet that XRP may be on track to hit $0.70 this year.

The analyst backed this lofty forecast by looking to a few factors on the long-term chart of the cryptocurrency: the Heiken Ashi candles have turned green on a weekly basis, implying reversal, the cryptocurrency has turned a key horizontal into support, and it has broken above a falling wedge pattern, adding to the bull case.

While there are these technical factors, everyone and their mother isnt bullish on the cryptocurrency. On the contrary.

Per previous reports from Ethereum World News, veteran commodities analyst Peter Brandt warned his followers that XRP is in the form of printing a textbook a head and shoulders top, marked by two shoulder-like segments of price action and a blow-off top in the middle.

Brandt remarked that should this textbook pattern play out, the cryptocurrency could fall to $0.2071 around 23% lower than the current market price around $0.27 for that is where the measured move for this pattern lies.

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XRP Just Flipped a Key Resistance Into Support: Why This is Bullish - Ethereum World News

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Ripple Is On The Verge Of A New Rally According To Analysts – Somag News

Posted: at 1:16 am

The last few days in the cryptocurrency market have not been very good. The market faced bearish pressure due to huge losses in Bitcoin, Ethereum and XRP.

Especially in this process, Ripple (XRP) fell hard. Popular altcoin fell from its $ 0.34 peak to $ 0.26. With this decline, the bull run in the midway caused negative feelings about cryptocurrency, but despite the losses given, analysts believe that XRP can resume the bull run and bring the bulls back to its ranks.

Preparing for XRP IncreaseThe popular crypto analyst CJ has suggested that signs of the XRP chart may experience a strong upward leap shortly afterwards.

In the chart he shared, the analyst stated that XRP has come to the end of the falling wedge pattern over the past two weeks and is prepared to break upwards. Saying that the support area of the falling wedge is $ 0.24, CJ expects XRP to break this formation up to $ 0.35.

He also shared with you that there is a signal coming from the indicator that XRP will make 1000%, and the popular cryptocurrency analyst HODL2100K on Twitter has announced that the IchiEMA indicator has signaled to buy on the weekly chart of the cryptocurrency. With this signal, XRP had seen an enormous rally from $ 0.20 to $ 3 at the end of 2017.

Another popular cryptocurrency analyst, Financial Survivalism, stated in its latest analysis that XRP will reach $ 0.70 in the short term. On the other hand, technical analysis guru Peter Brandt, who has tried a new analysis method on XRP, thinks that the cryptocurrency will decrease by 23% to $ 0.2071.

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How Polygamy Works | HowStuffWorks

Posted: at 1:14 am

Recently, child welfare officials allege in court documents that the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints outside of Eldorado, Texas, was "rife with sexual abuse, with girls spiritually married to much older men as soon as they reached puberty and boys were groomed to perpetuate the cycle [source: AP]. " In 1997, Warren Jeffs, the former church leader, was prosecuted and found guilty on two charges of rape by accomplice.

On the popular HBO drama "Big Love," Bill Paxton plays a man with three wives who live next door to each other and share a backyard. So polygamy isn't just on fictional TV, but are any of these portrayals accurate?

Today, most Americans think of monogamy as the "normal" form of marriage. But as it turns out, strictly monogamous practices are in the minority. In fact, cultures that practice some form of polygamy outnumber monogamous cultures by the hundreds [ref]. Some critics suggest that the Western practice of frequent divorce and remarrying represents a form of serial polygamy, though most anthropologists consider it serial monogamy -- no one gets married to more than one person at one time.

The Nyinba people of Nepal practice fraternal polyandry. Polyandry is a form of polygamy in which one woman has multiple husbands. In Nyinbian culture, when a woman marries a man, she marries all of his brothers, too. All of the brothers have equal sexual access to the wife, and the entire family cares for the children, although the family may recognize individual brothers as the specific father of a given child [ref]. This kind of marriage structure concentrates the wealth and resources of all the brothers into one family, and also concentrates their parents' land and wealth.

Polygyny, on the other hand, rewards males who have access to greater wealth and resources than others. It takes a lot of work and money to support a large number of wives and the children they produce. In biological terms, such a man is an excellent choice for reproducing and passing his genes on to the next generation, which could be expected to be similarly successful. A man can father many children in a short period, while a woman is limited to one pregnancy every nine months. If a successful man has many wives, he can pass on his genes more often. This is also an advantage in societies where rapid and frequent reproduction is vital for survival. Early Jewish doctrine encouraged polygyny because Jews were a minority and needed to increase their numbers rapidly. Some orthodox Jewish sects advocate polygyny today, and some scholars believe that the Talmud contains passages suggesting tolerance or even encouragement of polygyny.

Islamic tradition addresses polygamy directly. The Koran states that a man is allowed up to four wives, but only if he can support them and treat them all equally. Many Islamic societies continue to allow polygamy, but usually only the most affluent men can afford multiple wives. Westernization has led many younger Muslims to view polygamy as old-fashioned.

In Vietnam, polygamy is not legal, but there's a practical reason for its practice -- decades of war has left the male population severely depleted. Polygamy was also common in China before Confucianism, which supported the practice, fell out of favor. Many African tribes, Native American tribes and pre-Christian Celts practiced polygamy, often without the conservative restraints on the sexual aspects of it that characterize Mormon polygamy [ref].

Next, we'll look at the Mormons, polygamy and the United States legal system.

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How Polygamy Works | HowStuffWorks

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Utah senators unanimously pass bill to decriminalize polygamy

Posted: at 1:14 am

February 19, 2020, 9:01 PM

2 min read

The Utah Senate unanimously passed a bill that effectively decriminalizes polygamy between consenting adults.

The bill would make polygamy an infraction, amending the current penalty punishable by up to five years in prison. Republican Sen. Deidre Henderson sponsored the bill.

It passed Tuesday and now will make its way to the House of Representatives.

Republican Sen. Deidre Henderson looks on during a hearing, Feb. 10, 2020, in Salt Lake City.

Polygamy is most often considered to be a relationship between one man and multiple women, whom he claims are his wives.

Cases where an arrangement stems from threat or coercion, or occurs under fraudulent pretenses, would remain a third-degree felony.

The bill did draw criticism, with some arguing that it wouldn't do enough to protect victims in underage marriages, according to The Associated Press.

Some 30,000 people are believed to be living in polygamous communities in Utah, the AP reported. The state's Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints practiced polygamy in its early days, but abandoned and disavowed the practice in 1890.

Representatives from Utah's State or House didn't immediately respond to requests for comment from ABC News.

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Polygamy bill passes House panel after hearing that asks whether bill will help victims or perpetrators – Salt Lake Tribune

Posted: at 1:14 am

At a hearing before the House Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice Committee, lawmakers voted to clarify that sexual battery committed in a plural household is a felony. The amendment, if approved by the full House, would mean SB102 will have to return to the Senate, where it passed earlier this month.

Under the measure, polygamy would be an infraction an offense less than some traffic tickets if the polygamists were otherwise law abiding. That created a debate Monday among former members of polygamous groups about whether the bill will protect consenting adults or abusers.

Hildale Mayor Donia Jessop, a former member of the polygamous Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, testified in favor of the bill. She told legislators that criminal penalties for polygamists taught people in plural families to fear law enforcement and not to report crimes.

I am not in any way advocating for polygamy, Jessop said. I am making a stand against abuse, and I am standing for my people.

The FLDS is led by Warren Jeffs, who is serving a prison sentence of life plus 20 years in Texas for sexually abusing two girls he married as plural wives. There was discussion in the hearing of how FLDS members have secluded themselves in remote locations.

A Jeffs nephew, Ian Jeffs, testified against SB102. He said the FLDS has not secluded itself because its afraid of law enforcement but so that people can practice polygamy without scrutiny.

Decriminalizing polygamy will only embolden the practice, Ian Jeffs said.

Melissa Ellis left the polygamous Davis County Cooperative Society, also known as the Kingston Group or The Order. She testified against the bill and said her 5- and 6-year-old daughters came to her saying they would marry the same man when they turn 14 and 15 like their grandma and her sister did.

Ellis encouraged the Utah Legislature not to pass a new bill and to give anti-polygamy laws passed in 2017 and 2019 more time to work.

Those bills," she said, have helped the victims.

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Polygamy bill passes House panel after hearing that asks whether bill will help victims or perpetrators - Salt Lake Tribune

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