Monthly Archives: February 2021

Matthew Keene: America can heal when it works to become righteous – GoErie.com

Posted: February 22, 2021 at 2:39 pm

Matthew Keene| Erie Times-News

Calls for unity and reconciliation have gone unanswered in the aftermath of the most contentious presidential election in living memory. What olive branch was extended to supporters of the loser of the 2016 election, some ask. Others counter that the thinly veiled disdain of the victors this time around give lie to the assertion that they are interested in finding common ground.

Both are right. The divisions are too deep, the wounds too painful and the environment too acidic for any reunification of the electorate at a political level.

What ails the U.S. is more than a clash of philosophies of governance, more the traditional battle between political parties in which power swings like a pendulum between the two. It is above all a consequence of the reality that basic human values no longer sufficiently inform our political discourse or social policies.

I am not speaking of the nations founding principles, to which many claim we need to return, nor concerned about reestablishing a commitment to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness and property. None of these can be protected without unity on something even more fundamental: agreement on how people should treat one another.

The values at which we nod our heads in agreement at our churches, our synagogues and our mosques seem to remain in the sanctuary as we head out to work Monday morning. Generosity. Empathy. Compassion. Mercy. Self-sacrifice. Forgiveness. All virtues we claim should govern our lives. But in too many cases, we fall short in our thoughts, in our words, in what we have done, and what we have failed to do. Our examinations of conscience seem to be limited to our personal behavior and do not extend to the actions of our communities within society, concerned with the speck in our left eye while ignoring the log in the right.

The Talmud, the Bible and the Quran are filled with instructions on proper social relationships, both within our own community and with outsiders. Not to oppress strangers. To care for the poor and hungry. To treat others as we wish to be treated.

American individualism has created a tension between the deeply ingrained idea of self-sufficiency and the social responsibility we bear toward one another. Views that helping others creates a culture of dependency, that God helps those who help themselves, that the conditions in which we live are primarily due to our own effort and accomplishment all illustrate the conflict that animates our political debate.

We rage against each other with words that lack charity and reflect a lack of openness to true dialogue. We begrudge the successful their wealth and vilify the poor for failing to drag themselves out from under the circumstances of their suffering. When times are easy, we too often clutch tightly to our purses. When they are difficult and we find ourselves in need of assistance, we conveniently forget we failed to extend a helping hand when we had the opportunity. We act as did the unforgiving servant Jesus spoke of in the Book of Matthew, withholding the mercy and charity to others we have ourselves received without deserving it.

We must do what is right simply because it is right.

We must divorce ourselves from the notion that we are the arbiters of others' lives and dispense our love and aid only when we think they deserve it. Nothing in my moral instruction led me to conclude that the rules governing my behavior are limited to my interactions with those like me. What credit is it to you, Jesus said, when you love those who love you? Instead, love your enemies, he said, do good to them and lend to them when asked without expecting anything in return.

The healing of America will occur when we resume the pursuit of doing what is right for its own sake, recognizing that the health of the entire nation is a product of millions of daily acts of righteousness. In this way, we will discover that the problems of a civilization that once seemed so impossible begin to resolve themselves.

When to the hungry man we routinely give something to eat; when we as a matter of habit provide water to the thirsty woman; when we clothe the naked; tend to the sick; visit the prisoner; when we work to empathize with those of different skin colors, religions, sexual orientations and opinions; when we abandon the self-righteous idea that engaging with any of them equals tacit consent of something we may not agree with; when we at last remove ourselves from a throne we have no right to occupy and live strictly by the law of love andleave the moral interrogations and task of reward and punishment to the more qualified; then, and only then, will true unity reemerge.

Matthew Keene, a retired senior foreign service officer, lives in Windsor Township, York County.

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My son, Mohammed El Halabi, is innocent of funding Hamas – opinion – The Jerusalem Post

Posted: at 2:39 pm

My dear son Mohammad El Halabi, who has been languishing in Ramon Prison since 2016, is innocent.

A parent knows the soul of the child. It is what parents give our lives to: to nourish and nurture our childrens bodies and souls. I know my son. He was innocent before the arrest and is still innocent.

How do I know? Why am I so certain? I know this with certainty because innocence is integral to integrity and truth, and my son is a good man, a man of integrity and truth. But he is accused of having diverted millions of dollars of humanitarian aid to Hamas. Yet no proof has been given.

Mohammad was offered a plea bargain of three years imprisonment and, of course, he refused. Why?

Why would he not grab the chance to accept, knowing that after three years he would be once again in the arms of his agonized mother, in the arms of his beloved wife, and be able to hold in his arms the treasures of his heart: his five children?

Why?

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Because he is an innocent man. Because as a man of integrity he would have to admit to the lie that said he was guilty. How then could he face his family as a liar? What great lesson of life would he be teaching his young children? That a lie has more power than the truth? That honor is a bargaining chip?

As my Jewish brothers and sisters are aware, the Talmud states, The Holy One, blessed be He, hates a person who says one thing with his mouth and another in his heart

And in my holy faith, we are warned, Avoid falsehood, for it may appear to be a way of salvation, whereas in reality it leads to destruction.

Better for Mohammad to suffer the torture and degradation of prison than to walk free suffering the degradation of his soul. I know that Jews understand the dilemma my son faced. His perseverance as well as all other facts show that he is innocent.

Surely, we Palestinians and Israelis share a common humanity that is held together by the principles of truth, compassion, justice and love. My son Mohammad lives by those principles in his personal and family life, and in his dedicated work for the most vulnerable, as the director of World Vision in the West Bank and Gaza. He should be freed on his terms, the truth of his innocence. The only thing holding back his release is the arrogance of those who made the false and unproven claim against him. They are ashamed to admit their mistake, ensure his immediate release and apologize to him and his family.

My son has been in jail for nearly five years and has suffered through a record 155 court appearances without any credible proof being presented. The Prophet Amos pleaded for justice, saying, Let justice roll down as waters, and righteousness as a mighty stream.

Mohammad El Halabi is an innocent man.

The writer is a retired chief of the field education program at UNRWA and a resident of Gaza.

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Yiddish professor goes viral in town hall with President Biden – Forward

Posted: at 2:39 pm

President Joe Biden engaged in a rare moment of kvelling during a live broadcast of a CNN town hall in Milwaukee on Tuesday night.

I actually know some Yiddish, Biden revealed during an exchange with a Jewish member of the audience.

The light remark came after the president was introduced to Joel Berkowitz, a foreign language professor and the director of the Stahl Center for Jewish Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

Im not bad at the literature part, but after five years of French, I still cant speak a word, so I apologize, Biden said.

Ill teach you some Yiddish sometime, Berkowitz responded.

To which Biden, perhaps thinking of his time spent with Jewish relatives, replied, I actually know some Yiddish.

CNN host Anderson Cooper then intervened and said to the president, It would be a shanda if you didnt.

In an interview with The Forward on Wednesday, Berkowitz said the moment wasnt scripted.

I did not expect that, Berkowitz, 55, said. It was kind of like the second that I had to kibbitz with the president of the United States and it just kind of came out.

Berkowitz, who spoke on the phone after teaching a Wednesday morning class on Jewish literature, said he wasnt particularly surprised by Bidens response because he expected the president to know some Yiddish words since hes been around Jewish people and has quoted the Talmud in past speeches.

He described it as a cute and fun exchange and insisted that the few seconds of fame and the spotlight didnt get to his head. I am the same person I was yesterday, Berkowitz said, adding that he will carry on with life unless I get a phone call from the president saying, I hope you were serious about those Yiddish lessons and get on Zoom with me for a few minutes a day.

Berkowitz, who moved to Milwaukee in 2010 after teaching at the University of Albany and at Oxford, said that he had originally submitted two questions to CNN, the other on higher education and that the network had confirmed earlier this week that he would participate to ask a question about white supremacy. This was his first public event since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic and he was thrilled to have the opportunity to go out. It was Valentines Day when I got the invitation, he recalled, and I said to my wife, Can I invite you out on a date with the president and Anderson Cooper? Turns out he couldnt have asked for more.

During the commercial break before he got to ask the question, Berkowitz sat close to the stage and the moderator turned to him and inquired about his profession, knowing he teaches foreign language. When Cooper heard that he primarily teaches Yiddish, without missing a beat, he said he read Sholem Aleichem in 10th grade, Berkowitz said. I got a kick out of that.

Berkowitz added that Coopers use of the word shanda was super impressive.

Born in Philadelphia and later moving to Mamaroneck, Westchester County in New York, Berkowitz didnt grow up speaking Yiddish at home. His mother is a second-generation American and his father came to the U.S. at age 10 after his parents fled Poland early in World War II. But he heard bits and pieces of Yiddish when his extended paternal family got together. He joked that he probably learned more Spanish words watching Sesame Street than he learned Yiddish words at home. But the opportunity arose during graduate school when he was offered a course on Yiddish language one summer at Oxford University and I was completely bitten by the bug, he said. It felt like there was some kind of collective unconscious or something that I was tapping into. It just moved me on a really deep level. I was completely smitten with the language.

In 1995, Berkowitz spent a year on a postdoctoral fellowship at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, doing research on Yiddish theatre while also studying Hebrew. He then traveled to the U.K to teach Yiddish for four years, followed by a nine-year tenure at SUNY in Albany.

Berkowitz said that the Tuesday night exchange, the first of a kind hes ever had with a president, was an opportunity to get the leader of the free world to address the issue of white supremacy and conspiracy theories that is deep seated in society and that came out of the woodwork, particularly in the insurrection of the Capitol on Jan. 6. I expect there are people in the administration, in Congress and elsewhere in the halls of power who are talking to the people who understand how those kinds of ideologies come about and how to address them, he said.

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At one JCC, new classes make it easy for adults with disabilities to tune in – Forward

Posted: at 2:39 pm

Jews may be the chosen people, but when it comes to Jewish education, adults with disabilities have often been left out.

Coinciding with Jewish Disability Awareness and Inclusion Month, the Marcus JCC of Atlantas Lisa F. Brill Institute for Jewish Learning offers inclusive education classes through the Florence Melton School of Adult Jewish Learning virtually via Zoom.

The second series of Members of the Tribe classes is now underway, with more than double the number of students participating. Rabbi Steven Rau of Atlantas The Temple taught the first class, and instructor Devorah Lowenstein of Atlanta Education Associates leads the second.

There isnt anything like it out there right now for this community of adults. They need to be served and connected Jewishly and we cant forget about them, said Talya Gorsetman, director of the Lisa F. Brill Institute. This is the first series of Melton classes that is inclusive of people of all abilities and types of learners. We have a couple of people who were diagnosed with Down syndrome, others with congenital disabilities and intellectual disabilities, she said.

Courtesy of Beth Intro Photography

Talya Gorsetman is the director of the Lisa F. Brill Institute in Atlanta.

The curriculum and pace of the class has been modified to allow additional time for questions, clarification and repetition and to accommodate the needs of the class, such as if someone is vision or hearing impaired. We had a great discussion and mix of ideas, with everyone learning from each other.

Encompassing Torah, Mishnah, Talmud, rabbinical writings and contemporary material, the classes cover two or three texts each week. We did a lot of discussion, engaging and making the texts relevant. We just needed to slow it down and chop it up a bit, Gorsetman said. Its also a class on Jewish values, reestablishing those values and sharing experiences and thoughts, she added. The Melton curriculum is all about listening to each other.

Although Melton adult education classes usually cost several hundred dollars, this series is underwritten and offered at steeply reduced rates. The first semester had nine students enrolled, many participating with a parent or caregiver, and 17 signed up for the current classes, which are offered in the evening to accommodate students who work during the day.

Kyle Simon, 24, who has a job at a honey-producing bee farm, has an invisible intellectual learning disability and attended special schools growing up. He attended the fall semester and re-enrolled for the spring class. It just takes me more time. I need more patience. Some things are a little harder for me than for other people, he said. When youre studying with a disability its always hard to focus. I tried hard to pay attention and it got easier the second time around. Ive enjoyed this semester even more.

Courtesy of Simon Family

Michelle and Kyle Simon participate in a JCC class over Zoom.

This has been an amazing thing to do, to get together as a community and talk about Judaism, keeping kosher and what it means to be Jewish, continued Simon, who was raised Reform. We study the Torah. We talk about the holidays and what they mean, like lighting the candles on Hanukkah. I love how it brings the community together, even though its on Zoom.

Born in New York, Gorsetman attended Jewish day and high schools, majored in Jewish studies at Yeshiva Universitys Stern College, and studied in Israel before and after she married her husband, Rabbi Adam Starr. She is now in her sixth year at Melton, and is looking forward to expanding the adult disability education program.

Were at the beginning stages. Were in talks with the Florence Melton School to develop a curriculum for this community of adults and a faculty guide to train Melton teachers to teach these classes, and get other Melton directors to offer this to their communities all around the world, she said. We have not even begun.

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Why pop stars are having prosthetic makeovers – BBC News

Posted: at 2:38 pm

It's Okay To Cry was an introduction to Sophies face, as well as to the artist's 2018 LP Oil of Every Pearl's Un-Insides. That was an album that linked transgenderism with transhumanism the philosophy that we can reach our greatest potential by improving ourselves technologically. Songs like Faceshopping and Immaterial proposed that technology (including prosthetic makeup) could enhance our own self-presentation in ways that transcended the gendered, corporeal self. Through music, Sophie expressed the idea that, by creating new skins of our own, we could better express our insides, and our best sides, to the world.

It wasn't just a striking effect, but a seminal one. Less than two years later, the fashion label Balenciaga sent their models down the catwalk with similarly sculpted faces for their spring/summer 2020 collection at Paris Fashion Week. The show notes that accompanied the presentation explained that the models' prosthetic makeup was a "play on beauty standards of today, the past, and the future".

Catwalks have always been at the forefront of embodying speculative futures, and sure enough, ever since Balenciaga's Sophie-resembling show, prosthetic makeup has begun to cross over back to pop music, and into mainstream visual culture. No longer are such extreme makeovers the chief preserve of B movie horrors and mask-wearing metal bands. Rather today, prosthetic makeup is turning some of the worlds most recognisable stars unrecognisable in recent times, the likes of Lady Gaga, Taylor Swift and Lil Nas X have all incorporated it into their work to expand their artistic mythologies and to challenge the static nature of their own bodies.

A headline moment

However perhaps the most high-profile use of prosthetic makeup of late has been from R&B star The Weeknd, who has placed it at the forefront of his latest album campaign. In January of last year, he appeared in the music video for standout hit Blinding Lights with a seemingly busted, bloodied face. Then in March, the singer was decapitated in the music video for In Your Eyes, before several months later his head was reattached onto another mans body in the video for Too Late, which evoked Gucci's prosthetic head runway. In November, he appeared at the 2020 American Music Awards with a face full of bandages; and finally in January this year, those bandages were removed for the video for Save Your Tears, to reveal a grotesquely swollen and contorted face, as though the singer's nose, lips and cheeks had been stretched like toffee.

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Crashing into the Future – Announcements – E-Flux

Posted: at 2:38 pm

Crashing into the FutureA new program on Artist Cinemas, convened by Cao Fei

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e-flux is pleased to presentCrashing into the Future, a six-part program of films and interviews put together by Cao Fei. It is the fifth program in Artist Cinemas, a long-term, online series of film programs curated by artists for e-flux Video & Film.

Crashing into the Futurewill run for six weeks from February 22 through April 5, 2021 screening a new film each week accompanied by an interview with the filmmakers(s) conducted by Cao Fei and invited guests.

The program opens with Xin LiusLiving Distance(2019-20), screening from Monday, February 22 through Sunday, February 28alongside an interview with Xin Liu conducted by Emma Enderby.

Crashing into the Future Convened by Cao Fei

With films byFei YiningandChuck Kuan,Yong Xiang Li,Xin Liu,Haonan Wang,ZhangCongcong,Zheng Yuan;and interviews with the filmmakersbyCao Fei,Emma Enderby,Alvin Li,Lawrence Xiao,Yang Beichen,andEvonne Jiawei Yuan

Various signs around us suggest that we have reached a moment where the contradictions accumulated by our history can no longer be sustained. A sense of dj vu takes hold. Once again, the uneasy organisms of this planet look up and gaze at the cosmos as they hastily crash into the future...

For this program, I've selected works by video artists from China born in the late 1980s and 1990s. Most of the featured artists studied or lived abroad for some time, and their artistic practices reflecttheir diverse influences. I have attempted to delineate thematic junctions in their works that, together, constitute a kind of rhizome wherein meaning is produced in the space between the nodes.

1.Monstrosity Contemporary culture is rife with the figures of ghosts, aliens, chimeras, cyborgs, undead, zombies, and other indescribable organisms and hybrid species. Sometimes these monsters are friendly, other times decidedly not. They could be passersby, or our partners; they might even be us. In essence, their stories are fables of humankinds contradictionsboth inner contradictions and contradictions with the world. If these monsters mirror our alienation, they also mirror our transformation,andsometimes ouremancipation.

Made during the pandemic in 2020, Yong Xiang LisIm Not in Love (How to Feed on Humans)features the artist himself as a vampire in search for more than just everlasting life. Partly a playful take on contemporary relationships, the video is also a last celebration of vampirism in a seemingly apocalyptic time. In Haonan WangsBubble (2020), foliage sprouts out of and consumes the male protagonist, transforming him into a beast to be consumed in turn by his female lover. Human and beast, desire and hunger, consumer and food become indistinguishable in a cathartic culmination of alienation.

2.Ghost Worker The New China of post-1949 witnessed an intense drive to shape the image of the worker, with poetry, music, painting, sculpture, and film devoted to celebrating and enshrining the working class. Since Chinas economic reforms of 1978, however, the relationships between various social classes in China have been dramatically transformed. With the identity of the worker ruptured and reconstituted, the working class gradually disappeared from political rhetorica phenomenon most significant amid the rapid development that globalization wrought on China in the 1990s. Today, the internet service sector spawned by the new economies of artificial intelligence in China has grown into a labor-intensive industry. This industry has given rise to food delivery workers, couriers, app-hailed drivers, and various kinds of door-to-door occupations. Digital labor gradually became unstable and isolated, a competition of speed between invisible bodiesghost workers.

ZhangCongcongsElement(2021) focuses on the relationship between capital and labor, as well as the corporeality of production. InElement, workers don their machine-operator uniforms and go on long, aimless walks by the sea. They take in the ocean breeze and bask in the sun, reminiscent of the leisurely middle-class figures of Georges SeuratsA Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte(1884-86). They are connected by a string of vague actions that cant quite be called work. Here, Zhang deconstructs the legitimacy of labor and empties its content. Stage after stage, the production chain recalls a mysterious ritual, a whispered code. Zheng YuansDream Delivery(2018) depicts a group of motorcycle couriers dressed in colorful uniform. The camera pushes and pulls, and pans over them as though ina commercial shoot. Against a backdrop alternating between pastoral park and desert ofancient ruins, they bask in the resplendent sunor fall onto the ground in intoxicated bliss. Through the juxtaposition of interviews, documentary footage, and fiction, the film encapsulates the lived realities of this new type of worker, whose vulnerable body attempts to elude the manipulations of invisible hands.

3.Cosmos in Flux Philosophical efforts to transcend human limitations and reform the universesuch as those proposed by Russian cosmism or transhumanismhave already become part of an approaching quotidian. Many technologies bear humankinds insistent belief in transformation and enhancement, and bid farewell to the body, while information becomes the medium by which we consciously intervene in the universe.

ArtistsFei Yining and Chuck KuansBreakfast Ritual: Art Must Be Artificial(2019) fades out the human as subject and exhibits a free consciousness dominated by AI, floating in a sea of fragmented memories after stellar cooling, passing through an incorporeal whisper of a dream. Is this the eve of the awakening of AI ideology? If the body can be seen as a proxy, then Xin LiusLiving Distance(2019-20) removes a tiny part of the bodya wisdom toothand sends it into space. The wisdom tooth becomes the protagonist of a melancholy trip around the cosmos, reprising the role of the Soviet spacedog Laika. The symbiotic relationship between the physicality of the wisdom tooth and the boundlessness of the universe seems to pay homage to the immortality and eternity sought in cosmism.

Cao Fei, translated by Mike Fu

Program

Week #1: Monday, February 22Sunday, February 28, 2021 Xin Liu,Living Distance, 2019-20 10:45 minutes

Living Distanceis a fantasy and a mission, in which a wisdom tooth is sent to outer space and back down to Earth again.Propelledby a crystalline robotic sculpture called EBIFA, the tooth becomes a newborn entity in outer space. Its performance is about death, body, and home, in a world where our science exploration and spiritual journeys are diverging.

Week #2: Monday, March 1Sunday, March 7, 2021 Haonan Wang,Bubble,2020 14:29 minutes

Bubbleis an urban tale of love and sacrifice set in a mysterious restaurant hidden in an alleyway. On an ordinary night, a man eats a lot of herbal plants in front of a woman, transforming himself into her food.

Week #3: Monday, March 8Sunday, March 14, 2021 ZhangCongcong,Element,2021 8:00 minutes

On an ordinary workday, three workers who do not know each other work on an invisible assembly line,all producing the sameelement.

Week #4: Monday, March 15Sunday, March 21, 2021 Yong Xiang Li,Im not in love (How to Feed on Humans), 2020 27:01 minutes

Im Not in Loverestores the tired motif of the vampire, injecting it with a sense of queer warmth. In this freakish and playfulcombination of narrative film and music video, a 386-year-old Asian vampireVampystruts about town tending to his three lovers, or symbionts. Apparently, his venom is not venomous at all, but instead grants pleasure and long life. (Alvin Li)

Week #5: Monday, March 22Sunday, March 28, 2021 Fei Yining and Chuck Kuan,Breakfast Ritual: Art Must Be Artificial,2019 8:51 minutes

Breakfast Ritualpresents a speculative glimpse into a post-Anthropocene future in which human civilization as we know it no longer exists. Over breakfast, an AI in the form of a young girl performs a ritual in a semblance of Marina Abramovis seminal workArt Must Be Beautiful, Artist Must Be Beautiful(1975).

Week #6: Monday, March 29Monday, April 5, 2021 Zheng Yuan,Dream Delivery, 2018 9:50 minutes

An exhausted motorcycle courier falls asleep on the bench of a roadside park.In his dream, fellow couriers gather together in a Shanzhai, or counterfeit, parkin the desert where the previously mobile riders have become static statues.The scene stands incontrast with the speed and efficiency with which they pursue their work around the clock,revealinganother side of the Chinese economic miracle.

Cao Fei(b. 1978,Guangzhou) uses moving image, photography, installation and performance to explore the daily lives of people navigating accelerated changes and chaos in social, political, and technological landscapes, especially in, but not limited to, Chinese and Asian societies today. Anchoring her projects in historical research and film histories, she also embraces mass cultures like cosplay, games, popular music and social media to reflect on the human condition, and the realities of global flows in contemporary post-capitalist societies. Cao has had solo exhibitions at Centre Pompidou Paris (2019), Tai Kwun Contemporary, Hong Kong (2018) and MoMA PS1, New York (2016), among other venues. Her works have been presented at the Venice Biennale (2003, 2007, and 2015), Yokohama Triennale (2008), Tate Modern, and the Berlinale, amongst others. Forthcoming solo exhibitions will take place at MAXXIthe National Museum of 21st Century Arts in Rome, and at the UCCA Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing (2021).

About Artist Cinemas Artist Cinemasis a new e-flux platform focusing on exploring the moving image as understood by people who make film. It is informed by the vulnerability and enchantment of the artistic processproducing non-linear forms of knowledge and expertise that exist outside of academic or institutional frameworks. It will also acknowledge the circles of friendship and mutual inspiration that bindthe artistic community. Over time this platform will trace new contours and produce different understandings of the moving image.

For more information, contactprogram@e-flux.com.

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The New Aging – City Journal

Posted: at 2:38 pm

The historian Pierre Goubert tells us that in 1654, the year of Louis XIVs coronation, life expectancy in France was 25. At the center of every village was a cemetery; death defined life. What a contrast with our day, when existence is no longer brief, as ephemeral as a passing train, to recall a metaphor from Maupassant. For us, death no longer lies at the heart of existence; it is the terminal point that we attempt by every means to put off, even to ignore, though it still terrifies us. It is the supreme obscenity.

For more than a century, the human race has been staying around longer than expected, at least in developed countries, where life expectancy has risen 25 or 30 yearsexcept in Russia, where health is undermined by alcoholism and poor health care, and in the United States, where, in certain Appalachian counties, the white working class, haunted by social despair and the opioid crisis, now has a life expectancy below Bangladeshs, according to economist Angus Deaton.

This extension represents immense progress, since it is accompanied by a delay in the onset of old age, which two centuries ago began at 35. When Honor de Balzac in 1842 evoked a 30-year-old woman, he described a person already aware of the shadows of autumn and ready to leave behind the life of love in order to enter old age. For us, this is a truly strange attitude; beyond 50 years or so, the human animal enters a kind of holding pattern: a person is no longer young but not yet really old, experiencing a kind of weightlessness. Once time was a movement toward an end, oriented toward spiritual perfection or fulfillment. Childhood tended toward adolescence, and adolescence toward adulthood, which in turn flowed gently toward middle and old age. But now an unprecedented phase is opening up between these last two periods.

This phase is a kind of reprieve that leaves life open like a swinging door. It transforms everythingrelations among generations, social-welfare finances, the cost of elder care, and our attitudes about work and romantic love. If aging is to be assigned a place on the calendar, becoming little by little a figure of the past, we now refuse to accept our status as caught up in the common condition. I am of a certain age, but I am not necessarily identified by it; I note a gap between the images associated with my official condition and what I feel. When this gap becomes massive, as is happening todaywhen a Dutch citizen, aged 69, sues the state to change his official age because he feels like a man of 49 and is subject to discrimination in the workplace as well as in his love life (notably, when he goes on Tinder)then we are experiencing a slippage of worldviews, for better and for worse.

We no longer act our age because age no longer makes us or unmakes us; it is simply one variable, among others. We no longer want to be fixed to our date of birthor, for that matter, to our sex, skin color, or status. Men want to be women, or the reverse, or neither one nor the other; white people consider themselves black, old people are babes. Everywhere the human condition escapes us, as we enter the era of liquid generations and identities. Today, many yearn to be free of the yoke of age and to benefit from the suspension between middle and old age, seeking to invent a new art of living.

This might be called the Indian summer of life. The baby-boomer generation was a pioneer in this regard: it created the path that it is now following. It reinvented youth, and now it thinks that it can reinvent old age. It is in this interval after 50, when one is neither young nor old but still teems with appetites, that we confront the great questions of the human condition so acutely: Do we want to live long or intensely, to start over or to take a new turn? How are we to look on remarriage or a new career? What gives us the strength to press on despite bitterness or satiety, and what motivates us every morning to start afresh? This is why late middle age is the philosophic age par excellence, whether we like it or not, because it forces each of us, man or woman, to reconsider the great intellectual problems.

We have seen the rise of a new category: seniors, a Latin term recovered to capture those who are graying but active, in good physical condition and often financially better off than the rest of the population. This is the time when many, having raised their children and completed their conjugal duties, divorce or remarry, dreaming of a new spring in the autumn. In other words, there is no longer one time of old age but several, and the only one now where the word really fits is immediately before death. This reprieve brings with it both passion and anxiety. What are we to do with these 20 or 30 extra years? The time available shrinks and the possibilities become more limited, but there can still be discovery, surprises, shattering loves.

At least two models are available in our individualistic society: either we rediscover at 60 the dreams of adolescence; or we decide that the game is basically up and join the folks playing bingo while waiting for their soup. On one side, we see the tribe of retired people on vitamin supplements, often in good physical shape. They usually belong to the upper middle class or are rich; they want to sink their teeth into life and display fierce energy at a time when their predecessors were often senile or bedridden. On the other side, we see faded people, resigned to their fate and determined to withdraw from the tumult.

The emergence of Viagra, along with hormonal treatments for women, offers intoxicating powers to people in their sixties. This has unsettled relations between the sexes, often accentuating the subordination of women. How many aging spouses are separated when one of them, breaking the truce of abstinence, rediscovers a taste for sexual adventure? Its worth noting that the two great ages of divorce in Europe are between 20 and 30 and between 50 and 70: in the first, young couples, married too soon, break up after discovering their incompatibility; in the second, older spouses take off on a new adventure, unhindered by the fact that their standard of living may fall or that they might end up alone. Freedom and the wish once again to control their own destinies take precedence over the risks involved.

The eagerness of seniors, looking to roll the dice one last time, to get involved in sports, travel, work, and saturnalia of the flesh stems from the new strategic depth regarding time now available to us. In Europe, the average age of maternity has reached 30, and the locking of the womb at menopause might one day be pushed to the age of 60. (The worlds oldest mother is an Indian who gave birth at 74, through in-vitro fertilization.) One may find this a pathetic vision. Still, to reproach the elderly for their misplaced appetites, for wanting to take on new things, to continue to work, is to condemn them to an anticipated death, and to condemn ones own future at the same age. Isnt there a certain beautyeven if the body is weakeningin defying the old temporal order, outflanking ones destiny and allowing oneself, at least for a while, an extra portion of intoxication, of sensations, of encounters? Life is perpetual uncertainty, an uncertainty that, as long as it lasts, proves that we are alive.

A significant drawback nevertheless remains. It is not youth that science and technology have extendedit is old age. The true miracle would be to sustain us until the threshold of death in a state and with the appearance of an adult of 30 or 40. Though research on life extension is working on this, the goal remains remote. Our added years can sometimes be a poisoned gift; we live longer but sick. Medicine, from this perspective, becomes a machine to produce disability and dementia. The extra years allotted to us can be years with worn-down bodies. We would so like to keep our favorite face, the one we would choose out of all those we have passed through over the decadesor get it back with a stroke of the scalpel.

Classically, philosophy made old age a synonym for wisdom, the great time of peace and serenity, when the essential was extracted from the optional. The withering of the body left only what counted: greatness of spirit and the souls beauty. With the extension of lifes duration, this model was obscured. There is a newly active life, for some older peoplebut also, for others, a weakened existence that we turn away from like a ghost, the specter of ourselves as aged and bedridden, waiting for extinction. As for the wisdom of the aged, we often suspect that this is another name for resignation to an impoverishment of life and relegation to special elder homes with fancy names, little more than medicalized places of death.

Yet it would be nice gradually to get over the excessive appetite for earthly pleasures, to dedicate oneself to meditation and study, and to pronounce oracles in the form of definitive maxims, thus preparing oneself gently for the Great Departure. Sophocles, at 80, if we are to believe Plato, was content finally to be liberated from the cruel burden of desire, an experience analogous to that of a people who overthrow a tyrant, or of an emancipated slave. It is not clear that such a liberation is attractive to some of our contemporaries. It may be, in fact, that the secret of happiness in later life consists in precisely the opposite approach: cultivate all ones passions up to the very end, renounce no pleasure, no curiosity, but continue to the end to work, to learn, to travel, remaining open to the world and to others.

Is to philosophize also to learn to die, as Montaigne said? All classical thought until the Enlightenment considered meditation on death the very meaning of existence. But is this not today a strange recommendation, even for those who care more about flourishing in this world than obsessing about the next? Dying, alas, is not something we need to learn; it happens without our help, except in the case of suicide. Nothing prepares us for death: even the most austere ascetic and the most ardent believer are surprised when the Reaper comes for them. What matters, perhaps, is not to learn to die but not to die while one is still alivenot to become a zombie, going through the motions of daily life, without soul or vitality. What matters is to be alive until the last day.

I am still surprised in the U.S. when I see waiters and waitresses spryly at their posts, despite wrinkles and gray hair.

To go on living is to recount a list of physical disasters so obvious that it would be fastidious to list them. As the proverb says, if, after 50, you no longer hurt somewhere when you get up in the morning, then youre dead. Illness is indeed the cost of longevity, and degenerative diseases such as Alzheimers and Parkinsons strike mostly people over 65. To age is also to put up with some pains that cannot be healed but that at least can be contained by medications. We submit to repairs, piece by piece, like an old sedan that breaks down every 100 miles but that runs again after an overhaul. Age, despite the illnesses that threaten the faltering body, is no longer a verdict, no longer the threshold beyond which a person is obsolete. Now a person can modify his fate up to the last moment.

There is joy mixed with anxiety in this experience of aging, having escaped the worst pathologies. This is the joy, however absurd, of still being alive, of inhabiting ones body, however worn down. For now, the transhumanist dream of immortality or hyper-longevity remains a chimera, the preserve of a few billionaires who wish to digitize their brains or have them preserved cryogenically until science finds a way to rejuvenate our cellsdespite the risk that a power failure could end the experiment, leaving those hoping for eternity to decompose as the ice melts.

As for retirement, it involves an ambiguity: though it represents a significant social achievement, it also creates the aged condition that it is supposed to relieve. Certain unpleasant tasks require an end to activities for a body worn by repetitive work. But for other, less strenuous occupations, this change of life can be a double burden: one becomes poorer while facing the troubles of aging; one is obliged to leave active life and face a reduced income. We cast off adults perfectly healthy in mind and body, who then wither after a few months of inactivity. To define a whole age group as a leisure class, limited to nothing but consumerism, was a profound mistake, brought about with the best of intentions in the aftermath of World War II. Experience and insight generally progress with the years; to keep an activity or find one is to stay connected with others, to be involved in service, to be an agent in the full sense of the term.

The United States and Europe behave very differently in this domain: in America, concern for freedom is considered much more important than the Old Worlds emphasis on security. Thus, I am still surprised in the U.S. when I see waiters and waitresses spryly at their posts, despite wrinkles and gray hair. In the universities, one finds professors in their seventies and even early eighties teaching classes. The French term for retirement, retraite, is the same as the military word for retreata synonym for defeat. For many salaried employees, it indeed represents the double burden of leaving active life behind at the same time as income is reduced. The obligatory end of work in Europe for those in their sixties, with variations according to occupations, plunges us into the curse of leisure held up as a way of life. This free time is most commonly used not for cultivating interests but for self-hypnotizing in front of the screens that fill the lions share of ones time.

The third age has never been the philosophic age more than it is now; it is the time when all the challenges of the human condition present themselves starkly, as they were defined by Kant: What am I allowed to hope, to know, to believe? The Indian summer of life is truly this conversation of the soul with itself, as Socrates described it, a condition of permanent self-examination. In this phase, one may alternate the active life with the contemplative. This is the time when we confront the tragic structure of existence without mask or blinders. By the time we learn to live, it is already too late, said the French poet Louis Aragon. But life is not an academic affair; it is ceaselessly adjusting the preconditions for its own learning. While youth is the time when our talents come into their own, old age can also be seen as the last phase of education rather than a time to be put out of commission. Seneca liked to say that we are learning as long as we are living, down to our last breath. We can combine the joy of teaching with the joy of being taught; we can profess truths as we ask questions, in perfect reciprocity. We still have enough time to open ourselves once again to the world, to recommit ourselves to learning, becoming a little child at an age when others once went to the grave. We are not missing real life, because there is no one true life but many interesting paths that remain to be explored.

While youth is the time when our talents come into their own, old age can also be seen as the last phase of education.

What is there to do once you have become yourself, once you know yourself? What could be finer than a thumb in the eye of fate, granting oneself, at least for a while, a little additional drunkenness, and more sensations and encounters? The Great Rebeginning is for many the only form of eternity that we have found. There are many lives within the life of a man or a woman, and these come together without being assimilated. What are we to think of these grandmothers who bring their grandchildren to school on a scooter, these grandpas who ride gyro-cycles and dress like young adults? We are seeing the total confusion of ages: mothers dress like their daughters and grown-ups like superannuated adolescents; each generation wants to live not the life of its ancestors but that of its descendants. We sow our wild oats despite the time on our biological clocks: young people move in together as young as 20, while their graying parents frolic in multiple affairs. The exuberance of the third age can sometimes seem laughable, or even infuriatingbut would you prefer old folks slipping gradually toward the grave, closed up in specialized assisted-living homes? What is more exhilarating than to break the rules?

Will this new age be a transfigured maturity or a quavering post-adolescence? It will no doubt consist in a tension between the two. The tragedy of old age, Oscar Wilde said, is not that one is old, but that one is young. Even after 50, youth can be present within us as the possibility of mad exploits, diverse ecstasies. It whispers in our ears that nothing is too beautiful for us, that everything is still possible: only others regard, especially that of our children, brings us back to reality. On the one hand, the benefit of aging is that we often develop a growing taste for nature, for study, for silence, for meditation and contemplation, a penchant for cultivating nuance as opposed to the taste for the absolute; on the other, many experience an attachment to pleasure in all its forms that is still vivid, and even renewed. Will the new seniors be guardians of a heritage, or old satyrs, worn out with debauchery, in the words of Jean-Jacques Rousseau? Narcissistic rascals like Donald Trump, or august, white-bearded ancestors?

We have not found the solution to the misfortunes of the human condition but have merely opened a little skylight in the cave. A seventeen-year-old is not serious, sang Arthur Rimbaud. Nor are we invariably so at 50, 60, or 70, even if conventions oblige us to appear as such. We can turn age against itself with humor and elegance, stripping it of its decrepit ornaments. At every stage in its unfolding, life can fight back against the irreversibleand this until the dive into the abyss.

Pascal Bruckner is a French philosopher and author of many books, including A Brief Eternity: The Philosophy of Longevity. His article was translated by Alexis Cornel.

Illustrations by Sol Cotti

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NEWS WATCH: Titan Comics MAY 2021 Solicitations and Covers – Comic Watch

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Here are Titan Comics May 2021 solicits which include highlights like V. E. SCHWABS EXTRAORDINARY #0, DOCTOR WHO: MISSY #2, MINKY WOODCOCK: THE GIRL WHO ELECTRIFIED TESLA #2 and more!

ANIMATION

MINIONS: MINI BOSS #1Writer: Stephane LapussArtist: Renaud CollinSC FC 28pp $3.99On Sale May 26, 2021

Hilarious and mischievous comic strip adventures with Illuminations Minions!

Hot off their new movie, Minions The Rise of Gru ARRIVING IN CINEMAS JULY 2, 2021, the Minions are back for more chaotic action!

In a world where monster wrestling is a global sport and monsters are superstar athletes, teenage Winnie seeks to follow in her fathers footsteps by becoming a coach and turning a loveable underdog monster into a champion.

CRIME

DOUBLE DOWN TPWriter: Max Allan CollinsSC 352pp $12.95On Sale May 26, 2021

Veteran thief Nolan tangles with a skyjacker and vigilante in two full-length novels from Grandmaster Max Allan Collins (Road to Perdition), collected in one volume for the first time ever.

COVER ARTIST(S): ROBERT MCGINNIS (CVR A), BURLESQUE PHOTO COVER (CVR B), CYNTHIA VON BUHLER (CVR C)

TITAN BESTSELLING HARD CASE CRIME SERIES IS BACK!

A stylish, glamorous feminist take on the classic gumshoe!Private investigator Minky Woodcock becomes involved in an investigation of maverick genius and reclusive pigeon-fancier, Nikola Tesla, and discovers a horrifying conspiracy involving corrupt politicians and Nazis.

MAGIC/ FANTASY

LONE SLOANE DELIRIUS 2Author: Jacques LobArtist(s): Phillipe Druillet and Benjamin LegrandHC FC 72pp $19.99On Sale September 1, 2021

Lone Sloane, the Ulysses of space, cosmic freebooter and rebel, endlessly struggles against dark gods, robotic entities and alien forces!

The lonely traveler is in trouble, Lone Sloane is stuck on the planet aptly named Delirius!

COVER ARTIST(S): ENID BALAM (CVR A)

BRAND NEW SERIES expands deeper into the world of Schwabs critically acclaimed novels Vicious and Vengeful.

Set in the years between VICIOUS and VENGEFUL, ExtraOrdinary follows a teenage girl named Charlotte Tills who survives a bus crash and becomes EO-ExtraOrdinary, gaining the ability to see peoples deaths in reflective surfaces.

Entertainment Weeklys 27 Female Authors Who Rule Sci-Fi and Fantasy Right Now!

MANGA

GAMMA DRACONIS HCCreator: Eldo YoshimizuHC B&W 64pp $14.99On Sale August 25, 2021

Eldo Yoshimizu, the creator of the epic Yakuza Manga, Ryuko, teams up with Benoist Simmat to create another dazzling crime tale.

Aiko Moriyama studied religious art at the Sorbonne, but her research in occultism quickly led her down a dangerous path. When several experts around her come under attack from a mysterious entity rising from the depths of the web, she finds herself embroiled in a police investigation involving the sinister leader of an international organization. From London to Tokyo, between transhumanism and black magic, Aiko is determined to solve the enigma of Gamma Draconis and to discover how exactly her family is involved

SC-FI

BLADE RUNNER ORIGINS #4Writers: K. Perkins, Mellow BrownArtist: Fernando DagninoFC 32pp $3.99On Sale May 19, 2021

COVER AComic WatchRTISTS: JESUS HERVAS (CVR A), ROBERT HACK (CVR B), FERNANDO DAGNINO (CVR C)

LOS ANGELES: 2009 UNCOVER THE STORY BEHIND THE FIRST BLADE RUNNERS! A TYRELL CORPORATION SCIENTIST IS DEAD the victim of an apparent suicide. But when LAPD Detective CAL MOREAU is called in to investigate, he uncovers secret documents revealing a new kind of Replicant and a conspiracy that could change the world.

LIMITED TO 500 PACKS! COLLECTS THE STUNNING ARTWORK OF FAN FAVORITE ARTIST PEACH MOMOKO!

COVER ARTISTS: DAVID BUISN (CVR A), PHOTO COVER (CVR B), CLAUDIA CARANFA (CVR C)

NEW SERIES CELEBRATING THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE MASTERS FIRST APPEARANCE!THE DEBUT OF THE DOCTORS DEADLIEST ADVERSARY! MISSY wages war on the THIRD AND TWELFTH DOCTORS! Can they stop her from executing her lethal plot? Announced on Doctor Who official social media 5 MILLION FANS

Over the 50 incredible years of Star Trek TV shows and movies, the franchise has produced many stand-out villains.

Collected here are features on some of the very best or worst villains and classic interviews with the actors who portrayed them. Includes the Borg (Alice Krige as the Borg Queen), Khan (Ricardo Montalban, Benedict Cumberbatch), Q (John de Lancie), Shinzon (Tom Hardy) and many, many more.

Discover how the most iconic Star Wars heroes were brought to life in this collection of incredible interviews and articles.

The actors and creators behind 15 of Star Wars most popular heroes discuss the process behind creating some of the most iconic characters in cinematic history.

NEWS WATCH: Titan Comics MAY 2021 Solicitations and Covers

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South African father, technology, sci-fi, fantasy nut and lifelong comic reader..... my love of costumed capers started very early after a chance encounter with a spinner full of comics in a local convenience store. I am a fan of all things Marvel, Dc, and Image including X-men, X-force, New Mutants, Teen Titans, Saga, Hellboy, Wayward, Gen13, Nightwing, Sandman and many more.

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Guide to Online Casino Bonuses in Canada – Off The Bench – Off The Bench Baseball

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Most Canadian online casinos are carrying bonuses of some kind or another. Many will provide you with a welcome bonus when you first join, and this may require a deposit or not. Top casinos will continually reward you with promos and bonuses long after you stop being a new player to keep you entertained throughout your time at their site.

Oddly enough, there is more to casino bonuses than just stacks of cash. Do not get us wrong we like bundles of free spins and cash. However, these mean next to nothing if the terms and conditions attached to these bonuses are not fair, too. Claiming an offer with bad conditions will be detrimental to your casino gaming experience rather than benefit it. What should you look for then?

Before playing at any Canadian online casino, read through the terms and conditions attached to each offer (as tedious as that process is) and ask yourself these six simple questions.

The wagering requirements attached to bonuses is hugely important. Casino bonuses that have hefty playthrough rates (also known as rollover requirements) mean that you will have to re-wager much of what you win multiple times before you can withdraw those winnings. For this reason, we would not recommend claiming any casino bonus which has wagering requirements of over 40x the bonus amount. A few casino bonuses out there are wager-free, and that is great. However, they tend to be worth considerably less than offers that have fair playthrough rates.

Unless you claim a no deposit bonus, you will likely have to deposit to claim an offer. The amount you are required to pop into your account can vary from offer to offer, never mind casino to casino. Cash and free spin bonuses worth small sums will typically only need a minimum deposit of $10. More extensive offers can ask for $20 to $25. Only high-roller bonuses should require a minimum deposit of hundreds, if not thousands of euros.

You might think that you can use your casino welcome bonus to play anything and everything that a site has to offer. That will most likely not be the case, though. Live casino bonuses can usually only be used on live dealer games. Slots are typically fair game with most rewards. However, it is worth noting that some slot games are exempt from bonus offers, and this usually means progressive jackpot titles. Similarly, free spin deals may be valid on a single game, a selection of games, the titles from one providers portfolio, or many of them. For this reason, it is worth checking the terms and conditions before you claim an offer.

It is unlikely that you are going to be able to win millions with casino bonuses. Many offers come with specific terms relating to how much you are permitted to win with free spins. Usually, progressive jackpot prizes are out of the window, to begin with. How much you are entitled to win with your casino bonus is vital because it plays an essential role in determining whether an offer is worth claiming in the first place or not at all.

Just because you win several thousand dollars with a casino bonus does not mean that you can cash out all those winnings. Some casinos are sneaky in that they will let you win vast sums but limit the amount of winnings from bonus funds that you can withdraw. For this reason, you should once again check a bonus offers terms and conditions to ensure that maximum cashout caps are reasonable in comparison to the bonus you receive and the amount you can win with it.

You will not always get your bonus immediately. Some casinos have wagering requirements attached to their offers and will immediately let you play with your bonus funds as soon as you deposit. Other casinos initially look like they have no wagering requirements on their bonuses. In reality, though, you will unlock your bonus over time rather than being given it straight away. The amount you wager (within a timeframe) determines how much of your bonus is unlocked. In other words, this process is precisely the same as having a promo with wagering requirements, the only difference being that you will not get to play with the bonus straight away.

However, when you do unlock the offer, the funds are not credited as bonus cash but as real money. This means that you can withdraw anything you win with unlocked bonuses, as you have technically already fulfilled the wagering requirements on them.

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Guide to Online Casino Bonuses in Canada - Off The Bench - Off The Bench Baseball

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Rush Street Interactive Secures Online Casino and Sports Betting Market Access Opportunities in Ohio, Maryland and Missouri – Business Wire

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CHICAGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Rush Street Interactive, Inc. (NYSE: RSI) (RSI), one of the most trusted and fastest-growing online casino and sports betting companies in the United States, today announced that it has secured market access opportunities in Ohio, Maryland and Missouri.

RSI has entered into a strategic partnership agreement with Penn National Gaming, Inc. (Nasdaq: PENN) (Penn National). Under the terms of the agreement, RSI will have the ability to offer its award-winning BetRivers.com real-money online casino and sports betting platform for up to 20 years in Ohio, Maryland and Missouri through potential second skins in each of those states, subject to license availability, state law and regulatory approvals. Upon and following the launch of the skins, RSI will compensate Penn National with industry-standard payments for market access.

We are pleased to gain potential market access to three new states as we continue the execution of our strategy to gain access and bring our best-in-class online gaming offerings to key markets across the United States, said Richard Schwartz, president of RSI. The addition of Ohio, Maryland and Missouri to our market access portfolio, specifically, builds on RSIs success in neighboring states and will create enhanced marketing efficiencies for our BetRivers.com brand. We continue to engage in productive dialogue with industry participants, such as tribal and commercial casinos and other stakeholders, to further our expansion into new states. We expect to continue entering into additional market access arrangements in the future, as other opportunities arise.

RSI currently operates online gaming sites available for customers to play today in eight states with a combined population of more than 68 million, including Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Virginia. Taken together with our ability to access markets under applicable regulations or potentially access them through our existing market access deals for online gaming in New York, Ohio, Maryland, Missouri and West Virginia, RSI now has the potential, with first or second skins, to access online gaming markets reaching more than 35% of the U.S. population. In addition to its industry leading real-money online casino and sports betting offerings, RSI offers immersive social gaming options and provides tailored retail wagering services to in-casino sportsbooks. RSI is the market leader in the three most populous states that have legalized retail sports betting: Illinois, Pennsylvania and New York.

Additionally, the agreement provides RSI with a right of first offer for a potential skin in Texas through Penn National subject to, among other things, state law and regulatory approvals.

About RSI

Founded in 2012 by gaming industry veterans, RSI is a market leader in online casino and sports betting in the U.S., currently operating real-money gaming in nine U.S. states. RSI launched its first online gaming site in New Jersey in September 2016, and through its BetRivers.com and PlaySugarHouse.com sites, RSI was the first to launch regulated online gaming in Colorado, Illinois, Indiana and Pennsylvania. RSI was named the 2020 Global Gaming Awards Digital Operator of the Year, and the 2020 EGR North America Awards Casino Operator of the Year and Customer Service Operator of the Year. RSI has been an early mover in Latin America and was the first U.S.-based gaming operator to launch a legal and regulated online casino and sportsbook, RushBet.co, in the country of Colombia. For more information, visit http://www.rushstreetinteractive.com.

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release includes "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the "safe harbor" provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. RSI's actual results may differ from their expectations, estimates and projections and consequently, you should not rely on these forward-looking statements as predictions of future events. Words such as "expect," "estimate," "project," "budget," "forecast," "anticipate," "intend," "plan," "may," "will," "could," "should," "believes," "predicts," "potential," "continue," and similar expressions are intended to identify such forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements include, without limitation, RSI's expectations about its strategic partnership with Penn National, its potential future operations in the states covered by that partnership and its future performance there, and its expectations about obtaining additional market access throughout the United States. These forward-looking statements involve significant risks and uncertainties that could cause the actual results to differ materially from the expected results. Most of these factors are outside RSI's control and are difficult to predict. Factors that may cause such differences include, without limitation, changes in applicable laws or regulations, unanticipated product or service delays, and other risks and uncertainties indicated from time to time in RSIs most recent proxy statement, including those under "Risk Factors" therein, and in RSIs other filings with the SEC. RSI cautions that the foregoing list of factors is not exclusive. RSI cautions readers not to place undue reliance upon any forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date made. RSI does not undertake or accept any obligation or undertaking to release publicly any updates or revisions to any forward-looking statements to reflect any change in its expectations or any change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based.

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Rush Street Interactive Secures Online Casino and Sports Betting Market Access Opportunities in Ohio, Maryland and Missouri - Business Wire

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