Monthly Archives: April 2021

Las Vegas businesses prepare for more Hawaii visitors ahead of full capacity reopening date – KHON2

Posted: April 15, 2021 at 6:33 am

HONOLULU (KHON2) The Governor of Nevada announced on Tuesday a goal of reopening to 100 percent capacity by June 1. Travel companies are hoping this will attract Hawaii residents to take a long awaited trip back to the ninth island.

[Hawaii news on the goLISTEN toKHON 2GOweekday mornings at 7:30 a.m.]

Vacations Hawaii says theyre already seeing some good signs.

The call volumes are starting to pick up as more and more people get vaccinated, said David Strow, president of Vacations Hawaii. Its been over a year since many of our longtime guests have had the chance to come to the California Hotel and thats a long time to wait.

Travelers will have to wait a little longer to book charter packages. Vacations Hawaii will resume that option on September 3.

Meanwhile, Las Vegas businesses that rely on Hawaii customers are 100 percent ready to fully reopen.

All the workers here and at our bakery have all been fully vaccinated, so we feel pretty good about it, said Kryce Higa of Las Vegas Jerkys.

We cant wait for our regulars from back home to come visit us, said Alijah Lee Walter of 2 Scoops of Aloha. Were for sure going to be wearing masks and keeping our social distancing. As far as capacity, I think well only allow 15 people at the most in the restaurant at once.

Although the state may allow full capacity, Boyd Gaming wants to remind visitors that modifications may still be in place.

We dont have as many restaurants available. Theres still going to be capacity restrictions and social distancing requirements for the next couple of months until a plan gets approved by the control board. So its going to be different in that respect, said Strow.

Hawaii travel experts expect to see a huge demand for trips to Vegas in the coming months.

I think its those that have always gone every three months, every six months that havent been able to go plus other folks that want to go to a place thats 100 percent open, said Jerry Argusa, a UH Shidler School of Business professor. I think that thats whats going to happen too.

Travelers can now book flights with Vacations Hawaii as they await their charter options to return.

Hawaiian Airlines also says theyre resuming their last paused route, which is Maui to Las Vegas, at the end of May.

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Free Will Astrology (April 15) – Las Vegas Weekly

Posted: at 6:33 am

ARIES (March 21-April 19)"Today I feel the whole world is a door," wrote poet Dennis Silk. In a similar spirit, 13th-century Zen master Wumen Huikai observed, The whole world is a door of liberation, but people are unwilling to enter it." Now I'm here to tell you, Aries, that there will be times in the coming weeks when the whole world will feel like a door to you. And if you open it, you'll be led to potential opportunities for interesting changes that offer you liberation. This is a rare blessing. Please be sufficiently loose and alert and brave to take advantage.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)Taurus philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein was called a genius by Nobel Prize-winning author Bertrand Russell. His Philosophical Investigations was once voted the 20th century's most important philosophy book. Yet one of Wittgenstein's famous quotes was "How hard it is to see what is right in front of my eyes!" Luckily for all of us, I suspect that won't be problem for you in the coming weeks, Taurus. In fact, I'm guessing you will see a whole range of things that were previously hidden, even though some of them had been right in front of your eyes. Congrats! Everyone whose life you touch will benefit because of this breakthrough.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)Why don't rivers flow straight? Well, sometimes they do, but only for a relatively short stretch. According to the US Geological Survey, no river moves in a linear trajectory for a distance of more than ten times its width. There are numerous reasons why this is so, including the friction caused by banks and the fact that river water streams faster at the center. The place where a river changes direction is called a "meander." I'd like to borrow this phenomenon to serve as a metaphor for your life in the coming weeks. I suspect your regular flow is due for a course changea meander. Any intuitive ideas about which way to go? In which direction will the scenery be best?

CANCER (June 21-July 22)Cancerian poet Denis Johnson eventually became a celebrated writer who won numerous prizes, including the prestigious National Book Award. But life was rough when he was in his twenties. Because of his addictions to drugs and alcohol, he neglected his writing. Later, in one of his mature poems, he expressed appreciation to people who supported him earlier on. "You saw me when I was invisible," he wrote, "you spoke to me when I was deaf, you thanked me when I was a secret." Are there helpers like that in your own story? Now would be a perfect time to honor them and repay the favors.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)What do you believe in, exactly, Leo? The coming weeks will be a fine time to take an inventory of your beliefsand then divest yourself of any that no longer serve you, no longer excite you, and no longer fit your changing understanding of how life works. For extra credit, I invite you to dream up some fun new beliefs that lighten your heart and stimulate your playfulness. For example, you could borrow poet Charles Wright's approach: "I believe what the thunder and lightning have to say." Or you could try my idea: "I believe in wonders and marvels that inspire me to fulfill my most interesting dreams."

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)Virgo poet Charles Wright testifies, "I write poems to untie myself, to do penance and disappear through the upper right-hand corner of things, to say grace." What about you, Virgo? What do you do in order to untie yourself and do penance and invoke grace? The coming weeks will be an excellent time for you to use all the tricks at your disposal to accomplish such useful transformations. And if you currently have a low supply of the necessary tricks, make it your healthy obsession to get more.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)Kublai Khan, ruler of the Mongol Empire and China in the second half of the 13th century, kept a retinue of 5,000 astrologers on retainer. Some were stationed on the roof of his palace, tasked with using sorcery to banish approaching storm clouds. If you asked me to perform a similar assignment, I would not do so. We need storms! They bring refreshing rain, and keep the earth in electrical balance. Lightning from storms creates ozone, a vital part of our atmosphere, and it converts nitrogen in the air into nitrogen in the ground, making the soil more fertile. Metaphorical storms often generate a host of necessary and welcome transformations, as wellas I suspect they will for you during the coming weeks.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)"Unexpressed emotions will never die," declared trailblazing psychologist Sigmund Freud. "They are buried alive and they will come forth, later, in uglier ways." I agree, which is why I advise you not to bury your emotionsespecially now, when they urgently need to be aired. OK? Please don't allow a scenario in which they will emerge later in ugly ways. Instead, find the courage to express them soonin the most loving ways possible, hopefully, and with respect for people who may not be entirely receptive to them. Communicate with compassionate clarity.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)Sagittarian author Cristin OKeefe Aptowicz wrote a poem entitled Not Doing Something Wrong Isnt the Same as Doing Something Right." I propose that we make that thought one of your guiding themes during the next two weeks. If you choose to accept the assignment, you will make a list of three possible actions that fit the description "not doing something wrong," and three actions that consist of "doing something right." Then you will avoid doing the three wrong things named in the first list and give your generous energy to carrying out the three right things in the second list.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)In the past few weeks, I hope you've been treating yourself like a royal child. I hope you've been showering yourself with extra special nurturing and therapeutic treatments. I hope you've been telling yourself out loud how soulful and intelligent and resilient you are, and I hope you've delighted yourself by engaging with a series of educational inspirations. If for some inexplicable reason you have not been attending to these important matters with luxurious intensity, please make up for lost time in the coming days. Your success during the rest of 2021 depends on your devout devotion to self-care right now.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)Sometimes when a disheartening kind of darkness encroaches, we're right to be afraid. In fact, it's often wise to be afraid, because doing so may motivate us to ward off or transmute the darkness. But on other occasions, the disheartening darkness that seems to be encroaching isn't real, or else is actually less threatening than we imagine. Novelist John Steinbeck described the latter when he wrote, "I know beyond all doubt that the dark things crowding in on me either did not exist or were not dangerous to me, and still I was afraid." My suspicion is that this is the nature of the darkness you're currently worried about. Can you therefore find a way to banish or at least diminish your fear?

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)"Some people, if they didn't make it hard for themselves, might fall asleep," wrote novelist Saul Bellow. In other words, some of us act as if it's entertaining, even exciting, to attract difficulties and cause problems for ourselves. If that describes you even a tiny bit, Pisces, I urge you to tone down that bad habit in the coming weeksmaybe even see if you can at least partially eliminate it. The cosmic rhythms will be on your side whenever you take measures to drown out the little voices in your head that try to undermine and sabotage you. At least for now, say "NO!" to making it hard for yourself. Say "YES!" to making it graceful for yourself.

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Free Will Astrology (April 15) - Las Vegas Weekly

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67K views on YouTube? Its just another day at the Society Las Vegas house – Las Vegas Review-Journal

Posted: at 6:33 am

Hannah Evana said matter-of-factly that shes going to lie, causing the 18-year-olds four roommates to burst out laughing.

The group, not yet old enough to drink, were inside the sprawling master bedroom of their 9,000-square-foot Las Vegas home to film a YouTube video of themselves playing the cheeky game Never Have I Ever.

Filmed last month, the nearly 12-minute video has racked up more than 67,000 views on YouTube. Its only a small slice of the content they produce on a daily basis as members of Society Las Vegas, the newly launched content house by Clubhouse Media Group.

Clubhouse Media not to be confused with the invite-only audio app is planning to create a network of content houses across the country. The Society Las Vegas content house opened in February and marks Clubhouses first U.S. expansion outside of California.

Content houses, or collab houses, are collectives of social media influencers who live and work together creating videos and snapping photos to post on social media platforms such as Instagram, TikTok and YouTube with the goal of building their fan bases.

Were very bullish about this space because we believe that its something that really has the potential to be big, Clubhouse Media President Christian Young said. The best way of saying this is we are a talent agency combined with a digital studio combined with really like a venture (capital) incubator.

The company boasts access to an estimated 280 million social media followers through its Clubhouse influencers while the companys own branded accounts have a following of more than 9 million.

The phenomenon of content houses isnt a new concept, but it has gained traction in recent years with notable examples including Hype House and Sway House in Los Angeles. Still, turning it into a long-term business model is a gamble and runs the risk of fizzling just as the internet fame of social influencers can be fleeting.

Kyle Johnston, president of ad agency Gigasavvy, said Clubhouse will need to convince brands that it can offer scale and efficiency as well as authenticity from its budding network of influencers.

If its done at scale and brands can get, say, 100 influencers at different houses across the country to all create content simultaneously and then feed that out, A/B test it all to see what works better then youve potentially got a model there, he said. But still theres a huge movement now with big brands to be purpose-driven and more authentic, and the risk of getting called out by consumers is pretty high.

Market run

Young co-founded the companys first content house, Clubhouse BH in Beverly Hills, in March 2020 with popular YouTuber Daisy Keech, Clubhouse Media Chief Operating Officer Simon Yu and Clubhouse Media Chief Executive Amir Ben-Yohanan, who also heads a New Jersey-based property management firm called West of Hudson Properties.

We wanted to start something different, Young said. We decided that we would scale this out and go to different markets.

The company now operates five content houses, which are leased, in the U.S. including Las Vegas and a location overseas in Malta. Influencers arent required by contract to live in one of their houses and can leave at any time.

Clubhouse went public shortly after launching on the over-the-counter markets in November through a reverse takeover, in which a private company buys shares to control a publicly traded company, then merges to become public.

For Clubhouse Media, that meant merging with a Chinese hospital that incorporated in Las Vegas in 2006 called Tongji Healthcare.

It seems like an unusual deal, but Young explained it as the best approach for the company to raise capital. It searched for a shell company to merge with that had ceased operations but was still listed on the public market.

(Tongji) happened to be the cleanest it was SEC reporting, it was third-party audited and very transparent, he said. So, we acquired it.

Living large

Publicly traded or not, the members of the Society Las Vegas are more excited about the opportunity to live and work together.

Kayla Patterson, 17, has a following of more than 2.2 million followers and relocated from South Carolina to join the house last month.

Shes able to continue with school since her classes are remote because of the pandemic, but it means finishing her schoolwork early so she has time during the day to create content.

Her parents werent familiar with the concept of a content house but were still supportive.

They were really scared for me to come across the country all by myself, she said. My grandparents cant even comprehend what is happening. But my friends, theyre really excited for me.

Evana, who moved to Las Vegas from Ohio, said she joined as an intern.

I had a little bit of a following on Instagram and TikTok but not necessarily like a creator (level) following, said Evana, who has more than 570,000 followers. So, Im here and Im interning. Ill help plan out some photo shoots and stuff like that and I drive everyone.

Their six-bedroom, six-bath house is 15 minutes east of the Las Vegas Strip near McCarran International Airport. The white Art Deco-style home has a large swimming pool and lighted tennis court. Inside, theres a movie room just off the kitchens large breakfast nook and a dance pole upstairs.

Jordan Beckham, 16, is the youngest of the crew but has the most followers at more than 4 million across YouTube, TikTok and Instagram.

When youre at home, you dont really have that source of people to collab with so I feel like you kind of feed off of everybodys energy and their following (of fans), Beckham said. Its an amazing opportunity, like anybody would take it.

Brian Freeman, chief executive of influencer platform Heartbeat, said its a win for all involved.

As the content creator, I get representation. I get access to more followers. I get a place to live. I get an epic lifestyle, Freeman said. And from the content house perspective, they can go to an advertiser and say, Hey, weve got 100 million followers pick your poison. Do you want car enthusiasts? Do you want gaming enthusiasts? Weve got something for everybody. The more houses they have, the more talent they have and the bigger the core brand, Clubhouse, gets, and that benefits advertisers by giving them a one-stop shop.

Lights, camera, action

Cole Beckham, 20, is the oldest of the group and the self-appointed big brother, adding that hes the one tasked with lifting heavy items and taking out the trash. He joined the house in February with sister Jordan.

While he sees Society Las Vegas as the best way to grow his fan base of more than 210,000, he admits it can be mentally taxing constantly churning out videos while living and working in the same space.

There are days when it gets overwhelming, but its really good to live with people that love and support you, he said. And its OK to say, Hey, Ill take a break today. Its really important to manage that, and weve learned so far, especially from being here in February and past life experiences, to maneuver and manage everything.

Gabriella Annalisa, 19, said that in addition to creating fresh content for their own social media channels, each member is required to produce regular videos and photos on behalf of the content house, in other words media assets that are meant for Society Las Vegas social media accounts. She has more than 2.6 million followers.

Ill post like three to four times a day on TikTok, and then we try to get at least one YouTube video done or an Instagram post too, Annalisa said.

We all have our different schedules, but we all try to post quite a few times a week.

A small sample of YouTube videos include Jordan Beckham getting her first tattoo and Annalisas videos of moving to the Las Vegas content house.

Producing a steady stream of content not only keeps followers engaged, but it can also help her snag sponsorship deals from brands, whether its free clothes or money to post specific content, according to Annalisa.

The more organic and authentic a video is the better, said Nixon Peabody LLP Partner Ellie Heisler, who works with several top influencers on licensing, IP protection and brand building.

If that influencer lives in a house and theyre living with a bunch of friends that decide to pop into that (sponsored) video or repost their friends content, all of a sudden the brand is paying for one influencer but they potentially get the reach of so many more, she said. If all the influencers are being managed by the same company in the house, they can negotiate for multiple brand deals for their multiple talent.

Slice of the pie

Young said the company will present creators with brand deals and negotiate the compensation, which helps Clubhouse cover operating expenses from hiring a videographer to a regular cleaning service for the house.

We also take equity in companies and market them to also provide revenue along with acquiring companies in the social media space that the network can promote, he said.

Company filings show some creators enter exclusive management agreements under Clubhouse Medias talent management firm Doiyen.

Doiyen receives between 10 percent to 50 percent of all gross compensation earned and received by the creator during the term of the management agreement, regardless of whether we introduced the opportunity resulting in compensation to the creator.

How compensation is calculated depends on the deal, Young said.

Influencers are expected to create content, called deliverables, for the house account in exchange for being provided with living arrangements and other services such as photography. Young said they will sell against them to companies for marketing purposes or use the content for Clubhouse Medias main social channels.

If a brand opts to work directly with Clubhouse and its branded accounts, then Doiyen receives the full payment. Should a brand choose to work directly with an influencer, then the creator can expect to pay Doiyen a percentage of their earnings.

Clubhouse Media Creative Director Heather Ferguson said its creators have a say in what brands they would like to work with and can reject offers presented by Clubhouse.

Were not here to make a quick buck from this brand deal, she said, adding its goal is helping influencers reach their career goals. Our point of differentiation is we have publicists. We have a media team. We have full-scale video production. We have full-scale styling production and in-house studio.

But the company hasnt turned a profit. It reported a net loss of an estimated $2.6 million for the fiscal year ended Dec. 31 though it reported revenue of about $1 million, up from $0 the previous year.

Young said that the company is still in hyper growth mode and that content houses arent the only line of business, pointing to plans to grow through acquisitions.

This is really a 360 business, he said. Its not just about the brand deals. Its not just about the houses. I know this is sort of the front end of what people see, but I think its important for the public to understand we have a lot else going on.

Contact Subrina Hudson at shudson@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0340. Follow @SubrinaH on Twitter.

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Here are 6 education bills moving forward in the state Legislature – Las Vegas Review-Journal

Posted: at 6:33 am

Dozens of education-related bills are moving forward in the state Legislature after successfully passing out of committees by last weeks deadline.

The Senate and Assembly Education committees were among those acting on a flurry of bills covering topics such as distance education, what age children can start kindergarten and which Nevada colleges can be considered land-grant universities.

April 9 was the last day for bills to pass out of the committee to which they were originally referred. Those that didnt wont move forward this session.

One bill that didnt make it was Assembly Bill 255, which called for hybrid school boards in Clark and Washoe counties with some elected members and some appointed by municipalities. Currently, all school board members are elected.

The Assembly bill, sponsored by Speaker Jason Frierson, D-Las Vegas, proposed four members of a seven-person board be elected, while the rest would be appointed. A similar proposal Senate Bill 111, sponsored by Sen. Ben Kieckhefer, R-Reno called for three members to be elected and four appointed, but that bill also did not advance.

Another that isnt moving forward is Senate Bill 321, which called for creating a separate governing body for the states four community colleges and removing them from the Nevada System of Higher Educations authority.

Proponents have pushed the bill for years. Gov. Steve Sisolak also referenced the concept in his January State of the State address, pointing to the role community colleges will play as part of COVID-19 recovery efforts.

The Nevada System of Higher Education opposed the bill, saying it would be costly and would make it harder for students to transfer from a two-year college to a four-year university.

What the bills would do

Heres a look at six of the bills and resolutions that are still in play:

Senate Bill 102, sponsored by Sen. Scott Hammond, R-Las Vegas, calls for moving up the date when a child must be 5 years old in order to enroll in kindergarten for a new school year. Currently, children who turn 5 by Sept. 30 can register, but the proposal calls for changing the date to Aug. 1.

Proponents argue most other U.S. states have an earlier cutoff date than Nevada.

The legislation would impact up to 3,000 Clark County School District students.

We appreciate the effective date of this bill starting for the 2022-2023 school year as online registration for the upcoming school year will be open prior to this bill passing, the district said in a written statement.

The date change would also apply to requirements under state law for a child to be 6 in order to start first grade and 7 to start second grade.

SB 215, sponsored by Sen. Mo Denis, D-Las Vegas,would require the board for each public school district and public charter school to develop a plan for conducting a program of distance education. The bill incorporates recommendations from the states Blue Ribbon Commission for a Globally Prepared Nevada.

By Oct. 1 each year, a school district or public charter school would have to identify students and teachers or other school employees who dont have the technology needed to participate in distance education, including internet access or a computer.

A plan, including a cost estimate, would be required by Dec. 31 to make technology available to all those identified.

In Clark County, which operated for about a year under 100 percent distance education with the exception of seven rural schools, district officials say theyre looking to provide both full-time distance education and full-time, face-to-face instruction next school year. Superintendent Jesus Jara said last month that some students have done well under the distance education model.

District officials testified in support of the bill.

As we start to return to some form of in-person learning, distance education has become a part of the equation for how we will reach a subset of students, the district said in a statement. This is why CCSD Superintendent Jesus Jara was a member of the Blue Ribbon Commission, to help ensure innovation is at the forefront of how we educate our students.

The bill gives school districts flexibility so instruction is not restricted to a set time on the calendar, the district said.

Accelerated path for student teachers

SB 352, sponsored by the Senate Education Committee, proposes allowing a paraprofessional someone who provides instructional help in a classroom seeking to become a teacher to complete an accelerated student teaching program while on the job.

It also would require the Nevada Department of Education to accept student teaching or other teaching experience from an out-of-state or out-of-country applicant if it substantially fulfills the standards of a program of student teaching.

The legislation comes amid a nationwide teacher shortage, which is impacting Nevada.

Ronnow Elementary School Principal Michelee Cruz-Crawford worked with a number of community partners, including the Public Education Foundation, on bringing this idea forward, the district said in a statement. District officials also testified in support of the bill.

Ensuring there is a healthy teacher pipeline is incredibly important to the entire state, there is no better way to work towards this than by using the hard-working support professionals in our schools currently, the district said.

Assembly Bill 19, sponsored by the Assembly Education Committee on behalf of the Nevada Department of Education, would require parents homeschooling their child or children to add subject areas within social studies, including civics, financial literacy and multicultural education. The change would also apply to all public schools.

The Nevada Homeschool Network opposes the bill.

The state Department of Education provides technical assistance to the Legislature, but doesnt advocate or lobby for legislation, spokeswoman Jessica Todtman said via email.

AB 19 was drafted in response to school district feedback with the intent of clarifying social studies requirements for HS graduation (to include multiculturalism and financial literacy), she said.

Land grant schools

SB 287, sponsored by Sen. Dallas Harris, D-Las Vegas, would designate state land-grant schools as University of Nevada, Reno, UNLV and the Desert Research Institute.

Land-grant institutions were designed under the federal Morrill Act of 1862, which provided public lands in order for states to open colleges.

UNR is typically considered the states only land grant institution by the Legislature, but some past legal opinions have also included UNLV and the Desert Research Institute.

Whats now UNR opened in 1874 in Elko, but moved to Reno more than a decade later. UNLV opened in 1957 and the Desert Research Institute debuted in 1959.

In an April 8 letter to Denis, chair of the Senate Education Committee, state and local officials wrote in support of expanding land-grant status to all three higher-education research institutions in the state, including UNLV. Among those signing the letter were UNLV President Keith Whitfield, Vegas Chamber President Mary Beth Sewald, Council for a Better Nevada Executive Director Maureen Schafer, and Las Vegas Global Economic Alliance President/CEO Jonas Peterson.

Ultimately, the legislation is about achieving equity for UNLV with its peer institution and allowing UNLV to better serve the needs of our Southern Nevada community, they wrote.

It would also allow for better access to federal grants that have land-grant requirements, according to the letter.

Desert Research Institute is neutral on the bill, school spokeswoman Detra Page said.

But William Payne, dean of UNRs College of Agriculture, Biotechnology & Natural Resources, told the Review-Journal he has grave concerns about the bill and the impact it will have on the universitys programming throughout the state.

We serve over 28,000 youth in Clark County alone and are worried about the potential disruption that this legislation will cause, Payne said. I understand that this is a very complex issue, but I dont believe this will increase federal funding to UNLV or DRI.

The 2018 Farm Bill clearly states no additional federal land-grant money will go to states that designate additional land-grant schools, he said. I also have it on unambiguous federal authority that claims that land-grants get special points or consideration in competitive federal grant applications are inaccurate.

Payne said the university offered an amendment to study the issue in an effort to come up with a solution that serves the entire state.

We hope to be part of the conversation as this moves through the Legislature, he said.

Senate Joint Resolution 7, sponsored by Sen. Marilyn Dondero-Loop, D-Las Vegas, and Assemblyman Tom Roberts, R-Las Vegas, seeks to remove references to the Nevada System of Higher Educations Board of Regents from the Nevada Constitution.

Voters narrowly defeated a similar proposal, Question 1, during the November 2020 election.

Contact Julie Wootton-Greener at jgreener@reviewjournal.com or 702-387-2921. Follow @julieswootton on Twitter.

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Clowney signs with Browns, wants to ‘dominate’ with Garrett – Las Vegas Sun

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Brett Carlsen / AP

Tennessee Titans outside linebacker Jadeveon Clowney pauses between plays against the Pittsburgh Steelers during the first half of an NFL football game in Nashville, in this Sunday, Oct. 25, 2020, file photo. Clowney will chase quarterbacks and a Super Bowl title with the Browns. The dynamic free agent defensive end signed a one-year, $10 million contract with Cleveland on Wednesday, April 14,2021.

By Tom Withers, Associated Press

Wednesday, April 14, 2021 | 6:37 p.m.

CLEVELAND As he considered his next stop in the NFL, Jadeveon Clowney said there was something about the Browns that made them very appealing.

They're winning, he said.

They are now, and Clowney wants to help them win it all.

The dynamic free agent defensive end signed a one-year, $10 million contract with Cleveland on Wednesday, joining All-Pro end Myles Garrett on the defensive line of a rising team looking to go even deeper in the playoffs in the 2021 season.

Clowney turned down a multiyear offer from the Browns last year (he said his former agent didn't want him to visit them), opting instead to sign for one season with Tennessee.

Things didn't go as he hoped with the Titans as Clowney was slowed by a knee injury that stopped him after eight games.

He's healthy following surgery, motivated and intent on showing he can still affect a game.

I can still dominate this league," the 28-year-old Clowney said. I know that.

The Browns will line up Clowney on the opposite side of their line from Garrett, another former No. 1 overall pick who has grown into one of the league's best defensive players and is a threat to get a sack on every snap.

And while much has been made of Clowney's addition making Garrett better, the 28-year-old said the opposite is also true.

I have been getting double-teamed an awful lot in this league and in my career, Clowney said, breaking into a wide smile. "I'm looking forward to playing with somebody who is dominant on the opposite side like a Myles Garrett, who can draw a double team.

"Maybe I can go one on one more."

Clowney's signing excited Browns fans along with quarterback Baker Mayfield, who celebrated his 26th birthday on Wednesday. Mayfield posted a photo of Clowney on his Instagram page with the caption: This is a nice birthday present...

The No. 1 overall pick in 2014, Clowney hasn't always played up to his reputation, and his stats haven't been impressive the past few seasons three sacks combined in 2019, 2020 because of injuries. But Browns general manager Andrew Berry has been intrigued by him for two years, and Clowney appreciated the team's dogged pursuit.

He was relentless getting after me and trying to get me up here, and I am going to be relentless on that field for him, Clowney said of Berry. "He knows I can play. He told me he likes my style of play. I said I am going to bring that here.

To some critics, Clowney has never reached his potential. He underwent microfracture knee surgery probably the worst thing you could have in this game and although he's been to three Pro Bowls, there are those who want to see more.

Clowney's one of them.

If I ever reach my max potential or get back there like I feel now, they say the sky is the limit, but it is probably higher than that, he said. "They have footprints on the moon, though. That is where we are trying to reach. I just want to stay healthy. If I play 16 games, I think we will be ready to see. Just let me work on that.

Berry spent this offseason upgrading Cleveland's defense, with Clowney, a three-time Pro Bowler, his signature move. The addition may impact Berrys plans in the upcoming draft; Clevelands biggest need had been an edge rusher to complement Garrett.

They took a run at J.J. Watt, who signed with Arizona. The Browns weren't going to let Clowney slip away from them again.

Hes one of the more disruptive players in the game and we think hes going to add an element of ruggedness along our defensive line and will pair nicely with many of the guys we have on the roster already," Berry said. "The other thing we love about Jadeveon is his versatility, his ability to play all across the front and impact the game regardless of his alignment.

The Browns ended their nearly two-decade-long playoff drought last season by going 11-5 in the tough AFC North. They beat rival Pittsburgh in the wild-card round and were minutes from upsetting the then-defending champion Kansas City Chiefs before losing 22-17.

Cleveland was already a Super Bowl contender. The signing of Clowney, who has 32 career sacks, has only raised expectations.

Clowney was in a similar situation last season with the Titans, and he knows that expectations can change a team.

When guys are trying to win and everybody is looking for the win, it brings out the best in everybody on the team, he said. "When you start winning, everybody is happy and everybody wants to go out there and make plays and ball.

"I'm looking forward to that. Hopefully, we can get on that winning train and everybody just wants to go out there, dominate and make plays.

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Clowney signs with Browns, wants to 'dominate' with Garrett - Las Vegas Sun

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Gilleys launches a new weekend breakfast with bottomless mimosas on the Las Vegas Strip – Eater Vegas

Posted: at 6:33 am

TREASURE ISLAND Gilleys Saloon, Dance Hall & Bar-B-Que has new weekend breakfast items, including $16 breakfast burrito with scrambled eggs, shredded cheese, and tater tots wrapped in a flour tortilla with homemade salsa; $18 loco moco with a hamburger patty, steamed rice, and an egg any style, served with mushroom gravy; and $29 steak and eggs with a 12-ounce New York steak, two eggs any style, and tater tots, served with Texas toast. Gilleys also has bottomless mimosas for $22 per person until 2 p.m. Gilleys serves breakfast every Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to noon. [EaterWire]

THE VENETIAN Dandelion Chocolate reopens its store with only its retail line including The Single Origin Truffle Collection, Hot Chocolate Trio, and Sea Salt Caramels. Beverages such as frozen chocolate and pastries may return in May or June. Executive pastry chef Lisa Vega and the kitchen team are working on the build out of a new off-site kitchen. [EaterWire]

LAS VEGAS Three Square Food Bank kicks off its annual Bag Childhood Hunger campaign. Nevada Gold Mines operated by Barrick and NV Energy Foundation will double any donation made through May 31. Three Square estimates that one in four children is experiencing hunger. Hunger plagued little ones across the valley long before COVID-19 arrived, Brian Burton, president and CEO of Three Square, says in a press statement. Prior to the pandemic, 102,000 children in Southern Nevada were food-insecure. While the pandemic continues, that number currently stands at 131,430. Donations can be made online. [EaterWire]

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Critical Race Theory is Eugenics | Bob Ryan | The Blogs – The Times of Israel

Posted: at 6:32 am

One cannot combat the eugenics of the past by using eugenics in the present, which is what critical race theory is doing. To say the racism of the past, that saw the rise of eugenics take hold under former President Wilson, has any merit in todays society is to ignore far more than the bloody end of a war that helped bring about an end to slavery in the United States.

Modern science has proven the science of the past wrong. Biologically, there is no difference between humans regardless of their outward appearance. All people have varying abilities and these abilities do make a difference. No person excels in all areas and there is no shortage of failures of the past and present when attempting something when one does not have the ability.

Race, from a purely scientific standpoint, does not exist. To say racial inequality exists is to give emphasis to what has been proven nonexistent. It is akin to claiming nothing has changed, regardless of the science that has done exactly that.

There was a time in the United States when anti-Semitism did run rampant and was every bit as open as racism. There were places of business denied based on nothing more than the color of ones skin or the religious affiliation that happened to be part of by birth. It did not matter that most Jews were secular in the United States, as is the case today.

The Klan, which had been dying out prior to Wilson, saw a rebirth that he and others encouraged. Movies were made that romanticized the Klan, which were shown in the White House to Wilson. His praising of those movies, along with others of influence, was one of the primary reasons for the rebirth.

Wilson, as one of his first acts as President, segregated the military and fired just about every person who happened to be of, as he believed, a lesser race. That segregation would not end until Truman started the process and Eisenhower gave it teeth. Two World Wars were fought without ever thinking of ending segregation.

The Tuskegee airmen, who were the best bomber escort fighter pilots in WWII, had to face ridiculous hurdles, since Washington, including former President Roosevelt, did not believe black men were capable of flying in combat. It did not matter that the Canadians already had a military made up of combined races, including their Air Force, which did have successful black pilots.

Eugenicists were so focused on race, that any evidence to the contrary had no bearing on anything. Despite what was happening in Europe under the eugenics beliefs of the Nazis, nothing changed in Washington. Roosevelt remained committed to eugenics, which is the reason he never stopped the segregation that most likely prolonged the war.

When Roosevelt died, he left Truman surrounded by people of a similar mindset to the one he had. Truman faced an internal threat of the entire Cabinet quitting is he welcomed Israel as a new nation. Even after much of the horrors of the Nazis became known, the anti-Semitism continued from those who predated Truman.

Those institutions that had been put in place to prevent people from working or living where they wished were removed over time. The Clan that was on the rise following Wilson, is now little more than a crippled and shattered shell of what it once was. There is no university that prohibits anyone based on race or religion from gaining access to any profession in the United States.

Critical race theory is a continuation of eugenics that continues to put emphasis on race over individual abilities. Included in race are the Jewish people as a whole from an anti-Semitic viewpoint. The universities that have been slowly pushing critical race theory is where the greatest number of anti-Semites can be found today. It is no secret that anti-Semitism has been growing on college and university campuses.

Emily Benedict recently published an article at Tablet Magazine entitled, California Is Cleansing Jews From History, where she points out the more problematic problems with the proposed California curriculum based on critical race theory. In one sample lesson, she saw that a list of historic U.S. social movementsones like Black Lives Matter, #MeToo, Criminal Justice Reformalso included the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions Movement for Palestine (BDS) BDSs primary goalthe elimination of Israelwas not mentioned. Kaplan also saw that the 1948 Israel War of Independence was only referred to as the Nakbacatastrophe in Arabicand Arabic verses included in the sample lessons were insulting and provocative to Jews.

https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/news/articles/california-ethnic-studies-curriculum

Critical race theory, at its heart, is based on race, which makes it divisive by its very nature. It seeks to cast all members of races, as they classify them, merit or demonization based on nothing more than how one appears. Jewish people, regardless of their actual origin, as solely European in nature, which does make them the target of critical race theory.

Critical race theory blames the past for the problems of the present. There is not one thing being spoken about that will solve the current problems as they exist. Not one word about the poor schools with a high dropout rate. Nothing about the illiteracy rate that increases with each generation, which limits the jobs people can do.

There was a time when some states did prohibit educating people of African descent, but that is no longer the case. The public school system, particularly in the inner cities, does have problems that do contribute to the drop out and illiteracy rates. That is never mentioned by those who preach critical race theory.

Anything based on race, including critical race theory, is eugenics. No matter how the package is wrapped, it is still based on a science that has been disproven time and again. Ability knows no color.

Bob Ryan is a science-fiction author and believes the key to understanding the future is to understand the past. As any writer can attest, he spends a great deal of time researching numerous subjects. He is someone who seeks to strip away emotion in search of reason, since emotion clouds judgement.Bob is an American with an MBA in Business Administration. He is a gentile who supports Israel's right to exist as a Jewish state.

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Carolyn Partridge | Notes from Montpelier: Steps to improve the lives of Vermonters – Brattleboro Reformer

Posted: at 6:32 am

In the last two weeks, we have taken many steps to improve the lives of Vermonters. Ill take a few moments to focus on several of them.

H.159, among other things, creates the Better Places Program and makes a strong commitment to our Vermont State Colleges (VSC). We allocate $20.5 million to the State College system to be focused on workforce development in the fields of childcare, nursing, accounting, and mental health counseling, as well as scholarships for Vermont students who want to complete their degrees or return home from out-of-state colleges and universities to attend VSC. The Better Places program is allocated $5 million to advance its mission of creating or revitalizing public spaces in our communities through matching grants. To reopen our state to tourists, $2.5 million is dedicated to marketing Vermont in support of our hospitality and tourism industry. H.159 also places an emphasis on supporting businesses owned by BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, Persons of Color) community members. The bill passed unanimously on roll call and voice votes.

Over the last three months, I have discussed several system weaknesses that COVID-19 has revealed including in broadband and the food supply chain system; another of those is in health care. Our goal is to have equal access to health care for all Vermonters, but data and statistics indicate that that is not the case, especially for those in the BIPOC and LGBTQ (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Questioning) communities. For instance, 20 percent of COVID cases were members of the BIPOC community when they are only 6 percent of our population. This may be because they are less likely to have a personal physician. Statistics also show that non-white Vermonters are more likely to suffer from depression, LGBTQ adults are three times as likely to report seriously considering suicide, and adults with disabilities are more likely to report being in poor mental or physical health.

To try to correct these disparities, address structural racism, and promote equal access and equity in our health care system, we passed H.210. It creates a Health Equity Advisory Commission, which will collect and analyze data and then provide grants to programs that improve health care for members of the BIPOC, LGBTQ, and disability communities.

In recent years, we have witnessed more incidents of people being sexually assaulted on college campuses and elsewhere after being incapacitated, either by drugs or alcohol. H.183 expands the definition of consent, makes clear that those who are incapacitated are unable to consent, and provides added protections for those who are sexually assaulted. It creates the Intercollegiate Sexual Violence Prevention Council in an effort to reduce sexual violence on college campuses. It also asks law enforcement to increase data gathering to better understand sexual assault and violence in Vermont.

March 31 marked the 90th anniversary of the passing of legislation that would be one of Vermonts least stellar moments. On that day in 1931, An Act for Human Betterment by Voluntary Sterilization was signed into law. Based on research and a survey done by UVM professor Henry Perkins, the goal of the eugenics movement was to prevent procreation by people deemed unfit in order to preserve old pioneer stock. This, of course, targeted folks in the BIPOC community, in particular those of Native American and French-Canadian heritage. Also included on the list were those with disabilities, the poor, and people of mixed ethnicity including French-Indians.

Some of the tactics used included forced sterilization, family separation, incarceration, and institutionalization, which led to trauma that is still felt today by some members of our population. Records were kept on Vermonters as Perkins collaborated with municipal and state officials, including the Vermont Department of Welfare and it is believed that at least 253 people were sterilized.

In an attempt to apologize for the harm that was done, we passed J.R.H. 2, which is a formal apology for Vermonts State-Sanctioned Eugenics Movement. In resolutions, perhaps the most important parts are the Resolved clauses. In this case they read, That the General Assembly sincerely apologizes and expresses its sorrow and regret to all individual Vermonters and their families and descendants who were harmed as a result of State-sanctioned eugenics policies and practices, and be it further Resolved: That the General Assembly recognizes that further legislative action should be taken to address the continuing impact of State-sanctioned eugenics policies and related practices of disenfranchisement, ethnocide, and genocide.

This helps explain something that I have wondered about. In 1985 when I moved back to Windham, my mother-in-law, Cora Cheney Partridge, was close friends with a long-time Windham resident. I had heard that her mother was Native American, and I was intrigued to learn more. She knew many home remedies that I wanted to know more about, but she was very hesitant to talk about it. Im sure that years of hiding her ethnicity for fear of being separated from her family, or worse, was a result of the Eugenics Movement that she had grown up with.

The final bill Ill cover is H.225, which is an act that decriminalizes small amounts of non-prescription buprenorphine, commonly known as bupe. Buprenorphine is an opioid that, among other things, is used before coming into Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT) under the care of a doctor. At this point in time, possession of small amounts of buprenorphine, while a misdemeanor, is rarely prosecuted because it is seen as a method to wean people off of serious opioid addiction. This practice of turning a blind eye may not be followed state-wide so H.225 seeks to make clear that possession of 224 milligrams (a one- to two-week supply) or less of non-prescription buprenorphine by those 21 and older is legal.

Debate on H.225 brought fresh to my mind the untimely death of my niece in 2017 due to a fentanyl overdose. I wrote about it in 2020, which you can read if you go to my website at carolynpartridge.com 1.17.2020 Farm to Plate Report and Substance Abuse Disorder. If you havent experienced directly the loss of someone to substance abuse disorder, it may be hard to understand the tragedy it introduces to a family. Families struggle to help their loved one kick a habit that may have been the result of post-operative medication or a chance experimentation with friends that leads to a rapid brain chemistry change. Even after several visits to rehab and seeming to be on a good path, one little slip and reduced tolerance to drugs or alcohol can be lethal.

Aside from the time I served as Majority Leader, in 23 years Ive explained my vote two or three times, but I felt compelled to do so on this bill. The following is what I said, Madam Speaker: Nearly four years ago, my niece died of a fentanyl overdose. Had something less lethal been available to her, she might be alive today. If you have not experienced the loss of a loved one to substance abuse disorder, you are fortunate. It breaks hearts and tears families apart. Today, I cast my vote for Megan Anne and have faith that this bill will save lives. I sincerely hope it does. The pandemic has not slowed the death rate due to opioids; in fact, we have seen a 38 percent increase in overdoses during the last year.

One of the good things the pandemic has brought to us is familiarity with Zoom meetings. My district-mate, Rep. Leslie Goldman is holding monthly Zoom meetings for our constituents in the Windham-3 district, but she assures me that all are welcome. The next meeting is April 24 at 10 a.m. and if you want to join, please register at http://www.lesliegoldmanvt.com. I was able to join last month and really enjoyed it. This month I will not be able to join because I will be participating in a Council of State Governments virtual conference entitled Carbon Sequestration from the Ground Up: Opportunities in Northeastern Farms and Forests but hope to participate again next time.

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US must build trust on the vaccine: Government has duty to African Americans – The Creightonian

Posted: at 6:32 am

In 2020, the world was shocked and stopped by the COVID-19 pandemic. The United States was especially affected by the pandemic, due to the U.S. governments categorization of the disease.

Government officials initially stated the disease was a hoax and overall something that Americans did not have to worry about. This misinformation, miscategorization and misleading was allowed to go unchecked until the American death toll began to drastically rise.

At the point when Americans began to realize that we and our loved ones were in danger, for many people, it was far too late. Our government failed to protect us by not equipping us with the proper knowledge, necessary protocols and vital resources to minimize the harm caused by the disease.

By failing to provide these elements, Americans were caught off guard and as a result, more than 550,000 people lost their lives, according to the CDC. These were fathers, mothers, children, grandparents, cousins, friends and they were all people who deserved more from the U.S. government.

According to the CDC, COVID-19 has had a disproportionate impact on minority communities. Minority communities have experienced higher rates of infection and death from the disease, as well as greater economic impact.

The African American community has been negatively impacted by discrimination in health care, lack of health care access, reluctance to seek medical care, disproportionate representation in essential work settings, crowded housing conditions and educational, income and wealth gaps. Each of these factors plays a role in the high rates of infection and death among the African American population.

One of the most prominent of these factors is African Americans reluctance to seek medical care. This is based on their distrust in the government and health care systems responsible for inequities in treatment and historical events like the Tuskegee Experiment and eugenics programs.

The Tuskegee Experiment was an ethically unjustified study of untreated syphilis in African American males conducted between 1932-1972 by the United States Public Health Service and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The African American men who participated in the study were promised free health care from the federal government, but this promise was a lie. The study was originally supposed to last for six months but instead lasted for 40 years, even after it lost the funding.

None of the participants were ever treated for syphilis nor did they know they had syphilis. All of the African American men were told they were being treated for bad blood. Although the cure for syphilis (a shot of penicillin) was widely available by 1947, it was never administered to any of the participants. For forty years, participants were forced to suffer through the symptoms of syphilis with 128 of the 600 participants dying.

Eugenics is a set of beliefs and practices aimed at improving the genetic quality of the human population, historically advanced by white supremacy. In America, eugenics was utilized to preserve the position of the white race as the dominant group in the population.

Eugenics programs were present across the United States, and their purpose was to sterilize people without their permission. The focus of these programs was to minimize minority populations by limiting their ability to procreate. Both African American men and women, of a variety of ages, were often the targets of these forced sterilizations, although the women often outnumbered the men.

These eugenic programs were overtly racist in their objectives and their implementation across society. Both the Tuskegee Experiment and the Eugenic Programs have led to a valid distrust of the government and health care professionals by African Americans.

Our country has reached a point where multiple COVID-19 vaccines are available, and much of the population is being vaccinated. After a year of being forced to comply with pandemic protocols, a return to normalcy seems to be on the horizon. However, minority populations, especially African Americans, are still not comfortable receiving the COVID-19 vaccine.

The government has a duty to rebuild African Americans trust in medicine, specifically the COVID-19 vaccine. There is a duty to provide African Americans with information on the vaccine, explanations for why the vaccine was created so fast and most importantly why we need to receive it.

Due to the longstanding distrust of the government, there should be commercials advocating for and detailing the facts of the COVID-19 vaccine, reports explaining that millions of dollars and resources were poured into crafting and perfecting the vaccine and press conferences recommending that African Americans get vaccinated due to their disproportionately high risk of infection and death.

The governments actions are what have led us to where we are today, thus, they must right their wrongs and protect African Americans and Americans as a whole.

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Webinar with John West: Darwin’s Three Big Ideas That Impacted Humanity – Discovery Institute

Posted: at 6:32 am

Photo: John West speaking at the 2020 Dallas Conference on Science and Faith, by Chris Morgan.

Darwinian theory is a lot more than just an idea in science. Its validity as an explanation of biological origins can be debated, but the reasons it arouses the passion it does go beyond science. Atheist Daniel Dennett was not wrong when he called it Darwins dangerous idea. Actually, though, as Discovery Institute Vice President and Senior Fellow John West will explain in a Zoom webinar on Thursday, Darwin had three very destructive ideas.

Join Dr. West on April 15 from 4 to 5:30 pm Pacific time for Darwins Three Big Ideas That Impacted Humanity.

From the event description:

Charles Darwin introduced three big ideas that have had catastrophic consequences in human history in terms of theories and policies related to moral relativism, scientific racism, eugenics, abortion and infanticide, and atheism. This presentation will uncover the Darwinian undertones seen in modern society.

More information and a link to join is here. No registration is required. The event is sponsored by the Areopagus Forum.

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