Monthly Archives: September 2021

Hacking the draft room: How to exploit ESPN and Yahoo tight end fantasy rankings using ADP – The Athletic

Posted: September 4, 2021 at 5:54 am

The definition of discount is a deduction from the usual cost of something, typically given for prompt or advance payment or to a special category of buyers.

I consider my fellow readers of The Athletic as a special category of buyers. Thats why Ive written this special article series about ADP Hacks for you this month (plus, because my editor assigned this series to me).

If this is your first exposure to this series, the elevator pitch to you is this: Our ADP hack points out which players are being drafted earlier or later in ADP compared to other draft sites. (Pretend its a long elevator ride.) This lets you know if you have to reach for a player you like higher than you expected or if you can wait a little later.

We already did this ADP hack with quarterbacks, running backs and wide receivers.

The tight ends position is interesting because the top ones are bunched at the top, which all draft sites seem to agree with in Average Draft Position. But cohesiveness starts to unravel in the middle rounds on who is deserving of a TE1 spot on your roster.

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Goodyear’s road to making Nascar tires – Yahoo Finance

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Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company (GT) is no stranger to very high speeds on the racetrack.

The tiremaker has had a long, storied 100-year history in the sport of racing. It all began for Goodyear back in 1901, when Ford founder Henry Ford put Goodyear rubber on his car sponsored by the Detroit Driving Club. Come 1922 and after years of wins, Goodyear dropped out of active race participation amid the economic uncertainties of the time.

Goodyears unofficial return to racing came in 1954 with the test of the Police Special Tire in Darlington, South Carolina. The company made its official return into racing in 1958.

In the 1960s, Goodyear scored major victories at the prestigious 24 Hours of Le Mans with legends Dan Gurney and Bob Bondurant behind the wheel of a GT Cobra. Legend AJ Foyt scored a few Indy 500 wins, too.

Today, its safe to say Goodyear continues to be the dominant tire player in all things racing. Producing racing tires by hand out of its high-tech Akron, Ohio, manufacturing plant, Goodyear makes every racing tire produced for Nascars top three series as well as the NHRA/Top Fuel league. The company churns out more than 100,000 tires each year for Nascar. About 4,000 tires are brought to the track by Goodyear on a typical Nascar race weekend.

A worker hand makes a Nascar tire at Goodyear's Akron, Ohio manufacturing plant.

And suffice it to say, the racing tire of today has come a long way from those Henry Ford days. A Nascar tire is constructed to handle speeds of more than 200 mph. At those 200 mph speeds, the surface area of one tire touching the track is roughly equal to half of an 8.5 inch by 11 inch piece of paper.

Each Nascar tire is 15 inches, weighs 24 pounds, has an RFID tag and the name of the person that made the tire on a sticker. The tire life ranges from 80 to 100 miles, or the distance it takes to use a full tank of fuel. Each tire costs $503.

As for the NHRA tires, they are designed to handle speeds in excess of 300 mph. The front tires for a top fuel car go for $274, and $919 for the ginormous rear tires.

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Brian Sozzi is an editor-at-large and anchor at Yahoo Finance. Follow Sozzi on Twitter @BrianSozzi and on LinkedIn.

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Juniper Breach Mystery Starts to Clear With New Details on Hackers and U.S. Role – Yahoo Finance

Posted: at 5:54 am

(Bloomberg) -- Days before Christmas in 2015, Juniper Networks Inc. alerted users that it had been breached. In a brief statement, the company said it had discovered unauthorized code in one of its network security products, allowing hackers to decipher encrypted communications and gain high-level access to customers computer systems.

Further details were scant, but Juniper made clear the implications were serious: It urged users to download a software update with the highest priority.

More than five years later, the breach of Junipers network remains an enduring mystery in computer security, an attack on Americas software supply chain that potentially exposed highly sensitive customers including telecommunications companies and U.S. military agencies to years of spying before the company issued a patch.

Those intruders havent yet been publicly identified, and if there were any victims other than Juniper, they havent surfaced to date. But one crucial detail about the incident has long been known uncovered by independent researchers days after Junipers alert in 2015 and continues to raise questions about the methods U.S. intelligence agencies use to monitor foreign adversaries.

The Juniper product that was targeted, a popular firewall device called NetScreen, included an algorithm written by the National Security Agency. Security researchers have suggested that the algorithm contained an intentional flaw otherwise known as a backdoor that American spies could have used to eavesdrop on the communications of Junipers overseas customers. NSA declined to address allegations about the algorithm.

Junipers breach remains important and the subject of continued questions from Congress because it highlights the perils of governments inserting backdoors in technology products.

As government agencies and misguided politicians continue to push for backdoors into our personal devices, policymakers and the American people need a full understanding of how backdoors will be exploited by our adversaries, Senator Ron Wyden, a Democrat from Oregon, said in a statement to Bloomberg. He demanded answers in the last year from Juniper and from the NSA about the incident, in letters signed by 10 or more members of Congress.

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Against that backdrop, a Bloomberg News investigation has filled in significant new details, including why Sunnyvale, California-based Juniper, a top maker of computer networking equipment, used the NSA algorithm in the first place, and who was behind the attack.

Juniper installed the NSA code an algorithm with the unwieldy name Dual Elliptic Curve Deterministic Random Bit Generator in NetScreen devices beginning in 2008 even though the companys engineers knew there was a vulnerability that some experts considered a backdoor, according to a former senior U.S. intelligence official and three Juniper employees who were involved with or briefed about the decision.

The reason was that the Department of Defense, a major customer and NSAs parent agency, insisted on its inclusion despite the availability of other, more trusted alternatives, according to the official and the three employees. The algorithm had just become a federal standard at NSAs behest, alongside three similar ones that werent mired in controversy, and the Pentagon tied some future contracts for Juniper specifically to the use of Dual Elliptic Curve, the employees said. The request prompted concern among some Juniper engineers, but ultimately the code was added to appease a large customer, the employees said. The Department of Defense declined to discuss its relationship with Juniper.

Members of a hacking group linked to the Chinese government called APT 5 hijacked the NSA algorithm in 2012, according to two people involved with Junipers investigation and an internal document detailing its findings that Bloomberg reviewed. The hackers altered the algorithm so they could decipher encrypted data flowing through the virtual private network connections created by NetScreen devices. They returned in 2014 and added a separate backdoor that allowed them to directly access NetScreen products, according to the people and the document.

While previous reports have attributed the attacks to the Chinese government, Bloomberg for the first time has identified the hacking group and its tactics. In the past year, APT 5 is suspected of engineering intrusions into dozens of companies and government agencies, according to cybersecurity firm FireEye Inc., which added that the hackers have long sought to identify or introduce vulnerabilities into encryption products to enable breaches of their ultimate targets: defense and technology companies in the U.S., Europe and Asia.

After detecting the 2012 and 2014 breaches of its network, Juniper failed to understand their significance or recognize that they were related, according to the two people involved with Junipers investigation and the internal document. At the time, the company found that hackers had accessed its e-mail system and stolen data from infected computers, but investigators mistakenly believed the intrusions were separate and limited to theft of corporate intellectual property, according to the people and the document.

Juniper declined to answer specific questions from Bloomberg. The company provided a statement that reiterated its comments from 2015 about the operating system for its Netscreen products, which is called ScreenOS.

Several years ago, during an internal code review, Juniper Networks discovered unauthorized code in ScreenOS that could allow a knowledgeable attacker to gain administrative access to NetScreen devices and to decrypt VPN connections, the company said. Once we identified these vulnerabilities, we launched an internal and coordinated external investigation and worked to develop and issue patched releases for the impacted devices. We also immediately and successfully reached out to affected customers, strongly recommending that they update their systems and apply the patched releases with the highest priority.

In a July 2020 response to Wyden and other members of Congress, Juniper provided few new details of the case but blamed the intrusions on a sophisticated nation-state hacking unit. NSA told Wydens staff in 2018 that there was a lessons learned report, but the agency now asserts that it cannot locate this document, according to a Wyden aide. Reuters previously reported NSAs claim that the document had been lost.

I am extremely disappointed that the NSA refused to answer my questions about their reported role in the Juniper affair, Wyden said in his statement.

The NSA declined to comment to Bloomberg. Chinas Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement, China firmly opposes and combats all forms of cyberattacks and opposes arbitrary labeling and malicious attacks on China in the absence of conclusive evidence.

The U.S. government and related agencies have carried out large-scale, organized and indiscriminate cyber theft, surveillance and attacks on foreign governments, companies and individuals, according to the ministry. The U.S. should stop being the thief who calls out to catch the thief.

Bloombergs findings add new details to a long-running and contentious debate over the use of backdoors secret digital pathways that bypass security measures and allow high-level access to computer networks.

Some of the governments prior efforts to install backdoors in U.S. products are well known, including an ill-fated effort to equip American-designed telecommunications equipment with NSAs Clipper chip in the early 1990s. Two decades later, leaked documents from former NSA contractor Edward Snowden revealed some of the agency's secret techniques for penetrating encryption, lending credence to allegations that NSA installed a backdoor in the Dual Elliptic Curve algorithm, according to multiple news articles based on the files.

More recently, in October, the Department of Justice under then-President Trump published a joint statement with counterparts in the U.K. and Australia saying modern encryption poses significant challenges to public safety and urging technology companies to implement reasonable, technically feasible solutions to allow authorities backdoor access when required.

The governments classified policies around the practice are shrouded in such secrecy that critics worry about potential abuses.

Junipers case is a perfect example of the danger of government backdoors, said Jennifer Stisa Granick, surveillance and cybersecurity counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union. "There is no such thing as a backdoor that only the U.S. government can exploit.

NetScreen was an innovative company that Juniper acquired for $4 billion in 2004. Its products combined a firewall, which controls who can access computers on a network, and VPNs, which encrypt users data as it travels over the internet.

Customers included major banks and nine of the 10 top global telecommunications companies, according to a Juniper investor presentation. The Defense Department was a major customer, too, and enjoyed direct access to high-ranking Juniper employees.

At least once a year, Pentagon officials traveled to Junipers headquarters to meet with a small group of NetScreens senior engineering managers to review planned product upgrades and ensure they would meet federal security standards, according to the former senior U.S. intelligence official and the three Juniper employees who either attended or were briefed about the meetings.

By 2008, the Department of Defense had presented Juniper with a tricky proposition: If the company wanted NetScreen to qualify for certain future contracts with the military and intelligence agencies, it would need to add the Dual Elliptic Curve algorithm to NetScreens ScreenOS software, the four people said.

The NSA algorithm, which was purported to improve security for encrypted communications, had been approved as a standard for government systems despite red flags. In 2007, Microsoft Corp. researchers had published a technical paper warning that it contained a likely backdoor. The researchers homed in on something called the Q value, a large number in the algorithm used to help create encryption keys. At the time, NSA had a specific value it recommended. According to the researchers, whoever picked the value could calculate the secret contents of those keys and ultimately decrypt communications.

Nonetheless, the National Institute of Standards and Technology a Department of Commerce agency that sets security requirements for federal computer systems made the algorithm part of a federal cryptographic standard in 2008 at NSAs direction, one of four that could be selected. Federal agencies and government contractors are required to follow NIST guidance, and the private sector often follows those standards.

Juniper was aware of concerns about a possible backdoor and also criticism that the algorithm was notoriously slow, according to the three employees present for or briefed about the meetings with the Pentagon. But because NIST had validated the algorithm, Juniper went forward with the proposal to satisfy a big customer, they said.

After Snowdens disclosures in 2013 renewed concerns about the NSA algorithm, Juniper said in a security advisory that NetScreen products had two safeguards designed to prevent any exploitation of the vulnerability. However, after the companys breach disclosure in 2015, independent researchers discovered that one of them failed, and the other was rendered ineffective by the hackers tampering.

Juniper wasnt the only organization that used the algorithm.

OpenSSL, whose open-source encryption software is used by millions of websites, also incorporated it. A sponsor of the project requested its inclusion to meet NIST standards, Steve Marquess, a project manager, wrote in 2013. We didnt make [Dual Elliptic Curve] a default anywhere and I didnt think anyone would be stupid enough to actually use it in a real-world context," he wrote. Marquess didnt identify the sponsor. He didnt respond to a request for comment.

Microsoft Corp., Cisco Systems Inc. and other companies included it in their products as well, according to a database maintained by NIST. Dual Elliptic Curve often came in a package of encryption software that contained all four federally approved algorithms that were part of the same standard, and companies could decide whether or how to make them available to their customers.

Microsoft and Cisco made other algorithms the default choices. Cisco, in a blog post, acknowledged using third-party software that included Dual Elliptic Curve but said the algorithm was not in use in any Cisco products. A company representative declined further comment. Microsoft declined to comment.

Industry pioneer RSA Security received $10 million from the NSA in a deal that set Dual Elliptic Curve as the default in a package of encryption software that it licensed to other technology companies, Reuters reported in 2013. RSA and its owner, Symphony Technology Group, didnt respond to messages from Bloomberg.

Junipers investigations of its breaches in 2012 and 2014 underestimated the hacking threats facing the company, mistakenly concluding that those incidents were attempts to steal trade secrets that had little effect, according to the two people involved in Junipers investigation and the internal document. The company reported the incidents to the FBI and the Defense Department but downplayed their significance to those agencies, based on its understanding of the intrusions at the time, the people said.

Juniper had missed an important clue.

In its 2012 probe, Juniper learned that the hackers had stolen a file containing NetScreens ScreenOS source code from an engineers computer. The company didnt realize that the hackers returned a short time later, accessed a server where new versions of ScreenOS were prepared before being made available to customers and altered the code, according to the two people involved in the 2015 investigation and the document. The hackers' tweak involved changing the Q value that the NSA algorithm used the very same vulnerability that Microsoft researchers had identified years earlier. The hack allowed them to potentially bypass customers' encryption and eavesdrop on their communications.

Juniper said in its December 2015 statement that it discovered the tampering during an internal code review. The company hired FireEyes Mandiant division, a leader in digital forensics, to help investigate, according to the people and the document. The investigation concluded APT 5 was behind the attacks, the people said.

A spokesperson for Mandiant declined to comment.

Juniper revealed few specifics, but independent researchers filled in many details about what happened, identifying the illicit change to the Q value and the insertion of an unauthorized master password, disguised as debugging code. The hackers could use the password to gain access to NetScreen products.

Years later, Russian hackers were discovered using a similar method, inserting a backdoor in software updates from Austin, Texas-based SolarWinds Corp., an attack a Microsoft executive described as the largest and most sophisticated attack the world has ever seen. The attackers ultimately infiltrated nine U.S. agencies and at least 100 companies using the backdoor and other methods.

In the last year, a group suspected to be APT 5 has targeted VPN devices made by San Jose, California-based Pulse Secure LLC in attacks on dozens of companies and government agencies, according to FireEye. Daniel Spicer, chief security officer at Ivanti Inc., Pulse Secures parent company, said in a statement that a highly sophisticated threat actor was behind the attacks but declined to discuss the attribution or motivation. The company found no evidence that its source code had been modified. A rigorous code review is just one of the steps we are taking to further bolster our security and protect our customers, he said.

Because of their central role in telecommunications systems, Juniper products have been a longtime target for intelligence agencies, according to a 2011 document leaked by Snowden. It revealed that GCHQ the British signals intelligence agency developed secret exploits against at least 13 different models of NetScreen firewalls, with the knowledge of the NSA. Other classified NSA memos support cybersecurity experts suspicions about Dual Elliptic Curve, indicating the NSA created a backdoor and pushed the algorithm on NIST and other standards bodies. One NSA memo, cited in news articles based on the documents, called the effort a challenge in finesse.

Based on Snowdens revelations, NIST revoked its support for the algorithm in 2014. In a statement, NIST said its decision was due to the implications suggested by the Snowden revelations. Use and implementation of an encryption technology is rooted in trust, and NIST no longer had full trust in the base assumptions made for the security of the NSA algorithm, the agency said.

While the Pentagon wouldn't discuss specific questions about its relationship with Juniper, it responded to Bloomberg News with a general statement about its cybersecurity. In light of increasingly frequent and complex cyber intrusion efforts by adversaries and non-state actors, the department is constantly applying mitigations, improving defenses, and closing vulnerabilities in our global information network, said spokesman Russell Goemaere.

Juniper warned in a December 2015 technical bulletin that there was no way for customers to know if their NetScreen VPN traffic was intercepted and decrypted. And while any use of the illicit master password would have left a small record, Juniper cautioned that a skilled hacker could delete it and effectively eliminate any reliable signature that that device had been compromised.

For all the twists and lingering questions, cybersecurity experts and civil liberties defenders say the Juniper incident shows the perils of inserting backdoors for spy agencies, the companies involved and their customers.

Time and again, weve seen the government lose control of vulnerabilities, said Jim Dempsey, a lecturer on cybersecurity at the University of California, Berkeley, School of Law. The bigger lesson from the whole Juniper ordeal is that the government cannot control its vulnerabilities. With Michael Riley and Christopher Cannon

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

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Jobless claims: Another 340,000 individuals filed new claims, reaching the lowest since March 2020 – Yahoo Finance

Posted: at 5:54 am

The U.S. saw the least number of new unemployment filings since March 2020 last week as employers sought out more workers to fill open positions during the recovery.

The Labor Department released its weekly jobless claims report on Thursday at 8:30 a.m. ET. Here were the main metrics from the print, compared to consensus estimates compiled by Bloomberg:

Initial unemployment claims, week ended August 28: 340,000 vs. 345,000and a revised 354,000 during the prior week

Continuing claims, week ended August 21: 2.748 million vs. 2.808 million and a revised 2.908 million during the prior week

Initial unemployment claims returned to their downtrend after a modest uptick last week. Filings have fallen sharply relative to August last year, when new claims were coming in at nearly 900,000 a week. And as of the latest data, the four-week moving average for new claims which smooths out volatility in the weekly data dipped by nearly 12,000 to 355,000.

The trajectory toward improvement has come alongside broadening vaccinations and business reopenings in the U.S., but has still been partially hindered by lingering concerns over the virus. Some economists have also pointed to federal enhanced unemployment benefits as another factor keeping some workers on the sidelines and still claiming jobless insurance. These pandemic-era programs, however, will expire by Sept. 6 in the about two dozen states still offering them.

As of the week ended Aug. 14, about 12.2 million Americans were claiming benefits of all forms, including both regular state and enhanced federal unemployment benefits. That marked an increase of nearly 179,000 versus the previous period, though the overall trend over the past several months has been decreasing. Some 9.2 million Americans were claiming benefits via the federal Pandemic Unemployment Assistance and Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation programs, which will each end within a week.

A primary concern for the economy has remained labor supply shortages, with employers still struggling to find enough qualified workers to fill vacancies.

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Other economic data has pointed to a slowdown in the pace of rehiring, especially as the Delta variant's spread has kept some workers on the sidelines over concerns of infection. ADP's private payrolls report on Wednesday showed the U.S. economy added back just 374,000 jobs in August, falling far short of the 625,000 that had been expected.

"The jobs recovery hasn't stalled, but new hires are clearly crawling along in the slow lane after the strong gains seen in the first half of the year," Chris Rupkey, chief economist for FWDBONDS, wrote in an email on Wednesday. "The reports of labor shortages in many industries is real and is evidence that the Fed is closer to achieving its maximum employment goal."

Friday's "official" monthly jobs report from the Labor Department is also expected to reflect a slowdown in hiring, with consensus economists looking for 748,000 non-farm payroll additions after July's 943,000. During the survey week for the August jobs report in the middle of the month, new weekly jobless claims had reached a pandemic-era low of 349,000.

Emily McCormick is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter: @emily_mcck

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Iron Maiden’s Bruce Dickinson talks surviving cancer and COVID: ‘Medical technology worked really well for me’ – Yahoo Entertainment

Posted: at 5:54 am

British metal legends Iron Maiden recorded their 17th studio album, Senjutsu, in early 2019, but many of its tracks Days of Future Past, Darkest Hour, The Writing on the Wall, and Hell on Earth, for instance certainly seem appropriate for 2021.

Strangely, we have one or two songs that do appear to be on the Zeitgeist here of what's going on, frontman Bruce Dickinson tells Yahoo Entertainment with a wry laugh. I think Steve [Harris, Iron Maidens primary songwriter] sometimes feels very kind of alienated by some of the things going on in what purports to be the modern world. So, the sentiment [of Hell on Earth] is very much: You know what? This kind of sucks, this place. So if I end up kicking the bucket and departing this planet, then maybe when I come back, it'll be another time, a parallel universe, and everything is going to be cool again.

Dickinson quips, Frankly it pisses me off! when asked about Iron Maiden being unable to tour during the past year and a half due to coronavirus concerns, saying, I've just done some theater shows, but it's not the same as a giant, fire-breathing monster in front of 20,000 people. He actually recently had a breakthrough case COVID-19, which forced him to postpone some of those theater shows, but he notes that because he was vaccinated, he was absolutely fine. My belief is and I stress, it's a belief that this proves that I would have been more sick if I've not taken the vaccine. I mean, I had both jabs. Everybody I know has had both jabs. And I'm quite happy about it. You know, none of us have started growing extra heads, suddenly wanting sidle up to 5G phones, or expressed a willingness to go down on Bill Gates. So, all of these things, I think it's largely a myth!

While Dickinson still feels its a personal choice whether to get vaccinated, he does honestly find it incredible that some people are still resistant [to vaccines] And I mean, the [anti-]mask thing I genuinely do not understand. But he doesnt think vaccine skeptics are politically motivated. I think they believe [conspiracy theories] because of their psychological makeup. They have a need to believe in these things. It's the same as people that are going to sit on top of a mountain every year and wait for the world to end. And the world doesn't end, but do they modify their beliefs? Actually, no. It strengthens them: Yep, we were right all along. It is definitely going to end, just not this year. The rest of the world is against us! And that's the way that some people think. It's their mentality, and you're probably not going to change that. But for the rest of us I would say, just get vaccinated. And if you do get sick, you won't get that sick. It'll just be like a mild case of the flu.

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Senjutsu is Iron Maiden's first album since 2015, the same year that Dickinson underwent seven weeks of treatment for a cancerous tumor on the back of his tongue. Fortunately, the tumor was discovered in its early stages, and Dickinson was declared cancer-free by May 2015. He says despite being a cancer survivor, he wasnt concerned that his compromised immunity would make him more susceptible to the coronavirus but he does recall that at the time of his cancer diagnosis, he encountered some medical skeptics that reminded him of the current anti-vax movement. When [doubters] found out that I was having chemo and radiotherapy, they went, Oh my God, you're not doing that! Um, what do you think I should do? Eat more cabbage? That's going to get rid of it? So, yeah, medical technology worked really well for me.

Dickinsons famously operatic voice sounds at the peak of its powers on Senjutsus epic tracks, some of which are well over 10 minutes long. While Dickinson chucklingly clarifies that he obviously would have preferred not to get tongue cancer, surprisingly, he says that the cancer not only didnt compromise his vocals, but it actually improved them in the long run.

SAINT PAUL, MN - AUGUST 26: Bruce Dickinson of Iron Maiden performs during the Legacy of the Beast tour at Xcel Energy Center in Saint Paul, Minnesota. (Photo: Jeff Wheeler/Star Tribune via Getty Images)

I had a three-and-a-half-centimeter [tumor] basically a golf ball living down at the base of my tongue, right at the base, he explains. So, that was sitting there for I really don't know how long by the time it got big enough to notice. But I did a whole album [2015s The Book of Souls] with that sort of sitting there. And when it went away, I guess there's a lot more space for the sound come out! Not to put too fine a point on it, but there's no more obstruction in the way, you know? So yeah, with the high notes I was like, Wow! Whoosh! There's a lot more horsepower in some of the high notes, which is interesting.

In early May [2015], I started trying to sing and it sounded absolutely terrible. I sounded like some wounded beast, Dickinson recalls of the early days of his recovery. I was just like, Oh my God!So, I waited another two or three months. I was wandering around the kitchen, waiting until everybody had gone out, and just started to give the voice a bit of a workout. I went, OK, let's have a go at the top. Dickinson then tested a few operatic lines of one of Maidens most classic songs, Run to the Hills, and suddenly all was well. I went, Oh, ooh, yep, yep, yep, yep, yep. Oh my God. And then I just relaxed, because I'm not in a hurry now; I know it's all there. It's come back.

While Dickinsons voice thankfully wasnt damaged by his illness, he insists that he was never worried about possibly having to relearn how to sing or, even worse, that he might not be able to sing ever again. There's always a way you can turn things into being a positive, he says. I mean, even if the worst happened and it completely messed with my voice to the extent that it changed completely, you have to take that and go, Well, what am I? Am I just some squeaky toy that makes noises, and if I don't make those noises, then I can't be an artist anymore? Just take a look at some great singers who have very unconventional voices. I'm thinking of somebody like Leonard Cohen there's a man who, self-confessed, was like, I have like virtually no voice. But because you're such a great communicator, the content of what you do comes through your voice. You don't have to be an opera singer to do that.

So, there's ways and means, like the line in the line in Jurassic Park: Nature will always find a way.

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West Virginia governor: ‘You have to get vaccinated’ – Yahoo Finance

Posted: at 5:54 am

As millions of students continue to return to school over the coming weeks, one state's governor is stepping up the call for vaccinations among his constituents.

"You have to get vaccinated," West Virginia Governor Jim Justice said during a regular COVID-19 briefing on Friday. "The more that are vaccinated, the less that will die. That is absolutely the way it is."

The latest CDC data available lists West Virginia as having fully vaccinated 39.6% of the population with 47% receiving at least one dose. The West Virginia Department of Health & Human Resources (HHS) website, however, lists West Virginia as having fully vaccinated 50.8% of the population with 62.5% receiving at least one dose. (The reason for the discrepancy is unclear.)

Nationwide, the vaccination rate is 61.2% for those ages 12 and up (compared to 58.5% in West Virginia, according to the state's HHS).

Cases in the state are nearing pandemic highs and rising amid the spread of the highly contagious Delta variant, which seems to be infecting unvaccinated Americans including children under 12 at higher rates as the new school year begins.

Nationally, we have seen that the overwhelming majority of people hospitalized with COVID are not vaccinated, Justice said. West Virginia is experiencing the exact same thing.

He added that unvaccinated individuals made up an overwhelming majority of the current COVID-related hospitalizations in the state. For example, at Thomas Health hospitals, unvaccinated individuals represent over 90% of the patients and 100% of those in the ICU.

Only children ages 12 and up are eligible to receive a COVID-19 vaccine. That still leaves millions of children vulnerable to the virus.

And while the mortality rate for COVID-19 in children is extremely low, thats not what physicians are most concerned about.

Its also about hospitalizations, children being pulled away from school because they get COVID, Dr. Mona Amin, a board-certified physician, said on Yahoo Finance Live (video above). They get hospitalized, hospital bills, everything that comes with being hospitalized as a child that were trying to avoid. We know that were not able to completely avoid this. We know this with the flu. We know this with [Respiratory Syncytial Virus].

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According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, more than 180,000 COVID-19 cases in children were reported during the week ending Aug. 19, and children represented about 22% of total new confirmed cases.

The Mountain State is currently experiencing 20 different outbreaks within schools across 13 counties. (Justice is still not in support of a statewide school mask mandate.)

Gov. Justice stated that he's ready to "move very quickly" to push vaccinations for children under 12, "if and when" the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends it.

"I'm totally committed to doing a back-to-school vaccination for those 12 and older," he said.

A CDC Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report published on Friday noted a COVID-19 Delta variant outbreak in an elementary school in Marin County, California in late May to early June, after an unvaccinated infected teacher continued teaching in person for two days before getting tested.

The teacher had reported becoming symptomatic on May 19 but only got a test on May 21. Between then, the CDC said "the teacher read aloud unmasked to the class despite school requirements to mask while indoors."

From there, 27 cases emerged including that of the teacher. 22 of the students who got COVID were ineligible for the vaccine because of their age. 81% of them reported symptoms, the most common being fever, cough, headache, and sore throat.

A third grade student wears a mask as she listens to instruction at Montara Avenue Elementary School on Aug. 16, 2021 in Los Angeles. (Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

As a way to encourage eligible students to get vaccinated, the West Virginia Department of Education launched its #IGotVaxxedWV campaign, which is now branded as #IGotVaxxed To Get Back, as a nod to the end goal of returning back to normal.

Part of the campaign includes schools competing for the largest percentage of vaccinated staff and students. A total of four elementary high schools, four middle schools, and four high schools will each receive $50,000 to use towards school activities.

"We've done all kinds of things ... everything we can possibly do to market, to be able to get people to the finish line and get them vaccinated," Justice said. "Everything points towards one thing, and that is you have to get vaccinated."

Adriana Belmonte contributed to this story.

Update: This post has been updated to note the discrepancy between CDC and West Virginia vaccination data.

Aarthi is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. She can be reached at aarthi@yahoofinance.com. Follow her on Twitter @aarthiswami.

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Political thought The threat from the illiberal left – The Economist

Posted: at 5:54 am

Sep 4th 2021

SOMETHING HAS gone very wrong with Western liberalism. At its heart classical liberalism believes human progress is brought about by debate and reform. The best way to navigate disruptive change in a divided world is through a universal commitment to individual dignity, open markets and limited government. Yet a resurgent China sneers at liberalism for being selfish, decadent and unstable. At home, populists on the right and left rage at liberalism for its supposed elitism and privilege.

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Over the past 250 years classical liberalism has helped bring about unparalleled progress. It will not vanish in a puff of smoke. But it is undergoing a severe test, just as it did a century ago when the cancers of Bolshevism and fascism began to eat away at liberal Europe from within. It is time for liberals to understand what they are up against and to fight back.

Nowhere is the fight fiercer than in America, where this week the Supreme Court chose not to strike down a draconian and bizarre anti-abortion law. The most dangerous threat in liberalisms spiritual home comes from the Trumpian right. Populists denigrate liberal edifices such as science and the rule of law as faades for a plot by the deep state against the people. They subordinate facts and reason to tribal emotion. The enduring falsehood that the presidential election in 2020 was stolen points to where such impulses lead. If people cannot settle their differences using debate and trusted institutions, they resort to force.

The attack from the left is harder to grasp, partly because in America liberal has come to include an illiberal left. We describe this week how a new style of politics has recently spread from elite university departments. As young graduates have taken jobs in the upmarket media and in politics, business and education, they have brought with them a horror of feeling unsafe and an agenda obsessed with a narrow vision of obtaining justice for oppressed identity groups. They have also brought along tactics to enforce ideological purity, by no-platforming their enemies and cancelling allies who have transgressedwith echoes of the confessional state that dominated Europe before classical liberalism took root at the end of the 18th century.

Superficially, the illiberal left and classical liberals like The Economist want many of the same things. Both believe that people should be able to flourish whatever their sexuality or race. They share a suspicion of authority and entrenched interests. They believe in the desirability of change.

However, classical liberals and illiberal progressives could hardly disagree more over how to bring these things about. For classical liberals, the precise direction of progress is unknowable. It must be spontaneous and from the bottom upand it depends on the separation of powers, so that nobody nor any group is able to exert lasting control. By contrast the illiberal left put their own power at the centre of things, because they are sure real progress is possible only after they have first seen to it that racial, sexual and other hierarchies are dismantled.

This difference in method has profound implications. Classical liberals believe in setting fair initial conditions and letting events unfold through competitionby, say, eliminating corporate monopolies, opening up guilds, radically reforming taxation and making education accessible with vouchers. Progressives see laissez-faire as a pretence which powerful vested interests use to preserve the status quo. Instead, they believe in imposing equitythe outcomes that they deem just. For example, Ibram X. Kendi, a scholar-activist, asserts that any colour-blind policy, including the standardised testing of children, is racist if it ends up increasing average racial differentials, however enlightened the intentions behind it.

Mr Kendi is right to want an anti-racist policy that works. But his blunderbuss approach risks denying some disadvantaged children the help they need and others the chance to realise their talents. Individuals, not just groups, must be treated fairly for society to flourish. Besides, society has many goals. People worry about economic growth, welfare, crime, the environment and national security, and policies cannot be judged simply on whether they advance a particular group. Classical liberals use debate to hash out priorities and trade-offs in a pluralist society and then use elections to settle on a course. The illiberal left believe that the marketplace of ideas is rigged just like all the others. What masquerades as evidence and argument, they say, is really yet another assertion of raw power by the elite.

Progressives of the old school remain champions of free speech. But illiberal progressives think that equity requires the field to be tilted against those who are privileged and reactionary. That means restricting their freedom of speech, using a caste system of victimhood in which those on top must defer to those with a greater claim to restorative justice. It also involves making an example of supposed reactionaries, by punishing them when they say something that is taken to make someone who is less privileged feel unsafe. The results are calling-out, cancellation and no-platforming.

Milton Friedman once said that the society that puts equality before freedom will end up with neither. He was right. Illiberal progressives think they have a blueprint for freeing oppressed groups. In reality theirs is a formula for the oppression of individualsand, in that, it is not so very different from the plans of the populist right. In their different ways both extremes put power before process, ends before means and the interests of the group before the freedom of the individual.

Countries run by the strongmen whom populists admire, such as Hungary under Viktor Orban and Russia under Vladimir Putin, show that unchecked power is a bad foundation for good government. Utopias like Cuba and Venezuela show that ends do not justify means. And nowhere at all do individuals willingly conform to state-imposed racial and economic stereotypes.

When populists put partisanship before truth, they sabotage good government. When progressives divide people into competing castes, they turn the nation against itself. Both diminish institutions that resolve social conflict. Hence they often resort to coercion, however much they like to talk about justice.

If classical liberalism is so much better than the alternatives, why is it struggling around the world? One reason is that populists and progressives feed off each other pathologically. The hatred each camp feels for the other inflames its own supportersto the benefit of both. Criticising your own tribes excesses seems like treachery. Under these conditions, liberal debate is starved of oxygen. Just look at Britain, where politics in the past few years was consumed by the rows between uncompromising Tory Brexiteers and the Labour Party under Jeremy Corbyn.

Aspects of liberalism go against the grain of human nature. It requires you to defend your opponents right to speak, even when you know they are wrong. You must be willing to question your deepest beliefs. Businesses must not be sheltered from the gales of creative destruction. Your loved ones must advance on merit alone, even if all your instincts are to bend the rules for them. You must accept the victory of your enemies at the ballot box, even if you think they will bring the country to ruin.

In short, it is hard work to be a genuine liberal. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, when their last ideological challenger seemed to crumble, arrogant elites lost touch with liberalisms humility and self-doubt. They fell into the habit of believing they were always right. They engineered Americas meritocracy to favour people like them. After the financial crisis, they oversaw an economy that grew too slowly for people to feel prosperous. Far from treating white working-class critics with dignity, they sneered at their supposed lack of sophistication.

This complacency has let opponents blame lasting imperfections on liberalismand, because of the treatment of race in America, to insist the whole country was rotten from the start. In the face of persistent inequality and racism, classical liberals can remind people that change takes time. But Washington is broken, China is storming ahead and people are restless.

The ultimate complacency would be for classical liberals to underestimate the threat. Too many right-leaning liberals are inclined to choose a shameless marriage of convenience with populists. Too many left-leaning liberals focus on how they, too, want social justice. They comfort themselves with the thought that the most intolerant illiberalism belongs to a fringe. Dont worry, they say, intolerance is part of the mechanism of change: by focusing on injustice, they shift the centre ground.

Yet it is precisely by countering the forces propelling people to the extremes that classical liberals prevent the extremes from strengthening. By applying liberal principles, they help solve societys many problems without anyone resorting to coercion. Only liberals appreciate diversity in all its forms and understand how to make it a strength. Only they can deal fairly with everything from education to planning and foreign policy so as to release peoples creative energies. Classical liberals must rediscover their fighting spirit. They should take on the bullies and cancellers. Liberalism is still the best engine for equitable progress. Liberals must have the courage to say so.

This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline "The threat from the illiberal left"

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Liberal candidate wants to be voice for the region 100 Mile House Free Press – 100 Mile Free Press

Posted: at 5:54 am

Liberal candidate Jesse McCormick is focusing his campaign on the top three issues facing the Kamloops-Thompson-Cariboo: climate change, COVID-19 and Indigenous reconciliation.

As a lawyer, McCormick has worked closely with the government, including on Parliament Hill with Catherine McKenna, minister of environment and climate change, and David Lamettei, minister of justice and Canadas attorney general.

I have spent most of my career working to advance Indigenous Reconciliation, environmental protection and finding that appropriate balance with natural resource development, McCormick said. Im very well versed in that intersection between natural resources, environmental law and policy and the rights and interests of Indigenous peoples.

McCormick said the 2021 wildfire season has underscored the importance of addressing climate change, and said he intends to fight for a national solution. On a more local level, McCormick said he would also advocate to ensure the region has enough healthcare workers and recovers economically from the COVID-19 pandemic.

If re-elected, the Liberals plan to invest $3-billion to hire 7,500 doctors, nurse practitioners and nurses over the course of four years and forgive more student debt to attract young practitioners to rural communities, he said. Promoting vaccinations is key to allowing the economy to recover, he added.

READ MORE: Federal election jostling begins

A newcomer to Kamloops his wife works as an ER physician at the Royal Inland Hospital McCormick said he decided to run to improve the lives of everyday people in the riding and be a voice for them in Ottawa. A long-time Liberal, in 2019, he ran for MP in Ontarios Lambton-Kent-Middlesex riding, where he said he came in a glorious second place.

I have a strong belief in the guiding values of the Liberal Party and also the competence of the Liberal Party to actually follow through and implement the policy measures that are being proposed.

These policies include the Liberal Partys climate change policies, the recently announced affordable housing plan and $10 a day child care. McCormick asserts that the Liberal governments records attest to their ability to successfully implement these plans.

McCormick grew up in London, Ont. as a member of the Anishinaabe people. Before becoming a lawyer, he said he learned the value of a hard days work by working as a labourer, dishwasher and Zamboni driver. He pledged to work with constituents on finding solutions.

The best part of the job (is connecting with voters). In the context of the campaign, its knocking on doors, sitting down with businesses, reaching out to mayors and taking the time to understand the issues and challenges being faced by the Kamloops-Thompson Cariboo, McCormick said. Most importantly its the conversations you have every day with community members about what issues theyre facing and what they think are the best solutions.

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From the McRib to Taco Bell’s Mexican pizza: fast food innovations we still crave today – Yahoo Finance

Posted: at 5:54 am

From Crispy Chicken Sandwich tacos at Taco Bell to new fries at Wendys, theres no shortage of shiny new items to draw the attention of the fast food connoisseur. The chicken sandwich wars also continue, two years after Popeyes kicked off the craze. And with many restaurant chains raising their prices, the business of keeping fast food fresh and interesting is more important than ever.

But these enticing eats are created for more reasons than just driving up a companys bottom line. In fact, many of the most famous fast food items of all time did not rack up a considerable profit. But they did do something potentially more valuable.

These novelty items are about the social play, getting people talking about the brand, Danny Klein, Editorial Director at Food News Media, told Yahoo. Inspiring visits, creating a new news cycle to market something else thats happening. (They) need to come to market with something unique to put on social media and draw in customers. Yum Brands (owners of Taco Bell, Pizza Hut, and KFC) are all about the cultural relevance play in their marketing, to get people talking.

Several of these fast food innovations have made such an impact that people still reminisce about them today. Here are a few of the foods still filed away in our brains as tasty memories.

McDonald's McRib draws plenty of attention when it drops on menus each year.

McRib (McDonalds)

The McRib has inspired cultish devotion since its release in 1981, and those who have not followed it since then may wonder why. Invented by McDonalds executive chef Ren Arend, the sandwich was a flop at first and was pulled from the menu in 1985. It reappeared periodically in the 90s before going on a farewell tour in 2005. Now it appears once a year, and like clockwork, people show up in droves to pack it into their faces.

Introduced in 2010, the Double Down was a viral hit for KFC.

Double Down (KFC)

Making its debut in 2010 as a limited edition item, KFCs Double Down was not for the health-conscious. Packing bacon and cheese between two slices of fried chicken in lieu of bread, the Double Down contains nearly a days worth of sodium content and 32 grams of fat. But that didnt stop 10 million people from ordering it in its first few months on the menu, according to KFC Spokesman Rick Maynard in an interview with CNN. However, Buckingham Research analyst Mitchell Speiser told CNN that the sandwich only accounted for 5% of sales that year, and that a new product has to be north of 10% to be considered a blockbuster. Much like the McRib, the Double Down has returned for limited engagements since, the most recent being in the Philippines this month.

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Burger King's chicken fries were discontinued in 2012 but brought back a few years later after thousands demanded its return.

BK Chicken Fries (Burger King)

Burger King also saw the potential to repackage the way chicken was served when it launched its BK Chicken Fries in 2005. They hung around until 2012 and were discontinued, which drummed up a huge reaction on social media begging for the fries return. Some even made dedicated Twitter accounts to broadcast their stance loud and clear. Burger King responded by bringing back the fries for good in 2014, telling Business Insider in an interview that the experience taught them to always put what the guest wants first. Since then, Chicken Fries have come in Buffalo, Jalapeno, and even Cheetos-flavored varieties.

Taco Bell's Mexican Pizza was discontinued in 2020. Will public outcry result in this item coming back?

Mexican Pizza (Taco Bell)

After 32 years on the menu, Taco Bells Mexican Pizza was discontinued in 2020, causing an uproar on social media. More than 166,000 people signed a petition pleading with the company to bring it back. One fan even went as far as to create a fake Halloween ad advertising its return. The hashtag #mexicanpizza remains active on Twitter, with some going as far as to beg newly-appointed Chief Impact Officer Lil Nas X to bring it back. Fan devotion is no joke, yall.

The Big New Yorker (Pizza Hut)

This 16-inch pizza didnt sport any special features (unless you count its foldability), but fans went nuts over it. Introduced in 1999, Pizza Hut announced 70,000,000 pies sold in the first year it was available. Its since fallen off the menu, but there is a current Change.org petition collecting signatures and hoping to resurrect its cheesy glory. The Hut currently offers a Detroit-style pizza, but it just isnt the same.

What discontinued fast foods do you most wish would make their glorious comeback? Let us know in the comments.

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SCHULTE: Liberal plan hits the target for real change in long-term care – Toronto Sun

Posted: at 5:54 am

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The pandemic tragically highlighted serious and long-standing challenges in Canadas long-term care sector. Canadians are rightly concerned about the level of care and protection provided for their loved ones. Now is not the time for half measures; its time for real change.

The Conservative plan for long-term care will squander this opportunity to provide needed help for seniors.

Better care for those living in long-term care starts with improved conditions for workers. Although the Conservatives propose to double the Canada Workers Benefit, it wont help most personal support workers whose incomes are above $32,244, the average for most nurse aides and orderlies. It wont incentivize people to start careers as personal support workers.

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In effect, the Conservative plan fails to address instability in a sector dominated by women, over a third of whom are immigrants.

While the Conservatives say that they want to invite the provinces to work with us to develop a set of best practices for long-term care, this duplicates work already underway by experts at the Health Standards Organization (HSO) and CSA Group.

When Conservative Leader Erin OToole was asked about funding for long-term care, he pointed to his promise to increase the Canada Health Transfer. But the Canada Health Transfer is a general fund that can be used for any health-care initiative, such as clearing backlogs.

The only way for the government of Canada to make permanent changes in this sector is by working cooperatively with provinces and territories, who have the constitutional jurisdiction to regulate long-term care. That requires finding common ground backed by significant, targeted federal investments.

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The Liberals have a strong record of working cooperatively with their provincial and territorial partners and have a new $9 billion plan that will deliver better care for Canadians in long-term care.

It starts by improving working conditions and raising wages for personal support workers. They are the heroes on the frontlines taking care of our loved ones.

Too many have precarious jobs in multiple homes and do not earn enough to get by on. This drives turnover and increases infections as workers spread outbreaks between homes.

A re-elected Liberal government will work with provinces and territories to ensure personal support workers receive a wage of at least $25 an hour. To address the workforce shortage, we will invest $500 million to train up to 50,000 new personal support workers.

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Over the last 20 months, weve seen how standards without enforcement fail to protect workers and residents. So we will work with our partners to introduce a Safe Long-term Care Act that ensures standards of care are upheld across the country. It will be informed by the work of the HSO and CSA.

During the pandemic, we saw the virus spread through multi-bed rooms and outdated ventilation systems.

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A re-elected Liberal government would invest a further $3 billion to provide major renovations in long-term care homes and improve the quality and number of beds.

All this adds to the almost $5 billion we have invested since the pandemic started for infection prevention and wage increases for low-income essential workers.

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Finally, seniors want to stay in their own homes as long as possible as they age. The Canadian Institutes of Health Informationreportsthat as many as one in nine seniors in long-term care could have been cared for at home with the proper supports.

Liberals have a plan to help more seniors age at home.

We will double the Home Accessibility Tax Credit, providing an additional $1,500 for renovations to make seniors homes more accessible. We will create a new Multigenerational Home Renovation tax credit to help families add a secondary suite to their home so a family member can live with them. And the new Age Well at Home initiative will fund practical supports that connect low-income and vulnerable seniors with help for tasks they are no longer able to manage.

In 2022 we are renegotiating homecare agreements with provinces and territories to improve access to homecare and transitions to long-term care or palliative care.

Everyone living in long-term care deserves safe, dignified and quality care. Only the Liberals offer an ambitious, achievable plan to get there.

Deb Schulte is the federal Liberal candidate for King-Vaughan and the Minister of Seniors.

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