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Daily Archives: January 9, 2022
Five design trends set to visually shape 2022 – It’s Nice That
Posted: January 9, 2022 at 4:03 pm
Intense, Retina-searing Colours
If there ever was a visual riposte to uncertain, challenging times that manifested through the reflective microcosm that is the world of design, then the recent rise in the use of dramatic, eye-searing colours was definitely it. Intense gradients and blazing hues showed up across advertising campaigns, album and book covers, identity systems and editorial design that made it almost impossible for the viewer to look away.
It was no coincidence that we felt the need to go full-tilt bright last year in some of our colour choices. Hope and optimism go a long way, and colour as a visual identifier of this sentiment seems like a choice many people and organisations will continue to make, says Jason Little, co-founder and executive creative director of For The People, who designed the identity for the Sydney Film Festival 2021. Its like theres all this pent up energy waiting to be released, and this is definitely an avenue to express it.
We cant wait to be safe and free again, so we pour that intention, that hope into our work and the colour choices, says Zuzanna Rogatty, senior designer at Collins. In a way, this ballsy use of colours also points towards a clear intention to make brands unignorable, Zuzanna explains. I hope it is actually a movement, a characteristic of the zeitgeist, a colour uprising, and not only a trend.
The use of provocative, complex hues is definitely here to stay. Theres always a long tail to these things, right? says Jason. While its been brewing gently for a while, lately, colours have become emblematic of the current, get-up-and-go creative landscape, and it promises to be something well see a lot of in 2022. Jason adds: And maybe the late majority and big tech will be right in this space by 2024, who knows.
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Five design trends set to visually shape 2022 - It's Nice That
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10 Fascinating Trends to Watch in 2022 – gearpatrol.com
Posted: at 4:03 pm
These days, it seems, bad news is painfully easy to find. The good stuff often takes a bit more digging. Thats where GPs expert writers and editors come in, keeping their fingers on the pulse of the industries they cover to tap into all the exciting product news breaking now and waiting for us on the horizon.
With that in mind, we tasked our teams with ID-ing the most interesting trends in their areas of expertise, and wow, theres lots to celebrate and anticipate. Just a few examples to whet your appetite: microdosing mushrooms or LSD is becoming a legal way to level out, you can order coffee beans via text message, digital audio quality has never been better, and holy crap a lot of rad EVs are coming this year.
So hey, quit the doomscrolling and do some pleasant perusing of whats good in outdoors, fitness, style, wellness, food & drink, home, tech, audio, motoring and watches below. It wont erase the bad news, but it just might make things easier to ride out.
They say threes a trend, right? In that case, we are officially declaring the outdoor industrys push toward endemic recycling incorporating factory scraps into new products just that. The micro movements inspiration is, of course, Cotopaxi. The seven-year-old Salt Lake City-based brands colorful packs and jackets are legendarily scrap-sourced, with 94 percent of its products containing repurposed, recycled or responsible materials. More to the point, it has an entire series dubbed Remnant, currently composed of 21 different bags made with fabric sourced from other companies larger production runs.
The practice makes both environmental and business sense, which may explain why at least three other prominent brands have somewhat mimicked it. First theres Nemo Equipment, which assembles the Chipper Reclaimed Closed-Cell Foam Seat aka butt pad from leftover sleeping pad foam. On a larger scale, youll find Fjllrvens Samlaren collection. Named after the Swedish word for gathering, the very limited series features unique color combinations, including a Pink-Air Blue Knken pack, which we are crossing our fingers comes back in stock.
Most recently, we have Arcteryxs ReBird program, a sweeping effort to rethink sustainability that includes an initiative to collect end-of-roll materials and upcycle them into new products. This stuff seems to sell out even faster than Samlaren does, perhaps because it truly doesnt skimp on performance: the lightweight, ski-ready Rush Jacket Rebird features Gore-Tex Pro Most Rugged, after all. That fabric is so high-performance, its no wonder Arcteryx isnt letting an ounce of it go to waste.
As curious creatures, we humans been tracking ourselves for a pretty long time. We've created almanacs, cave paintings, the Manpo-kei and more to document our exploits, bringing ever-better technology to bear with every passing year.
Until recently, breaking down our bodies activities has been fairly hands-on: the pedometer, the wireless heart rate monitor, the accelerometers embedded in phones all record various data, but they still demand a degree of user engagement. The advent of Fitbit and its ilk introduced passive tracking monitoring biometrics in real time, with minimal effort, to hone our pursuit of physical perfection (or something like that). And now, thanks to brands like HidrateSpark and Whoop, were seeing a truly friction-free movement on the horizon.
The HidrateSpark PRO sets hydration goals, employs an LED smart sensor to record water intake and glows to remind you when its time to take a swig, pretty much autonomously. The Whoop 4.0 with Any-Wear clothing technology is more advanced but just as unobtrusive. Users can hide the sensor pod on various points of their bodies to track physical activity, heart rate, stress levels and more. The unit never turns off charge it on the go with the battery pack, and digitize your metrics, 24/7. Theres no screen, no buttons, no effort (other than the initial setup, and, well, your workouts).
Different as they are, both products signal the dawn of a new era in fitness one where we can comprehensively keep tabs on our bodies, without breaking a sweat.
GORP Takes to the Streets
Arcteryx, Salomon, Patagonia, Snow Peak, And Wander, The North Face. Do these brands sound familiar? Probably so if youre prone to long, treacherous hikes across rough terrain. But for fashion-minded folks, these labels represent a new subset of the industry growing with each passing season: GORPcore, an adaption of the acronym for good ol raisins and peanuts, a popular snack mix people take on the trail.
XT-6 Trail Running Shoes
$190.00
The term encompasses technical outerwear for city-oriented types. No, the conditions in a place like New York City cannot compare to the Pacific Northwest, where trails like the Alpine Lakes or the Badlands are located, but youll find people wearing the gear within city limits nonetheless. The trend can be traced back to the early 2010s, when trendsetters turned their attention toward the elderly or the unknowingly boring for inspiration. Then, it was normcore, embodied by gray sneakers, high-end chinos and crisp, plain shirts. The TL;DR of it all: think of someone dressed head-to-toe in humbly priced pieces, or a designers rendition thereof.
Now, a $339-dollar Arcteryx jacket outweighs a silky bomber by a well-known Maison; fleeces are fighting suit jackets off the shelves; Salomon sneakers are converting lifelong Nike and Adidas loyalists. It's a signal that function and form can not only coexist in the menswear space, but drive the conversation.
Microdosing Goes Mainstream
Lets break microdosing down into its two parts: micro, meaning small, and dosing, a reference to the way you dole out a certain substance over time. The word has upended the medical and psychedelics industries respectively over the past half-decade, but it's all coming to a head now.
Substances once perceived as mere gateways to hallucinogenic (often great, occasionally bad, sometimes horrible) trips like mushrooms or LSD are now breakthrough therapeutic treatments in their own rights, capable of aiding those battling depression, PTSD or addiction with one to 10 percent of the amount needed to trip taken daily for a mild, nearly unnoticeable impact. Over time, though, consistent ingestion can lead to transformative change.
Psilocybin, the compound in mushrooms that triggers trips, is still fully illegal in almost every state. Oregon, in late November 2020, became the first state to legalize it for medicinal use. In Denver, Detroit, Somerville, Massachusetts and Oakland, California, psilocybin mushrooms are merely decriminalized, essentially meaning the police cannot enforce laws against possession or consumption.
In Texas and Pennsylvania, bills to further research the compounds potential to treat mental illnesses are nearly law. Plenty of research has already confirmed the likely upsides of both mushrooms and LSD, but professional, state-level assessments could convince even more states to pass similar, medicinal-first legalization plans. That could save thousands of lives, and help millions establish healthier habits and exist with less anxiety, new research reveals.
Sandbagging, Microwaves and Convenience
If describing food as "convenient" sounds a bit like a dog whistle (lazy, bad), know that, as of 2022, it's not. More time at home means more time in the kitchen and, after a year-plus spent indoors, no one should be ashamed to admit they could use a little more help.
The Everyday Set From Anyday
Help like Fellow's new text-to-order coffee bean service, Drops, which asks that you reply to a text with a number indicating how many bags you want. David Chang, self-proclaimed master of the art of sandbagging in the home kitchen, played a part in a pair of new releases: an absurdly good instant noodle released under his Momofuku line and cookware meant not for the stovetop, but the microwave.
Shit, a podcaster came up with a new dried pasta shape to optimize sauce carrying capacity. Making convenient also good isn't entirely new. (Ever heard of an Instant Pot? How about air fryer?) But it's easy to argue we've never seen low- and high-brow merge quite like this.
If you're not a gamer, you probably didn't know there's a whole product category dedicated to gaming furniture and accessories. Brands like Razer and Secretlab have dedicated their entire existence to help gamers achieve win after win.
Embody Gaming Chair
$1,795.00
In the past couple years, we got hints that gaming would become more pronounced outside of the gaming sphere. Razer made a mouse to help with the recent surge in working from home, and Herman Miller released a gaming chair with Logitech G.
In 2022, gaming gear continues to extend far beyond these niche brands, entering almost every aspect of the cultural zeitgeist and becoming more approachable. Mavix released an entry-level gaming chair to complement its pricier options, maintaining its gamer-friendly features minus the huge investment.
And if there's one release that solidifies the category's staying power, it's Ikea's Uppspel collection. The line was designed in collaboration with Republic of Gamers, an Asus-owned brand dedicated to PC gaming. It's filled with stuff to make gaming more comfortable, from chairs to desks, and while no one needs gaming-specific furniture, it's just a hint at what's to come.
The March of the Microchips
For decades, devices that compete on the open market have shared some very, very similar components inside. Until Apple's M1-chip initiative brought to its apex with the new MacBook Pros Mac and Windows computers alike ran on the same Intel chips. In the land of smartphones, meanwhile, virtually every Android phone, from Samsung or Google or LG, has historically had a Qualcomm chip of some sort at its heart.
Apple's 14-inch MacBook Pro
But the times are changing. Apple's M1 chip is the loudest example, but this past fall Google announced it's heading in the same direction with its "Tensor" chip that powers the Pixel 6. Amazon is already on its third generation of in-house Graviton chips, used to power the computers at its cloud data centers. Tesla is preparing to produce its own chips as well. Facebook ("Meta," if you must) is on the war path too.
What does this mean? For you, the humble end user, the direct effects may not be completely clearly microchip related. On the upside, a device that's designed as one piece from silicon to screen can reach new heights of efficiency. That means better battery life, more horsepower and less bulk all at the same time.
On the downside, cross-compatibility could take a nosedive. Devices that used to share some common DNA increasingly won't. This could leave developers in the lurch to prioritize one evolutionary path over another. As if they aren't under enough pressure to do so as it is.
From a broader perspective, it illustrates a world-historical concentration of capital in the hands of tech mega-giants. Companies that once made their bones running goofy college websites or delivering books through the mail have ascended to architecting products on a scale that, just decades ago, required the cooperation of entire industries. That kind of centralized planning comes with its benefits, but not all of them are for you.
The Commoditization of Lossless Audio
Audio quality took a big hit in the '90s during the age of Napster and the iPod when compressed digital files (which take a lot of details out of the music, especially on the high and low ends) were all the rage. But over the past four decades there's been a steady resurgence of high-quality audio, largely thanks to old-school analog formats (like vinyl) becoming en vogue again and, more recently, lossless audio becoming easily streamable.
Last year was a banner one for lossless audio. The two biggest music streaming services on the planet, Apple Music and Spotify, both announced lossless streaming tiers. While Spotify's service has yet to appear, Apple's lossless tier made waves by rolling out to all paying Apple Music subscribers at no extra cost. Now you can stream lossless (or CD quality) for $10/month, which is half the price that some legacy lossless streaming services (like Tidal) are charging.
This move by Apple subsequently forced the hand of every other lossless streaming service out there Tidal, Deezer, Qobuz and Amazon all lowered the barrier of entry to their lossless streaming tiers. Now it's not only easier than ever to listen to high quality music streams, but it's also affordable.
An EV for Everyone
So far, buying an EV has meant buying a Tesla or buying a not quite-as-good alternative to a Tesla that is expensive and not that conducive to most peoples lifestyles. But an avalanche of EVs will enter the market in 2022 many on new dedicated EV platforms. And if youre in the market for a new vehicle, there should be an EV that meets your needs.
Luxury options will increase dramatically. Want range and performance? The Lucid Air will deliver more than 500 miles of range and 1,100 horsepower. Want that performance from an off-road EV? The Hummer SUT arrives very soon, and it will accelerate as quickly as a Porsche in WTF mode with off-roading specs that beat the Jeep Wrangler Rubicon. Just want the luxury car you would have bought but electric? Stay tuned for new offerings from Mercedes, BMW and Audi that are just that.
Want an electric truck? You can hop on the Rivian bandwagon with the new R1T or keep things a bit more traditional with the Ford F-150 Lightning arriving next year. Want something relatively affordable? The VW ID.4 is out. And Nissan, Toyota, Subaru, Kia and Hyundai are launching electric crossovers. Oh, and the starting MSRP for that F-150 Lightning is under $40,000 before the potential tax credit.
Hurdles remain for mass-adoption EVs charging infrastructure isnt where it needs to be yet if you dont have a Level 2 home charger but the right option should be out there if youre willing to leap into the future.
Lean, Green Machines
While 2021 wasn't the first year we noticed a trend toward, shall we say, a more "verdant" timepiece, it was certainly the year in which the green watch firmly took hold. As horological veteran William Massena once explained, the watch world is on a roughly three-year product development cycle, so while entirely new models take quite a while to develop, habillage, or "dressing up" is much quicker and easier to execute. (Read: Take that watch that already exists and make it green! Because everybody else is doing it!)
While it would've perhaps been unthinkable just a few short years ago and certainly 20 or 30 years ago watches with colored dials are back in a big way. Something that isn't black, white or silver or, heaven forbid, blue! seems like it might just be the next big thing. Rolex launched a new series of "Stella" dials in their Oyster Perpetual line, and for the first time (perhaps ever), an OP became nearly impossible to buy at retail. Then came a green Datejust with what looks like either pot leafs or palm fronds on it (depending how much weed you smoke), and the entire Internet lit up.
Patek did the same thing, turning its 5909 annual calendar into a lean, green machine (and making it in steel, no less), which earned the timepiece a spot in our GP100. (The brand did the same for a short, final run of the famed 5711 pure unobtanium if there is such a thing.) Who knows what's next? If green is "in," anything seems possible. Is this the end of boringly bland watch dials a window into a brighter future? Color us intrigued.
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Arise, Sir Aidan dreaming of the Irish who deserve honours – Independent.ie
Posted: at 4:03 pm
Sir The annual publication in the UK of the queens New Year Honours seems to inevitably elicit contributions from various correspondents regarding our system of honours, or in some cases, the lack of it.
erhaps it was the sugar rush from the last of the mince pies, but my imagination went into overdrive as I imagined the link with the crown had not been broken 100 years ago.
In my reverie, I saw Aidan OBrien on one knee, head bowed, as the queen placed the ceremonial sword on each shoulder. I heard her whisper: Arise, Sir Aidan.
The two monarchs of their respective spheres then joined in in close conversation, presumably on equine matters.
From the wings, actor, Sir Gabriel Byrne appeared, preceded by the more senior knight Sir Gabriel Byrne. The double-take confused no one, certainly not Sir Bob Geldof nor Sir Daniel ODonnell, who got the gong for their services to music and charitable work. Sir Ben Dunne got his prefix for business.
The ladies are also in the mix. Dame Sonia OSullivan for sports, Dame Mary Robinson for human rights, Dame Mary Kenny for journalism and Dame Miriam for TV.
I dreamed the Upper House was also represented, and Lord Kinsealy created quite a stir in the sedate House of Lords, though his gallop was balanced by the more correct Lord Michael of Galway, who found the ancient house a suitable venue to exercise his oratorical skills.
Alas! To paraphrase the Bard, We are such stuff, as any dreamers are made of.
Patrick Fleming,Glasnevin Dublin 9
Sir I read with interest your editorial piece in last Sundays paper. I completely agree with your opinion on the stable state of our country and the fact we have far more that unites us than divides us.
However, I contrasted your positive piece with that of Gene Kerrigan, whose theme, week-in week-out, on the prominent back page is to shred the current and indeed past governments for every move they make.
Mr Kerrigan is a fine writer and can be so sharp on certain topics, but if one were to only read his opinion every week we could be led to believe we live in a shambles of incompetency, fraud, corruption and general chaos, with no hope for the future unless a group of hard-left politicians take over and put us on the right track.
May I suggest everyone in the country be asked to read Mark Henrys excellent recently published book, In Fact:An Optimists Guide to Ireland at 100.
This might level the argument for the naysayers and doom merchants. And also the cynics and pessimists.
Yes we have big problems here in Ireland, as there are in the rest of the world. A wise man said: The world has enough for everyones needs, but not everyones greed.
Mary Cleary,Firhouse, Dublin 24
Sir I am amused by Joe Brollys naive reliance on record sales for The Men Behind the Wire as proof of the emotional connection that the people of the Republic had with them.
Aside from the fact an RT ban broadened the appeal of the song in question, Joe should know that, in the real world, democratically held elections provide a sounder basis for assessing the opinion of the people. From 1976 to 1994, over 85pc of those who voted in seven general elections supported political parties that maintained Section 31 of the Broadcasting Act.
The people and the political parties were on the same page on this one, Joe.
PJ OMeara,Cahir, Co Tipperary
Sir Joe Brollys excellently written piece last week reminded me of Fianna Fils attitude to the Troubles in Northern Ireland and indeed to its treatment of the Irish media of the time.
That Irish journalists, many of them solid NUJ trade unionists, were silenced and an eminent RT reporter ended up in prison for reporting the truth in the news was certainly an indictment of a party that has the word republican in its shop window.
Mr Brollys words were obviously written from the heart. Along with my favourite columnist, Gene Kerrigan, he truly is a nugget of hope at a time when stenographers and press releases are stymieing a proud tradition.
Jimmy Rhatigan,Loughboy, Kilkenny city
Sir In the first half of an Ulster Championship match against Down in 1994, Joe Brolly destroyed all before him. But, with regard to his article last week, I fear I must put a stop to Joes relentlessly one-sided revisionist viewpoints much like Paul Kelly did when he came on for Down in the second half and took Joe out of the game.
I cannot pretend to understand what growing up in South Derry was like, to be a second-class citizen. But it reflects poorly on Joes legal training to hammer the same line, without context, at every opportunity.
Hindsight is always clear. A barrister always has time to analyse, parse and deconstruct the decisions of others who have to actually deal with a chaotic or stressful or dangerous situation.
Pearse Doherty,Co Monaghan
Sir I want to compliment you on the supplement on the Treaty Debates in last weeks issue of the Sunday Independent.
It was so interesting and factual and a pleasure to read and even my grandchildren showed great interest in it. They loved the old advertisements.
Sally McDonald,Ballinacarrig, Carlow
Sir By agreeing to attend the Treaty negotiations in 10 Downing Street, London, did that not somehow imply that ownership of Ireland was vested in the UK government?
Accordingly, did this not reduce the plenipotentiaries to the role of beggars begging the owners for concessions to bring home to the Dil in the guise of obtaining the best deal?
Apart from conceding home advantage to the opposition, surely by insisting on a more neutral venue Edinburgh or Cardiff the Irish delegation would have kicked off the negotiations on a more equal footing?
Separately, compliments to the editor for last weeks supplement in the Sunday Independent an excellent coverage of the Dil debates leading to ratification.
Mick OBrien,Springmount, Kilkenny
Sir The Golfgate trial in Galway was told the public was whipped up into hysteria and good people had to resign.
I found this statement to be absolutely ludicrous.
I say that based on the millions of people in this country who at that time were asked to make unprecedented sacrifices.
The least I would have expected from our public representatives is that they too would have been on board with the zeitgeist of that time.
It appeared to me that Golfgate was one rule for them and another rule for everyone else.
Name and address with Editor
Sir Hold on, lets nip this in the bud. We are all fairly much aware of the facts and circumstances of this. Trial of the Four is a futile exercise. No new facts will emerge. Legal profession get another fat pay day. Court time wasted. Mood of the nation gets another kick in the teeth.
Instead why not ask Donie Cassidy and Noel Grealish to request a modest 2k each from the offenders. We and they know who they are. Include Phil Hogan and Samus Woulfe. Nobody loses further face. Money paid to go to a nominated charity (charities). All legal action dropped.
Common sense and decency should prevail.
Tony Finucane,Ennis, Co Clare
Sir I was surprised at An Taoiseachs attack on Sinn Fin and his allegation of them having a pro-Putin stance on Ukraine. It is a poor reflection on a leader to be encouraging confrontation with Russia and compromising our neutrality.
Surely Mr Martin, a teacher qualified in political history, must remember what happened in 1955 when the US positioned missiles in Turkey aimed at the USSR and Russia reciprocated by placing missiles in Cuba?
The world came close to nuclear war until, fortunately for us all, both sides sensibly removed their cause for war in 1962.
Mr Martin should exhort the EU to bring their influence to bear on Biden and Putin and stop Ukraine becoming another pawn with the potential for war.
Don Teegan,Monkstown, Demesne, Co Cork
Sir Conor ODonovans letter (GAA must resolve to fix hand-pass fiasco) resurrected the spiky issue that, for me, has dimmed the brilliance of our ancient game in recent years.
There is an article on his countys Premierview site about the issue of the hand-pass with statistics that seriously undermine the legality of how the pass is being executed. For instance, two-thirds of the hand-passes in the semi-finals and final of this years senior hurling championship were illegal ones.
Its long been the rule that if a player wants to carry the sliotar for more than four steps he/she has to bounce or balance it on the hurley, while the sliotar can only be handled twice in such a possession. It would be in keeping with this principle that the hand-pass be adjusted, whereby both hands must be used to execute the movement. Failing that the hand pass as is should be limited to a maximum of three hand-offs.
Such modifications would limit the easy retention of possession, promote more contesting of the sliotar as was traditional in the game and carry the potential to make a referees life a smidgen easier.
Michael Gannon,St Thomas Square, Kilkenny
Sir The comments by the Pope concerning pets and children were undoubtedly insensitive and unkind to animal lovers. He perhaps unintentionally strayed off message. Where was his shepherd?
He was bemoaning the global decline in birth rates and clumsily threw the pets out of the bath water to make a point.
I can remember from coming from a family of 10, not including the many wonderful pets we had, that it was considered a bit selfish for parents to have so many children or at least it sometimes felt like that. All those mouths to feed. But my parents managed to share the sustenance and love.
Obviously, the church welcomed all, the more the merrier with that expectation of some dayof a Christian brother, a nun and a priest for the fold.
I fondly remember an episode from The Vicar of Dibley, when Geraldine organised an impromptu gathering (pre-Covid) for the local pet owners to bring their pets to the church for a special sermon thanking God for all living creatures. The service was a lively event as humans and their pets packed out the church and the choir sang All Things Bright and Beautiful and Puppy Love.
I wonder what St Francis of Assisi would think of the Popes comments? I suspect he might identify more with the vicar.
Aidan Roddy,Cabinteely, Dublin 18
Sir In the haste to dismantle the religious trappings of Christmas, spare a thought for the Three Wise Kings (aka the Magi), who arrived, camel-sore, weary and in the nick of time into Christian history and a mere few days ago in our family cribs on January 6.
Shouldnt we afford Balthasar, Melchior and Caspar a period of Yuletide welcome beyond the cut-off point of the 12 days and Little Christmas?
It would be (to borrow TS Eliots wonderful word in Journey of the Magi) satisfactory.
Oliver McGrane, Rathfarnham, Dublin 16
Sir With the present Governments regulations on alcohol price control forcing the consumer to drink less, perhaps they should set a good example and ban alcohol from the Dil?
David Smyth,Co Leitrim
Sir The Governments introduction of minimum alcohol pricing is a progressive step if it encourages people to drink a little less. It reminds me of one of the many stories my late father told me about the customers of the family pub.
John arrived at the pub every evening around 8pm. He had three pints of Guinness before closing time. He enjoyed discussing Austin Stacks football, greyhounds, horses and the news of the day. He then walked home, where he lived alone.
When the price of the pint went up from 11p to an old Irish shilling, the regulars called down every misfortune on the powers that be in Dublin, but the porter continued to flow.
Making his way to John, who was sitting contentedly by the fire, Dad asked: Will you follow the pint at the new price, John?
My dear man, replied John. Ill follow it to Hell. Drinking the juice of the barley in such pleasant company is priceless.
Billy Ryle,Spa, Tralee, Co Kerry
Sir Our legislators are among the highest-paid in the world, but the new regulations on buying alcohol are more Luddite than progressive. They display a paucity of imaginative and innovative thinking and the implementation of these measures will only benefit special interest groups, again.
Those of us on fixed incomes, particularly those of us getting on in years, will have to pay prices out of the reach of many.
Like all responsible people, I would like to see an end to anti-social drinking and the social ills that accompany this scourge, but it is wrong to scapegoat everyone for the irresponsible behaviour of the few.
Tom Cooper,Templeville Road, Dublin 6W
Sir The reality of binge drinking and cheap alcohol was brought home to our family 11 years ago when our 19-year-old son, David, died by suicide after leaving an all-night house party.
At his inquest we asked that the problem of cheap alcohol be addressed, along with promotion and availability.
We were just parents who saw a problem and wanted change, not sympathy.
At times, total strangers saw fit to tell us we were just looking for something to blame and that we were allowing ourselves to be used as pawns despite the proven facts that alcohol is a contributing factor in 50pc of suicides in Ireland and a person is eight times more likely to die by suicide when they are binge drinking.
It says on Davids death certificate that alcohol was a contributing factor in his death. It never ceases to amaze us that so many people choose to ignore these facts.
Minimum unit pricing is the can that was kicked down the road until eventually someone decided to pick it up and thank God they did.
John Higgins,Ballina, Co Mayo
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Mom Does Her Own Detective Work to Nab Teen Son’s ‘Russian Roulette’ Killer – The Daily Beast
Posted: at 4:02 pm
A Chicago-area mother wanted the killer of her 17-year-old son found, even if that meant she had to do it herself. Leslie Bell explained during a news conference Friday that she retraced her son Isaiah Davis steps to see who he was with. Nearly two months after the Oct. 28 murder, she came face-to-face with the man she believed was responsible. I knew that it was him who hurt my son, who actually killed my son, Bell said, according to the Chicago Sun-Times. It was his interaction with me. He couldnt give me eye contact, so that was it for me. Police credited Bell with helping them nab Faheem Norwood, who was arrested on Dec. 31 on first-degree murder. Prosecutors say he shot Isaiah then tried to set the teens body on fire. Norwoods attorney claimed he accidentally shot Davis during a game of Russian roulette. The arrest of Faheem Norwood was possible because the community worked with us, Harvey Police Deputy Chief Cameron Biddings said.
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Its Russian roulette out there: Tenants face sticker shock as rents rise – WSOC Charlotte
Posted: at 4:02 pm
CHARLOTTE Zillow has released its predictions for the hottest housing markets this year and Charlotte ranks fifth. Experts expect prices to climb 21% through November, which is good for sellers but bad for buyers, including renters.
Many renters have been contacting Action 9, saying their leases are up and that their landlords are raising their rent hundreds of dollars per month.
[READ MORE: Charlotte ranks fifth in Zillows 10 hottest housing markets]
Charlene Phillip and her mother, Thora, have lived together in Concord since 2014. Their current lease ends in February. They told Action 9s Jason Stoogenke that they were paying a little more than $1,000 each month, but the new rate will be more than $1,350.
Charlene said shes very worried.
We didnt have holidays. I remember I cried all day Thanksgiving day because this is the first time Ive ever been in this position to this point where I dont know what to do, Charlene said.
You lose sleep at night, Thora added.
The Phillips told Stoogenke the pandemic cost Thora her job. Shortly after that happened, Charlene had to have emergency back surgery.
When I came out, I had no job. Im an independent contractor, Charlene said.
They were able to get unemployment benefits and rental assistance for a while, but both have ended or will end soon. Now, theyre living off Thoras Social Security and hoping Charlene will qualify for disability.
[READ MORE: Heres how much workers have to earn to afford rent in Charlotte area]
They told Stoogenke that they asked their apartment complex to reconsider the rent increase, but that it said no. Theyve considered moving but have run into one waitlist after another.
Its Russian roulette out there, Charlene said.
The women have renewed their lease, even though they dont know how theyre going to pay for rent.
According to Zillow, Charlottes rent has gone up 18.5% since this time last year with the average bill costing about $1,700 per month. Other markets have experienced an increase as well, including Raleigh, which has gone up 18.1% and Atlanta, which has gone up 22.7%.
A lot of people actually got relative bargains on rent if they signed a lease about a year ago, Zillow economist Jeff Tucker said. However, since then, supply has gone down while demand has gone up.
[ALSO READ: Charlotte area logs steep decline in housing affordability]
Vacancy rates are very, very low. There are a lot of folks out there trying to get an apartment. And a lot of people who may have been planning to move out of their apartment and buy their first home who got stymied last year because home prices rose just as fast as rent. So, put that all together and its a recipe for a lot of demand pressure on rentals, Tucker added.
Stoogenke found that the law isnt on the renters side. Landlords can raise the rent when a lease is up.
Many cities across the country limit what landlords can charge with rent control, but North Carolina law actually forbids cities and counties from doing that. The only option a renter may have is to pressure state lawmakers to change the law.
Unfortunately, that does not help renters now.
(WATCH: Action 9: Understanding the difference between low-income tax credits and income-based rent programs)
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Can Britain really learn to live with Omicron? This week well find out – The Guardian
Posted: at 4:02 pm
The roulette wheel is spinning, the ball already rattling towards its final destination. Boris Johnson has bet the house on his Omicron gamble and now theres no going back. The bullishness of ministers insisting over the weekend that they see no case for further restrictions glosses over the fact that it may now be too late for that anyway, given an estimated one in 25 people in England already had the virus before New Years Eve.
Double or quits it is, then, as a country drags itself back out to work and school after the Christmas hibernation period. Were about to find out exactly what it means to experience unprecedented levels of Covid infections, but from a strain that may be less dangerous, at least in the fully vaccinated. Once again, a virus we thought wed got to know has abruptly shapeshifted and once again, history isnt necessarily a reliable guide to the present. Were all back on the seesaw, lurching between hope and fear, never knowing quite what to expect.
The novel threat this time is not death on the biblical scale forecast during the first wave although sadly there will be too many deaths, hospitalisations and cases of long Covid disabling people for months to come but knock-on chaos and disruption caused by the potential mass infection of key workers, leaving them unable to do their work. Weve entered an unpredictable world of people who have heart attacks waiting for well over an hour for an ambulance, critical incidents being declared by hospitals that cant maintain safe staffing levels and large organisations being warned to plan for up to a quarter of their people being off sick or self-isolating. Now imagine what that worst-case scenario might do to the everyday grind of supermarket deliveries, bin collections and bus timetables, let alone to policing or critical infrastructure such as the power and water industries.
Education ministers have meanwhile vowed to keep schools and nurseries open wherever possible rightly given the profound impact we now know closures had on poorer childrens education, and on a vulnerable few who are sadly safer with their teachers than with their parents but are simultaneously letting heads know they can send year groups home if they have to. For secondary schools in England and Wales hit by serious staff shortages, in practice that would probably mean prioritising GCSE and A-level classes for pupils who need to sit their mocks this term but switching to home schooling for other years if necessary, something already happening in some parts of the country before Christmas as Omicron hit.
Nurseries and primary schools catering for pupils too young to be vaccinated will meanwhile be flinging windows open to the January air and crossing their fingers, knowing that (at least according to the Office for National Statistics) about one in 15 children aged between two and 11 had Covid before Christmas. Since many key workers are also parents who cant easily do their jobs if their child gets sent home sick, were probably about to be reminded that childcare is the fourth emergency service, without which the other three would struggle very quickly. In other words, its time to prepare ourselves at least for the possibility of things getting messy; of everyday life becoming harder and more volatile as Covid jams its spokes into wheels that in good times you barely even notice turning.
With luck, that upheaval could be mercifully brief. But any country that nearly ground to a halt overnight thanks to a temporary post-Brexit shortage of fuel tanker drivers and a panicky stampede for petrol should probably have learned by now not to get cocky. Over and over again this virus has reminded us of just how much happens unseen beneath the surface of a functioning society; of how complex our just-in-time modern lives with all their endlessly interconnected moving parts have become, but also how fragile, dependent on things and people we mostly take for granted until brutally reminded not to do so.
And thats why learning to live with this or any other virus, the mantra of those who never want their liberties restricted by government diktat again, doesnt mean quite what some hope it does. Its not about ripping off your mask and gleefully forgetting that any of it ever happened, but about building in resilience and learning from the weaknesses exposed by Covid. Rubbing along successfully through what might hopefully be the tail end of a pandemic should mean investing not just in vaccines and antivirals but in more hospital beds and people to staff them, creating enough slack in the system to absorb seasonal Covid surges without having to throw up tent wards in NHS car parks. Its going to mean well-honed contingency plans for critical industries, better ventilation in schools, and more imaginative answers to the question of protecting people who are shielding or clinically vulnerable than are so far forthcoming from lockdown sceptics bellowing that its time everyone was left to get on with their lives. But it may also take something of a shift in national attitudes.
Living successfully with Covid-19 will require not just a virus obliging enough not to mutate in more lethal ways but the maturity to self-police sometimes as plenty did last month by voluntarily side-swerving parties or the pub so they could have Christmas with their families, and as Swedes have always quietly done in what was the unsung element of their countrys no-lockdown policy and the resilience to live with a degree of unpredictability in life, which is infinitely easier said than done for some. Low-income families especially are likely to need help absorbing the sudden shocks and disruptions this virus is still capable of delivering, even as it hopefully burns itself out.
The silver lining to the Omicron cloud is, of course, that it could pass relatively quickly. Its risky reading too much into data collected over the Christmas holidays when reporting was potentially patchy, but all hopes are now pinned on Britain following the same path as South Africa, where infections seemed to peak relatively quickly before falling back. A rocky few weeks, so the cabinets argument goes, beats months of economic and personal misery; better to rip the plaster off and get it over with. Whether that gamble was uncharacteristically shrewd or lethally reckless will become clear enough in the next few days as Omicron spreads from London to the rest of the UK, with hospitalisation rates doubling already across much of the north of England. But right now, the wretched roulette wheel is still spinning, and all most of us can do about it is hold our breath.
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Column: How will climate change impact the Shuswap? Salmon Arm Observer – Salmon Arm Observer
Posted: at 4:01 pm
What does the future hold?
Two years ago, after the New Years Eve snowmageddon storm, my first column of the new decade predicted the beginning of the new roaring twenties with the roar not coming from wild dance parties, but instead from wildfires, intense storms, rising social upheavals and yet more wars.
Sadly, most of these predictions are coming true and are joined with continued societal stress from the pandemic that refuses to go away. The weather and its impacts now dominate the news as we anticipate more crisis generating intense storms, heat domes and summers filled with smoke and the threat of local wildfires.
One result of the pandemic is that continued social isolation has prevented the completion of volume two of Everything Shuswap, because all the chapters involve social interaction. With many restrictions still in place, many cultural activities are on hold, community events are cancelled, and the economy remains at half-throttle. Consequently, my columns have branched out to cover other fascinating topics such as the intentional communities of the 70s and 80s.
The plan for the final chapter of the last volume is the topic What does the future hold?
The future for humanity has the potential to head in one of two directions, either towards environmental and social collapse or towards a more promising future where solutions to the current problems are working, society has become more equitable and sustainable, and health and happiness are the norm. In order to achieve a more promising future than what the cards are currently dealing, a number of prerequisites need to be met that would lay the foundation for a better future.
With the climate continuing to heat up as more carbon and methane is pumped into the atmosphere, the earths biological support system is in free-fall. It was easy to think that the Shuswap would be less impacted because of its geography, but in fact the temperature is rising faster in the north than in mid-latitudes and, like most of the continent, we are in line for the increasing number of impacts from jet-stream instability. Thus, key to our ability to thrive in the future will be pre-emptively adopting climate change adaptation measures that will minimize the impacts from fires, heat, drought, storms and other emergencies.
Read more: Column: Ancient cedar stands at risk in Shuswaps own Fairy Creek
Read more: Christmas & climate change: Shuswap environmentalist recommends planet-friendly season
Another key prerequisite is overall, societal and economic stability from the world level down to the regional level. It is possible that one day soon, political tensions could ease, and financial inequality will lessen given the need for everyone on the planet to concentrate on survival by working together as the planet overheats. If co-operation replaced competition, if the wealthy paid their true fair share, and if governments and citizens adopted common goals, all regions like the Shuswap would benefit.
Think back to how different our world was in 1992 when personal computers were just being developed, cellphones looked like large walkie-talkies, there were few homeless people, homes were affordable and massive forest fires, storms and intense droughts were a rarity.
Considering how massive societal changes are occurring now, what might the Shuswap be like in 2052? In the following series of articles, I will explore the possibilities that the future holds if the key prerequisites are met to accelerate climate change adaptation, improve sustainability and achieve equitability.
What might the city of Salmon Arm and other local communities look like with mass migration likely, as people are forced to flee flooded coastlines and southern regions where temperatures are too hot to support populations? How will land and water be managed to support both a larger population, as well as to promote greater carbon absorption and conserve water? How will education work, and how will people keep in shape and enjoy sports and recreation when snowfalls are rare and summer temperatures are too high for outdoor activities? How will agriculture work? What will people eat?
One value of considering what a better future might look like is that it enables backcasting to identify what policies and programs are needed to reach the future desired state. By imagining an ideal future condition, one can better understand what is needed to get there. If we want our grandchildren to experience the best possible future, there is no better time than the present to help make that happen.
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What happened to those in poverty with the child tax credit expansion ended? – The Philadelphia Inquirer
Posted: at 4:01 pm
Federal payments that kept millions of families out of poverty have expired without Congress allowing them to continue, plunging people in need back into a state of indigence they believed theyd never have to endure again.
Its foolish and short-sighted and unconscionable, said Beth McConnell, director of policy in Philadelphias Office of Community Empowerment and Opportunity. We are literally taking food out of childrens mouths.
The Biden administrations one-year expansion of the child tax credit (CTC) starting last July was meant to help families navigate the pandemic with cash infusions of as much as $3,000 a year per child ages 6 to 17, and $3,600 a year per child from newborn to age 5.
The expanded CTC has especially helped the poorest Americans. To get the credit before the expansion, households had to earn at least $2,500 annually, omitting those who didnt make that much.
Under Bidens plan, however, the CTC became fully available to all those in poverty, regardless of income.
But now, as the omicron variant proliferates exponentially, that lifeline has been snatched back, allowing those in poverty to languish without a means of survival theyd grown to depend on, advocates and low-income people say.
Its definitely a hardship, said Samantha Rodriguez, 28, a South Philadelphia child-care worker with a 6-year-old daughter. Shed been receiving a CTC payment of $250 a month that started in July and ended last month.
That money was paying for our food, said Rodriguez, who described herself as a single mother making less than $20 an hour. She has a masters degree in business and is enrolled in a teachers certification program. Her goal is to some day open a charter school to help children with special needs. But Rodriguez is yoked to student debt of $90,000, making economic survival precarious.
Ill have to figure out now how we eat, said Rodriguez, whos applied for a second job as a driver for Uber Eats. Im determined not to have to go to food pantries for help.
Overall, Mai Miksic, early childhood policy director for Philadelphia-based Children First (formerly Public Citizens for Children and Youth) predicts longer lines at food pantries, and people relying more on community-based programs that give out diapers and clothing.
As dire as life might get, there will be some short-term relief, however small.
The CTC expansion was supposed to be for 12 months. That means those whove received payments between July and December of 2021 are still owed another six months of cash.
But, there are two conditions. First, the money will be given only to people who file their 2021 income taxes this year. That could be a problem because many low-income people dont ever file, often because they dont make enough. Many of these individuals were allowed to sign up for the CTC in 2021 by using a non-filer portal on the government website.
But, advocates say, the non-filer option will no longer be available, and people will have to file traditional tax returns, something those in poverty may be unable to do because theyre unfamiliar with it, or cant afford filing help. Tax services for those in poverty are available.
Second, even if people do file their taxes, the CTC wont be mailed to them in monthly installments as it was last year. Instead, the money will come in one lump sum, like a tax refund after being processed by the IRS, making it more difficult to meet monthly bill payments.
I intend to file my taxes to get the remaining six months payments, said Susann Ali, 38, a Head Start teacher from Germantown. But until then, we are without money that was helping me pay my three kids Catholic school tuition.
And after those payments are completed, Ali said, she worries that Congress wont restore the help shed grown to rely on:
I thought that by now, theyd have extended the credit, and Im scared it might not ever happen.
The expanded CTC was expected to be so popular that Congress would automatically renew it for 2022 and beyond.
But so far that hasnt happened, despite continued efforts to do so. And surveys show that not all Americans like the idea. A December Morning Consult/Politico poll discovered that just 47% of Americans favored extending the expansion, as opposed to 42% who were against it.
More important, Sen. Joe Manchin (D., W.Va.) said he wouldnt support the credit expansion going forward without a work requirement attached. Manchins vote is key in an evenly split Senate.
That view is espoused by conservative entities such as the American Heritage Foundation, which explains that extending the expansion in 2022 would actually stymie anti-poverty efforts by persuading people not to work, but simply collect government funding.
Thats a minority view.
In a widely recognized study last fall, Columbia University found that the enhanced CTC has had no negative impact on workforce participation among parents.
Columbia research also discovered that the augmented tax credit kept nearly four million children out of poverty and that food was the top item families spent their federal money on.
If one of the goals was to reduce child poverty, the expanded credit was tremendously successful policy, said Temple University sociologist Judith Levine, director of the schools Public Policy Lab.
But now children are being thrown back into poverty and the timing is terrible with the pandemic surging and parents having to stay out of work to be with their children as schools and child-care centers close.
The end of the expanded CTC wont halt the typical CTC that families have been receiving for years. But it will mean less money. The expanded CTC grew to amounts of $3,000 to $3,600 per child. The normal CTC was around $2,000, and given in one lump sum.
Congress failure to expand the CTC beyond 2021 rankles experts on poverty and inequality.
Allowing the expanded child tax credit to expire is yet another demonstration of the U.S. governments intentional neglect of families with children, a clear example of legislative violence, said Mariana Chilton, director of the Center for Hunger-Free Communities at Drexel Universitys Dornsife School of Public Health.
Chilton espouses universal basic income, a proposed government program in which every adult citizen receives a set amount of money regularly.
The failure to make the CTC expansion permanent means a moment of optimism in which deep injustices and hardships could have been changed may be over, noted University of Pennsylvania sociologist Pilar Gonalons-Pons.
And, Levine said, the United States, which fails miserably at reducing child poverty, loses an opportunity on the world stage to catch up with peer nations that treat children and families better.
That failure resonates with Mia Thomas, 37, the unemployed mother of a 13-year-old daughter in West Philadelphia.
The expanded CTC had allowed Thomas, who suffers from multiple sclerosis, to attain something rare in her life: a bank account.
The money was a godsend that allowed me to actually create a small nest egg, she said. But now, Im straining without the monthly payments to make rent and pay bills.
Ill still try to keep my bank account. But its going to be a struggle.
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No, colleges and universities are not safe to reopen for in-person learning – WSWS
Posted: at 4:01 pm
On Wednesday, the Atlantic published an article by Professor Emily Oster, an economist at Brown University, titled, Universities Need to Catch Up to the Post-vaccine Reality. Oster argues that the recent decision by a number of colleges and universities to temporarily return to virtual learning in the face of skyrocketing COVID-19 cases is a mistake.
Oster makes three deceitful arguments: 1) Students are not themselves at risk of illness; 2) Campuses will not lead to community spread of the virus; and 3) campuses must be opened to protect students mental health.
Osters arguments are not based on science or experience. They are made on behalf of the political establishment and with no regard for the lives and livelihoods of the students she claims to care for.
The reality must be stated clearly: No, colleges and universities are not safe from COVID-19, especially as the vaccine resistant Omicron variant has taken its place as the dominant strain throughout the country.
Young people are in no way immune from infection and death, and, if infected with the virus, will spread it to all those with whom they come into contact. While mental health issues are an important concern, Oster, following the lead of the entire political establishment, has weaponized the severe mental health crisis among young people to justify the intentional infection of the population with the virus.
The arguments made in Osters article are reflective of the entire strategy of the Biden administration and worth answering in some detail. But let us first address the question: Who is Emily Oster?
Ivy League Democratic Party operatives fight for a policy of mass death
Oster is a well-seasoned official Democratic Party academic operative who has been tapped throughout the pandemic to advocate for the unsafe reopening of schools. In 2020, she authored a number of articles where she argued that schools were not significant spreaders of Covid-19.
Among these articles are two for the Atlantic titled Schools Arent Super-Spreaders and Go Ahead, Plan a Family Vacation with Your Unvaccinated Kids. Another notable piece by Oster was published in the Clinical Infectious Diseases Journal titled Effectiveness of three versus six feet of physical distancing for controlling the spread of COVID-19 among primary and secondary students and staff. This latter study published March 10, 2021 was picked up by the CDC and used as its primary evidence for changing social distancing guidelines.
Remarkably, Oster has no background in public health, biology, or any other field related to the science of the pandemic. She holds a PhD from Harvard in economics, is currently a professor at Brown University and has authored books on pregnancy and parenting. She has no expertise or authority in the field in which she is meddling.
The data she uses to back her arguments for keeping schools open are riddled with errors at best, and are purposefully skewed and distorted at worst.
In August of 2020, for example, Oster claimed she had created a database of COVID-19 infections in schools that showed that just 0.23 percent of students and 0.49 percent of teachers had become infected, making her case that schools are not super spreader events.
However, this information was derived from just 550 public and private schools, and over 200 of them were fully remote during the time the data was collected! Additionally, the most populated schools from urban areas where there have been the largest outbreaks were excluded.
In the three versus six feet article, similar erroneous errors were made to claim that a three or six-foot social distancing guideline made little difference in transmission and could be abandoned. Most notable was that the study only compared schools that had differing official guidelines without actually investigating if they followed those guidelines.
In other words, the study contains no actual science or experiments to test the different social distancing methods. The actual science of COVID-19 has shown that the virus is airborne, meaning that even six feet of social distancing is not sufficient to stop its spread.
In short, Emily Oster is not an expert on the pandemic or school safety in any sense. She is a mouthpiece for the ruling class in its aggressive drive to reopen schools to keep parents at work and the economy afloat. Her concerns are not the health and wellbeing of students and families but the profit demands of Wall Street.
There is no way to evaluate the current pandemic conditions and conclude that schools, including colleges and universities, are safe to reopen without engaging in an immense level of self-deception or false arguments. For Oster, it appears to be the latter.
Oster writes in her article that the world has changed since the pandemic began, and yet, the rise of the Omicron variant and the ensuing spike in COVID cases have led many university administrators to articulate the same old concerns: Students could possibly spread the virus to community members, who could in turn end up in hospitals, which could be overwhelmed.
She continues: Such a chain reaction is of course possible, but the probabilities are not what they used to be, because the great majority of students are now vaccinated and the percentage of people in the surrounding communities who are at risk of landing in the hospital is much, much smaller than it used to be. [emphasis added]
Students could infect others, and the hospitals could become overwhelmed, Oster skeptically suggests. Is this not the very situation taking place in towns and cities across the country right now?
It is false to suggest that the percentage of people who are at risk of landing in the hospital is smaller than it used to be. In fact, hospitalizations among 1829 year olds is at a record high since the start of the pandemic, standing at a seven-day average of 1,433 new patients per day. For those aged 3039, the average is 1,532 hospital admissions per day, also a record high.
Child hospitalizations are also at their highest point ever, at 766 per day. Lurie Childrens hospital in Chicago reported Thursday that child hospitalizations have increased ten times compared to the number of admissions at the end of November.
Across the country, one in five hospitals reporting to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) noted that their ICUs were above 95 percent capacity. Don Williamson, president of the Alabama Hospital Association, told CBS 42, Im worried now! Thats right now where my main concern lies. You know, we may have beds, but we dont have anybody to staff the beds.
Hospitalizations have increased 161 percent in the last ten days across the state.
Patricia Maysent, chief executive officer of University of California San Diego Health, told the San Diego Union-Tribune that the university system had more than 500 health care workers test positive over the last week, forcing some of their departments to operate at half capacity. This is the first time, she said, from the very beginning of the COVID pandemic, that Im actually worried that we dont have enough staff to take care of the patients.
On Thursday, Beaumont Health, one of the largest hospital systems in Michigan, with nine hospitals in the Detroit area, reported that 430 employees had COVID-19 symptoms in a notice sent to the public headlined, Were at a breaking point. The notice said that hospitalizations have increased 40 percent in the last week.
It is in this context, in which nurses and doctors around the country are at a breaking point, that Ms. Oster insists that closing the schools reflects an outmoded level of caution.
She goes on to claim that, in fact, closing colleges expresses a failure of universities to protect their students interests. The natural question to ask from such a statement is what are students interests and how are they best protected?
Osters only answer to this question is to point to the youth mental health crisis. Her claim is that the closing of schools and a temporary shift to online learning has too great an impact on students mental health, and schools therefore must remain open at all costs.
Oster writes, Moving to remote schooling when the conditions on the ground have changed so dramatically is an abdication of universities responsibility to educate students and protect all aspects of their health. College students are in the midst of a mental-health crisis.
There is no question that mental health issues affect an alarming number of young people. But the arguments made by Oster do not in fact have students interests in mind to the slightest degree.
While it is true that mental health issues have been accelerated by that pandemic, alongside all other social crises, it is not their root cause. Oster and those she speaks for never made the slightest noise about mental health issues until it became a convenient cover to justify the unsafe reopening of schools.
Students do indeed need immediate access to mental health treatment and services. But deteriorating mental health is only the symptom of a much deeper problem.
The situation facing the average American student even before the pandemic is a distressing one. Many young people find themselves stressed to the point of exhaustion balancing studies while also working to make ends meet. Those who live on their campuses and in the university dorm rooms must deal with poverty-like conditions with crumbling facilities and unhealthy food.
Most students will come out of school saddled with thousands, tens of thousands, or even hundreds of thousands of dollars of debt and few quality jobs to repay their loans. For many young people, a trip to the emergency room or even an unexpected car repair is enough to entirely cripple them financially.
The pandemic has undoubtedly added significantly to these issues with an abrupt shift to online learning certainly being a challenge. But how are these issues to be resolved? Are we to be expected to believe that, by keeping campuses open, students will have forgotten all these other inescapable problems?
Oster has nothing to say about the real difficulties and challenges students and youth face living under capitalism. For Oster and people in her privileged middle-class layer, the pandemic has been merely an inconvenience where their routines have been disrupted by lockdowns or mitigation efforts. Their solution: pretend like nothing is happening, return to classes, and resume business as usual.
Students need relief from their crushing debt and access to healthcare and resources, so that they no longer need to rely on food pantries and other charities to survive. Students need the ability to study and learn without the concern that they might become infected or infect their parents and loved ones with COVID-19.
If mental health is the concern, the situation currently underway in high schools and colleges that have opened can only deepen them. In recent days, students have flooded social media with reports of schools practically devoid of teachers who are all sick. Students are testing themselves for COVID-19 in bathrooms followed by a panic as they are left to figure out how to appropriately respond. How is forcing students into this kind of environment supposed to relieve their anxiety?
There will be no resolution to the mental health crisis as long as the pandemic rages on. And to defeat the pandemic requires the intervention of the working class, which is already under way.
Thousands of teachers and students are in the midst of a struggle against reopening, fearing for their lives and the lives of their loved ones. Teachers in Chicago have bravely voted not to return to in-person learning amid record-breaking case numbers, with graduate students at the University of Michigan, teachers in San Francisco, and other major cities following closely behind them. There is growing anger and outrage among broader layers of the working class over being forced to continue to work in factories and workplaces that are centers of COVID transmission.
The working class is the social force that must be mobilized. To defend students is to protect them from infection from COVID-19 and fight for an international program to eliminate the virus once and for all.
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20 Baltimore tech and entrepreneurship leaders offer New Year’s resolutions for 2022 – Technical.ly
Posted: at 4:01 pm
Hello, 2022.
Its Q1. Time to start anew.
With the fresh start comes a chance to put forward your hopes and goals for the year ahead. Its a chance to reframe what didnt get done in 2021, or get going on a project youve always wanted to tackle.
With that in mind, we asked Baltimore tech and innovation leaders to share their resolutions. Responses ranged from the personal to the professional. Others are setting out to give back.
Take a look:
Keep practicing authenticity. Being authentic unlocks so much richness in conversation, connections, even in strategic discussions why waste time not being real? Not everyone is ready to hear real talk, however, so I want to continue to practice to communicate well and bring self-awareness to every interaction.
Our goal at JHTV is to use every presentation as an opportunity to compel people to care about and support the high-impact work we do. We want our team members to leverage storytelling and other best practices in presentation-making to captivate our audiences and stand out amid information overload (and Zoom fatigue).
At a personal level, my resolution is to prioritize my mental health and wellness. I will continue to prioritize my time for meditation, yoga, journaling and self-reflection, as we continue to go through stressful and anxiety-filled times with the pandemic into 2022. One of our 1501 Health startups, WellSet, a marketplace for holistic wellness providers like acupuncture, yoga and nutrition coaching, offers classes for breath work and meditation that can provide much needed balance during the holidays and the start of the new year.
At a system level, my resolution is to prioritize addressing the mental health crisis faced by healthcare providers two years into the pandemic. Burnout is a major concern for healthcare providers, with nearly 50% reporting burnout, according to AMA in 2020. Stress scores were highest among nursing assistants, medical assistants, social workers and inpatient workers such as nurses and respiratory therapists as well as among women, Black and Latinx health care workers. Even Health, one of our 1501 Health startups based in Maryland, offers mental health support for healthcare employees, through their flagship product, Cabana. My resolution is to launch our Cabana pilot at LifeBridge Health for our healthcare providers and help champion the growth of Even Health with health systems in our region and scale across the nation.
Our hope for 2022 is to be able to expand Hutch to include programs and opportunities that more entrepreneurs can leverage outside of our existing two-year digital services incubator.
Get hip to all the great talent that came out of Odells in the 70s and 80s.
My 2022 resolutions include looking for inspiration in unexpected places and challenging myself to find the fun in being wrong.
If you cant fly, then run. If you cant run, then walk. If you cant walk, then crawl. But whatever you do, you have to keep moving forward Martin Luther King Jr.
I just finished Amanda Ripleys High Conflict, and so Im trying to find more opportunities to be curious, especially during disagreements.
In 2022, I resolve to prioritize work-life balance, invest in the leadership of our amazing team, and find joy and possibility in speaking truth to power.
My New Years resolution is to have a great day on purpose. I want to be intentional with the understanding that every day I wake up is a blessing. Its a new day to grow, positively impact anyone I come into contact with (even if that is putting a smile on their face or just acknowledging them with a hello), and continue going after my dreams without fear because if I fail, it will be fast and forward.
My New Years resolution professionally is to fully embrace my new team and keep establishing our culture. Listen more, talk less, and allow my teams talents to shine through. Personally, my resolution is to continue to over indulge in self care, embracing a life of ease and wellness. Hustle culture is canceled.
My New Years resolution is to continue to invest just as much time in my family that I do in my business!
I want to help make life fair for everyone. I am creating new community software codenamed the GRID, for Graphical Resources Investment Directive. It will allow communities to use data to visualize their broad needs and includes tools for them to organize as a community to set the direction for future investments.
To help at least 50 underrepresented entrepreneurs and social enterprises in Baltimore to raise funding.
To bring back the GBTC. It will be through a sub-chapter of the Maryland Tech Council called the BRTC. Just wait and see. Its gonna be awesome.
My New Years resolution is to gain a greater understanding of what problems the businesses in Maryland are solving. In the past, I focused on Baltimore. Next year, Im going to make an effort to learn more about businesses across Maryland.
Lean more into trusting myself, the process, the journey, and the results.
Eat more protein shakes, consistently. Finish reading the Dune series.
Invest more in both PDs: professional development and personal development.
In March 2020, I was boarding one of the last flights out of Lisbon, Portugal, homeward-bound to an uncertain America on the brink of a global pandemic. Portugal is one of my favorite remote work destinations, and my trip was ending abruptly. As we approach the two-year anniversary of that event, Im starting to see some patterns in this pandemic world. Specifically, when cases are likely to spike, and the burnout feeling that comes from the blurred lines of work and home life. My New Years resolution is to re-establish healthy boundaries with work and to see if I can safely work remotely abroad again. My best life has always included Baltimore and a blend of several cultures and countries.
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20 Baltimore tech and entrepreneurship leaders offer New Year's resolutions for 2022 - Technical.ly
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