Daily Archives: January 9, 2022

Space Station Flyover Thursday morning – FOX Carolina

Posted: January 9, 2022 at 3:59 pm

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Space Station Flyover Thursday morning - FOX Carolina

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Stunning video of South Island captured by International Space Station – Stuff.co.nz

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The International Space Station (ISS) has released a video of parts of the South Island captured on Saturday afternoon.

The video, posted by ISSAboveYou on Twitter, comes three days after the ISS captured a stunning video of the North Island showing the coastline stretching from Cape Reinga to the northern part of Hawke's Bay.

A representative for ISSAboveYou said the video was captured as the space station passed by just a bit to the north of Christchurch on January 8 at 12.35pm.

READ MORE:* Beautiful clear video of North Island from International Space Station * Weather: Heavy rain and strong winds expected for much of NZ* Aurora looks just as cool from space, as seen from the International Space Station* International Space Station passing sun captured by Auckland astrophotographer

ISSAboveYou/Supplied

The video was taken as the space station passed by just a bit to the north of Christchurch on January 8.

The ISS orbits Earth every 90 minutes and has been doing so since November 2000. A crew of seven people live and work in the station while travelling at a speed of 8 kilometres per second.

Nasas website says the space station orbits Earth 16 times in 24 hours and travels through 16 sunrises and sunsets in a day.

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Software engineers are the backbone of space tech this is what they do – The Next Web

Posted: at 3:59 pm

When we think about space exploration, we tend to think of astronauts, rockets, or the International Space Station. Maybe we also think about a team of experts sitting in the office of a Chinese or American space agency, breaking out into fits of joy as they successfully land a new rover on Mars.

What we tend to miss is all the people who write the software that keeps the satellites orbiting and the rockets on track. Large numbers of people sift through data from satellite sensors or simulate rocket launches before they take place. They, too, are doing rocket science. But its less intuitive to think of them as such.

Many images we see in the media show expert teams congratulating themselves or cool rovers and rockets cruising in outer space. They satisfy our human curiosity and our everlasting thirst for crossing new borders and expanding our horizons. At the same time, these types of stories keep things simple enough. Anyone can appreciate the fact that humanity has landed a few rovers on Mars. On the other hand, it takes a heap of expertise to understand how that rover is built, what goes into steering it, and which technologies make it fit for life on Mars.

Many people want to know about space. They want to know what it looks like and what humanity is doing to explore it. But without detailed knowledge, its hard to understand how space technology really works.

Thats where being a software engineer helps. Even if you dont know too much about physics, or about rocket materials, coders can understand what types of software technologies are used in space and why.

Although NASA makes a lot of its code public, its hard to find details on the day-to-day activities of a software engineer for space tech. A few stories are available from Elon Musks projects, though. Considering that working at SpaceX or Starlink is many an engineers dream, these will be my focus here.

Back in 1945, when science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke first proposed satellite TV, it sounded like a pipe dream. Even though it took three decades, this technology finally became reality. Nowadays, many people have satellite receivers on their roofs and think nothing of it. Satellites major advantage over cable is that they can reach rural areas, which wouldnt be cost-effective with very long cables.

Similarly, satellite internet still sounds like a pipe dream to many people. But the demand is there: One in four rural Americans thinks that their lack of access to high-speed internet is a major problem. Spotty internet access is also a problem for moving objects like trains, jets, and ships. Anyone who has tried to use WiFi while traveling can attest to that.

These problems might get resolved soon, however. Starlink, a spinoff of private-sector rocket pioneer SpaceX, is laying the groundwork for more expansive internet access. First announced in 2015, Starlink internet is already available in many parts of the U.S. today.

To ensure that the internet isnt too slow, the satellites need to be quite close to Earth. Because of that, they only remain overhead for a few minutes at a time. So, the ground-based antennas that they communicate with need to change which satellite they speak to very often. And the satellite network needs to be dense enough to provide the antennas with a signal at any given moment in time.

The network consists of hundreds of satellites; new ones are constantly being added and old ones replaced. As a result, Starlink software lead Andy Bohn says that the team doesnt have time to put each satellite into its own designated orbit. Instead, every Starlink satellite navigates itself. To manage the busy traffic conditions, the Earth-side network gives each satellite a place to be, and the satellite steers itself into its spot.

This process requires a huge computational effort. First, the satellites dont only risk bumping into each other. They can also collide with planes and other satellites in low orbit. Starlink satellites are already involved in half the near-collisions in space, where two objects get closer than one kilometer (0.6 miles) to one another, so this risk is real.

Second, the possibility of interference contributes to the massive computational requirements. When the signals of two satellites overlap, they can distort or even cancel one another. Avoiding interference requires putting the signals into slightly different frequency bands. But this isnt as easy as it sounds, and a finite number of possible frequency bands. Therefore, two satellites with bands that are too similar cant get too close to each other. This requirement further complicates the satellites navigation.

You might wonder why the satellites positions need to be calculated on Earth and not directly onboard the satellites. For one thing, if something goes wrong inside a satellite, its much harder to go there and fix it. In addition, things go wrong much more often in outer space than on Earth.

Because the suns radiation is much stronger outside the Earths atmosphere, bits can flip more easily. Bits, the zero-or-one encoding units of all computers, can corrupt entire software programs when they flip their value. To prevent this from messing up a satellites trajectory, different machines share software, and a correct copy of it can be reloaded in the event of corruption.

Software at Starlink is written in well-known programming languages. Because of its reliability and capability for bare-metal programming, Starlink uses C++ for most of the code in its satellites. The company also uses Python for some prototyping because its generally faster to build in. This mirrors what developers use in autonomous vehicle technology.

Satellite internet is a very ambitious project, and it comes with many difficult challenges. Starlink is undoubtedly the pioneer of this field, but other companies and space agencies are quick to follow. In a decade or two, it might be just as standard as satellite TV is today.

Similarly ambitious is SpaceX, of which Starlink is an offshoot. Launching rockets into outer space, docking with the ISS, or aiming for Mars requires near perfection in both hardware and software engineering. Tests can fail, of course. But in the final mission, nothing is allowed to go wrong. And if a part of the rocket system doesnt work properly, all other parts need to compensate for that failure.

All flight software for SpaceX rockets is built around control cycles. First, all the inputs are read, such as data from sensors or commands from the ground. Then this data gets processed and important things get calculated, such as the position of the rocket or the status of the life support system. Then the program goes to sleep for a fraction of a second, to save compute power, after which the whole cycle starts again.

Different subsystems control different parts of the rocket. In order to prevent big disasters, these need to be isolated from one another. If, for example, something goes wrong in the guidance system that steers the aircraft, the life support system doesnt need to go haywire as well. If one thing goes wrong, the show must still go on.

This setup differs from how many other tech companies operate. Take Google, for example. They record every failure, select those that seem most important, and try to draw lessons for the future from them. In other words, Google lets failures happen and tries to learn from them afterward.

For Google, this approach works perfectly well. But a search machine (and translator, document editor, cloud service provider, and more) operates a little differently from a rocket. If one process in Google fails, maybe a search query will return eerie results. If a manned rocket steers in the wrong direction, though, human lives are in jeopardy.

Because of the high-stakes nature of the problems it tackles, SpaceX tries its best to never fail. Although the companys engineers do embrace failure for rocket tests, in those cases, theyre almost purposefully allowing the project to fail in order to learn for the future. When the rocket starts for an actual mission, however, everything needs to work. That means the rocket must remain intact even if a part of it fails.

Rocket software needs to be as reliable as possible. So, it comes as no surprise that the quality requirements are high at NASA and SpaceX, especially compared to regular commercial applications. Elaborate systems are in place to ensure that no one breaks the code by merging something faulty with the master branch. That being said, none of SpaceXs tools related to testing are unheard of elsewhere in software development.

Before a developer can make a pull request, they need to meet a set of elaborate criteria. Before merging, the code gets tested twice, and its tested again after the actual merge.

SpaceXs continuous integration environment is largely based on HTCondor, and its metadata is managed with PostgreSQL. In addition, the company uses Python for backend test running, build orchestration, and web services. For the front end of these web services, it uses Angular, JavaScript, and some TypeScript. In terms of containerization, SpaceX uses Dockers, along with a little bit of Kubernetes.

The choice of tools and languages is, thus, very similar to what youd expect in a terrestrial company. Meeting the quality requirements and merging, however, is much more rigorous.

In addition to the software that gets deployed in and around rockets and satellites, spacefaring projects also deal with application software. This type helps bring a rocket to the pad and get it ready to launch and entails areas like supply chain, manufacturing, finance, inventory, and more.

Following the trend across many industries, SpaceXs application software has shifted from a monolithic architecture to microservices, specifically from AngularJS, C#, and MySQL towards Angular, PostgreSQL, and containerization. The advantage is largely the same as for all the other systems in SpaceX: If one piece is broken or waiting for repair, that delay doesnt affect the other pieces that much.

What sets SpaceXs application software division apart from its equivalents in other companies is that they have four very different projects to support: Falcon, which delivers cargo to outer space, Dragon, which focuses on human spaceflight, Starship, which will focus on interplanetary transport, and Starlink, for satellite internet. This scope of projects sets it apart even from NASA.

As in other areas, space tech uses largely the same tools and follows the same trends as others, but the scope and variety of the projects are a lot higher than in most terrestrial companies.

In other words, if youre a seasoned software developer and youre considering working at NASA, SpaceX or Starlink, you wont need to learn about many more tools and frameworks. But you should get prepared for more varied tasks, higher quality requirements, and a more intense workday ahead.Pe

Its quite legitimate to ask why we should bother with exploring outer space when we cant even handle our problems on Earth properly. Amidst an ongoing pandemic, racial and societal inequalities, floods and wildfires, plus all the smaller problems of life, shouldnt we take our gaze off the sky for a minute?

No. Its true that every rocket launch burns a horrendous amount of fuel. Its true that every software developer working on starships is one who isnt working on an app to beat a pandemic or on a payment processor for underprivileged communities. Its true that every dollar invested in outer space isnt invested in fair housing, better education, or preserving wildlife.

Those rocket launches, workers, and dollars come back in other ways. Open-source NASA software, for example, is available to help minimize aircraft emissions, calculate the size and power requirements of a solar power system, or optimize the efficiency of wind turbines. Therefore, by writing code for outer space, some developers just might be contributing to making other sectors greener.

In addition, the rise of private companies in space isnt necessarily a bad thing. If a small group of wealthy people loses a part of their money by literally shooting themselves to the moon and beyond, so be it.

By developing smart regulations, we do need to ensure that these people dont colonize space and repeat history. These regulations exist and ensure that no single country calls space their own territory, that every nation is free to explore it, that no entity is allowed to cause harm to space or the environment, and so on. As long as we make sure that these rules are respected, were not risking the future of less wealthy humans, were not wasting tax money, we can reap the benefits of open-source code, and we can satisfy our human curiosity for new frontiers. Sounds like a win-win-win-win to me.

This article is written by Ari Joury and originally published at Builtin. You can read it here.

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ContraFect Announces Award from the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation to Evaluate Exebacase as a Potential Treatment for Serious MRSA Lung Infections…

Posted: at 3:59 pm

YONKERS, N.Y., Jan. 06, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- ContraFect Corporation (Nasdaq: CFRX), a late clinical-stage biotechnology company focused on the discovery and development of direct lytic agents (DLAs), including lysins and amurin peptides, as new medical modalities for the treatment of life-threatening, antibiotic-resistant infections, today announces that it has received an additional award from the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation (CFF). This contract award will support investigation of the potential utility of exebacase for treating serious lung infections caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in people with cystic fibrosis (CF). The program, titled Nonclinical Assessment of Lysin Exebacase for Treating MRSA Infections in CF will, over the course of 12 months, evaluate the in vitro activity of exebacase against bacterial specimens obtained from CF patients.

MRSA lung infections lead to potential acceleration in the decline in lung function and are an independent predictor of mortality in the CF population. Eradication of persistent MRSA in the lungs of CF patients remains a major challenge despite current antibiotic therapy. Thus, there is a pressing unmet need for new medical modalities and novel therapeutic approaches to address the serious health threat to CF patients, said Cara Cassino, M.D., Executive Vice President of Research & Development and Chief Medical Officer of ContraFect. We are pleased to have the opportunity to work with the CF Foundation again in order to evaluate the potential utility of exebacase as such a treatment for MRSA lung infections in this vulnerable population, continued Dr. Cassino.

Pathogenic bacteria are known to be a major contributor to CF disease. The lungs of CF patients are typically colonized with pathogenic bacteria, that damage the epithelial surfaces. The growth of highly resistant Staph aureus or Pseudomonas aeruginosa, two of the most common causes of lung infections in CF patients, is associated with further epithelial surface damage, and potentially an overall decline in pulmonary function. MRSA has become more prevalent in the CF population in recent years, increasing from 9.2 percent in 2002 to 25.9 percent in 2017. MRSA plays a role in pulmonary exacerbations of CF that may require hospitalization and treatment with systemic antibiotics. Chronic lung infections are known to be the main cause of lung function deterioration, and ultimately mortality, in CF patients.

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The award from the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation will provide ContraFect with financial support for research activities. Further financial details were not disclosed. ContraFect retains global rights for exebacase and its entire DLA therapeutic pipeline.

About Cystic Fibrosis

Cystic Fibrosis (CF) is a rare, life-shortening genetic disease affecting approximately 75,000 people worldwide. CF is a progressive, multi-system disease that affects the lungs, liver, GI tract, sinuses, sweat glands, pancreas and reproductive tract. People with CF are prone to infections of the lungs because they develop abnormally thick, sticky mucus which traps germs in their airways and therefore does not have the same infection-fighting properties as normal mucus. This abnormal mucus provides an ideal environment for bacteria to form protective layers -- known as biofilms -- that make them more difficult to kill. Many individuals also suffer severe side effects from long-term antibiotic use, such as hearing loss, and are at increased risk of lung function deterioration and ultimately mortality.

About Exebacase (CF-301):

Exebacase is an anti-staphylococcal recombinantly-produced lysin (cell wall hydrolase enzyme) with potent bactericidal activity against Staph aureus, a major cause of bloodstream infections (BSIs) also known as bacteremia. It is the first lysin to enter clinical studies in the U.S. and was granted Breakthrough Therapy designation by the FDA for the treatment of MRSA bloodstream infections, including right-sided endocarditis, when used in addition to SOC anti-staphylococcal antibiotics.

Exebacase is currently being studied in the Phase 3 DISRUPT superiority design study of exebacase in patients with Staph aureus bacteremia, including right-sided endocarditis. In the Companys Phase 2 study of exebacase, a pre-specified analysis of MRSA-infected patients showed that the clinical responder rate at Day 14 in patients treated with exebacase was nearly 43-percentage points higher than in patients treated with SOC antibiotics alone (74.1% for patients treated with exebacase compared to 31.3% for patients treated with SOC antibiotics alone (p=0.010)). In addition to the higher rate of clinical response, MRSA-infected patients treated with exebacase showed a 21-percentage point reduction in 30-day all-cause mortality (p=0.056), a four-day lower median length of hospital stay and meaningful reductions in hospital readmission rates.

Exebacase has the potential to be a first-in-class treatment for Staph aureus bacteremia. Exebacase was licensed from The Rockefeller University and is being developed at ContraFect.

About ContraFect

ContraFect is a biotechnology company focused on the discovery and development of DLAs, including lysins and amurin peptides, as new medical modalities for the treatment of life-threatening, antibiotic-resistant infections. An estimated 700,000 deaths worldwide each year are attributed to antimicrobial-resistant infections. We intend to address life threatening infections using our therapeutic product candidates from our platform of DLAs, which include lysins and amurin peptides. Lysins are a new class of DLAs which are recombinantly produced antimicrobial proteins with a novel mechanism of action associated with the rapid killing of target bacteria, eradication of biofilms and synergy with conventional antibiotics. Amurin peptides are a novel class of DLAs which exhibit broad-spectrum activity against a wide range of antibiotic-resistant Gram-negative pathogens, including P. aeruginosa, Acinetobacter baumannii, and Enterobacter species. We believe that the properties of our lysins and amurin peptides will make them suitable for targeting antibiotic-resistant organisms, such as MRSA and P. aeruginosa, which can cause serious infections such as bacteremia, pneumonia and osteomyelitis. We have completed a Phase 2 clinical trial for the treatment of Staph aureus bacteremia, including endocarditis, with our lead lysin candidate, exebacase, which is the first lysin to enter clinical studies in the U.S. Exebacase, currently being studied in a pivotal Phase 3 clinical study, was granted Breakthrough Therapy designation by the FDA for the treatment of MRSA bloodstream infections, including right-sided endocarditis, when used in addition to SOC anti-staphylococcal antibiotics.

Follow ContraFect on Twitter @ContraFectCorp and LinkedIn.

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains, and our officers and representatives may make from time to time, forward-looking statements within the meaning of the U.S. federal securities laws. Forward-looking statements can be identified by words such as projects, may, will, could, would, should, believes, expects, anticipates, estimates, intends, plans, potential, promise or similar references to future periods. Examples of forward-looking statements in this release include, without limitation, statements regarding: the potential for exebacase to treat serious MRSA lung infections associated with CF, ContraFects ability to discover and develop DLAs as new medical modalities for the treatment of life-threatening, antibiotic-resistant infections, statements regarding the award, CF and CFF, statements made by Dr. Cassino, whether the award will provide ContraFect with financial support for research activities, whether exebacase has the potential to be a first-in-class treatment for Staph aureus bacteremia, ContraFects ability to address life-threatening infections using its DLA platform, whether lysins are a new class of DLAs which are recombinantly produced, antimicrobial proteins with a novel mechanism of action associated with the rapid killing of target bacteria, eradication of biofilms and synergy with conventional antibiotics, whether amurins are a novel class of DLAs which exhibit broad-spectrum activity against a wide range of antibiotic-resistant Gram-negative pathogens, and whether the properties of ContraFects lysins and amurins will make them suitable for targeting antibiotic-resistant organisms, such as MRSA and P. aeruginosa. Forward-looking statements are statements that are not historical facts, nor assurances of future performance. Instead, they are based on ContraFects current beliefs, expectations and assumptions regarding the future of its business, future plans, strategies, projections, anticipated events and trends, the economy and other future conditions. Because forward-looking statements relate to the future, they are subject to inherent risks, uncertainties and changes in circumstances that are difficult to predict and many of which are beyond ContraFects control, including the occurrence of any adverse events related to the discovery, development and commercialization of ContraFects product candidates such as unfavorable clinical trial results, insufficient supplies of drug products, the lack of regulatory approval, or the unsuccessful attainment or maintenance of patent protection and other important risks detailed under the caption Risk Factors in ContraFect's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Actual results may differ from those set forth in the forward-looking statements. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ include, among others, our ability to develop treatments for drug-resistant infectious diseases. Any forward-looking statement made by ContraFect in this press release is based only on information currently available and speaks only as of the date on which it is made. Except as required by applicable law, ContraFect expressly disclaims any obligations to publicly update any forward-looking statements, whether written or oral, that may be made from time to time, whether as a result of new information, future developments or otherwise.

Investor Relations Contacts:

Michael MessingerContraFect CorporationTel: 914-207-2300Email: mmessinger@contrafect.com

Media:

Jules AbrahamCORE IRTel: 917-885-7378Email: Julesa@coreir.com

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ContraFect Announces Award from the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation to Evaluate Exebacase as a Potential Treatment for Serious MRSA Lung Infections...

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Why Can’t People Hear What Jordan Peterson Is Actually …

Posted: at 3:58 pm

My first introduction to Jordan B. Peterson, a University of Toronto clinical psychologist, came by way of an interview that began trending on social media last week. Peterson was pressed by the British journalist Cathy Newman to explain several of his controversial views. But what struck me, far more than any position he took, was the method his interviewer employed. It was the most prominent, striking example Ive seen yet of an unfortunate trend in modern communication.

First, a person says something. Then, another person restates what they purportedly said so as to make it seem as if their view is offensive, hostile, or absurd.

Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, and various Fox News hosts all feature and reward this rhetorical technique. And the Peterson interview has so many moments of this kind that each successive example calls attention to itself until the attentive viewer cant help but wonder what drives the interviewer to keep inflating the nature of Petersons claims, instead of addressing what he actually said.

This isnt meant as a global condemnation of this interviewers quality or past work. As with her subject, I havent seen enough of it to render any overall judgmentand it is sometimes useful to respond to an evasive subject with an unusually blunt restatement of their views to draw them out or to force them to clarify their ideas.

Perhaps she has used that tactic to good effect elsewhere. (And the online attacks to which shes been subjected are abhorrent assaults on decency by people who are perpetrating misbehavior orders of magnitude worse than hers.)

But in the interview, Newman relies on this technique to a remarkable extent, making it a useful illustration of a much broader pernicious trend. Peterson was not evasive or unwilling to be clear about his meaning. And Newmans exaggerated restatements of his views mostly led viewers astray, not closer to the truth.

* * *

Peterson begins the interview by explaining why he tells young men to grow up and take responsibility for getting their lives together and becoming good partners. He notes he isnt talking exclusively to men, and that he has lots of female fans.

Whats in it for the women, though? Newman asks.

Well, what sort of partner do you want? Peterson says. Do you want an overgrown child? Or do you want someone to contend with who is going to help you?

So youre saying, Newman retorts, that women have some sort of duty to help fix the crisis of masculinity. But thats not what he said. He posited a vested interest, not a duty.

Women deeply want men who are competent and powerful, Peterson goes on to assert. And I dont mean power in that they can exert tyrannical control over others. Thats not power. Thats just corruption. Power is competence. And why in the world would you not want a competent partner? Well, I know why, actually, you cant dominate a competent partner. So if you want domination

The interviewer interrupts, So youre saying women want to dominate, is that what youre saying?

The next section of the interview concerns the pay gap between men and women, and whether it is rooted in gender itself or other nondiscriminatory factors:

Newman: that 9 percent pay gap, thats a gap between median hourly earnings between men and women. That exists.

Peterson: Yes. But theres multiple reasons for that. One of them is gender, but thats not the only reason. If youre a social scientist worth your salt, you never do a univariate analysis. You say women in aggregate are paid less than men. Okay. Well then we break its down by age; we break it down by occupation; we break it down by interest; we break it down by personality.

Newman: But youre saying, basically, it doesnt matter if women arent getting to the top, because thats what is skewing that gender pay gap, isnt it? Youre saying thats just a fact of life, women arent necessarily going to get to the top.

Peterson: No, Im not saying it doesnt matter, either. Im saying there are multiple reasons for it.

Newman: Yeah, but why should women put up with those reasons?

Peterson: Im not saying that they should put up with it! Im saying that the claim that the wage gap between men and women is only due to sex is wrong. And it is wrong. Theres no doubt about that. The multivariate analysis have been done. So let me give you an example

The interviewer seemed eager to impute to Peterson a belief that a large, extant wage gap between men and women is a fact of life that women should just put up with, though all those assertions are contrary to his real positions on the matter.

Throughout this next section, the interviewer repeatedly tries to oversimplify Petersons view, as if he believes one factor he discusses is all-important, and then she seems to assume that because Peterson believes that given factor helps to explain a pay gap between men and women, he doesnt support any actions that would bring about a more equal outcome.

Her surprised question near the end suggests earnest confusion:

Peterson: Theres a personality trait known as agreeableness. Agreeable people are compassionate and polite. And agreeable people get paid less than disagreeable people for the same job. Women are more agreeable than men.

Newman: Again, a vast generalization. Some women are not more agreeable than men.

Peterson: Thats true. And some women get paid more than men.

Newman: So youre saying by and large women are too agreeable to get the pay raises that they deserve.

Peterson: No, Im saying that is one component of a multivariate equation that predicts salary. It accounts for maybe 5 percent of the variance. So you need another 18 factors, one of which is gender. And there is prejudice. Theres no doubt about that. But it accounts for a much smaller portion of the variance in the pay gap than the radical feminists claim.

Newman: Okay, so rather than denying that the pay gap exists, which is what you did at the beginning of this conversation, shouldnt you say to women, rather than being agreeable and not asking for a pay raise, go ask for a pay raise. Make yourself disagreeable with your boss.

Peterson: But I didnt deny it existed, I denied that it existed because of gender. See, because Im very, very, very careful with my words.

Newman: So the pay gap exists. You accept that. I mean the pay gap between men and women existsbut youre saying its not because of gender, its because women are too agreeable to ask for pay raises.

Peterson: Thats one of the reasons.

Newman: Okay, so why not get them to ask for a pay raise? Wouldnt that be fairer?

Peterson: Ive done that many, many, many times in my career. So one of the things you do as a clinical psychologist is assertiveness training. So you might sayoften you treat people for anxiety, you treat them for depression, and maybe the next most common category after that would be assertiveness training. So Ive had many, many women, extraordinarily competent women, in my clinical and consulting practice, and weve put together strategies for their career development that involved continual pushing, competing, for higher wages. And often tripled their wages within a five-year period.

Newman: And you celebrate that?

Peterson: Of course! Of course!

Another passage on gender equality proceeded thusly:

Newman: Is gender equality a myth?

Peterson: I dont know what you mean by the question. Men and women arent the same. And they wont be the same. That doesnt mean that they cant be treated fairly.

Newman: Is gender equality desirable?

Peterson: If it means equality of outcome then it is almost certainly undesirable. Thats already been demonstrated in Scandinavia. Men and women wont sort themselves into the same categories if you leave them to do it of their own accord. Its 20 to 1 female nurses to male, something like that. And approximately the same male engineers to female engineers. Thats a consequence of the free choice of men and women in the societies that have gone farther than any other societies to make gender equality the purpose of the law. Those are ineradicable differencesyou can eradicate them with tremendous social pressure, and tyranny, but if you leave men and women to make their own choices you will not get equal outcomes.

Newman: So youre saying that anyone who believes in equality, whether you call them feminists or whatever you want to call them, should basically give up because it aint going to happen.

Peterson: Only if theyre aiming at equality of outcome.

Newman: So youre saying give people equality of opportunity, thats fine.

Peterson: Its not only fine, its eminently desirable for everyone, for individuals as well as societies.

Newman: But still women arent going to make it. Thats what youre really saying.

That is not what hes really saying!

In this next passage Peterson shows more explicit frustration than at any other time in the program with being interviewed by someone who refuses to relay his actual beliefs:

Newman: So you dont believe in equal pay.

Peterson: No, Im not saying that at all.

Newman: Because a lot of people listening to you will say, Are we going back to the dark ages?

Peterson: Thats because youre not listening, youre just projecting.

Newman: Im listening very carefully, and Im hearing you basically saying that women need to just accept that theyre never going to make it on equal termsequal outcomes is how you defined it.

Peterson: No, I didnt say that.

Newman: If I was a young woman watching that, I would go, well, I might as well go play with my Cindy dolls and give up trying to go school, because Im not going to get the top job I want, because theres someone sitting there saying, its not possible, its going to make you miserable.

Peterson: I said that equal outcomes arent desirable. Thats what I said. Its a bad social goal. I didnt say that women shouldnt be striving for the top, or anything like that. Because I dont believe that for a second.

Newman: Striving for the top, but youre going to put all those hurdles in their way, as have been in their way for centuries. And thats fine, youre saying. Thats fine. The patriarchal system is just fine.

Peterson: No! I really think thats silly! I do, I think thats silly.

He thinks it is silly because he never said that the patriarchal system is just fine or that he planned to put lots of hurdles in the way of women, or that women shouldnt strive for the top, or that they might as well drop out of school, because achieving their goals or happiness is simply not going to be possible.

The interviewer put all those words in his mouth.

The conversation moves on to other topics, but the pattern continues. Peterson makes a statement. And then the interviewer interjects, So youre saying and fills in the rest with something that is less defensible, or less carefully qualified, or more extreme, or just totally unrelated to his point. I think my favorite example comes when they begin to talk about lobsters. Heres the excerpt:

Peterson: Theres this idea that hierarchical structures are a sociological construct of the Western patriarchy. And that is so untrue that its almost unbelievable. I use the lobster as an example: We diverged from lobsters evolutionarily history about 350 million years ago. And lobsters exist in hierarchies. They have a nervous system attuned to the hierarchy. And that nervous system runs on serotonin just like ours. The nervous system of the lobster and the human being is so similar that anti-depressants work on lobsters. And its part of my attempt to demonstrate that the idea of hierarchy has absolutely nothing to do with sociocultural construction, which it doesnt.

Newman: Let me get this straight. Youre saying that we should organize our societies along the lines of the lobsters?

Yes, he proposes that we all live on the sea floor, save some, who shall go to the seafood tanks at restaurants. Its laughable. But Peterson tries to keep plodding along.

Peterson: Im saying it is inevitable that there will be continuities in the way that animals and human beings organize their structures. Its absolutely inevitable, and there is one-third of a billion years of evolutionary history behind that Its a long time. You have a mechanism in your brain that runs on serotonin thats similar to the lobster mechanism that tracks your statusand the higher your status, the better your emotions are regulated. So as your serotonin levels increase you feel more positive emotion and less negative emotion.

Newman: So youre saying like the lobsters, were hardwired as men and women to do certain things, to sort of run along tram lines, and theres nothing we can do about it.

Where did she get that extreme and theres nothing we can do about it? Peterson has already said that hes a clinical psychologist who coaches people to change how they relate to institutions and to one another within the constraints of human biology. Of course he believes that there is something that can be done about it.

He brought up the lobsters only in an attempt to argue that one thing we cant do is say that hierarchical organization is a consequence of the capitalist patriarchy.

At this point, were near the end of the interview. And given all that preceded it, Newmans response killed me. Again, she takes an accusatory tack with her guest:

Newman: Arent you just whipping people up into a state of anger?

Peterson: Not at all.

Newman: Divisions between men and women. Youre stirring things up.

Actually, one of the most important things this interview illustratesone reason it is worth noting at lengthis how Newman repeatedly poses as if she is holding a controversialist accountable, when in fact, for the duration of the interview, it is she that is stirring things up and whipping people into a state of anger.

At every turn, she is the one who takes her subjects words and makes them seem more extreme, or more hostile to women, or more shocking in their implications than Petersons remarks themselves support. Almost all of the most inflammatory views that were aired in the interview are ascribed by Newman to Peterson, who then disputes that she has accurately characterized his words.

There are moments when Newman seems earnestly confused, and perhaps is. And yet, if it were merely confusion, would she consistently misinterpret him in the more scandalous, less politically correct, more umbrage-stoking direction?

To conclude, this is neither an endorsement nor a condemnation of Petersons views. It is an argument that the effects of the approach used in this interview are pernicious.

For one, those who credulously accept the interviewers characterizations will emerge with the impression that a prominent academic holds troubling views that, in fact, he does not actually believe or advocate. Some will feel needlessly troubled. And distorted impressions of what figures like Peterson mean by the words that they speak can only exacerbate overall polarization between their followers and others, and sap their critics of credibility to push back where they are wrong.

Lots of culture-war fights are unavoidablethat is, they are rooted in earnest, strongly felt disagreements over the best values or way forward or method of prioritizing goods. The best we can do is have those fights, with rules against eye-gouging.

But there is a way to reduce needless division over the countless disagreements that are inevitable in a pluralistic democracy: get better at accurately characterizing the views of folks with differing opinions, rather than egging them on to offer more extreme statements in interviews; or even worse, distorting their words so that existing divisions seem more intractable or impossible to tolerate than they are. That sort of exaggeration or hyperbolic misrepresentation is epidemicand addressing it for everyones sake is long overdue.

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Jordan Peterson says Joe Rogan beats ratings of legacy media because ‘he doesn’t lie’ – Washington Examiner

Posted: at 3:58 pm

Canadian psychology professor and author Jordan Peterson responded to ratings numbers showing that Joe Rogan's podcast has more than triple the number of views of legacy media prime-time shows such as The Rachel Maddow Show and Tucker Carlson Tonight.

In response to Q3 media ratings posted to Twitter, Peterson argued that the reason Rogan's show beats cable talk shows in the ratings is because he "doesn't lie."

FED UP JOE ROGAN JOINS GETTR AFTER TWITTER BANS DR. ROBERT MALONE AND REP. MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE

"That's because he doesn't lie. Or talk down to his audience. Or manipulate for his own narrow advantage," Peterson tweeted. "Go @joerogan. See you in three weeks in Austin."

JORDAN PETERSON SAYS HE WAS LIED TO: 'I'LL GET THE VACCINE IF YOU F***ING LEAVE ME ALONE. AND DID THAT WORK? NO'

The ratings chart, based on data from Nielsen Holdings and Spotify, shows that Rogan's show is ranked No. 1 with an average of 11 million viewers per show, followed by Tucker Carlson Tonight, with 3.24 million per show, and The Five, with 2.98 million viewers per show.

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Rogan often has controversial guests on his show. He recently had the embattled Dr. Robert Malone, a contributor to the research that created mRNA vaccine technology, on his show to discuss the potential risk involved with the coronavirus vaccine as well as alleged malpractice by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Pfizer, and other health authorities in relation to the COVID-19 response.

Malone was banned from Twitter after making posts that could have promoted vaccine hesitancy.

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Cal Basketball: Unbeaten USC Pulls Away From Bears in the Second Half – CalBearsMaven

Posted: at 3:58 pm

No. 7 USC is the fourth-tallest team in the country and the Trojans used that length to stay undefeated at the expense of Cal on Thursday night.

The Trojans converted eight offensive rebounds into 10 second-chance points in the first half. Then they merely attacked basket, making 11 of their first 16 shots in the second half on the way to a 77-63 victory at Haas Pavilion.

By the time it was over, the Trojans had scored 50 points in the paint.

"We didn't play well enough to beat a Top-10 team tonight," Cal coach Mark Fox says in the video at the top of this story. "We simply didn't rebound the ball in the first half. And in the second half we didn't force enough stops to even have our rebounding exposed."

Cal (9-5, 2-2 Pac-12) had won five straight games and nine in a row at home. And Bears played well during long stretches of the game.

They simply had no answer for the Trojans physical advantage, although Cal guard Jordan Shepherd said the Bears simply didn't measure up defensively.

USC (13-0, 3-0), with seven players standing at least 6-foot-9, overpowered the Bears in the second half. Isaiah Mobley, a 6-foot-10 forward, put up 19 points scoring on dunks, drives while also making both of his 3-point attempts.

The Trojans, who hadn't played in 18 days, used an 8-0 to push their lead to 46-35 on a drive by Ethan Anderson with 14:25 left. But the Bears did not go away.

Back-to-back 3-pointers by Jordan Shepherd and Jalen Celestine and a pair of free throws by Shepherd pulled Cal within 52-48 with just over 10 minutes left.

The Bears got no closer, and when Joshua Morgan scored a layup with 5:18 left the Trojans had their biggest lead of the night at 65-53. That margin reached 15 points before the Bears closed a bit in the final minutes.

Drew Peterson scored 17 points and Boogie Ellis had 14 points for USC, which shot 64 percent in the second half. Peterson and Mobley each had nine rebounds.

Grant Anticevich, who led the Bears with 19 points, says in the video below he feels like the Bears gave the game away. Cal, playing two top-10 teams in the same week for the first time since 1975, takes on No. 5 UCLA on Saturday

Shepherd, limited in the first half by two early fouls, scored 15 for the Bears and Andre Kelly had 13 points and 11 rebounds. Celestine added 10 points. Point guard Joel Brown dished a career-high nine assists and had zero turnovers in 36 minutes on the floor.

The Bears shot 40.7 percent from the field, the highest percentage any opponent has managed this season against a USC team that is second nationally, allowing just 35 percent.

Cal trailed 36-31 at halftime after allowing the Trojans to convert eight offensive rebounds into 10 second-chance points. They used their length to build a 23-14 rebounding advantage in the first 20 minutes.

Cal shot well early in a half that had 10 lead changes but the Bears closed the half by making just one of eight attempts to finish the period at 38 percent.

The Bears last lead the half was 17-16 after Celestine converted a drive to the basket with 11:22 left.

The Trojans built their biggest lead of the half with an 8-0 run that made it 26-20 with 8 minutes left. They scored two of those basket following offensive rebounds and another off a steal that became a breakaway dunk.

Kelly had eight points and six rebounds for the Bears at halftime and Anticevich had eight points and six rebounds. Celestine came off the bench to score seven.

Mobley had 12 points and six rebounds for USC and Peterson posted eight and six.

Cover photo of USC's Drew Peterson passing around Cal's Andre Kelly by D. Ross Cameron, USA Today

Follow Jeff Faraudo of Cal Sports Report on Twitter: @jefffaraudo

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A plea to save the Freedom House building – BayStateBanner

Posted: at 3:58 pm

A key piece of Bostons civil rights history faces demolition: is it too late to save the Freedom House?

In a residential pocket of Bostons Grove Hall neighborhood where Roxbury meets Dorchester, an old brick building sits on a fenced-in lot, its wooden steps buckled and rotted, peeling paint visible through rusted metal window frames.

The longtime home of Freedom Housenow a decaying, neglected structure on Crawford streetplayed a critical role in the local civil rights movement, serving as a meeting place for advocates for equality and the neighboring community starting in the 1950s.

Freedom House founders Otto and Muriel Snowden. PHOTO: NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY ARCHIVE

One mile away from the house where Malcolm X spent part of his youth, Freedom House founders Otto and Muriel Snowden held court with Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights leaders, local elected officials, stakeholders in the fight against racism in Boston and President John F. Kennedy. Decades before a 1974 federal court order, social workers at the Freedom House in Roxbury started a movement of freedom schools and protests to counter segregation and racism in Boston public schools.

Currently slated for demolition, the building constructed in 1900 is a civil rights-era time capsule the city seems to have forgotten, though a recent application to delay its destruction raises the question: Is it too late to save the Freedom House?

Katrina Shaw, Freedom Houses executive director, says the nonprofit spent a decade trying to secure funding for renovations to save the old building.

But people werent giving. People didnt want to give, she told GBH News. People love the idea of Freedom House and what it meant to the city, but no one would really put their financial wherewithal behind it.

In 2010, the state awarded Freedom House a $1 million challenge grant to restore its former home and renovate a newer location across the street, a former public library branch where the organization currently operates. Then-chief executive Gail Snowden, the founders daughter, put out a call for help with fundraising to preserve the structure.

The current Freedom House building in the former Grove Hall Branch library building on Crawford Street. PHOTO: TORI BEDFORD

Our love for the building made us hold on to it for so long at a financial cost, Shaw said. If we were able to preserve it, we would. But when it starts to cannibalize your own ask to actually do the mission of Freedom House, then I think you have to make hard decisions, just like you would never choose your house over your child.

Last year, Snowden gave her blessing to Shaw and the current Freedom House managers to sell the building. The historic site was sold to a development company started by the late Dorchester native John Corcoran for $1.5 million, a sum that will go towards programs at the new location, where the foundation primarily focuses on academic, financial and social opportunities for college-bound students. Hoping to break ground in 2023, the developer plans to construct mixed-income housing and a memorial on the site to honor the work of the founders.

This decision was hard to make, and it wasnt made in haste, Shaw said. And if someone wanted to give Freedom House, like $20 million, I would restore it. I will do that tomorrow. I will do it five minutes from now. That had been our plea all along in terms of being able to raise money, but we couldnt.

The former Freedom House building sits a few blocks away from dozens of historic landmarks, structures from the Revolutionary War and homes of English settlers and church deacons. Its one of a handful of landmarks from the civil rights era remaining in Boston and a symbol of the fight for equal rightsone that may soon disappear.

You know, its interesting, no one has called me about it, Byron Rushing, president of the Roxbury Historical Society, told GBH News. We pretty much respond to people raising the issue. Can we save this building? What do we have to do to save this building? No one has asked me that question.

The current segregation in Bostonand racial wealth gapleads to the neglect of landmarks in predominantly Black neighborhoods like the Freedom House, Rushing said.

People dont know that history, outside of Roxbury, and new Roxbury people dont know about the history, he said. If this building was on the Black Heritage Trail, we would get a lot more publicity about it.

Christopher Martell, a UMass Boston professor who lives in Dorchester, teaches his students about Bostons educational history through a tour that begins at the old Freedom House, an important nerve center during the violent reaction to school desegregation.

Its particularly important because it tells a much longer story than just Boston busing, Martell told GBH News. Most of the students from the suburbs of Boston have no idea about its history. They dont even really know much about the civil rights struggle in Roxbury and Dorchester during the 50s and 60s.

Last month, Martell wrote a letter to the Boston Landmarks Commission, arguing for the Freedom House to be preserved as a protected landmark.

Shortly after Martells letter, the commission received an application to delay the demolition, citing both the significance of the Freedom House during the civil rights movement and the buildings use as a Hebrew Teachers College beginning in 1920.

The commission preliminarily deemed the Freedom House historically significant, according to a commission spokesperson. Once the city agency receives two alternatives to demolition and holds a public community meeting, it will schedule a formal hearing.

A delay from the landmarks commission doesnt guarantee that demolition will be blocked, but it could shine a light on the issue, a development Martell hopes will help the city find another solution.

The Landmarks Commission only has so much power, he said, but this is a place where advocacy is really important, because it would be harder for a developer to just take down the building if there was a collective movement to push back against that.

Shaw seems resigned about saying goodbye, knowing that the core mission will continue, no matter what building its in.

The spirit of Freedom House, the work of Freedom House, its here and its going on, Shaw said, gesturing out to the bustling office, where students took classes on laptops and served lunch to the Goldenaires of Freedom House, a program for seniors.

Goldenaires Coordinator Jumaada Abdal-Khallaq Henry Smith, a Roxbury native who attended Goldenaires meetings with her mother in the old building, says shes sad to let go of the space where she spent so much of her childhood.

I am a victim of eminent domain, so I cant show my kids where I used to live because our house is not there anymore, Abdal-Khallaq Henry Smith told GBH News. I hate to see the loss of something that is historical because my mom was breathing in that air, and all those Goldenaires, you know. Theres something about being able to hold on to something, for your childrens children to see it.

Tori Bedford is a reporter at GBH News. She primarily covers Dorchester and the surrounding neighborhoods.

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Call to Freedom raising awareness during National Human Trafficking Prevention Month – KELOLAND.com

Posted: at 3:58 pm

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (KELO) This month is National Human Trafficking Prevention Month, and a local organization is working to build awareness.

We want to just make sure that the community is aware that yes, human trafficking is happening right here in Sioux Falls, but also throughout our state, Call to Freedom community engagement coordinator Monica Rilling said.

Call to Freedom has events going on in January to build awareness of human trafficking and sexual exploitation.

It is our, actually the National Human Trafficking Awareness Day, so this coming Tuesday, January 11, were just asking the community to build more awareness by wearing blue, so Im wearing my blue t-shirt today, and then putting a red X on your hand just to bring that awareness, Rilling said.

Call to Freedom associate director Michelle Treasure says their referrals have increased.

Last year in June of 2021, we had already met the the number of referrals that we had seen in the entire year of 2020, so now going into 2022, were not, unfortunately, expecting anything less. The number of referrals that are coming in are very high currently. I would say that were probably seeing around five to eight referrals a week, she said.

Their services can help victims of sex and labor trafficking as well as people who have suffered sexual exploitation or assault.

We just get to know those people. We get to know their story. What do they need? What are some of the goals that they have for their lives? Treasure said.

Call to Freedom also helps with housing, transportation and counseling. The organization says it is important for people to be on the lookout for signs of human trafficking.

Some of those red flags are going to be, you know, no eye contact. They may not be able to speak for themselves. The person thats with them might be talking for them. Their speech might sound very scriptive or robotic, Treasure said.

She also says to look for signs of physical abuse.

I think human trafficking has been going on a for a very very long time, Treasure said. I think now it has a name, and people know what it is and that exposure is out there because of the education and prevention that some of the organizations like Call to Freedom is doing out in the community.

Call to Freedom is opening a new facility in Sioux Falls in April to replace its current one.

Below is a flyer with the events Call to Freedom is hosting this month. You can also go to their Facebook page.

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As with Jesus, work for justice and freedom begins with baptism – CatholicPhilly.com

Posted: at 3:58 pm

Msgr. Joseph Prior

By Msgr. Joseph Prior Posted January 7, 2022

(See the readings for the Baptism of Our Lord, Jan. 9)

He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire, the Baptist says at the end of his reply to those asking if he were the Christ. He emphatically had responded that he is not the Christ and that he is not even worthy to untie his sandals.

Johns baptism is, like his entire ministry, one that prepared for the coming of Jesus. Jesus is the one coming after me (John). When all is accomplished, he is the one who baptizes with the Holy Spirit and fire.

This Sunday we celebrate the Baptism of the Lord. The feast concludes our observation of Christmas and transitions us back to Ordinary Time. The feast recalls Jesus baptism in the desert as recounted in the Gospel passage, this year from St. Luke, as well as a reminder of our own baptism.

Jesus baptism is one that foreshadows ours. He undergoes the ritual washing as an example for us. The memory was vivid in the life of the early Church. Matthews account has John objecting when Jesus arrives for baptism saying: I need to be baptized by you, and you are coming to me? Jesus responds: Allow it for now, for thus it is fitting for us to fulfill all righteousness.

Reflecting on Jesus baptism, St. Maximus of Turin writes: Someone might ask, Why would a holy man (Jesus) desire baptism? Listen to the answer: Christ is baptized, not to be made holy by the water, but to make the water holy, and by his cleansing to purify the waters which he touched. For the consecration of Christ involves a more significant consecration of the water. For when the Savior is washed, all water for our baptism is made clean, purified at its source for the dispensing of baptismal grace to the people of future ages. Christ is the first to be baptized, then, so that Christians will follow after him in confidence.

After the Holy Spirit descends on Jesus in the form of a dove, the voice of the heavenly Father is heard: You are my beloved Son; with you I am well pleased. The words call to mind the Isaian passage used for the first reading in todays liturgy. Here is my servant whom I uphold, my chosen one with whom I am pleased, upon whom I have put my spirit.

The reading continues to describe the mission of Jesus. He will establish justice. He comes not with loud voice or strong arm but as a man gentle and meek. He is the one who is set as a covenant of the people, a light for the nations, who will open the eyes of the blind, to bring out prisoners from confinement, and from the dungeon, those who live in darkness.

The words also echo Jesus own understanding. In the beginning of the public ministry in Lukes Gospel, Jesus is in the synagogue and proclaims the Isaian passage: The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring glad tidings to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, and to proclaim a year acceptable to the Lord (Luke 4:18-19).

After this he says: Today this scripture passage is fulfilled in your hearing (Luke 4:21). Baptism is linked to Jesus mission. The Father sends Jesus to establish justice and freedom. When all is accomplished, baptism will be the means by which this justice and freedom are experienced.

The two options for the second reading highlight this celebration. The first, from Acts of the Apostles, recalls Peters preaching in the house of Cornelius. In the reading he recalls Jesus mission beginning in Galilee after the baptism that John preached, how God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and power. After Peters proclamation (but not included in this passage), Cornelius and his household all were baptized.

The second choice comes from the Letter of Titus. The reading reflects the cleansing nature of baptism. It is washing away of sin so that the Holy Spirit might be given. He writes: When the kindness and generous love of God our savior appeared, not because of any righteous deeds we had done but because of his mercy, he saved us through the bath of rebirth and renewal by the Holy Spirit, whom he richly poured out on us through Jesus our savior, so that we might be justified by his grace and become heirs in hope of eternal life.

The celebration of Jesus baptism reminds us of the great gift of grace shared with us in baptism. His baptism points to our baptism whereby we are washed clean, filled with the Holy Spirit and fortified to live the life of love, now and for eternity.

***

Msgr.Joseph Prior is pastor of Our Lady of Grace Parish, Penndel, and a former professor of Sacred Scripture and rector of St. Charles Borromeo Seminary.

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