Daily Archives: October 30, 2022

Snowflake Makes It Easy For Anyone to Fight Censorship

Posted: October 30, 2022 at 12:24 pm

Tor, the onion router, remains one of the most effective censorship circumvention technologies. Millions of people use the Tor network every day to access the internet without fear of surveillance and censorship.

Most people get on the Tor network by downloading the Tor Browser and connecting to a relay. But some countries, such as Iran and Russia, block direct access to the Tor network. In those countries people have to use what are known as Tor Bridges to circumvent national firewalls. Tens of thousands of people use bridges regularly to circumvent censorship and national or regional restrictions.

The number of bridge users in Iran grew exponentially in the last week of September 2022.

Of course, ISPs in countries where Tor is banned are constantly trying to find the IP addresses of bridges and block them to prevent people from accessing Tor. Bridge connections can also be identified (or fingerprinted) as connections to the Tor network by an ISP using deep packet inspection. To deal with this, Tor has a clever solution called pluggable transports. Pluggable transports disguise your Tor connection as ordinary traffic to a well-known web service such as Google or Skype, and smuggles your Tor connection inside of the seemingly innocuous traffic.

In the past, running a pluggable transport was difficult to set up, requiring a server and a good deal of time and technical knowledge. Now, thanks to a new pluggable transport called Snowflake, anyone can run a pluggable transport in their browser with just a couple of clicks and help people all over the world access the unrestricted internet.

The user interface for the Snowflake browser extension

Logs from a standalone snowflake instance running on a server

Snowflake is composed of three components: volunteers running Snowflake proxies, Tor users (or clients) that want to connect to the internet, and a broker that delivers Snowflake proxies to clients. Volunteers willing to help users on censored networks can help by spinning up short-lived proxies on their regular browsers. When you enable Snowflake, your browser will contact the broker and let it know that you are ready to accept peer-to-peer connections from people seeking to access Tor. Then clients who are on a restricted network can contact the broker and ask for a proxy, the broker will eventually hand them your IP address, and then the client will make a direct connection to your computer using WebRTC (the same technology which is used by Zoom, Skype, and any other peer-to-peer web connection.) Your computer will then forward traffic from the client to the Tor network.

A visual diagram of Snowflake

The obvious weak point here is the broker server. Why couldnt a country just block the broker IP since it is well-known? The answer is a technique called domain fronting. The details of domain fronting can be found elsewhere, but in brief, domain fronting lets the client make a request that looks like an ordinary web request for google.com, and thanks to HTTPS the request is able to hide its Host header which is actually for an arbitrary web service hosted on Googles cloud. In this case, that service is the Snowflake broker.

To block Snowflake, a network or country would have to block all of Google or every IP address outside of the network, essentially a complete internet shutdown. Of course, countries have repeatedly shown their willingness to do exactly that, but its a much higher price to pay than simply blocking Tor.

The security concerns for the Snowflake proxy operator are minimal. The Snowflake client will not be able to interact with your computer in any way or observe your network traffic, and you will not be able to see their traffic. From the perspective of your ISP it will look like you are connecting to a Tor bridge, which if you are running a Snowflake proxy should be legal and unrestricted in your country. There is no more risk running a Snowflake proxy than running Tor browser.

Snowflake means that everyone can help people exercise their freedom of expression anywhere in the world, and it takes no technical knowledge to run, so if you are in an unrestricted country (such as in North America or most of Europe) go run one now! And if you are in a restricted network consider using Snowflake to circumvent censorship and access the internet.

More technical readers are encouraged to read the Snowflake Technical Overview and the project page for more technical details. For other discussions about Snowflake, please visit the Tor Forum and follow up the Snowflake tag.

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Putin: Russia has no plans to use nuclear weapons in Ukraine

Posted: at 12:18 pm

Russian President Vladimir Putin said Thursday that Russia does not intend to use nuclear weapons in Ukraine despite previous threats he has made that it may turn to them in its war.

He said at a conference of international foreign policy experts that using nuclear weapons against Ukraine would have no political or military purpose. He also said the West is looking to achieve international domination through the conflict.

Putin also repeated his previous claims that Russians and Ukrainians are a single people who should be united and tried to delegitimize Ukraine as an independent country.

Putin has gradually stepped up threats of Russia potentially using tactical nuclear weapons on the battlefield against Ukraine to defend Russian territory.

He has said that he considers Russian territory to include the four regions of Ukraine where Russian soldiers oversaw annexation referendums last month. The referendums in Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia passed with more than 90 percent in favor, but the international community has widely denounced the elections as illegal and illegitimate.

Putin said in his remarks that NATOs refusal to rule out Ukraine joining the military alliance and Ukraines refusal to support a peace agreement with separatists forced the Kremlin to act.

Russian-backed separatists have been fighting Ukraine in the Donbas region, made up of Donetsk and Luhansk, since 2014.

Russia also does not have complete control over the regions as Ukraine has retaken thousands of square kilometers of territory as part of a counteroffensive it has conducted over the past two months.

Russian officials have recently accused Ukraine of intending to launch a so-called dirty bomb, which would spread radioactive material in an explosion, but Ukraine and its Western allies have rejected the claim.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

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Vladimir Putin given bizarre new title in Russia amid Kremlin’s ‘holy war’

Posted: at 12:18 pm

Russian President Vladimir Putin has been called a fighter against the Antichrist or chief exorcist by Patriarch Kirill, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, Newsweek reports.

At the outset of the Ukraine War, Vladimir Putin called Russias invasion of its neighbour merely a special military operation with the objective of denazification.

Eight months into the war and Russia is reportedly failing in all of its military objectives in Ukraine. Now, reports suggest that voices inside the Kremlin are whipping up bizarre theories in order to stir up domestic support.

Aleksey Pavlov, the assistant secretary to the security council of Russia, is said to claim the existence of satanic sects and a satanic church in Ukraine which calls for killing Russians, Express reports.

The statements by Pavlov have not been independently verified.

Nevertheless, even Vladimir Putin himself made use of this narrative. This was when he declared Russias annexation of the four regions in Ukraine, he accused western countries of outright satanism, Newsweek reports.

Increasingly more voices inside Russia are trying to elevate the discourse about the Ukraine War. What was merely a special military operation has now become a call to fight satanism and a holy war.

Such is the case of Ramzan Kadyrov, the Chechen leader and Putin ally who described the war in Ukraine as a holy war against Satanism.

Moreover, Patriarch Kirill recently told Russian citizens not to be afraid of death when going to fight in Ukraine.

Sources used:

-Newsweek: 'Putin Appointed 'Chief Exorcist' as Kremlin Whips up Satanic Panic'

-Express: Putin dubbed 'chief exorcist' as Kremlin turbocharges satanic panic over Ukraine invasion

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Putin accuses Western elites of playing ‘dangerous, bloody and dirty game’ – CNN

Posted: at 12:18 pm

  1. Putin accuses Western elites of playing 'dangerous, bloody and dirty game'  CNN
  2. Putin pins Ukraine hopes on winter and divisive US politics  BBC
  3. Opinion | Ignore Putin's words. His crimes in Ukraine speak louder.  The Washington Post
  4. Putin Rails Against Western Elites in Speech Aimed at U.S. Conservatives  The New York Times
  5. Putin Says West Playing 'Dangerous, Bloody Game'  Voice of America - VOA News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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La Mirada Chamber Invited Alt-Right Racist to Moderate School Board …

Posted: at 12:13 pm

BRINGING RACISM TO SCHOOL BOARD DEBATE-A simple internet search of Van De Mark would have produced several pictures such as this one. Behind Van De Mark (front) is a woman flashing a white supremacist sign

September 17, 2022

Staff Report

The La Mirada Chamber of Commerce pulled a fast one Thursday night at the NLMUSD Candidates Forum introducing as the moderator Critical Race Theory espousing alt-right and known Proud Boy supporter Gracey Van De Mark to the surprise of many at the event.

LM Chamber executives were giddy, as was the clones who knew she was coming in advance, ready to pounce with their right-wing divisive statements about teachers in the classroom, what theyre teaching, abortion, birth control, and how they are enabling LGBTQ+ kids.

But others, including HMG-CN Publisher Brian Hews, had no idea Van De Mark was going to be the moderator.

The Cerritos Republican Club invited Van De Mark to speak at the Cerritos Library, which was attended by then Vice President of ABCUSD Board Soo Yoo; HMG-CN learned of the event and publicized it, which drew many protesters to a Cerritos City Council meeting, but the City Council still allowed the library event.

Cerritos Republican Club Hosted Racist Proud Boy Supporter Gracey Van Der Mark at Cerritos Library Weeks After AAPI Beating at City Park

Shes a right-wing whack job who needs to stay in Orange County, said HMG-CN publisher Brian Hews, I did not find out she was the moderator until I got several texts during the forum from people attending who were very angry. Extremely bad judgment on the part of the La Mirada Chamber to invite her.

My local community news writer, Tammye McDuff, who asked me if she could be Chamber President this year, also did not tell me.

And its not just Hews view of Van Der Mark, Shes a disruptor, shes a bigot, and she has no place in public governance. None, Gina Clayton-Tarvin, clerk of the board of trustees at Ocean View School District told the Daily Beast in 2021.

A simple internet search by the chamber would have revealed Van Der Marks long involvement with the alt-right.

In April 2017, according to a Facebook post, she shared a picture from an event with Kyle Based Stickman Chapman. A far-right brawler and leader of the Proud Boys paramilitary wing the Alt-Knights, Chapman had earned his nickname when video footage showed him hitting a leftist protester with a stick, leading to his arrest and eventual plea deal on a weapons charge.

My son got a few tips from Based Stick Man on how to protect himself against the Antifa masked cowards at rallys and patriot events. [sic] Van Der Mark wrote on Facebook.

In another selfie, Van Der Mark can be seen with Antonio Foreman. who, in August 2017, marched in the deadly white supremacist rally in Charlottesville.

Van Der Mark can also be seen attending an anti-Islam event in San Bernardino. Photos from the day show her wearing a gun-print shirt, standing behind far-right figure Johnny Benitez, who is wearing a Proud Boys uniform and holding a poster with a meme about ethnic cleansing of Muslims.

But that history did not matter to the chamber. Van Der Mark was introduced, smugly strolled up to the podium and immediately began her alt-right line of questioning, not knowing that it was traditional to allow the customary two minutes for each candidate to introduce themselves.

Van Der Marks first question was predictable, will you teach CRT in the NLMUSD.? Her second question was, will you fight against the state trying to include CRT in school curriculum?

It has been a proven fact in all reputable media reports that CRT is only taught in college graduate courses and it is a right-wing racist meme meant to divide parents and school boards

All candidates could be seen as taken by surprise, with all answering the question in the negative.

Van Der Mark then asked if the board members would allow a Planned Parenthood clinic, but that was a moot subject and yet another divisive question.

An item had been put on the NLMUSDs Board agenda weeks ago to discuss a clinic, but it was pulled and never discussed, the board making it clear in a statement they were not considering the clinic.

By the time Van Der Mark began asking abortion questions, a visibly upset LMUSD Board Member Dr. Robert Cancio, who is endorsed by HMG-CN, objected to Van Der Marks line of questioning.

Van Der Mark asked, a minor in school cannot be given an aspirin or Neosporin without permission from their parents; however, a child of any age, without permission or knowledge of their parents, can consent to have an abortion as well as be given birth control, do you approve of this?

Cancio responded, I almost feel like Im not in a friendly debate for school board with these questions.

Many attendees could be overheard on a microphone saying yes what is this? Why are you asking these questions?

Cancio continued, as the only product of the Norwalk La Mirada School District on the stage, I can assure you that we are in the business of teaching our students to be lifelong learners, we do not provide services and its inappropriate you keep asking these questions.

A debate moderators job is to be objective and control the situation, but Van Der Mark, could be overheard saying after Cancios comment, actually its [abortion services] happening in a lot of schools Ive seen it myself.

Cancio responded, not in this school district.

Board Member Norma Amezcua spoke up and said, your [Van Der Mark] questions are ridiculous and have no place in this debate, can you ask pertinent questions? That statement drew a loud and vocal response from the attendees.

Undaunted, Van Der Mark continued asking other candidates the abortion question, with the attendees becoming increasingly angry and yelling in her direction.

The last question caused chamber executives Noel Jaimes and McDuff to call a break and end Van Der Marks questioning.

Does anyone believes a six-year-old is cognitively prepared to understand the concept of being assigned a gender?

In an email, Jaimes told HMG-CN, yes I approved her [Van Der Mark] as the moderator, I did some research and found a few articles on her in Orange County, but your [HMG-CNs] stuff did not pop up in my search. Why?

Like the Daily Beast article, a search of Van Der Mark will produce many unflattering Orange County articles pointing out her alt-right Proud Boy supporter background, her controversial run for Huntington Beach City Council [she came in fourth] and her association with ex-HB Councilman Tito Ortiz, another right-wing Proud Boy supporter who called the Jan. 6 insurrection a false flag, and the pandemic a plandemic.

The information in the OC articles was used as background information when HMG-CN published the report outlining how ABC Board President Soo Yoo and the Cerritos Republican Club invited Van Der Mark to speak at the Cerritos Library.

That meeting ended with Yoo, Van Der Mark, and ABC Board Member Michael Eugenio pictured under the California Department of Education with a circle/slash through the logo.

WHAT WERE THEY THINKING?WhiteSupremacistVan Der Mark (left) with ABC VP Soo Yoo and Trustee Mike Eugenio (r) under the Prohibition sign.

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Hate & Extremism | Southern Poverty Law Center

Posted: at 12:13 pm

The SPLC is the premierU.S. organization monitoring the activities of domestic hate groups and other extremists including the Ku Klux Klan, white nationalists, the neo-Nazi movement, antigovernment militiasand others.

Wetrackmore than 1,600 extremist groups operating across the country. We publish investigative reports, train law enforcement officers and share key intelligence, and offer expert analysis to the media and public.

Our work fighting hate and extremism began in the early 1980s, amid a resurgence of Klan violence that began several years after the end of the civil rights movement. Each year since 1990, we have released an annual census of U.S. hate groups. In the mid-1990s, we also began documenting the number of radical, antigovernment militias and other organizations that comprise the far-right Patriot movement.

Over the years, weve crippled or destroyed some of the countrys most notorious hate groups including the United Klans of America, the Aryan Nations and the White Aryan Resistance by suing them for murders and other violent acts committed by their members or by exposing their activities.

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Ethereum Founder Issues Controversial Bitcoin And Crypto Warning Amid Wild Price Swings – Forbes

Posted: at 12:11 pm

  1. Ethereum Founder Issues Controversial Bitcoin And Crypto Warning Amid Wild Price Swings  Forbes
  2. Bitcoin Price and Ethereum Prediction BTC Braces for 10% Pump to $23,000  Cryptonews
  3. Bitcoin, Ether Press Higher as Momentum Increases  CoinDesk
  4. Why is Bitcoin price up today?  Cointelegraph
  5. This Week in Coins: Bitcoin and Ethereum See Green Shoots, Dogecoin Gets Musk Twitter Bump  Decrypt
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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The COVID-19 pandemic and health inequalities

Posted: at 12:06 pm

INTRODUCTION

In 1931, Edgar Sydenstricker outlined inequalities by socio-economic class in the 1918 Spanish influenza epidemic in America, reporting a signicantly higher incidence among the working classes.1 This challenged the widely held popular and scientific consensus of the time which held that the u hit the rich and the poor alike.2 In the COVID-19 pandemic, there have been similar claims made by politicians and the media - that we are all in it together and that the COVID-19 virus does not discriminate.3 This essay aims to dispel this myth of COVID-19 as a socially neutral disease, by discussing how, just as 100years ago, there are inequalities in COVID-19 morbidity and mortality ratesreflecting existing unequal experiences of chronic diseases and the social determinants of health. The essay is structured in three main parts. Part 1 examines historical and contemporary evidence of inequalities in pandemicsdrawing on international research into the Spanish influenza pandemic of 1918, the H1N1 outbreak of 2009 and the emerging international estimates of socio-economic, ethnic and geographical inequalities in COVID-19 infection and mortality rates. Part 2 examines how these inequalities in COVID-19 are related to existing inequalities in chronic diseases and the social determinants of health, arguing that we are experiencing a syndemic pandemic. In Part 3, we explore the potential consequences for health inequalities of the lockdown measures implemented internationally as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic, focusing on the likely unequal impacts of the economic crisis. The essay concludes by reflecting on the longer-term public health policy responses needed to ensure that the COVID-19 pandemic does not increase health inequalities for future generations.

More recent studies have confirmed Sydenstrickers early findings: there were significant inequalities in the 1918 Spanish influenza pandemic. The international literature demonstrates that there were inequalities in prevalence and mortality rates: between high-income and low-income countries, more and less affluent neighbourhoods, higher and lower socio-economic groups, and urban and rural areas. For example, India had a mortality rate 40 times higher than Denmark and the mortality rate was 20 times higher in some South American countries than in Europe.4 In Norway, mortality rates were highest among the working-class districts of Oslo5; in the USA, they were highest among the unemployed and the urban poor in Chicago,6 and across Sweden, there were inequalities in mortality between the highest and lowest occupational classesparticularly among men.7 In contrast, countries with smaller pre-existing social and economic inequalities, such as New Zealand, did not experience any socio-economic inequalities in mortality.8 9 An urbanrural effect was also observed in the 1918 inuenza pandemic whereby, for example, in England and Wales, the mortality was 30%40% higher in urban areas.10 There is also some evidence from the USA that the pandemic had long-term impacts on inequalities in child health and development.11

Several studies have also demonstrated inequalities in the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic. For example, globally, Mexico experienced a higher mortality rate than that in higher-income countries.12 In terms of socio-economic inequalities, themortality rate from H1N1 in the most deprived neighbourhoods of England was three times higher than in the least deprived.13 It was also higher in urban compared to rural areas.13 Similarly, a Canadian study in Ontario found that hospitalisation rates for H1N1 were associated with lower educational attainment and living in a high deprivation neighbourhood.14 Another study found positive associations between people with financial issues (eg, financial barriers to healthcare access) and influenza-like illnesses during the 2009 H1N1 pandemic in the USA.15 Various studies on cyclical winter influenza in North America have also found associations between mortality, morbidity and symptom severity and socio-economic status among adults and children.16 17

Just as in 1918 and 2009, evidence of social inequalities is already emerging in relation to COVID-19 from Spain, the USA and the UK. Intermediate data published by the Catalonian government in Spain suggest that the rate of COVID-19 infection is six or seven times higher in the most deprived areas of the region compared to the least deprived.18 Similarly, in preliminary USA analysis, Chen and Krieger (2020) found area-level socio-spatial gradients in confirmed cases in Illinois and positive test results in New York City, with dramatically increased risk of death observed among residents of the most disadvantaged counties.19 With regard to ethnic inequalities in COVID-19, data from England and Wales have found that people who are black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) accounted for 34.5% of 4873 critically ill COVID-19 patients (in the period ending April 16, 2020) and much higher than the 11.5% seen for viral pneumonia between 2017 and 2019.20 Only 14% of the population of England and Wales are from BAME backgrounds. Even more stark is the data on racial inequalities in COVID-19 infections and deaths that are being released by various states and municipalities in the USA. For example, in Chicago (in the period ending April 17, 2020), 59.2% of COVID-19 deaths were among black residents and the COVID-19 mortality rate for black Chicagoans was 34.8 per 100000 population compared to 8.2 per 100000 population among white residents.21 There will likely be an interaction of race and socio-economic inequalities, demonstrating the intersectionality of multiple aspects of disadvantage coalescing to further compound illness and increase the risk of mortality.22

The COVID-19 pandemic is occurring against a backdrop of social and economic inequalities in existing non-communicable diseases (NCDs) as well as inequalities in the social determinants of health. Inequalities in COVID-19 infection and mortality rates are therefore arising as a result of a syndemic of COVID-19, inequalities in chronic diseases and the social determinants of health. The prevalence and severity of the COVID-19 pandemic is magnified because of the pre-existing epidemics of chronic diseasewhich are themselves socially patterned and associated with the social determinants of health. The concept of a syndemic was originally developed by Merrill Singer to help understand the relationships between HIV/AIDS, substance use and violence in the USA in the 1990s.23 A syndemic exists when risk factors or comorbidities are intertwined, interactive and cumulativeadversely exacerbating the disease burden and additively increasing its negative effects: A syndemic is a set of closely intertwined and mutual enhancing health problems that significantly affect the overall health status of a population within the context of a perpetuating configuration of noxious social conditions [24 p13]. We argue that for the most disadvantaged communities, COVID-19 is experienced as a syndemica co-occurring, synergistic pandemic that interacts with and exacerbates their existing NCDs and social conditions (figure 1).

The syndemic of COVID-19, non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and the social determinants of health (adapted from Singer23 and Dahlgren and Whitehead25).

Minority ethnic groups, people living in areas of higher socio-economic deprivation, those in poverty and other marginalised groups (such as homeless people, prisoners and street-based sex workers) generally have a greater number of coexisting NCDs, which are more severe and experienced at at a younger age. For example, people living in more socio-economically disadvantaged neighbourhoods and minority ethnic groups have higher rates of almost all of the known underlying clinical risk factors that increase the severity and mortality of COVID-19, including hypertension, diabetes, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), heart disease, liver disease, renal disease, cancer, cardiovascular disease, obesity and smoking.2629 Likewise, minority ethnic groups in Europe, the USA and other high-income countries experience higher rates of the key COVID-19 risk factors, including coronary heart disease and diabetes.28 Similarly, the Gypsy/Roma communityone of the most marginalised minority groups in Europehas a smoking rate that is two to three times the European average and increased rates of respiratory diseases (such as COPD) and other COVID-19 risk factors.29

These inequalities in chronic conditions arise as a result of inequalities in exposure to the social determinants of health: the conditions in which people live, work, grow and age including working conditions, unemployment, access to essential goods and services (eg, water, sanitation and food), housing and access to healthcare.25 30 By way of example, there are considerable occupational inequalities in exposure to adverse working conditions (eg, ergonomic hazards, repetitive work, long hours, shift work, low wages, job insecurity)they are concentrated in lower-skill jobs. These working conditions are associated with increased risks of respiratory diseases, certain cancers, musculoskeletal disease, hypertension, stress and anxiety.31 In addition to these long-term exposures, inequalities in working conditions may well be impacting the unequal distribution of the COVID-19 disease burden. For example, lower-paid workers (where BAME groups are disproportionately represented)particularly in the service sector (eg, food, cleaning or delivery services)are much more likely to be designated as key workers and thereby are still required to go to work and rely on public transport for doing so. All these increase their exposure to the virus.

Similarly, access to healthcare is lower in disadvantaged and marginalised communitieseven in universal healthcare systems.32 In England, the number of patients per general practitioner is 15% higher in the most deprived areas than that in the least deprived areas.33 Medical care is even more unequally distributed in countries such as the USA where around 33 million Americansfrom the most disadvantaged and marginalised groupshave insufficient or no healthcare insurance.27 This reduced access to healthcarebefore and during the outbreakcontributes to inequalities in chronic disease and is also likely to lead to worse outcomes from COVID-19 in more disadvantaged areas and marginalised communities. People with existing chronic conditions (eg, cancer or cardiovascular disease (CVD)) are less likely to receive treatment and diagnosis as health services are overwhelmed by dealing with the pandemic.

Housing is also an important factor in driving health inequalities.34 For example, exposure to poor quality housing is associated with certain health outcomes, for example, damp housing can lead to respiratory diseases such as asthma while overcrowding can result in higher infection rates and increased risk of injury from household accidents.34 Housing also impacts health inequalities materially through costs (eg, as a result of high rents) and psychosocially through insecurity (eg, short-term leases).34 Lower socio-economic groups have a higher exposure to poor quality or unaffordable, insecure housing and therefore have a higher rate of negative health consequences.35 These inequalities in housing conditions may also be contributing to inequalities in COVID-19. For example, deprived neighbourhoods are more likely to contain houses of multiple occupation and smaller houses with a lack of outside space, as well as have higher population densities (particularly in deprived urban areas) and lower access to communal green space.27 These will likely increase COVID-19 transmission ratesas was the case with H1N1 where strong associations were found with urbanity.13

The social determinants of health also work to make people from marginalised communities more vulnerable to infection from COVID-19even when they have no underlying health conditions. Decades of research into the psychosocial determinants of health have found that the chronic stress of material and psychological deprivation is associated with immunosuppression.36 Psychosocial feelings of subordination or inferiority as a result of occupying a low position on the social hierarchy stimulate physiological stress responses (eg, raised cortisol levels), which, when prolonged (chronic), can have long-term adverse consequences for physical and mental health.37 By way of example, studies have found consistent associations between low job status (eg, low control and high demands), stress-related morbidity and various chronic conditions including coronary heart disease, hypertension, obesity, musculoskeletal conditions, and psychological ill health.38 Likewise, there is increasing evidence that living in disadvantaged environments may produce a sense of powerlessness and collective threat among residents, leading to chronic stressors that, in time, damage health.39 Studies have also confirmed that adverse psychosocial circumstances increase susceptibilityinfluencing the onset, course and outcome of infectious diseasesincluding respiratory diseases like COVID-19.40

The impact of COVID-19 on health inequalities will not just be in terms of virus-related infection and mortality, but also in terms of the health consequences of the policy responses undertaken in most countries. While traditional public health surveillance measures of contact tracing and individual quarantine were successfully pursued by some countries (most notably by South Korea and Germany) as a way of tackling the virus in the early stages, most other countries failed to do so, and governments worldwide were eventually forced to implement mass quarantine measuresin the form of lockdowns. These state-imposed restrictionsusually requiring the government to take on emergency powershave been implemented to varying levels of severity, but all have in common a significant increase in social isolation and confinement within the home and immediate neighbourhood. The aims of these unprecedented measures are to increase social and physical distancing and thereby reduce the effective reproduction number (eR0) of the virus to less than 1. For example, in the UK, individuals were only allowed to leave the home for one of four reasons (shopping for basic necessities, exercise, medical needs, travelling for work purposes). Following Wuhan province in China, most of the lockdowns have been implemented for 8 to 12weeks.

The immediate pathways through which the COVID-19 emergency lockdowns are likely to have unequal health impacts are multipleranging from unequal experiences of lockdown (eg, due to job and income loss, overcrowding, urbanity, access to green space, key worker roles), how the lockdown itself is shaping the social determinants of health (eg, reduced access to healthcare services for non-COVID-19 reasons as the system is overwhelmed by the pandemic) and inequalities in the immediate health impacts of the lockdown (eg, in mental health and gender-based violence). However, arguably, the longer-term and largest consequences of the great lockdown for health inequalities will be through political and economic pathways (figure 1). The world economy has been severely impacted by COVID-19with almost daily record stock market falls, oil prices have crashed and there are record levels of unemployment (eg, 5.2 million people filed for unemployment benefit in just 1 week in April 2020 in the USA), despite the unprecedented interventionist measures undertaken by some governments and central bankssuch as the 300 billion injection by the UK government to support workers and businesses. The pandemic has slowed Chinas economy with a predicted loss of $65 billion as a minimum in the first quarter of 2020. Economists fear that the economic impact will be far greater than the financial crisis of 2007/2008, and they say that it is likely to be worse in depth than the Great Depression of the 1930s. Just like the 1918 influenza pandemic (which had severe impacts on economic performance and increased poverty rates), the COVID-19 crisis will have huge economic, social andultimatelyhealth consequences.

Previous research has found that sudden economic shocks (like the collapse of communism in the early 1990s and the global financial crisis (GFC) of 200841) lead to increases in morbidity, mental ill health, suicide and death from alcohol and substance use. For example, following the GFC, worldwide an excess of suicides were observed in the USA, England, Spain and Ireland.42 There is also evidence of other increases in poor mental health after the GFC including self-harm and psychiatric morbidity.41 42 These health impacts were not shared equally thoughareas of the UK with higher unemployment rates had greater increases in suicide rates and inequalities in mental health increased with people living in the most deprived areas experiencing the largest increases in psychiatric morbidity and self-harm.43 Further, unemployment (and its well-established negative health impacts in terms of morbidity and mortality38) is disproportionately experienced by those with lower skills or who live in less buoyant local labour markets.27 So, the health consequences of the COVID-19 economic crisis are likely to be similarly unequally distributedexacerbating heath inequalities.

However, the effects of recessions on health inequalities also vary by public policy response with countries such as the UK, Greece, Italy and Spain who imposed austerity (significant cuts in health and social protection budgets) after the GFC experiencing worse population health effects than those countries such as Germany, Iceland and Sweden who opted to maintain public spending and social safety nets.41 Indeed, research has found that countries with higher rates of social protection (such as Sweden) did not experience increases in health inequalities during the 1990s economic recession.44 Similarly, old-age pensions in the UK were protected from austerity cuts after the GFC and research has suggested that this prevented health inequalities increasing amongst the older population.45 These findings are in keeping with previous studies of the effects of public sector and welfare state contractions and expansions on trends in health inequalities in the UK, USA and New Zealand.27 4649 For example, inequalities in premature mortality and infant mortality by income and ethnicity in the USA decreased during the period of welfare expansion in the USA (war on poverty era 1966 to 1980), but they increased again during the ReaganBush period (19802002) when welfare services and healthcare coverage were cut.46 Similarly, in England, inequalities in infant mortality rates reduced as child poverty decreased in a period of public sector and welfare state expansion (from 2000 to 2010),47 but increased again when austerity was implemented and child poverty rates increased (from 2010 to 2017).48

So this essay makes for grim reading for researchers, practitioners and policymakers concerned with health inequalities. Historically, pandemics have been experienced unequally with higher rates of infection and mortality among the most disadvantaged communitiesparticularly in more socially unequal countries.8 9 Emerging evidence from a variety of countries suggests that these inequalities are being mirrored today in the COVID-19 pandemic. Both then and now, these inequalities have emerged through the syndemic nature of COVID-19as it interacts with and exacerbates existing social inequalities in chronic disease and the social determinants of health. COVID-19 has laid bare our longstanding social, economic and political inequalities - even before the COVID-19 pandemic, life expectancy amongst the poorest groups was already declining in the UK and the USA and health inequalities in some European countries have been increasing over the last decade.50 It seems likely that there will be a post-COVID-19 global economic slumpwhich could make the health equity situation even worse, particularly if health-damaging policies of austerity are implemented again. It is vital that this time, the right public policy responses (such as expanding social protection and public services and pursuing green inclusive growth strategies) are undertaken so that the COVID-19 pandemic does not increase health inequalities for future generations. Public health must win the peace as well as the war.

We would like to thank Chris Orton from the Cartographic Unit, Department of Geography, Durham University, for his assistance with the graphics for figure 1.

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The COVID-19 pandemic and health inequalities

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DNA evidence has freed a California man imprisoned for more than 38 years – NPR

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  1. DNA evidence has freed a California man imprisoned for more than 38 years  NPR
  2. Man wrongly convicted of Inglewood murder freed after 38 years by DNA evidence  Los Angeles Times
  3. DNA testing exonerated Maurice Hastings after serving 38 years in prison  KABC-TV
  4. Black man freed by DNA test after 38 years in US prison for wrongful murder conviction  Anadolu Agency | English
  5. Man Released from Prison After 38 Years as DNA Proves His Innocence  PEOPLE
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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DNA evidence has freed a California man imprisoned for more than 38 years - NPR

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Maybe it wont be Illumina sequencing your DNA but one of its rivals – The San Diego Union-Tribune

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Maybe it wont be Illumina sequencing your DNA but one of its rivals  The San Diego Union-Tribune

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Maybe it wont be Illumina sequencing your DNA but one of its rivals - The San Diego Union-Tribune

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