Simple Tips to Live More Sustainably, From an Environmental Educator – The Beet

We know that most people are eating more plant-based these days for their health and the planet. These tips fromIsaias Hernandez, an environmental educator, plant-based innovator, and zero-waste activist will help you do both. Hernandez seeks to diversify the field of environmentalism. A graduate of UC Berkeleys environmental science program, he runs @queerbrownvegan, a space that provides accessible environmental education through an intersectional perspective.

Hernandez talks about transitioning to a plant-based lifestyle, and how his background plays an important role in his commitment to becoming zero-waste. He provided us with simple practices on how to live a sustainable lifestyle, slowly reducing waste for a cleaner and greener world. Let his advice motivate you to not only nourish your own body, but also the beautiful environment around you!

IH: I have been a vegan for almost two years now. My interest to live a plant-based lifestyle started in college when I took a class called Agricultural Food Systems and we discussed the horrifying working conditions of factory farms and how it's created a global environmental injustice. For many of us, I knew that this was always happening but my ethics were not aligned at the moment since I still contributed to eating dairy.

Realizing how agricultural industries are products of environmental colonialism and have perpetuated the abuse of humans and animals sparked my transition to veganism. My interests in environmentalism started at a young age when I grew up in the city of Los Angeles, California, most commonly known as the San Fernando Valley area where I lived near toxic facilities, terrible air quality, and noise pollution. Since then, I have looked into ways in how I can promote intersectionality within my environmental education work.

IH: As an environmental educator, I created @QueerBrownVegan in my mission to share information about environmentalism without it coming from an academic institution. I truly believe that environmental education lacks in most K-12 education systems, and my goal is to eventually develop a universal curriculum to be taught to students. As a person of color in the environmental field, I have dealt with many obstacles -- such as experiencing racism while I conducted research in college.

Queer is also an important aspect of my work because there weren't that many Queer POC mentors in my field. Additionally, I often felt that environmentalism mainly saw Queerness as not "normal" but anything that had binary in it, was seen as normal. As a vegan, I truly believe my work is grounded in the liberation and anti-oppression of living beings (both humans and animals). When we realize how extractive industries are interconnected, we are able to approach through intersectional, not single-issue activism.

IH: Growing up Mexican, I learned about my language and how it's embedded in colonial roots, which inspired my work to continually provide support for Indigenous communities. Being vegan and an intersectional environmentalist has allowed me to further understand my positionality in the movement but also provide a sense of representation for the Latinx community to know that we have always cared about the environment, but we just never had the opportunity to speak about it or be spotlighted.

IH: Zero waste in many cultural traditions focuses on circular models where resources are used efficiently. However, now that we have plastics ingrained in our society, those types of traditions have shifted today but are still a part of our cultural memories.My parents grew up in Mexico and immigrated to the United States in the 1980s. We were low-income my whole life and my parents instilled practices of survival that weren't really seen as eco-friendly.

For example, my mother always insisted that using tomatoes in your hair once a month would promote hair growth and vitamins. She was never a big advocate of using plastic shampoo bottles and always looked for plastic-free options, such as using natural ingredients to treat hair. We had to recycle not because we loved it, but because we believed that it provided an additional source of income. When it came to plastic containers, we used the ones we had already used such as the sour cream or butter container to store refried beans or salsa, instead of buying new ones. While these may have not been traditional values, my parents found alternatives to continue living more sustainably without having to generate more waste in our home.

IH: Some tips I generally share with people are to first check-in with your family and get to hear about their cultural traditions or how they had to be resourceful growing up. Most often than not, people practice sustainability in certain aspects of their life but they don't identify it as sustainable. Moreover, you need to understand that we all contribute to forms of plastic consumption whether we like it or not, so do not compromise your mental and physical health thinking about this.

Stick to something you are passionate about in your life, what sectors would you feel more inspired to make a change. We often gravitate to common notions such as going thrifting, reducing waste, or buying sustainable products, but what about investing in your own community? Ask yourself, what can I do to further improve this environment to be sustainable? Is this through building a mini book library, community fridge, or donating to local organizations shelters?

IH: I am most inspired by the fact that I am able to continue learning alongside my community about environmentalism.I always knew I wanted to study environmentalism, but I would have never imagined having had the opportunity to cultivate environmental education defined by my own thoughts, research, and culture. Through my work, I want to continue building accessible environmental education that goes beyond social media and actually is implemented in systems that have often ignored these types of conversations. My work is always evolving and this is just the beginning of my career.

IH: I try to practice zero-waste cooking, where I use all types of my produce through a circular lens without sending it to the compost bin. I usually make my own plant-based milk such as oat milk and incorporate leftover pulp to make oat pancakes or oat cookies. For lunch, I use leftover garbanzo bean liquid (aquafaba) as an egg replacement and I make brownies out of it! I also love making enchiladas on special occasions or whenever I have time.

IH: Most humans don't eat meat 7 times a week, so I encourage people to take small steps to reduce meat intake. For example, I started cutting out red meat before I went vegetarian since I rarely ate it. I slowly reduced my meat consumption each week before fully becoming a vegetarian. I think most often not, people think they have to transition to a plant-based diet perfectly or even uphold strict rules, but I encourage people to counteract that and make mistakes as shaming oneself does not create change. I suggest acknowledging where you can improve and what you want, which drives true compassion and encouragement.

Many of us already eat vegetables and fruits, so all it takes is finding those unique recipes and incorporating more plants to fully adopt a plant-based lifestyle. There are also great vegan meat alternatives to try out there and if you ever undercook vegan meat, you do not have to worry about getting sick like animal meat!

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Simple Tips to Live More Sustainably, From an Environmental Educator - The Beet

Chef Gaz Oakley to showcase plant-based cooking at Festive Vegan and Plant Powered Show – Bizcommunity.com

The celebrated vegan chef, Gaz Oakley, will be showcasing plant-based cooking at the Festive Vegan and Plant Powered Show (FVPPS).

After learning to cook at a very young age with his dad, cooking and sports became Oakley's early passions. Wanting to learn even more about the former, Oakley got his first part-time chefs job at the tender age of 15, working at a local hotel restaurant. A year later, after completing his GCSEs, he left school to work full time at the restaurant.

After a few years, he decided it was time for a new challenge and plucked up the courage to knock on the door of Le Gallois, a renowned restaurant in Cardiff, Wales. Oakley offered to work for free to show off his skills and to his amazement, the head chef agreed. He worked the weekend for no pay and a week later was offered a full-time position.

Working at Le Gallois was intense but the food we served was unbelievable. I learnt so much and was given the freedom to create my own dishes for the menu, he says.

After working long hours in the kitchen for a number of years, Oakley decided to take a sabbatical. Now that he had some spare time again, he got back into exercising, started weight training and adopted a body builder's diet but gained a lot of weight and did not feel healthy at all.

I noticed more and more information about veganism popping up on my social media feeds and then one day my favourite musician Jme (aka Jamie Adenuga) was on the radio talking about what made him go vegan, and he mentioned a YouTube video by a guy called Gary Yourofsky, which made him make the change overnight.

I watched the video and was blown away. From that day on I knew I would be vegan for the rest of my life, says Oakley.

I remember eating my first vegan meal and it was like a weight had been lifted off my shoulders. It tasted so fresh, vibrant and flavoursome. After weeks of experimenting, my passion for cooking was back and I started to create the most incredible vegan food.

One day, I came up with an idea to turn people on to the idea of veganism. I invited a group of friends over and made them the most amazing vegan burgers ever. They were gobsmacked and didnt believe they really were 100% vegan burgers. From that moment on, I knew that I had to use my cooking skills as my way of promoting veganism.

In February 2016, after many months of cooking for friends, recipe testing and experimenting, Oakley started his Instagram page @avantgardevegan, with the hope of spreading his activism through food to a wider audience. And before he knew it, he had thousands of followers from around the world, a number that now sits at over half a million and growing daily.

Oakley has now completed over 11 seasons of recipe videos, has over one million subscribers who are based all around the world and his YouTube videos have a combined total of nearly 40 million views.

The next obvious move was into publishing, and in January 2018 Oakley released his debut cookbook titled #Vegan100, which is sold worldwide and has been translated into five languages.

#Vegan100 is filled with all the recipes I created between the first day I went vegan up to the day I handed the book text in. I wanted to make sure there was something in there for everyone and packed with dishes that will also appeal to non-vegans, he says.

In December 2018, Oakley released his second book, Vegan Christmas, which, like his debut book, went on to become a bestseller. A third book, titled Plants Only Kitchen was released in April this year and is filled with simple protein-packed recipes that have proved to be a godsend to vegans and vegetarians during lockdown the world over.

As if his schedule is not full enough, Oakley also recently became the executive chef at a London vegan burger restaurant, The Vurger Co., designing new burgers and dishes for their menu.

I have dreams of opening my own restaurant and one day I will, but in the meantime giving people the chance to taste my food at restaurants before opening the doors to my own place is pretty awesome.

Early bird tickets for the FVPPS are now on sale from Quicket at R80 until 7 October. Thereafter tickets will cost R120.

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Why vegans and meat-eaters can’t stop attacking each other – Insider – INSIDER

This week, a Florida man was arrested after knifing his cousin in a heated altercation about almond milk.

According to documents from the Lee County Sheriff's department, the two men began punching each other during a debate about whether almond milk is better than whole dairy milk.

A witness said he overheard the pair the suspect became extremely angry, at which one the argument turned physical, and the suspect later pulled out a three-inch pocket knife and chased the victim around the yard with it, eventually striking him and leaving a small cut.

The police records don't detail whether the suspect was for or against almond milk. But it's one more example of how the debate over eating meat and dairy or a strictly plant-based diet can be rage-inducing.

While these kinds of real-life confrontations are thankfully rare, the most pervasive dietary vitriol is often online. There, the simple question of whether to eat meat (and how much) can escalate into flame wars full of insults,more likely to raise your blood pressure than cause anyone to change their minds, said Dr.Matt Ruby, apsychology professor at La Trobe University who specializes in the psychology of food choices.

"Some people on both sides are very determined to take things personally," Ruby told Insider in an interview.

Recently, the term "vegan" has itself been subject to controversy, as more people opting out of animal-products choose to identify as "plant-based" instead to avoid stigma and cultural baggage linked to veganism, said Nicole Civita, a sustainable food systems specialist at the University of Colorado Boulder.

But the conversation has as much to do with politics as it does with what's on your plate. According to Civita and Ruby, food choices reflect deep divides in culture and ethics, but also shared anxieties about our collective future and identities.

Eva-Katalin/Getty Images

A common argument for, or against, meat-eating is based on how humans evolved, and whether we were meant to be herbivores or omnivores based on our biology and physiology.

According toCivita, when most people argue about dietary choices, they tend to focus on basic principles known as the 4 Ns natural, normal, necessary, and nice. This means that omnivores look for evidence that meat-eating is ancestrally or biologically appropriate for humans, that it's important and accepted in our culture, that we need meat (or plant-based) diets for optimal health, or that it's just plain enjoyable and giving it up would be unpleasant.

In reality, there is no definitive evidence that either a plant-based or omnivorous diet is superior. Most nutritionists and medical experts agree that a balanced diet of mainly whole foods is a healthy way to eat, whether that includes some animal products or not. While red meat and processed meat have been scrutinized for their role in chronic disease, poultry, seafood, and cheese are generally regarded as fine in moderation.

And a natural, or ancestral, approach to dieting isn't necessarily convincing either, says Ruby.

"I don't find that particularly helpful natural doesn't mean better. Earthquakes are natural, black plague was natural," he explained.

Beyond personal preference, however, what we eat does matter for how we perceive ourselves, and how we want other people to perceive us, according to Civita.

"Food is a form of identity and expressive identity," she said.

Although vegans are often portrayed as overly sensitive, offended at the idea of eating meat, Civita says it swings both ways.

Most people would prefer not to think too much about their consumption habits, Civita said, or at least have the choice about when, and how much, to consider them.

Veganism, though, forces people to confront not just their role in food systems but also in the food chain.

"There's this notion of implicit judgment that my choice to not eat animal products is implicit judgment of someone else's choice to do so," Civita said.

Reuters Today's food systems allow us the luxury of eating meat without thinking too much about the source. Opting out, or advocating for animal rights, can interrupt that blissful, carefully-cultivated ignorance, Ruby explained.

"In most cultures people grow up eating meat as a perfectly normal thing to do.But at some point they learn where meat comes from and that can createa conflict. Alot of people are really disconnected with where their food comes from, so it can be a bit of a shock," Ruby said.

To make matters worse, most people generally like animals, especially the cuddly kind. At some point, meat-eaters are forced to reconcile their affection for non-human species with their decision to eat some of them, Ruby said, and that cognitive dissonance can make people particularly defensive about their food choices.

Beyond morals, meat-eating can also raise the sensitive issue of gender identity in culture, particularly when it comes to men. Traditionally, meat has been linked to notions of power and masculinity, and popular culture perpetuates this idea through ad campaigns like Burger King's "Manthem."

"Meat has been associated with wealth, power, status, masculinity, and these associations are oftenused in advertising," Ruby said.

Veganism, or vegetarianism, by contrast, have been associated with femininity a common example is the (previously debunked) notion that soy could raise estrogen or lower testosterone levels in men, causing them to grow breasts or other feminine features.

Although individual vegans and meat eaters can fall anywhere in the political spectrum, research shows some common trends in the politics behind food choices.

Meat-eaters, for instance, tend to be more conservative and more traditional. This is partly due to the social dominance orientation in both right wing and meat-eating, a sense of a natural class order that puts people at the top of the food chain, economically and biologically, Ruby explained.

"There's a growing body of evidence that in many cultures around the world, eating meat or being omnivorous is linked to right wing political views. On average, there's small to moderate association with conservatism," he said.

However, a few notable exceptions include a branch of vegan Neo-Nazis, and far right politicians in India.

Internet debates often amplify the most extreme versions of the conversation about diet. ISSOUF SANOGO/AFP/Getty Images Issues of food choice evoke social and environmental anxieties, about how our actions might influence things like climate change and economic justice, and more abstract notions of morality and social responsibility.

"There's uncertainty about how to be healthy and how to be a good person. In these notions of wellness and control, the onus on the individual to make themselves. It's a public health version of pulling yourself up by your bootstraps," she added.

Internet debates often amplify the most extreme versions of the conversation and the kernels of truth, somewhere in the middle, are lost in the heat of making a point or winning an argument. In that context, nuances are hard for people to digest.

"So much of it is that conversations are happening online, it's easy to forget that you're talking to real people. Many of us have a lot more values in common than different," Ruby said. "Empathizing with the other side doesn't mean agreeing with them."

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Why vegans and meat-eaters can't stop attacking each other - Insider - INSIDER

Dublin Theatre Festival reviews: The Great Hunger, and To Be A Machine – Irish Examiner

The Great Hunger

IMMA

Four Stars

The Abbeys promenade production around the grounds of IMMA is the only live show to survive the dreaded Phase 3 Covid-19 protocols at this years Dublin Theatre Festival.

It divides the 14 stanzas of Patrick Kavanaghs titular long poem between individual performers, with troubadours leading the small, masked audience through the autumn evening.

We set out between two lines of illuminated trees, lured the stark, unmistakable voice of Lisa ONeil. Then, Liam Carney appears between the potato drills: old Patrick Maguire, the peasant farmer, clay made flesh. He stayed with his mother till she died/At the age of ninety-one.

By then, he was sixty-five". This is his tragedy; through it, Maguire personifies in Kavanaghs indictment the poverty, conservatism, and sexual frustration of the rural Ireland he knew.

While the satirical target might not be as obvious as it was when Kavanagh wrote The Great Hunger in 1942, the poem lends itself to dramatisation, thanks to Kavanaghs deft portraiture and his ability to conjure a telling scene.

It also, of course, speaks to the universal. Lines like Sometimes they did laugh and see the sunlight or something was brighter a moment have a sudden poignancy now.

Meanwhile, of the performers, Derbhle Crotty in particular shines in an intimate, captivating scene. Her aliveness to the words, her movement, her expressiveness are a wonder a reminder of the great hunger within us all for the kind of moments only theatre can deliver.

To Be a Machine

Project Theatre

Four Stars

Last year, Dead Centre gave audiences an empty stage for their ghost play Becketts room. This time, things are reversed: an actor is present, but the theatre is empty.

Game of Thrones star Jack Gleeson is the man in the room, playing the writer Mark OConnell in a faithful exploration of the ideas in his acclaimed book on transhumanism, To Be a Machine. The framing of the show gives ample scope for playful echoes and illustrations of OConnells themes.

To begin with, for instance, we are asked to upload videos of ourselves in advance of the performance. We see them on the night: electronic, disembodied versions of ourselves on individual tablet screens where the audience would be.

No better way, then, to discuss such things as the US company Alcor, which preserves its customers disembodied heads in the hope of reanimation; or whole brain emulation and the philosophical questions such a technology would raise.

Both shows end on October 10; for more, check out dublintheatrefestival.ie

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Dublin Theatre Festival reviews: The Great Hunger, and To Be A Machine - Irish Examiner

The Dalai Lama Encourages a Switch to Vegetarianism on World Animal Day – The Beet

His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama is encouraging his followers around the globe to adopt a vegetarian dietin an effort to alleviate suffering on World Animal Day, which took place this past Sunday, October 4th. In a recorded message, the Buddhist leader said, "It is very useful to promote vegetarianism. We should pay more attention towards developing more vegetable [-based diets]," adding that factory farming is "environmentally very harmful." The Dalai Lama also urged kitchens of Buddhist monasteries and Tibetan schools to forgo meat in favor of more vegetables.

Buddhismhas a long history of vegetarianism and different sects of the religion hold different values and observe different diets. In Buddha's final teachings in the Mahayana school, it is said that he told his followers that they should not eat meat or fish. TheLankavatara Sutra states, "So as not to become a source of terror, bodhisattvas (a person on the path toward Buddhahood) established in benevolence should not eat food containing meat...People kill animals for profit and exchange goods for the meat. One person kills, another person buysboth are at fault."

Strict vegetarianism is not a belief that all Buddhists hold, for example, theTheravada school allowsmonks to eat pork, chicken, and fish but only if the animals were not killed for their consumption, rather offered and not specifically prepared for the person, similar to food donations the Buddha would accept, which sometimes contained meat.

Other schools such asVajrayana are not all vegetarian, but one overarching theme of the Buddhist religion is compassion, and in this time of climate change, vegetarianism can offer both compassion for the planet as well as for the animals inhabiting it.

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Meat-Free Foods Market with Competitive Analysis, New Business Developments and Top Companies: Brecks, Gardein, VBites Foods, Beyond Meat, Marlow…

Meat-Free Foods Market Scenario 2020-2025:

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The complete value chain and downstream and upstream essentials are scrutinized in this report. Essential trends like globalization, growth progress boost fragmentation regulation & ecological concerns. This Market report covers technical data, manufacturing plants analysis, and raw material sources analysis of Meat-Free Foods Industry as well as explains which product has the highest penetration, their profit margins, and R&D status. The report makes future projections based on the analysis of the subdivision of the market which includes the global market size by product category, end-user application, and various regions.

Topmost Leading Manufacturer Covered in this report:Brecks, Gardein, VBites Foods, Beyond Meat, Marlow Foods, Clearspring, Lightlife Foods, BOCA, Aldi, Hain Celestial, Fry Group Foods, Cedar Lake Foods, Atlantic Natural Foods, Bean Supreme, Butler Foods, Fantastic World Foods, Field Roast, Dragonfly Foods

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North America(the United States, Canada, and Mexico)Europe(Germany, France, UK, Russia, and Italy)Asia-Pacific(China, Japan, Korea, India, and Southeast Asia)South America(Brazil, Argentina, Colombia, etc.)The Middle East and Africa(Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt, Nigeria, and South Africa)

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At last, the study gives out details about the major challenges that are going to impact market growth. They also report provides comprehensive details about the business opportunities to key stakeholders to grow their business and raise revenues in the precise verticals. The report will aid the companys existing or intend to join in this market to analyze the various aspects of this domain before investing or expanding their business in the Meat-Free Foods markets.

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Mexico: The Cradle of Vegan Entrepreneurship in Latin America? – vegconomist – the vegan business magazine

nik0.0kin - stock.adobe.com

The launches that have acquired the greatest fame for vegan entrepreneurship have historically originated, for the most part, from Anglo-Saxon countries such as the UK, Germany, the USA, and Australia. At least until now.

There is no doubt that many of the pioneers of plant-based foods have come from these parts of the world, such as Beyond Meat, The Vegetarian Butcher and V2 Food, among others. However, vegetarianism and veganism are gaining strength in other parts of the world as well, both in the area of consumption and in production and innovation.

About 8% of people in Latin America identify themselves as vegetarian or vegan, similar to the number in the United States. But one reality stands out that would surprise many people: in Mexico the figure is a staggering 20%, more than double the US and many of the countries mentioned above. Sixty to seventy percent of these are women seeking to improve their diet.

These figures are important because Mexico is a country with a population of about 130 million people and has a GDP of 1.2 trillion dollars. This means that the country south of the US border has immense potential.

To cultivate that potential, the Association of Vegan Entrepreneurs of Mexico (AEVM) was created this year, which, according to its website, is a business community that seeks to empower consumers to adopt conscious and healthy lifestyles. This community includes Mexican vegan companies such as Heartbest Foods, which uses 100% Mexican technology and innovation to create alternatives to dairy.

One of the most successful Mexican companies in the vegan field to date is not surprisingly in the food market, but in fashion. The Guadalajara-based company Desserto has won countless awards for its extravagant cactus leather.

Its no longer a secret that vegan entrepreneurship is on fire around the world, but Mexico may well end up being the best-kept secret in this area, and its a country worth keeping an eye on.

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Mexico: The Cradle of Vegan Entrepreneurship in Latin America? - vegconomist - the vegan business magazine

Becoming a ‘conscious carnivore’: Texas bison harvest shows meat-eaters how to honor the animal – The Dallas Morning News

Ew, gross! was a common response to my plans to attend a bison field harvest at Roam Ranch outside of Fredericksburg, Texas. The event, held in January 2020, allowed participants to witness the entire slaughtering process of a Plains bison, from the transitioning through its end of life, as the Eventbrite description delicately phrased it, to the skinning, evisceration, and deboning. The ranchs events and tours that teach visitors about regenerative agriculture are returning this fall after a hiatus due to COVID-19.

Contradicting common ideas of butchery, the event descriptions continue with language like: Participants will have the ability to honor and show gratitude for the ultimate sacrifice that will eventually feed you and your families. With a short lunch break of bison chili and sourdough bread, the celebration concluded with a sausage-making demo and the freshest possible bison tartare.

Like many young people, I experimented with non-violent diets in my 20s and early 30s, namely vegetarianism and pescetarianism. Then, I moved to a different country to teach English as a Peace Corps volunteer. My Colombian host family never quite understood the concept of vegetarianism, and after a couple of months of eating yuca in all its possible forms, I succumbed and started enjoying the chicken and rice. By the end of my service, I was a full-blown carnivore, but I promised myself that one day I would show appreciation to the animals I eat by participating wholly in the process it took to get them on my plate.

Because my father was a fisherman instead of a hunter and Ive never toured an abattoir, I was like the majority of Americans, eating in ignorant bliss of what it requires to turn land animals into food. Before reading The Omnivores Dilemma, the book that earned Michael Pollan a James Beard award, I had already wanted to take a more direct, conscious responsibility for the killing of the animals I eat. Otherwise, as Pollan writes, I really shouldnt be eating them.

For Pollan, taking that responsibility meant cooking a meal exclusively with ingredients he had grown, foraged, caught or killed himself with the main course consisting of wild Californian pig. For myself, I wasnt ready to buy a gun and get a hunting license, but I felt the urge to look squarely at the death of an animal I would come to eat. For if the suffering of the animal was more than I could justify, I would either need to return to vegetarianism or willfully continue eating barbecue sandwiches while ignoring my moral qualms.

For years, I searched for an opportunity to take this look at the entire food chain that didnt involve potential exposure to macabre scenes like those described in Upton Sinclairs The Jungle. Then I learned about Roam Ranch, a 450-acre regenerative farm near Fredericksburg that, among its many missions, includes hosting events that are designed to connect people to the source of their food while honoring the animals and land that provide it. Along with annual bison harvests, Roam Ranch collaborates with Jesse Griffiths of the New School of Traditional Cookery for spot-and-stalk axis deer hunts, and every November theres a Thanksgiving turkey harvest where participants are guided in how to kill, defeather and eviscerate their own pasture-raised, heritage breed holiday main course.

In a Forbes story titled Inside An Epic Experiment: Where The Buffalo Roam, Texas Agriculture Thrives, Roam Ranch owners Taylor Collins and Katie Forrest share they were once vegans. They turned into conscious carnivores when Forrest began having joint issues while training for an Iron Man competition.

We were vegans because we cared about the welfare of animals and the welfare of the environment, Collins told me, and then we realized we were opting out of a system that helps take care of those values.

At Roam Ranch, animals arent just a future meal. They play a pivotal role in healing the land, a phrase Collins frequently uses to describe regenerative agricultures aim of restoring degraded soil by imitating natures way and rehabilitating biodiversity.

Collins and Forrest are part of a growing wave of first generation farmers searching to improve our countrys food systems. The USDA reports that recently released census data indicates that one in four food producers are currently beginners with less than ten years of experience. Without a background in agriculture, owning a ranch was a far-off dream for the Austin couple, but when they turned their new carnivorous diet into meat-based power bar company EPIC Provisions which they sold less than three years later to General Mills for a reported $100 million they suddenly had the means to buy a significant amount of land.

Unlike most property owners, the couple wants wild-growing weeds and as many animals walking around and pooping on their property as possible. The residential herd of 100 bison grazes in rotations, naturally tilling the soil with their hooves while simultaneously depositing seeds and enriching it with natures original fertilizer manure and urine.

Enriching soil fertility is an important concern because, as some studies show, healthy grasslands are more effective at capturing and sequestering carbon than forests. Collins and Forrest believe that with proper management, grazing ruminant animals can help reverse the effects of climate change, a particularly urgent matter. A 2014 United Nations' food and agriculture report stated that all of the worlds top soil could be gone within 60 years if current rates of degradation continue.

The second annual bison field harvest began with a tribute to bison Number 26. Born on the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in Osage County, Okla., she spent two happy years at Roam Ranch, but her inability to get pregnant marked her for the days harvest.

The shooter would be Robby Sansom, formerly the CFO and COO of EPIC Provisions and currently a partner with Collins and Forrest in their newest venture Force of Nature Meats. He reminisced about the first time he saw Number 26 step off the trailer from Oklahoma and how the team at Roam had worked to protect her from the challenges of ranch life. In the two years she was there, 26 contributed to a rapidly improving soil quality, and she would continue to contribute to the community by soon feeding it. An experienced elk hunter and trained sharpshooter, Sansom admitted he was sad and nervous about shooting her, but believes thats what made him the right person for the job.

He rode out on a truck with butcher Jesse Griffiths and ranch manager Cody Spencer while I, with another 50 participants, sedately watched from about 120 yards away. Number 26, whom I struggled not to christen with a pet name, would be killed in the most humane way possible with an unexpected shot through the brainstem from a Winchester Magnum.

After about an hour of waiting for Sansom to get a safe, clean shot, the crack of the rifle came unexpectedly. Number 26 was already on the ground by the time my eyes found her, kicking one back leg while other bison with cocked tails crowded around her. Spencer quickly drew the herd away before Sansom fired a second shot to the head for surety. To complete the act, Griffiths cut her jugular vein with a hand-forged Michael Hemmer knife. He tried to cut more veins in the leg to accelerate the exsanguination process, but she continued to enigmatically kick that same leg at him, even though her chest was motionless, and a puddle of thick blood bubbled on the grass around her. Within ten minutes of the first shot, she lay completely still.

The small crowd of viewers swiftly and gingerly hiked over large discs of bison dung to get to the slain animal. At this point, Collins invited participants to place their hands on her, and to feel her hair, hooves and horns. For myself, I only felt compelled to touch the last kicking hoof as a way of telling her it was all over. Resembling a ritual, it was a way of saying thank you to Number 26 for her sacrifice. Rituals and ceremonies that today have been reduced to saying grace are what allowed our ancestors to overcome the shame of killing animals, Pollan writes in The Omnivores Dilemma, a book that Collins says changed the trajectory of his life.

After a few somber minutes, a chain was strung between the Achilles tendon and bone of her hind legs, and she was hoisted up on the hay fork of a tractor. Her massive body seemed like a religious icon in a procession as we slowly walked with the tractor to the shade of a tree for the undressing.

Luckily, the high was 55 degrees that day in Fredericksburg, so we didnt have to contend with stench or flies as we watched Griffiths skin and eventually break the animal apart into tenderloin, ribeye and flank steaks. The evisceration was not at all as gruesome as I thought it would be, possibly because I was surrounded by a lot of staid men wearing camo and Texas A&M gear who had done this before, but mostly I think it was the cool weather and Griffithss professional focus that was as sharp as his knives.

Participants that were mostly men but women, too all of varying ages, bonded while deboning the meat and preparing it for packaging. For Bharath Dade, a database engineer from Guntur, India who lives in Austin, it was his fourth visit to the ranch. He says he keeps coming back because the Roam Ranch folks are among the few people working on implementing solutions to our many problems.

My sadness for Number 26s plight diminished as I enjoyed a delicious bowl of bison chili. If only all the animals I eat could have this much dignity in their death, I wished.

Fortunately, Whole Foods has named regenerative agriculture as one of the top ten food trends of 2020, and the Rodale Institute plans to mainstream Regenerative Organic Certified (ROC) products with a label by the end of the year. CEO Jeff Moyer says of the move: Growing food that promotes soil health, animal welfare and social justice is what regenerative agriculture is all about; by labeling foods regenerative organic, individuals will be able to connect with a full suite of values that extend beyond the food that they are consuming.

Force of Nature products are already in Whole Foods and Natural Grocers. Were where organic was 30 years ago, Collins tells me with excitement. His goal is to build supply for a coming demand.

The next day, I left the wild and winding Texas Hill Country hopeful for the future, inspired by my fellow Texans and immensely grateful to Number 26.

Roam Ranch has recently reopened to the public for ranch tours, where participants can meet the bison herd and other livestock while learning about regenerative agriculture. For those wanting a more intensive experience with animal butchery and processing, guided axis deer hunts begin this fall. Additionally, the third annual turkey harvest continues this November, and there are two bison harvests scheduled for January. All events are held outdoors with plenty of room for social distancing. The full event schedule can be found on RoamRanch.com.

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Becoming a 'conscious carnivore': Texas bison harvest shows meat-eaters how to honor the animal - The Dallas Morning News

Powered by Plants: Why we go vegan – The Spokesman-Review

After more than a decade of being vegetarian, I dont know why I went vegan. Allow me to explain.

It was a little more than two years ago, and I was looking at Twitter as all burned-out journalists are wont to do. I follow a cavalcade of accounts spanning the political and culinary spectrum, and if memory serves, a video of a calf appeared on my feed. It was happy and frolicking in a field of grass, making quick movements toward her handler. She acted just like a dog.

This is it, I thought: No more excuses. How can I, a self-described animal lover, support a dairy industry that would rip this calf from her mother, force her to live in an area a few feet bigger than her body, then impregnate her until her udders can no longer produce milk, only to then chop her up into steak and hamburger.

If shes lucky. The unlucky ones get processed into veal. I quit animal products that day. Vegetarians dont meat, while vegans also avoid all animal and animal-derived products, including honey, milk and eggs.

I havent had one animal product since. The problem is: Ive had this exact thought countless times over my adult life since going vegetarian when I was 18 (Im 30 now).

So here I am, wondering why I went vegan. Maybe it was just time.

Like a rite of initiation, its a question vegans and vegetarians often ask one another. And if we dont, others do it for us. Either extending an olive branch or looking to pick apart a lifestyle. Either way, its a big moment. One you dont often forget.

And unlike me, its a moment many in our community remember and remember well.

Dont just take it from me. Here are three stories.

Sheila Evans knows Spokane. No, really.

As a lover of art, animals and mushrooms (the edible kind, not psychedelic), she has a another more distinctly Inland Northwest paramour: Seor Froggy.

Im not kidding. For years, Evans would enjoy a burrito or taco weekly. At some locations, she could even eat for free an extension of gratitude reserved only for close friends and family, both of which she was to the Seor Froggy employees, blood relations be damned.

It was that love of dairy (cheese, specifically) that kept Evans from making the full plunge to veganism despite being vegetarian for most of her adult life.

That all changed last fall when she opened her exhibition at Kolva-Sullivan Gallery titled Sanctorium: a Celebration of Animals Both Farm and Domestic her tools of festivity photographs, paint and canvas.

The art show just provided a good date, Evans said. I cant in good conscience stand here in a room full of portraits of animals and tell their stories, some of them horrific, and not be vegan. I just couldnt do it.

Lucky for her, the change wasnt drastic. For years, shed been working toward the inevitable, assuring the coffin was secure before hammering home the last nail.

And as for cheese, what cheese? She hardly knew it.

I think being vegetarian so long kind of burned me out on cheese, she said. Im so happy I did it. Its been absolutely wonderful. I havent missed it.

Sara Maleki is living proof even lawyers a subset of people who are not only driven enough to graduate law school, but also pass a bar exam can fail.

In 2008, after being vegetarian since age 14, she tried to go vegan. She lasted six months.

That type of story isnt uncommon. As little as 10 years ago, vegan options were rare. There were hardly any options in restaurants unless you lived in progressive cities like Seattle and Portland.

But as the industry moved toward plant-based options, so, too, did Malekis diet. All it took to push her over the edge once more was meeting and talking to vegans at Washingtons Animal Law Summit.

I dont see myself falling back into vegetarianism, Maleki said. Its permanent now.

Like many others, Maleki doesnt just enjoy being vegan: She thrives being vegan. At home, she enjoys vegan Reubens with grilled seitan or tofu tacos, and, on the road, whatever she can get her hands on.

She and her husband even make food pilgrimages to Portland, which she calls probably the best in the world for vegan options (others tend to agree).

In Spokane, you can often find her at Allies Vegan Pizzeria and Caf or Stellas Caf in the Saranac Commons.

She hopes one day youll join her.

Weve got a climate problem. Weve got environmental issues. Theres the health impact, she said. Theres really no reason not to go vegan. At least sometimes.

If vegans had a dream similar to the American variety, Karla Bays would be our Aunt Samantha.

She: vegan. Husband: vegan. Son (who is 9 years old): vegan. Against all odds, theyve won the plant-based jackpot. After all, before joining the lifestyle, she and her husband, Carl Bays, took weekly trips to Churchills Steakhouse. And they enjoyed it, too.

I would have never thought I would be vegan, Bays said. My dad is a hunter. They raised us on venison.

Meat was life for the Bays family until a few years ago, when Karla Bays mother got sick. Doctors suggested she try a plant-based diet.

That proposal and a few documentaries about factory farming (especially the staples like Earthlings, Dominion and Cowspiracy, to name a few) later, and Karla was ready to ride the vegan train.

Then her husband hopped on. Then her son Alexander who to her surprise loves broccoli, tofu and pho.

It wasnt long before she says the diet started improving her health, as well. Since switching over, she said she no longer uses her inhaler for asthma, and she cant recall the last time shes had a cold.

Whether thats due solely to a diet is anyones guess. Point being, it works for her.

And if it aint broke, dont fix it.

I just think people in our society dont know, Bays said. They dont connect. The light does not go off in their head. A lot of people dont realize what is truly happening to these animals. What is truly happening.

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Powered by Plants: Why we go vegan - The Spokesman-Review

Impact Of Covid-19 on Nanomedicine Market 2020 Industry Challenges, Business Overview and Forecast Research Study 2026 – Crypto Daily

Manhattan, New York, Analytical Research Cognizance: TheNanomedicineMarketreport is based on the basis of product type, application and end-user during the truncated forecast period. The detailed study further offers a broad interpretation on the Nanomedicine market based on a systematic analysis of the market from a variety of reliable sources and thorough data points. Furthermore, the report sheds a light on the Global scale segmenting the market space across various districts, appropriate distribution channels, generated income and a generalized market space.

This intelligence and 2025 forecasts Nanomedicine industry report further exhibits a pattern of analyzing previous data sources gathered from reliable sources and set a precedented growth trajectory for the Nanomedicine market. The report also focuses on a comprehensive market revenue streams along with growth patterns, analytics focused on market trends, and the overall volume of the market.

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About us:Analytical Research Cognizance (ARC) is a trusted hub for research reports that critically renders accurate and statistical data for your business growth. Our extensive database of examined market reports places us amongst the best industry report firms. Our professionally equipped team further strengthens ARCs potential. ARC works with the mission of creating a platform where marketers can have access to informative, latest and well researched reports. To achieve this aim our experts tactically scrutinize every report that comes under their eye.

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Impact Of Covid-19 on Nanomedicine Market 2020 Industry Challenges, Business Overview and Forecast Research Study 2026 - Crypto Daily

2020 Trending: Nanomedicine Market is Thriving Worldwide By Size, Revenue, Emerging Trends and Top Growing Companies 2026| Combimatrix, Ablynx,…

Nanomedicine Market Report Delivering Growth Analysis with Key Trends of Top Companies (2020-2026)

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An Outline of the Major Key Players covered in this Report:

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Information related to the growth rate, revenue, sales, production, consumption, during the forecast period is included in the report. The Nanomedicine Market report claims that the industry is projected to generate significant revenue and sales during the forecast period. The report consists of information related to the market dynamics such as challenges involved in this vertical, growth opportunities, and driving factors affecting the market.

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2020 Trending: Nanomedicine Market is Thriving Worldwide By Size, Revenue, Emerging Trends and Top Growing Companies 2026| Combimatrix, Ablynx,...

In Togo, There Is Nowhere to Hide – The New York Times

This is an article from World Review: The State of Democracy, a special section that examines global policy and affairs through the perspectives of thought leaders and commentators, and is published in conjunction with the annual Athens Democracy Forum.

In recent years a handful of African countries, including Sudan and Algeria, have said goodbye to longstanding authoritarian rulers, creating openings, however small, for democratic change.

The West African nation of Togo, however, remains firmly under the thumb of a military-backed regime that of the Gnassingbe family, the longest-ruling dynasty on the continent. In recent years, the regime has fully embraced the tactics of digital repression to extend its longevity, outflanking (for now) an increasingly emboldened community of online activists.

The citizens of Togo, a country of roughly eight million people between Ghana to the west and Benin to the east, have lived for more than 50 years under a brutal dictatorship. The nations military regime came to power in 1967, with the installation of the armys chief of staff, Gnassingbe Eyadema, as president. Mr. Eyadema died in 2005, bringing to an end a ruthless 38-year reign marked by widespread human rights abuses. In the months after Mr. Eyademas death, the military-backed candidacy of his son, Faure Gnassingbe, proved victorious in an election marred by serious fraud allegations.

The generations of Togolese activists who had fought the dictatorship of Gnassingbe the First hoped his passing would bring an end to the nations tyranny, paving the way for a brighter democratic future. Instead, Mr. Eyademas death, in February 2005, and the election of his son in April led only to horrific violence: Between 400 and 500 people were killed during those months, with thousands more wounded, according to a United Nations report.

In response to the arrival of Gnassingbe the Second, a new generation of activists came to the fore. The internet was their most powerful tool, and as internet penetration in Togo grew, so did the democratic resistance movement.

I was one of those activists, and like many of my fellow dissidents I have felt empowered in the years since Mr. Gnassingbes rise by the ability to denounce the government its corruption and gangsterism on social media. You may rule over Togo with no accountability, I wrote in a 2014 Facebook post, addressing the administration, but we citizens rule over the internet, and we will hold you accountable.

Unfortunately, the Gnassingbe government isnt keen on any form of resistance, whether in the streets or online. (Mr. Gnassingbe was re-elected in 2010 and 2015 amid accusations of fraud by Togos opposition.) In fact, in recent years it has become increasingly obvious that we underestimated the governments ability to adapt its repressive methods to the digital world.

In the late summer of 2017, major protests quickly spread across the country in support of the oppositions demands that President Gnassingbe resign and that term limits, abolished by his father in 2002, be reinstated. During the monthslong demonstrations, tens of thousands of protesters chanted Faure Must Go, a slogan coined by an activist movement that I co-founded in 2011 with other young Togolese dissidents living in and outside the country. The Faure Must Go movement relied on decentralized digital organizing, which helped many of us maintain our anonymity, protecting us from direct physical repression by leaders.

However, the governments response to the 2017 protests made it clear that we werent as secure as we had thought. In September, the regime shut down the internet for nine days. In the ensuing months, hundreds of protesters were arrested and several were killed, including a 9-year-old boy, according to Amnesty International.

During this time, we received information suggesting that some activists had been arrested and tortured by the government based on evidence gleaned from private conversations that had taken place on WhatsApp, the encrypted messaging app. This gave us a strong hint that the government was spying on us, thus destroying our anonymity as online activists and putting our own security and that of our family members in jeopardy. I was in contact with some of the imprisoned activists for months; many were subsequently forced to flee the country or to go into hiding.

Thanks to a 2018 investigation by Citizen Lab, a cybersecurity research group based at the University of Toronto, we later discovered that a spyware program known as Pegasus was likely being used by the Togolese government to target smartphone users in the country. We believe the regime has used this program to attack the electronic devices of Togolese dissidents.

Pegasus is a product of the NSO Group, an Israeli company that has sold the surveillance technology to numerous governments around the world, solely, the company said, to aid in the fight against terrorism and crime. However, multiple allegations have emerged that the governments in question, some of them with poor human rights records, have also used NSO spyware to target activists, journalists and other civil society leaders. NSO is essentially selling arms to authoritarian governments, fueling abuse and oppression as it puts profits before human dignity.

By late 2018, the Togolese regime had managed to consolidate power by repressing protests and by organizing parliamentary elections under dubious conditions (which the opposition boycotted). It also passed a new cybersecurity law curtailing freedom of expression. As a result of the elections, President Gnassingbe gained the control he needed in Parliament to modify the constitution in his favor: A law passed in 2019 reinstituted the term limits eliminated by his father a major demand of the opposition but it did so while ignoring the three terms Mr. Gnassingbe had already served, potentially allowing him to rule Togo until 2030.

Other West African leaders, including Alpha Cond of Guinea and Alassane Ouattara of Ivory Coast, have recently followed in Mr. Gnassingbes footsteps by claiming that constitutional changes within their countries have essentially reset the term-limit clock to zero. (It is perhaps no surprise that the 2018 Citizen Lab report found potential Pegasus infections in Ivory Coast.)

When Mr. Gnassingbe ran for a fourth term in February 2020, the opposition had only a microscopic chance of winning. The regime, which retained control of the legislature, barred election monitoring groups from operating in Togo and deployed security forces across the country. Mr. Gnassingbe declared victory with 72 percent of the vote, surpassing his percentages in the 2005, 2010 and 2015 elections, amid further allegations of fraud made by the opposition.

Recent investigations by Citizen Lab and others have revealed that yet more government critics in Togo, including prominent Catholic leaders, have been targeted by NSO surveillance software, as part of an attempt to monitor their conversations and movements. The government seems to have succeeded at maintaining its grip on power in the face of mass protests. The Gnassingbe dynasty, in power for over a half-century, continues.

Yet the thirst for democracy in Togo is stronger than ever. The resistance must now go beyond holding authoritarian regimes accountable and demand that tech companies like NSO also be held responsible for the resources they provide to these governments.

The Togolese regime is ignoring a crucial truth: The internet has given the younger generation a taste of freedom and once people know what it feels like to be free, they can no longer be held in bondage indefinitely.

Farida Nabourema is the executive director of the Togolese Civil League, a nongovernmental organization promoting democracy and the rule of law in Togo, and the spokesperson for the Faure Must Go movement.

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In Togo, There Is Nowhere to Hide - The New York Times

‘Aging in Your 20s and 30s’ panel to be held Oct. 16 – College of Health and Human Sciences – Source

The Columbine Health Systems Center for Healthy Aging is hosting a virtual panel discussion at noon on Friday, Oct. 16, to answer community questions about how young people can live longer, healthier lives.

One of the Centers new initiatives is to encourage people in their 20s and 30s to think about what they can do now to support longevity and health across their lifespan and into advanced age, says Nicole Ehrhart, director of the Center and professor in the Department of Clinical Sciences. Research shows that people in their second and third decades rarely explore these topics.

As such, the premise of the panel is to cut through the noise and abundance of health and wellness tips to provide clear recommendations for healthy aging in young adults.

CSU faculty members from the College of Health and Human Sciences will serve as panelists for the discussion, including:

All questions surrounding diet, nutrition, fitness, mental health and general well-being are welcome. Questions can be submitted by emailing healthyaging@colostate.edu. Some to be answered by the panelists include:

Thus, while the panel is geared toward younger people, it will provide general health advice that people of all ages can benefit from.

Attendees may register in advance for the webinar at col.st/pAe2s

The webinar will be recorded for later viewing on the Center for Healthy Agings YouTube playlist.

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'Aging in Your 20s and 30s' panel to be held Oct. 16 - College of Health and Human Sciences - Source

Kamala Harris featured on cover of Elle magazine’s November issue | TheHill – The Hill

Democratic vice presidential nominee Sen. Kamala HarrisKamala HarrisRepublican COVID-19 outbreak rocks the 2020 race VP debate to install plexiglass between Pence and Harris Growing White House coronavirus infections highlight debate safety concerns MORE (D-Calif.) ison the cover for Elle magazines November issue, in which the senator participates in a broad interview spanning racial inequality, her upbringing and President TrumpDonald John TrumpState Department revokes visa of Giuliani-linked Ukrainian ally: report White House Gift Shop selling 'Trump Defeats COVID' commemorative coin Biden says he should not have called Trump a clown in first debate MORE.

In her interview with journalist Ashley Ford, Harris starts off by discussing her experience attending a civil rights march in Oakland, Calif., where she was born, as a child. At the time, Harris had been in a stroller with her parents, both activists who immigrated from Jamaica and India, and had fallen out at one point.

Eventually, Harris said her parents, who had continued marching afterward, noticed her absence and returned to get her.

My mother tells the story about how Im fussing, and shes like, Baby, what do you want? What do you need? And I just looked at her and I said, Fweedom, she said.

During her childhood, Harris, who also previously served as a former prosecutor and later as attorney general of California before becoming the second Black woman and first South Asian-American to become U.S. senator in 2017, said there was no question that you had to dedicate yourself to fighting for justice on some level or another.

That the measure of you is so much bigger than you; its the impact you have, its what you do in service to others, Harris, whose godmother, Mary Lewis, also helped establish San Francisco State University's Black studies department, continued. And thats how I was raised. I was raised that it is not about charity and benevolence, its about your duty. No ones going to congratulate you for itits what youre supposed to do.

Ford also pressed the senator on her meaning of justice in the interview, to which, Harris responded: "Its about freedom, its about equality, its about dignity. When you achieve equality, and freedom, and fairness, its not because I grant it to you. Its because you fought for it because it is your right.

This is not about benevolence or charity; it is about every human beings God-given right. What do we collectively do to fight for that? Thats what justice represents to meits about empowerment of the people, said Harris, who is also the first Black woman and Indian American to run as vice president on a major party presidential ticket.

As protests against racism and police brutality continue in parts of the country fromspring, summer and into fall following the police killings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and other Black Americans, Harris vowed in the interviewtokeepsupportingthe brilliance of the Black Lives Matter movement.

What I hope and pray is that we can get to a point where, through what are undoubtedly difficult conversations, we confront the real history of America, Harris said. Doing it in a way that is motivated by love, but also is fully honest.

Harris credited optimism during the interview as the fuel driving every fight she has been in and said her motivation comes from believing in what can be unburdened by what has been.

John LewisJohn LewisHow to fight the onslaught of election disinformation The House's stake in filibuster reform Hillicon Valley: Productivity, fatigue, cybersecurity emerge as top concerns amid pandemic | Facebook critics launch alternative oversight board | Google to temporarily bar election ads after polls close MORE, the dearly departed, like many others shed blood on that bridge. Because he really believed in what could be. It will often feel like [we are only] against something, but the motivation that carries us through, with any longevity, is knowing what were fighting for, the senator told the magazine.

She also spoke briefly about Trump during the interview while discussing the night she was elected senator in California years back.

In every one of my elections, part of our routine is we do a small friends-and-family dinner before we go to the campaign night celebration, she told the magazine.

When it became clearer that night that Trump was going to win the election, Harris recalled a conversation she had with her godson.

My godson, Alexander, who was seven years old at the time, came up to me, crying, and said, Auntie Kamala, theyre not going to let that man win, are they? And you know the babies in your life I held him, she said.

I mean, it still brings me pain to remember how he felt, and what it made me feel, which is that I needed to protect this child. I had one way, in my mind, I thought the evening would go. And then there was the way it turned out. And so by the time I took the stage, I had ripped up my notes, and all I had was Alexander in my heart. And I took the podium and I said, I intend to fight. I intend to fight, she said.

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Kamala Harris featured on cover of Elle magazine's November issue | TheHill - The Hill

Grants Totaling $700K Fund Two Major Projects Aimed at Advancing Faculty Diversity – UC San Diego Health

The University of California strives to reflect diversity in its students, faculty and staff. With the largest proportion of applicants to the UC System now students of color, it is critical that UC San Diego recruit more diverse faculty to better reflect the statewide population, and to foster an inclusive campus climate. To underscore its commitment to advancing faculty diversity, the University of California Office of the President has funded two major initiatives at UC San Diego through the UC Advancing Faculty Diversity (AFD) grant program.

An interdisciplinary cluster hiring project will recruit 10-12 faculty whose research is focused on racial/ethnic disparities in STEM fields with a significant focus on the Black Diaspora and African American communities. UC has provided $500,000 in one-time funding to assist with aspects of the recruitments. The new faculty will be located in the Division of Physical Sciences,Division of Biological Sciences, Jacobs School of Engineering, Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences,School of Medicine,the new Wertheim School of Public Health and Human Longevity Science, Scripps Institution of Oceanography,andthe Halcolu Data Science Institute.

Building on the Center for Faculty Diversity and Inclusions existing infrastructure of faculty affinity networks, a second initiative will seek to improve retention of underrepresented faculty through activities such as coaching for faculty mentors and coalition building. UC San Diego was awarded $200,000 in one-time funding to launch this project on our campus. The Center for Faculty Diversity and Inclusion, a unit of the UC San Diego Office for Equity, Diversity and Inclusion, managed the submission of both grants, and is a key partner in both initiatives.

Thandeka Chapman, a professor in Education Studies, is one of the project leads for the grant whose proposal, Advancing Diverse Faculty, Curricula and Research through a Cluster Hire at UC San Diego, seeks to recruit 10+ new faculty through a multidisciplinary cluster hire at the intersection of race/ethnicity and STEM. In addition to increasing faculty diversity in fields where faculty of color are underrepresented, the cluster would advance research on and for communities of color; diversify course offerings affiliated with the African American Studies Minor and the diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) course requirement; and provide valuable mentoring for UC San Diego students.

Today, at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic where social disparities translate into disparate health outcomes, this innovative proposal is both timely and globally relevant. UC San Diego leadership, including Chancellor Pradeep Khosla and EVC Elizabeth Simmons, are committing to 10-12 full-time employees (FTEs) for this initiative, and hiring under this cluster is one of only three hiring freeze exceptions that the Chancellor is allowing this year.

The interdisciplinary cluster hire represents a renewed commitment in academia to address complex racial/ethnic and social issues and ideas in STEM from cross-disciplinary perspectives, said Chapman. It is our hope that through their efforts at UC San Diego, these new faculty members will benefit and enhance all aspects of our academic programming by giving students, faculty and staff opportunities to engage in critical issues of race and STEM that trespass traditional school and departmental silos, and work towards transformative change for underrepresented racial minorities and low-income communities.

Education Studies Professor Makeba Jones, also a principal investigator (PI) for the project, added, It is vital to say that at its core, this effort is much more than a cluster hire; its a systemic effort to address racial inequities on campus for African American undergraduate and graduate students by creating a cadre of scholars who focus on the African American Diaspora in the areas of medicine, health and the environment. Faculty will not only produce innovative research in STEM fields related to African American communities, they will also be involved in teaching undergraduates through the African American Studies minor and majoras well as mentoring both undergraduates and graduate students.

Faculty recruitment doesnt end with the hiring process. A proposal by Associate Vice Chancellor for Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Frances Contreras and Mardestinee Perez, director of Faculty Development and Diversity, entitled A Holistic Strategy for Academic Success and Retention at UC San Diego resulted in University of California funding to improve campus climate and retain faculty as part of the systemwide AFD program. The proposal seeks to improve the retention of underrepresented faculty through a holistic strategy of support, connection and leadership development. New efforts will complement ongoing institutional efforts to improve department culture and academic leadership.

An issue that is often overlooked, particularly when we examine faculty diversity, is the critical issue of retention which is often intertwined with the state of the university and department climate, said Contreras. If faculty are engaged and able to thrive in their work environment, they are more likely to remain at UC San Diego and establish their academic careers and national reputation. Our efforts focus on helping faculty exercise their personal agency in navigating their department and this campus, while also assisting the campus to develop and examine infrastructures, processes and practices to improve department climates.

Perez oversees all programming at the UC San Diego Center for Faculty Diversity and Inclusion, a key campus entity for faculty retention efforts. Having a diverse faculty enriches research and teaching, increases innovation and adds cultural value to the campus. If we are going to invest time and resources in faculty recruitment, we need to pay attention to retention. It is important that we create an environment where faculty want to stay, not just because UC San Diego is a prestigious institution, but because they feel good about working here and they feel valued. We need to create that sense of belonging, and not lose opportunities for connection and supportespecially during this virtual workenvironment.

Contreras added, We are working to ensure that our cadre of diverse faculty want to call UC San Diego their academic home for the long term, said Contreras. They can help us to build a dynamic faculty network committed to the public mission of our university to both generate knowledge while also cultivating future generations of thought, industry and community leaders.

To learn more about efforts to advance faculty diversity at UC San Diego, visit the Center for Faculty Diversity and Inclusion.

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Grants Totaling $700K Fund Two Major Projects Aimed at Advancing Faculty Diversity - UC San Diego Health

Investment opportunities being created as longevity research ramps up – BioWorld Online

The American Federation for Aging Research (AFAR) is involved in supporting research designed to unravel the biology of aging and expanding the field, and this week it held a webinar on the Business of Longevity: Moving Biomedical Advances into Biotech Opportunities. The Population Reference Bureau in its Population Bulletin projects the number of Americans ages 65 and older to almost double from the more than 52 million today to 95 million by 2060, and the 65-and-older age groups share of the total population will rise from 16% to 23%. The baby boomer generation (between ages 55 and 73) have raised challenges because aging is a strong risk factor for many chronic diseases that have become a major burden on the health care system. To respond to that situation, advancements in drugs, medical devices, diagnostics and digital health for the treatment of age-related conditions will be crucial. In addition, researchers are beginning to contemplate whether it will be possible to not only slow the aging process but also develop specific therapies to allow people to live healthier longer lives.

The panelists reviewed the latest research and looked at what it will take to attract more investment and biotech companies into what remains a nascent area but one that offers tremendous commercial opportunities.

One of the participants, Mehmood Khan, CEO of Boston-based Life Biosciences, said longevity research has been accelerating over the last decade. However, new talent and companies still need to be attracted into the sector.

Jim Mellon, chairman of Juvenescence Ltd., noted aging research is still at the dial-up stage of the internet in terms of progress. To kickstart the field, product successes are needed. Unfortunately, some commercial forays have hit roadblocks.

Most recently in August, Unity Biotechnology Inc. reported UBX-0101, a senolytic p53/MDM2 interaction inhibitor, intended to act by eliminating senescent cells and inducing cartilage regrowth for the potential intra-articular treatment of inflammatory joint disease, failed to best a placebo on an established measure of osteoarthritis (OA) pain in a phase II study.

The San Francisco-based company has now shifted its focus, announcing a restructuring last month to align its resources on cellular senescence programs in ophthalmology and neurology. It said it will advance UBX-1325 to phase I development in patients with diabetic macular edema and expects to dose the first patient later this year.

The compound targets Bcl-xL, a novel mechanism to eliminate senescent cells in age-related diseases of the eye. The UBX-1325 study in diabetic macular edema is expected to begin before the end of the year. In an announcement, Unity said it will also focus on senolytic therapies for neurological diseases as well as exploring novel mechanisms for cognitive benefit. The company said it will extend its cash resources by making a 30% cut in its workforce.

Unitys disappointing trial results followed the failure of Restorbio Inc.'s PROTECTOR 1 phase III study designed to evaluate RTB-101 in preventing clinically symptomatic respiratory illness (CSRI) in adults ages 65 and older. RTB-101 is an oral, selective target of rapamycin complex 1 inhibitor.

The failure led the companys board to examine its strategic alternatives that eventually culminated in a merger with Adicet Bio Inc., with the combined company focusing on Adicets off-the-shelf allogeneic gamma-delta T-cell therapies for oncology, with its lead candidate, ADI-001, a gamma-delta CAR T-cell therapy targeting CD20 being developed for non-Hodgkins lymphoma.

New long-term trial

Interest will also focus on the long-term study of FDA-approved drug metformin that has been used to treat diabetes for more than 60 years. The compound has also been implicated in slowing aging in model organisms and reducing the incidence of aging-related diseases. According to AFAR scientific director Nir Barzilai, metformin is being tested in the Targeting Aging with Metformin (TAME) trial that will involve 3,000 individuals between the ages of 65 and 79. The NIH-funded Geroscience Network recommended metformin because of its safety and low cost. Several studies will test whether those taking metformin experience delayed development or progression of age-related chronic diseases such as heart disease, cancer and dementia.

Barzilai noted that several other good candidates for age-related diseases have emerged from the National Institute of Agings ongoing Intervention Testing Program, a multi-institutional study investigating treatments with the potential to extend lifespan and delay disease and dysfunction in mice.

Other recent developments

Douglas, Isle of Man -based Juvenescence said it established Juvenomics Ltd., a joint venture with G3 Therapeutics Inc., of Midlothian, Va., that will focus on developing validated nutraceuticals and medicines to combat aging and aging-related diseases such as those of the musculoskeletal system. Juvenomics is built on the combination of G3s multi-omic biological dataset, consisting of trillions of datapoints collected in the global clinical study of more than 7,500 patients, and the machine learning platforms assembled by Juvenescence.

Agex Therapeutics Inc., of Alameda, Calif., a biotechnology company developing therapeutics for human aging and regeneration, and Pluristyx Inc., of Seattle, have signed a manufacturing, marketing and distribution agreement through which Pluristyx will undertake those activities on behalf of Agex with respect to Agexs research and clinical-grade ESI brand human embryonic stem cells. The agreement builds on Pluristyxs strategy with standardized Ready-to-Use brand and Ready-to-Differentiate pluripotent stem cells to industry and academic scientists working on developing therapeutic products to treat human disease, the company said.

Grifols SA, of Barcelona, Spain, said it will acquire Alkahest Inc., of San Carlos, Calif., to enhance discovery and R&D to identify therapies for age-related diseases based upon an understanding of the human plasma proteome for $146 million. The transaction is expected to close early next year. In addition to the clinical development of specific plasma fractions and protein inhibitors, Alkahest said it is focused on developing a complete understanding of the human plasma proteome.

Foster City, Calif.-based Geron Corp., which is developing a first-in-class telomerase inhibitor targeting hematologic myeloid malignancies, established a loan facility this month for up to $75 million with Hercules Capital Inc. and Silicon Valley Bank. The companys imetelstat development program includes two registration-enabling studies, IMerge, an ongoing phase II/III trial in lower-risk myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), and a planned phase III trial in refractory myelofibrosis expected to be open for patient screening and enrollment in the first quarter of next year.

Cohbar Inc., of Menlo Park, Calif., which is developing mitochondria-based therapeutics to treat chronic diseases and extend healthy lifespan, closed its underwritten public offering of 12.3 million units, consisting of one share and one warrant to purchase 0.75 of a share of common stock at an exercise price of $1.44, priced at $1.22 each. The underwriters partially exercised the overallotment option for warrants to purchase an additional 1.38 million shares. The gross proceeds were approximately $15 million. In August, the company reported that the first subjects had been dosed with CB-4211 in the phase Ib stage of its phase Ia/Ib trial for NASH and obesity. The study is designed to assess the potential effects of CB-4211 on liver fat, body weight and various biomarkers that are relevant to NASH and obesity.

San Diego-based Deep Longevity Inc., a company focused on artificial intelligence for aging and longevity research, is being acquired by Regent Pacific Group Ltd., of Hong Kong, for HK$29.56 million (US$3.8 million). The company came out of stealth from Insilico Medicine, of Rockville, Md., in July. It also reported the launch of the first AI system on the market for aging-related biomarker development and a collaboration with San Diego-based Human Longevity Inc. The company said it has developed a new AI system that can predict an individuals biological age more accurately vs. conventional methods, paving the road to discover what biological culprits drive aging-related diseases.

Immetas Therapeutics Inc., of East Hanover, N.J., has raised $11 million from a series A financing to advance research on inflammation pathways in aging and the development of immune-modulating treatments for cancer and inflammatory disease. The companys lead program is aimed at designing a series of bispecific antibodies to regulate inflammation in the tumor microenvironment and overcome resistance to conventional immune checkpoint therapies.

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Investment opportunities being created as longevity research ramps up - BioWorld Online

Longevity Project: Panelists discuss what it takes to overcome life’s challenges – Aspen Times

Sean Swarner treks to the North Pole in spring 2017. Swarner, a two-time cancer survivor with one functioning lung, also has been to the South Pole and completed the Seven Summits in addition to other athletic achievements.Courtesy photo

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Part of being human is finding courage to stay the course when life wants to go in a different direction. Paralympic snowboarder Noah Elliott knows all about overcoming those challenges after he decided to have his leg amputated so he could pursue sports again.

No matter who you are, you experience an I cant moment in your life, Elliott said. Although its hard to see, those I cant moments are the moments that define you as a person and define your next chapter.

Elliott, who currently serves as the outreach program director for Steamboat Adaptive Recreational Sports in Steamboat Springs, was one of four guest speakers who took part in a virtual panel Tuesday as part of the annual Longevity Project, which was moderated by Aspen Times editor David Krause.

Other guests included Dash Doung Wong, a cancer survivor who now lives in Aspen; Nick Isenberg, a blind and partially deaf journalist who lives in the Roaring Fork Valley; and Kailyn Forsberg, a former freeskier from Eagle whose life and career took a turn when a crash during a slopestyle warm-up left her lower body paralyzed.

The Longevity Project a four-part editorial series that includes two virtual events focuses on living well in the mountains. A major theme of Tuesdays panel was learning to overcome lifes most difficult obstacles.

Having a great support system off the bat was definitely something that encouraged me to push as hard as I could. Without that, I dont believe I would have been able to be where I am today, Forsberg said of her injury five years ago before reflecting on her first time getting to sit ski at Winter Park. There were emotional boundaries there. I was so curious about the physical limitations I would have. But just sitting there when they got me all set up in the sit ski, I was just like, This is what I love to do. And Im not going to let an accident just stop me from doing things I love.

Earlier this spring, Wong had to fight off a bout with COVID-19. He said hes back to 100% although the disease did leave his only lung scarred. His other lung was removed because of cancer and that decision was a difficult one for Wong, who knew he would be giving up his military career. He had spent more than a decade as a Navy SpecOps before being medically discharged. He now devotes much of his time to veteran causes.

As part of our annual Longevity series, The Aspen Times, Glenwood Springs Post Independent, Steamboat Pilot and Vail Daily are hosting a panel of inspiring people who have fought through adversity and continue to thrive in the mountains. Hear how they have fought off cancer, paralysis and blindness and continue to live a full, grateful life.

The only I cant do this moment was when I had to choose to remove my lung. It was a choice I had to make, whether I was going to fight cancer through other means or if I was going to go with the surgical route, Wong said. I put so much of my identity and who I was into my job or my work, where it became everything of me. And because of a certain event that happened to me, all of it was taken away. That was the most destructive thing that could have ever happened to me and I was left in a dilemma of trying to figure out, Who am I?

When it comes to overcoming lifes most difficult challenges, each of the panelists talked about putting focus on what one can do, as opposed to what one cant do. Despite not being able to see, Isenberg has found a way to empower the blind through his radio series, The Tactile Traveler. Elliott works with children who are dealing with similar physical challenges, and Forsberg continues to move forward despite barely being able to move at all.

That just puts you in the mindset of negativity and things you are not going to be able to do. But if something happens, you just have to take it one day at a time, Forsberg said of dealing with simple things, such as not being able to go on hikes with her friends. There is no point in wallowing in the fact I cant do what they are doing. I have to look forward and look at myself and do the things I can still do.

The Longevity Project will conclude Wednesday with its second virtual event, a talk with keynote speaker Sean Swarner, the first cancer survivor to have summited Mount Everest. The free discussion begins at 6 p.m. Viewers can register ahead of time at aspentimes.com/longevity.

The Longevity Project is being produced in partnership with The Aspen Times, Summit Daily, Glenwood Springs Post Independent, Steamboat Pilot & Today and Vail Daily.

acolbert@aspentimes.com

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Longevity Project: Panelists discuss what it takes to overcome life's challenges - Aspen Times

Global Precision Medicine Software Market 2020 One the most booming industry in forthcoming years due to worldwide demand in Coronavirus (COVID-19)…

Global Precision Medicine Software Market: Industrial Analysis, Supply And Demand Analysis, And Future Market Trends

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Global Precision Medicine Software Market 2020 One the most booming industry in forthcoming years due to worldwide demand in Coronavirus (COVID-19)...

Three trends defining the future of healthcare – Gulf Business

Digital health The pandemic will accelerate the further digitalisation of the healthcare industry, particularly with a focus on telemedicine, mobile health and medical technology (medtech).

Medtech is a broad sector that encompasses the use of any technology that can save or improve the quality of life of individuals suffering from a multitude of health conditions. Simply put, medtech may range from familiar objects such as syringes and hearing aids to more sophisticated devices such as medical robots, body scanners, intraocular lens and replacement joints for knees and hips.

For example, the outbreak of the Covid-19 crisis has revealed many countries willingness to deploy medtech as part of the national efforts to deal with a public health emergency situation. In China, for instance, medical robots are used to provide support to frontline medical workers by aiding them in the cleaning and disinfection of hospital wards and publicly shared spaces, measurement of patients temperature, distribution of medical supplies to patients, delivery of food to both patients and health workers, reduction of the workload of medical staff, and minimising of contact between people so as to lower the risk of cross infection. Other examples include Belgium, Italy and South Korea, which have also turned to medtech to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus. In particular, medical robots have been deployed in hospitals and public places of these countries to distribute hand sanitiser and to ensure that face masks are properly worn.

Genomics It may be easy for us to get emotionally worked up as a result of the intensive media coverage of the current pandemic, along with the unprecedented implementation of lockdowns worldwide, and think that Covid-19 is the worlds only health challenge.

But of course, medical professionals are also silently fighting battles against other deadly diseases, and it is vital not to lose sight of that fact.

In particular, cell and gene therapies have increasingly emerged as a promising treatment option for a myriad of complex clinical conditions. These may include genetic disorders that arise from malignant mutations in our DNA, such as cancer and sickle-cell disease, as well as non-genetically acquired diseases, such as Ebola, the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and the bubonic plague.

Extended longevity The growing prevalence of chronic diseases associated with the increasing share of the greying population will have profound implications for the healthcare systems for decades to come. It is therefore in this context that assistive technologies that enable healthcare professionals to continuously monitor the health conditions of the elderly should become even more important in the future.

Older patients can benefit in a number of ways from the progressive uptake of digital-health technologies. Not only can healthcare specialists help ageing individuals reduce the likelihood of contracting more severe forms of chronic diseases through the early detection of health abnormalities, but hospital admissions can also be avoided, thereby relieving pressure from healthcare systems and keeping a lid on burgeoning medical costs.

Thanks to digital-health technologies, data related to patients blood oxygen saturation, heart rate and blood pressure can be measured via remote monitoring tools such as wearables and transmitted from the comfort of the patients homes to their physicians in real time. In other words, senior citizens no longer have to undertake long journeys to see their medical providers or endure long queues and big crowds at clinics and hospitals for simple medical examinations, especially in countries where geographical constraints, public transport and healthcare systems pose additional challenges.

The road aheadThe future of healthcare will be shaped by favourable structural trends and developments in the industry. In particular, areas that are related to digital health, genomics and extended longevity should see further upside potential over the longer term, given the political tailwinds, momentous demographic forces around the world, the rise of chronic diseases associated with ageing, as well as the growing financial burden of medical care.

Dr Damien Ng is the Next Generation analyst at Bank Julius Baer

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Three trends defining the future of healthcare - Gulf Business

Doubting Tom Bradys longevity never ages well – Maize n Brew

Tom Brady is 43 years old now, and in some ways his age is showing. His hair is a little more salt and pepper than it once was, theres a few more wrinkles here and there, his legs arent as nimble. Entropy happens to us all.

Tom Brady is also a 43 year old who has one of the best diets a human can have and still plays the game of football at a high level. The now Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback is the greatest QB of all time. With 6 Super Bowl rings and 9 appearances overall, thats a topic that shouldnt even be a discussion present day. Even when youve received all the accolades of yesteryear like Brady has, he still has to continuously prove himself once more.

Just like most times in his career when he struggled, Brady battled back. He turned things around during the game. The Bucs faced a 17-point deficit, but being behind by that score isnt something that is going to make Brady put his head down. Instead, Brady ended up having one hell of a second half. Brady completed 15 of 17 passes in the second half for 263 yards, 3 touchdowns with a perfect 158.3 passer rating. The Bucs won 38-35. Brady threw 5 touchdowns to 5 different receivers, the first time hes done that in a game in his career.

Bradys passes still have a lot of zip on them, he can still deliver an accurate deep ball. His mental prowess is unparalleled. Hes Tom effin Brady. Not much has changed. Hes still someone you dont want to go toe-to-toe with in Week 4, and definitely not in the playoffs.

Its quite hilarious to see some of the narratives play out when Brady makes any error. Those reactions tend not to age well. Weve seen this for the better part of a decade now, and Brady keeps proving doubters wrong. Beyond Bradys love for the game, the fact he still has to prove himself is reason enough for him to keep playing.

In a relatively weak looking NFC, Brady and the Buccaneers have a realistic shot at making the Super Bowl. With that in mind, now would be a good time to stop doubting Tom Brady and his longevity. Instead, appreciate greatness and look into what the hell hes doing to stay so physically fit and healthy. The TB12 method seems to be working.

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Doubting Tom Bradys longevity never ages well - Maize n Brew