5 things to know today that arent about the virus – Lowell Sun

By The Associated Press

Your daily look at nonvirus stories in the news:

1. VIDEO SURFACES OF POLICE CONFRONTATION WITH ARBERY A video from 2017 shows police in Georgia attempting to search Ahmaud Arberys parked car, and when he refuses to let them and begins to walk back to the vehicle an officer tries to tase him.

2. BIDEN HIRES FORMER KAMALA HARRIS AIDE The granddaughter of civil rights leader Csar Chvez is joining Joe Bidens campaign to help with Latino outreach.

3. SIGNIFICANT PROGRESS A U.N. investigative team cites new evidence that should strengthen cases against Islamic State extremists of crimes against the Yazidi minority in 2014.

4. MYANMAR SEIZES LARGE AMOUNT OF LIQUID FENTANYL The discovery provides the first evidence that the synthetic opioid is being produced in quantity in Southeast Asias infamous Golden Triangle region.

5. ROONEY RULE AMENDED The NFL is expanding the hiring rule to require more interviews of minority candidates for head coaching and coordinator positions, the AP has learned.

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5 things to know today that arent about the virus - Lowell Sun

Powderfinger gets the band back together – Sydney Morning Herald

Singer Bernard Fanning's bandmates John Collins, Ian Haug and Darren Middleton joined him on stage during his solo set at Splendour in the Grass in 2017, punching out a handful of Powderfinger tracks, but the last time the full band performed was in late 2010 for their Sunsets Farewell tour.

We really just want to bring a smile to some peoples faces ...

"The five of us have been meeting regularly over the past few months to organise some Odyssey Number Five anniversary releases," the band said in a statement. "The idea came up of playing together again in this unusual format, which we all thought would be fun. The past few months has been a very strange time for us all and difficult days for many. We really just want to bring a smile to some peoples faces and along the way raise some funds to help our music industry mates and people who are currently experiencing mental health issues."

Streamed on the band's YouTube channel, the performance will also help raise funds for Support Act and Beyond Blue and be the first time since their final hometown show on Brisbane's River Stage that they've rocked out songs from across their extensive catalogue, including debut album Parables for Wooden Ears and final album, Golden Rule, released in 2009.

After forming in 1989 the band broke through with their second album, 1996's Double Allergic, including the single Pick You Up. Two years later, Internationalist brought Powderfinger even wider acclaim, topping the ARIA album charts and winning the ARIA for album of the year.

Twenty years ago, Odyssey Number Five became the band's first album to chart in the United States and earned them another swag of ARIA awards, including 2001's album of the year and best rock album. Vulture Street (2003), Dream Days at the Hotel Existence (2007) and Golden Rule also topped the album charts, giving Powderfinger a total of five Australian number one albums in 11 years.

Powderfinger's One Night Only performance will be streamed live at 7pm on Saturday, May 23.

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Powderfinger gets the band back together - Sydney Morning Herald

UPDATE 1-Brazil’s primary deficit this year could top 9% of GDP, says Treasury Secretary – Reuters

(Adds quotes, details)

By Marcela Ayres

BRASILIA, May 14 (Reuters) - Brazils government could post a record primary budget deficit of more than 9% of gross domestic product this year on plunging revenues and increased emergency spending due to the coronavirus crisis, Treasury Secretary Mansueto Almeida said on Thursday.

That would be around 700 billion reais ($117 billion), and even greater than recent estimates from officials, including Almeida, of around 600 billion reais.

Speaking at a virtual public hearing in Congress broadcast online, Almeida said he was not worried about the deficit this year or the size of national debt, which could exceed 90% of GDP, because the emergency measures need to be implemented.

Around half of Brazils hefty debt load can be financed by record low nominal interest rates of 3% and real rates, after inflation is taken into account, of around zero, he said.

The trajectory of Brazils debt matters more than its size, he said.

It is very important that investors are sure that the country will, over time, gradually be able to repay its debt, and control the growth of its debt in relation to the size of the economy, Almeida said.

This is why a debt load of 90% of GDP becomes a concern when the economy is only growing around 1% a year, as Brazil has done for the past three years, he said. This year is likely to be Brazils biggest annual economic crash since records began in 1900.

That is why it is so important to grow, Almeida said.

He also said the Treasury is currently selling around 10 billion reais of debt a week, which will have to rise sharply as the countrys borrowing requirements rise. The government is more likely to issue shorter-dated debt because longer-term interest rates are steepening quite a bit, he said.

But even if benchmark interest rates fell to zero, the Treasury could not borrow at 0% because investors would still demand a risk premium, he said.

Meanwhile, the government will not meet its fiscal golden rule of not raising debt to pay for current expenses such as public sector salaries and pensions until 2023, and so that will have to be modified somehow, he added. (Reporting by Marcela Ayres Writing by Jamie McGeever Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Chris Reese)

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UPDATE 1-Brazil's primary deficit this year could top 9% of GDP, says Treasury Secretary - Reuters

The 1913 widening of St. Paul’s Robert Street gave the city room to grow – Minneapolis Star Tribune

The great Chicago architect and urban planner Daniel Burnham once famously said, Make no little plans; they have no magic to stir mens blood.

Burnham offered his advice to think big around 1910, and it appears civic and business leaders in St. Paul were listening. Within three years, St. Paul would embark upon one of the most ambitious projects in the citys history by widening a milelong stretch of a key downtown thoroughfare Robert Street.

In the early 1900s, Robert was downtown St. Pauls most congested street. Lined with department stores, hotels and office buildings and home to a busy streetcar line, it suffered from a seemingly intractable problem its narrowness.

Only 55 feet wide, counting sidewalks, it was the tightest of the citys main downtown streets. Even so, Robert wasnt especially narrow by St. Paul standards. Most other downtown streets in St. Paul had been platted at 60 feet wide (compared with 80 in Minneapolis), but the high volume of vehicular and pedestrian traffic made it a choke point that threatened downtowns continued growth and development.

By 1910 the idea of widening the street began to gain traction, although it promised to be a monumental and costly undertaking. That year, a St. Paul civic group commissioned John Nolen and Arthur Comer to prepare a plan for improving the downtown business district. Many other American cities were rolling out grandiose plans at the time under the banner of the so-called City Beautiful movement, which had been inspired by the gleaming white Classical architecture of the 1893 Chicago Worlds Fair (planned under Burnhams leadership).

Nolen and Comers plan, unveiled in 1911, called for widening Robert (as well as Wabasha and 7th streets), among many other recommendations. Most of these ideas disappeared into the giant circular wastebasket of civic inertia, but the proposed Robert Street project, against all odds, moved ahead.

The downtown business community embraced the project. The big businesses along Robert led by the Golden Rule, Emporium and Mannheimer Brothers department stores not only supported the project but also agreed to an assessment plan, along with other building owners, to pay for the work.

The final plan called for widening Robert to 75 feet from the bridge at the Mississippi River to a point near the State Capitol about 12 blocks in all. The biggest challenge was the stretch between the bridge and 8th Street, where an almost solid wall of commercial buildings, some of them very large, lined Robert. How could an extra 20 feet of roadway be carved out from such a heavily built-up part of downtown?

Several schemes were considered. One suggestion was to insert ground-floor sidewalk arcades into buildings on both sides of the street, thereby gaining added roadway. But this was found to be too costly. Another possibility was to cut 10 feet from the fronts of buildings on both sides of the street. This, too, was ruled out because so many large structures occupied the east side of Robert, including the 16-story Pioneer Building at 4th Street and the giant old Ryan Hotel at 6th.

In the end, the only plan that proved feasible was to create 20 feet of additional space along the west side of Robert. This, however, was no small feat. More than 30 buildings, some as tall as six stories and many dating to the 1880s or earlier, stood along the west side of the street between the river and 8th, and all of them had to be modified, either by lopping off their front 20 feet or tearing them down in order to accommodate the widened roadway.

Amazingly, the rebuilding was accomplished within the span of two years, between 1913 and 1915. Twenty or more buildings were truncated as part of the project. The two largest were the five-story Mannheimer department store, built in 1893, and the six-story Chamber of Commerce Building, a busy Victorian pile from 1886.

The new Mannheimer Brothers facade on Robert turned out to be much like the old one, and it takes a sharp eye to spot the differences between the before-and-after looks of the building.

The Chamber of Commerces makeover was more extreme. Its original facade on Robert featured pointed-arch windows and plenty of ornament. In its new guise, the building offered a far more straightforward look with Chicago-style windows (a three-part arrangement consisting of a broad, fixed central pane flanked by smaller double-hungs).

Many of the other refronted buildings along Robert took on a similar look, with Chicago-style windows and a light applique of the sort of classically derived ornament popular at the time.

There also were teardowns. The National German American Bank at 4th and Robert was razed and replaced in 1915 by a 16-story building for the Merchants National Bank (now part of the First National Bank Building complex). Meanwhile, the Golden Rule department store demolished its buildings at 7th and Robert and constructed a new store (now used as offices and known as the Golden Rule Building). Another big project, the six-story Bremer Arcade, was built just across 7th from the Golden Rule in 1916.

Today, aside from the Golden Rule and Merchants Bank buildings, nothing but Robert Street itself remains from the great makeover. Virtually all of the refronted buildings were razed by the 1980s. The Bremer Arcade hung on until it fell to the wreckers in 1998.

A street-widening project of such scale would be all but impossible today in either St. Paul or Minneapolis, given that downtown buildings tend to be much larger than they were a century ago. And, of course, the cost would be outlandish.

By contrast, the 1913-15 project was completed for around $1 million (not counting new buildings). That expenditure would translate into $50 million or more in todays dollars. But for all the enhancements it allowed, it seems like quite a bargain.

Larry Millett is an architecture critic and author. He can be reached at larrymillett.com.

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The 1913 widening of St. Paul's Robert Street gave the city room to grow - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Will the real mothers stand up? – Laurinburg Exchange

On Sunday, we celebrated the most precious holiday of the year: Mothers Day. A salute to all mothers. For there is no other holiday that tugs at the heart of man than that day.

Apart from Christmas and Resurrection Sunday, no other holiday touches the heart of mankind like Mothers Day. All across the country, affections of love were poured out in sweet sentiments in a tangible way to mothers. Cards, flowers, money, dinners and gifts bombarded them as children showered their mothers with affection on this holiday.

It was a time to appreciate the greatest gift to mankind that God gave to us apart from Jesus Christ. Mothers are the heart of our society and mankind in general. They are the center, the heartbeat of the home. Without mothers, there are no homes.

The world indeed would be a lonely and empty place without the mother; every successful man or woman that have achieved greatness in politics, sports, theater and even religion will say that they would not be what they are without their mother; those who paid tribute to your mother did the right thing; love them, appreciate them while you have them; in other words give them their flowers while they can smell them.

I hope that you gave them a phone call and wished them a Happy Mothers Day. I hope that you did not let another Mothers Day pass without reaching out to her while she could hear it, feel it;.

But everyday is Mothers Day, and there is not enough money and flowers in the world to pay you for what you have done for us. Can we imagine what the world would be like without them; and then ask those of us whose mother is no longer with us, those who had to go to the graveyard and drop off flowers at the gravesite; those of us who wish that we could reach out to them; so we honor the mothers of the past.

For some, it was an emotional day. As memory moments flooded our thoughts and hearts of that one personality who will influence us for the rest of their lives; all of us have our mothers moment; I had my mother moment as I reflected last week on my wonderful mother, who after we lost our father at a young age, raised us by herself.

Mothers, they made us go to Sunday School; and some taught us the golden rule. They put up with us when nobody else would; sacrificed, just so that we could have and achieve. They are the only ones that can fuss at us and love us at the same time but I want to make an appeal today to all children first, I want to say to all children, that this is no time to be estranged from your mother; in your opinion she may not have been or is the best mother; but she is the only one that you have.

There comes a time when we have to let bygones be bygones; they brought you into the world; and everything else that is wrong after that is in the Lords hand; cant change the past; but you can change the future; reach out on this day of days to your mother.

And then mothers, I call you to see the power and influence that you have; mothers shapes nations, the community and most importantly the home; they have the opportunity to influence their daughters; to show them the beauty of being a woman, and that they are fearfully and wonderfully made; to teach their children; mold them and to model after Hannah in 1 Sam. Chapters 1 and 2; a good model for any mother; she dedicated her son to the Lord; and then she was dedicated herself; for how can a mother dedicate their children to God, if they are not dedicated to God themselves!

Mothers need to be godly, and exert that influence in their homes; it creates an atmosphere that can turn the children to God early; mothers are teachers, they are to teach; teach their daughters that they are not a punching bag for men; teach them that they are somebody; see mothers, there is more to being a mother than just birthing a child.

Raising the child is lifetime process; she is to be an example to the children; she need to be her childrens parents instead of just being their friend! a mother, is not defined by what she look like; her educational prowess; a real mother is not defined by what kind of clothes she wears or what kind of home she lives in; a real mother is not known by her profession; but a real mother is known by the sacrifices and love that she gives her children; and the length that she is willing to go for her children.

See, anybody can give birth; 13-, 14- and 15-year-olds can have children; but that dont make them real mothers. But motherhood is a commitment and a lifetime investment; with teenage pregnancy going up; fatherless children being raised; child abuse on the rise, will the REAL mother please stand up!

Mothers, teach your children; go to the schools and check on your children; mothers, your children are a gift; they are yours; you carried them; gave birth to them; now give them your heart; give them your love; and then give them your time; mothers you are a gift from God; the greatest gift.

Having said that, will the REAL mothers PLEASE stand up!

The Rev. George Ellis is pastor at Union Grove Missionary Baptist Church.

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George Ellis Pastors Corner

https://www.laurinburgexchange.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/web1_RevGeorgeEllis-1.jpgGeorge Ellis Pastors Corner

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Will the real mothers stand up? - Laurinburg Exchange

The Best and Worst of Covid Stress – Thrive Global

If there was ever a time when it matters how other people think and behave, it is now! All cultures have a version of the Golden Rule: Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.

Individually we have preferences for how we would like people to act. We appreciate relationships with fun, thoughtful, intelligent, compassionate people. Kindness researchers like Dr Jamil Zaki tell us that cooperation is what allowed relatively weak and slow humans to thrive as a species.

The coronavirus pandemic is highlighting the best and worst of human nature. Everyone is struggling with fear and grief. Our nervous systems are alarmed and many of our usual supports and comforts are unavailable.

People are polarized into opposing camps. Some listen to scientists and medical doctors and are trying to protect ourselves through following expert advice as they discover more about the virus and how it spreads. Others believe Covid-19 is a hoax and are contemptuous of the other side for their beliefs, taking the restrictions as a personal affront to their freedom. Others interpret that disregard as a personal threat to their health. Emotions are running high.

We are in the midst of a huge social experiment as some countries, states and cities are following strict stay-at-home protocols and a cautious approach to re-opening, while others are pushing to get the economy moving again. Within two weeks, we will be able to see early results of these decisions based on rates of infection.

As individuals, we are powerless to control what governments decide and how people in our communities behave. What we can always work with is our reactions. As restrictions are easing and we move out of our homes, we will find ourselves getting activated or triggered by other people. If we wear a mask, we may find ourselves being shamed for over-reacting. If we dont believe wearing a mask will help, we may find ourselves being judged as reckless.

Many people were already experiencing social anxiety and isolation, and now the stakes are literally life and death. We could die if another person passes the virus on to us. We may be feeling increased loneliness through social distancing. Others are struggling with the people they live, perhaps working from home while caring for children. We are short of sleep and less resilient than usual.

When things are hard, we often move more into black and white thinking. Try this inquiry to see your hot spots and to practice letting things be as they are. No shame. No right or wrong answer. Just inquiry with kindness.

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The Best and Worst of Covid Stress - Thrive Global

COLUMN: Positive and negative freedoms | Opinion – Duncan Banner

It is troubling to see that retail workers are being shot as a matter of principle by mentally ill vigilantes who are anxious to dine in or who dont want to order curbside while masked. In some cities, armed people demonstrate for their freedom to shop or something.

I dont get it. Thats why I cant explain it. Im from a family of sensible shoppers of whom the most ardent might plan their Black Friday Christmas shopping logistics in advance and set an early alarm. We dont try to force human nature, though.

Maybe its a guy thing a testosterone-fueled attribution bias in reaction to budget stress that evokes some primal male shopping behavior, in mayhem cohorts. Anarchy men who want to shop, "really" want to shop! I call them Tea Partiers, for lack of a more precise term. Theyre typically 40-something demonstrators for a personal freedom not to wear an antiviral mask. Theyre for freedom to shop. They want a debt-free future. But they dont want to pay the cost for underinvesting in pandemic armor a disaster of their own chintzy making. These same advocates for a debt-free future irrationally oppose a $15 Oklahoma minimum wage. When your state is in a budget shortfall, why not churn more income tax dollars into state coffers like nearly half of the U.S. did this year, by increasing the workers minimum wage?

Philosopher Isaiah Berlin described positive liberty as "freedom to" and negative liberty as "freedom from" something. It was all a continuum. And the question being pondered in the hearts of Americans today is, Where is the balancing point? We want to be free to move about the nation, but to do so in a way that doesnt subject us to sloppy DNA from someones over-imagined rights. Vulnerable Americans over age 50 want to shop safely, without being elbowed by paranoid gun-toters who have a feeling and no demonstrable reality that their abstract rights are impinged.

Since the first cave families socialized, there has been a bright line between the freedom to cough and the right not to be coughed upon. It is implicit in the pact under which we submit to governance. We give up the right to go around naked and pee down our legs in trade for the other fellow's giving up his right to go naked and pee down his leg. Its a social compact. The Holy Bible says it like this: "Do unto others that which you would have them do unto you." The Greeks had the golden rule. The Tamils ponder, "Why does one hurt others, knowing what it is to be hurt? Likewise, the Talmud, Hillel, Leviticus. Every ethical religion has a reciprocity maxim. If there is a consensus among anarchists, it is that they ascribe to cooperation and reciprocity.

The Ninth Amendment has a beautiful little regift to the American people: The Saving Clause saves unenumerated rights to the people, as freedoms. That means the Constitution is not all-invasive and we can exercise independent free will about some things. The Ninth Amendment only saves the freedoms of careful and polite citizens of an orderly society. If the Constitution doesnt allocate Freedom from Masks and Freedom to Protect Others Against Pathogens"; individuals decide.

Next up, the 10th Amendment balances powers between federalist supremacy especially in commerce, and state health, safety and welfare. States are charged with using affirmative enumerated police powers to protect health and safety of vulnerable minorities from encroachment by overreaching protesters. As for protesters using the First and Ninth Amendments against constitutionally-mandated policy imperatives, Im placing my bets. Constitution: 1; Protesters: 0.

Kathy Tibbits is a Cherokee citizen, attorney, and artist living at Lake Tenkiller.

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COLUMN: Positive and negative freedoms | Opinion - Duncan Banner

Gaylan Hendricks, Chief Executive Officer, Will be a Keynote Speaker at 8% Nation This Summer – PR.com

Gaylan Hendricks will be a Keynote Speaker at 8% nation. Senior Security Benefits, Inc. is so excited for insurance agents and other sales people all around the country to hear CEO, Gaylan Hendricks' story which will inspire so many. Not only women will be inspired by her story but men are the first to recommend and support her. The attendees will see how she persevered during one of the hardest times of her career and "still" came out on top.

At the 8% Nation Insurance Wealth Conference being held this summer, tentatively scheduled for July 24-25, Gaylan will be a keynote speaker and will share stories of what has been instrumental to the success of her company. Senior Security Benefits, Inc. has been on top from time to time, but in 2013 they became one of the largest FMO's in the country when they made a change that soon doubled, tripled, and quadrupled their sales records.

With 35 years of experience in the health insurance business, Gaylan has weathered many major changes in the industry from Medicare standardization to the emergence of the Do Not Call list and Obamacare/ACA changes to tele-health. Each time the industry has undergone a change, she learned to make lemons into lemonade. She quickly adapted and developed strategies to maximize the opportunities.

Attendees of 8% Nation Insurance Wealth Conference will hear Gaylans powerful story of overcoming obstacles and rising to success. Despite negative situations, she became stronger and gained confidence because of her faith in God and her supporters. In difficult times, she clung to her belief that the truth would be revealed, and it always does. God always shows up when you need Him and in a big way! she says. Instead of being distracted by her adversaries, she focuses on the Golden Rule and her supporters who provide encouragement. As a motivational speaker, she shares her life experiences and knowledge to inspire others.

Gaylan often declares, If it were easy, everyone would be doing it! The insurance business is challenging, but Gaylan will equip and motivate business leaders to cling to faith, hold onto joy, adapt to change, surround themselves with supporters, and be primed for success. She believes everyone has the potential to be in the 8%.

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Gaylan Hendricks, Chief Executive Officer, Will be a Keynote Speaker at 8% Nation This Summer - PR.com

From alarm calls to cricket on the lawn, keeping children fit in lockdown is a fine art – Telegraph.co.uk

As a family we have now settled into the daily rhythms of home schooling. It is like the mid-point of a horserace, everyone is going well, no one is off the bridle and it is difficult to call the winner.

So now it is the fitness of my children to which I have turned my attention. That, I am discovering, has to be tailored to age and character.

One forgets what a great place school is for staying fit without realising it; the football game in break, running to lunch, using the climbing frame, walking between classes and games of tag quite apart from afternoons full of organised games. That is what they are missing.

I do not personally count normal horse riding as exercise any more than I would consider sitting on an arm chair a workout but my golden rule about each child having their own pony is that they must ride them.

That, of course, is not always possible on schooldays, particularly in winter. But it was their collective idea rather than the sergeant-major in me that an early morning ride would be a good way to set them up mentally for school so we are on board by 7.00 and, generally, it works.

But the nine-year-old fell off the other day and, tearfully, said she had banged her head so, to make it like the proper races, we concocted an impromptu concussion test.

What day of the week is it (after six weeks of lockdown even I had to think twice about the answer)? Monday. Correct. How many chicks did the bantam (very much her department) have? Four. Correct.

Am I holding up my left hand or my right hand? Left. Wrong. But rather than concussion, according to her siblings, it turns out left and right is not one of her strong points.

I have no worries about the middle ones fitness. She wants to be a jockey and has built her own gym in a disused bullpen in an old farmyard and would give most apprentices a run for their money on a bleep test.

It is, however, my 15-year-old son in the slough of his teenage years (conversation is reduced to a series of half-syllable grunts, sleeps for England, picks at delicious dinner before gorging on three rounds of toast, says lifes so unfair when he is summoned off Fortnite) who gives me most cause for concern.

With one of the longer run-ups in Oxfordshire schoolboy cricket every over not bowled this summer is roughly 150 m not run. At roughly 25 overs a week, chuck in a few quick singles, that is nearly four kilometres he would normally have, to quote the youngest, sprant.

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From alarm calls to cricket on the lawn, keeping children fit in lockdown is a fine art - Telegraph.co.uk

Besao’s Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Practices On Natural Resource Management: The Batangan OpEd – Eurasia Review

The people of Besao, Mountain Province, Philippines have a unique but sustainable indigenous natural resource management system.

According to Matthew Tauli, author of the Batangan: An Indigenous Knowledge System and Practice (IKSP) on Pine Forest Management of the Kankanaeys of Besao the IKSP evolved from the dapays or Council of Elder that ruled the communities.

The dap-ay was instrumental in maintaining peace, unity and cooperation among the people of the village (ili) and the villagers (umili) and with other tribes. Every household is affiliated with a dap-ay near his abode and dap-ay membership (dumap-ays) signified the households oneness with the ili.

The dumap-ays are responsible for sustaining the activities of their respective dap-ays and for providing assistance to members in times of need, from birth to death.

These IKSP on the different ecosystems of Besao have been developed over generations and become a custom and tradition of the umili. The development of these IKSP are personified in the Besaos values of inayan and lawa which forbids any act that causes harm or injury to anyone or anything, living or non-living, as they believe that everything is interconnected.

They believe in a Supreme Being (Kabunyan) and of spirits (pinading) that dwell in the forest, trees, rivers, stones, and also the spirits of their ancestors that are still around them and thus, must be respected and appeased for them to bring good luck to the living. These spirits are now part of nature and they must be called upon for guidance and consent in all the things to be done. The inayan or lawa is in ones conscience to judge the rightness and wrongness to ones plan of action and in doing such, a form of punishment or karma will beset the wrongdoer.

For example, it is not right to take advantage of another persons ignorance or weakness to enrich oneself by exploiting it, as an untoward incident will beset the exploiter. It is actually a command of dont but on a deeper level, it speaks of respect, justice, unity, ethics, sharing and helping other persons or things. Inayan or lawa is the local version of the Golden Rule of: Dont do to others what you dont want others do to you.

In IKSPs, inayan or lawa teaches a discipline or self-restraint in the use of the natural resources of the dumap-ays. It discourages destructive and wasteful practice or ayyew, another Kankanaey value which can be roughly translated as wasteful or uneconomical.

An example is on trees being cut but not yet mature, the Kankanaey will say, inayan, lawa, or ayyew ty bebe py laeng, tay no maseken sa, ad-ado kausarana (Dont cut the tree, it is still not mature, it will have more usage if it will grow bigger). Or of food being wasted, they will say, inayan, lawa or ayyew, kanem ty men-aga py nan makan (Dont waste it, eat it, or else the food will cry). And for each example, if one still does it against the advice, an unfortunate event or something bad will happen to him/her or if it is foretold something good will happen to him/her, this will not come about.

Thus, IKSPs on the different ecosystem of the iBesao Kankanaeys has been developed over time, from the village (ili), ricefields (payeo), swidden farms (uma/um-a), pastureland (pastolan), river systems (ginawang), forests (pagpag) and pine forest (batangan), and these has been practiced since time immemorial, fine-tuned along the way, and is a code of conduct in each and every facet of the iBesao existence.

The people of Besao was able to develop a very distinctive and sophisticated resource management system that is rooted in their deep awareness of their forefathers efforts and the respect and profound devotion to what is spiritually and morally just in their environs. In the past (circa: 1800s up to the 1920s) mountains near villages and its surroundings areas are bare of pine trees.

Natural pine forests are only found in small patches and far from villages such as in Mounts Buasao and Sisipitan. This has caused great difficulties for the elders whose task is to obtain fuelwood for cooking and warmth for the cold wilderness. They have to traverse great distances to be able to gather sufficient supply of fuelwood, spending a night or two in the mountains, gathering and carrying back their heavy load which they will again perform after a week or two depending on how much load they were able to carry back to the village. The male youths will be accompanying their elders carrying loads, depending on how strong they are. This became more difficult when they decided to build bigger and sturdier houses out of pine lumbers, traversing the same route but with more loads and more frequency.

These experiences eventually prompted the villagers they decided to plant pine trees in their respective swidden farms, on cogonal lands and on any open lands where there are no claimants. Wildlings and seeds are obtained from the natural pine forest and planted in these areas. To secure the trees from destructions caused by wild pigs and astray carabaos and cows, barriers were made such as planting of live fences, digging of ditches, and construction ripraps. By the World War II, pine trees have taken root on the mountains near villages.

This initiative also led to the formulation of policies and guidelines (P&G) or rules and regulation to manage and sustain the pine forest, implemented through their socio-political institutions (dap-ay). There might be some cases of non-participation of some villagers in this endeavor, but it became the elders responsibility to ensure everybodys participation, fine-tuning policies and guidelines which was acceptable to all.

As a result, they have instituted a self-reliant and sustainable management of this pine forest, an indigenous knowledge system and practice they called batangan.

The iBesao regards the pine forest as a source of wood, water and food for the villagers as a whole. It is the source of fuelwood as well as timber for houses, furniture, granaries and other buildings. At the same time, the forest is a source for water used in domestic and agricultural activities as well as food such as wild mushrooms. But for individual dumap-ays, primary services from the batangan are firewood used for rituals, marriages, deaths or any significant activity that requires falling a tree or two, and timberwoods for construction of house, granary or other constructions that requires sizeable pieces of lumber.

Payeo has been a village ever since documentations conducted by the Spaniards appeared, about the 1700s, when they first attempted to exploit gold in the mountains and Christianize the people. The Igorots, which means, people from the mountains in the Spanish language, have dwelled in these mountains rich in gold and other minerals since time immemorial. Payeo, Besao Catengan, Suquib and Agawa have been mentioned in these documents. It was only about the mid-1960s that Payeo was divided into Barangays Payeo, Padangaan and Kin-iway, which were part of its territories in the past.

At the same time, Besao Proper was divided into barangays Besao West, Besao East and Suquib and same with Agawa which was divided into, Lacmaan, Agawa, Gueday, Ambagiw and Tamboan (LAGAT). And together with barangays Bangitan, Catengan and Laylaya, they form the present 14 Barangays of Besao Municipality.

For the Batangan system of Payeo in particular, although similar with other Besao barangays, in the context of ownership, utilization, protection and management of the batangan, there are three types:

1) Batangan/Saguday/Komon di Umili this is communally-owned by a village, segregated by the elders from the wider batangan, managed, utilized and protected by the villagers as a whole and this include the natural forest. Any need that benefits the whole villagers (umili) is accessed komon di umili like if a school building for the village is to be constructed, it will be accessed here. A tree will be selected based on what purpose it will be used and this will be identified by an elder and concurred by other elders.

2) Batangan/Saguday di Dap-ay ownership, management, utilization and protection are by members of a dap-ay, the socio-cultural institution and structure where membership is composed by the cluster of households surrounding the structure. They claim ownership by virtue of planting an area as a dumap-ay. They can access lumber to construct and repair the dap-ay and it is also where they get firewood for making bonfire to keep warm during the cold weather or for cooking during rituals and festivities in the dap-ay. Initially there were 8 dap-ays in Payeo but as of now there are 6 as members of the two were assimilated by the remaining 6. These dap-ays that have a saguday in Mt. Mogao are Pap-ayangan, Anonang, Balaan, Tampogo, Bangbangoan and Bayongasan.

3) Batangan/Saguday di Pangapo ownership, management and utilization are descendants of one family either through affinity or consanguinity or a clan. Ownership is by virtue of planting pine trees and other permanent improvements or developments done in their uma/um-a by clan members like firebreaks either through ripraps, ditches or crops planted, which also serve to prevent animals from encroaching to the property, and planting of annual crops like coffee or other fruit trees.

A dumap-ay can access pine in the batangan: firstly, as a member of a clan, from the saguday di pangapo, secondly, as a member of a dap-ay, from the saguday di dap-ay and thirdly, as a villager, from the saguday di komon. But with such privilege, he/she also has the responsibility to adhere to the P&G as stipulated in the batangan system.

From the saguday or komon di umili, firewood and lumber needs will prioritize activities that benefits the village as a whole and same with the saguday di dap-ay, prioritizes activities for the particular dap-ay and dumap-ays and the saguday di pangapo for the benefit of the members of the clan/family. And within each saguday, individual members who will benefit will also be prioritized. But for deaths and marriages, firewood and lumber needs will be accessed first, from the saguday di pangapo where he/she is a member. But if firewood or lumber is not available or lacking in his/her saguday, then they look for it in the saguday di dap-ay where he/she belongs and if none or lacking in there, then from the saguday di umili.

For the saguday di pangapo, all the pangapo members have equal rights to extract timber. However, in most cases, the saguday does not contain enough trees to provide the timber requirements of its members. Thus, prioritization for services from the batangan are as follows: for deaths and marriages, firstly it will be accessed from their saguday and it follows as stated above. And for need of lumber for 1 housing materials which requires at least three full-sized pine tree, newly married couples who plan to build their house in the village are prioritized.

In saguday di pangapo, cutting trees from somebody elses saguday without the permission of the owner is illegal and socially unacceptable. And persons without pine lots can request free timber or buy lumber from the owner. The owner may borrow (and commit to return the favor) from other owners with mature trees while waiting for his trees to grow.

These forest resource management practices have been sustained for many generations and ensured the maintenance of the iPayeos forest cover. There is the prevailing practice of selective tree cutting (cutting mature trees or gnarled or stunted trees only), and the replanting of pine seedlings on the cleared area or simply allowing wildlings to regenerate naturally.

The mendepdep (putting off forest fires), especially if there are private properties like granaries, timber, and fruit trees or animal fences that may be destroyed by the fire are still practiced. The maintenance of the batangans is also based on the belief that many of these areas are sacred grounds, areas identified as dwelling place of gods or spirits and the site of the sacred tree or patpatayan.

But this indigenous sustainable forest management is however, seriously compromised by the lack of land tenure security. The Forestry Code of the Philippines or PD 705 which mandated that lands not classified as alienable and disposable are public lands and will categorize the iBesao and other Cordillera communities dwelling in mountainous terrains, virtually squatters in the lands they have occupied, utilized, and developed since time immemorial.

This has led to communities perceiving the government as insensitive and has discouraged some community members from sustaining their traditional forest resource management practices.

Certificates of tax declaration became the formal documentation of land ownership claims. But this is also taken advantaged by some community members who made tax declarations under their names over communal lands, even without introducing improvements in these areas, resulting in the privatization of communal forests and other communal resources.

This IKSP on environmental stewardship is also endangered by an influx of exploitative development. Besao and most of the Cordillera is covered by a Financial and Technical Assistance Agreement (FTAA) application of mining corporations. During consultations in 1996, the iBesaos have expressed their opposition to this mining application because of the destruction mining operations would cause on their lives, environment, and culture.

Without land tenure security, the decision can proceed over their opposition. And the free, prior and informed consent (FPIC) required of such projects by the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act (IPRA) only comes in areas that are formally considered as Ancestral Domain, which is not granted yet to Besao.

It is vital that IKSPs must be well understood as it could inherently impede contextually-relevant social development and governance mechanisms as proposed by indigenous communities, like the batangan system of the iBesao, which must be taken up seriously by the government (DENR) as the management system of their forest. This also implies that policies and institutions that would involve indigenous people should adapt to their culture and traditions and not the other way around.

The Source, Matthew Tauli, is a member of the Batil-ang Peypeyan Clan, the indigenous Kankana-ey Igorot community .

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Besao's Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Practices On Natural Resource Management: The Batangan OpEd - Eurasia Review

The latest SAG Awards join the Oscars and the Golden Globes in the rule change in the middle of closing Up News Info – Up News Info

A letter sent this week by the organizers of the SAG Awards to film studios confirmed that the annual program will join the Oscars and the Golden Globes in reviewing their film eligibility guidelines this year as the coronavirus closes. has closed all theaters across the country.

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SAG's rules, to be finalized next month, will allow titles with a planned theatrical release to be eligible if they air first or air on VOD, according to the letter, a copy of which has been obtained by Up News Info.

The other major guild awards are expected to follow suit in this unusual year, when films that generally must qualify for a theatrical release in Los Angeles, or in Los Angeles and New York, are unable to do so due to the closure. Most major studios have taken their summer and fall movies into fall and winter, and even through 2021, as the prognosis for reopening of multiplexes remains nebulous at best.

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Below-the-line workers who did not qualify for health benefits due to closure get another extension

The Up News Info has reached representatives of the PGA Awards, WGA Awards and DGA Awards to ask about their plans.

On April 28, both the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Oscar organizer and the organizers of the Golden Globes, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, revealed changes in the film eligibility requirements for their ceremonies in honor of to the best movies of 2020.

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For the Oscars, the eligibility rules for movies that open on streaming and video-on-demand services were changed "temporarily" to allow them to qualify, even if they don't appear first with the standard seven-day theatrical qualification race, or the day and date. Films will still have to qualify as they are available on the Academy exclusive streaming site within 60 days of the launch of the streaming or VOD and must have been previously intended for a theatrical release.

The Academy also for the first time expanded the number of eligible theaters to include some outside of Los Angeles County and in other areas and multiple cities to make this much easier for dealers.

Changes to HFPA rules state that movies that had a good-faith theatrical release planned to begin in Los Angeles during the period of March 15 to the date that will be determined by HFPA when theaters in the Los Angeles area Angels have reopened, instead released first in a television format (eg, subscription broadcast service, subscription cable channel, television broadcast, etc.) and will continue to be eligible for the Golden Globe Film Awards " The group made similar concessions for entries in foreign languages.

The Oscars of 2021 are still scheduled for February 28. The Golden Globes haven't set a date for 2021, but if everything goes back to almost normal, it would probably be Sunday, January 10.

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The latest SAG Awards join the Oscars and the Golden Globes in the rule change in the middle of closing Up News Info - Up News Info

6 ways to be a happy working parent – Echo Live

BEING a working parent has never been easy, but a new level of difficulty has been added - now many mums and dads are working from home and trying to look after their children at the same time.

Many parents will simply be managing the best they can, and planting young children in front of the TV or leaving them with an iPad to do their school work, in order to buy time to get on with their work. But it doesnt have to be that way, says child development expert Anita Cleare.

Cleare runs the Positive Parenting Project (anitacleare.co.uk/positive-parenting-project) and has just written.

She says: Working parents have been told the way to be successful is to be hyper-organised, buy five years worth of birthday cards at once and batch-freeze meals. But that goes against the grain of what children really need from us. Good relationships with children are built on quality moments, not on constantly chivying our kids from task to task.

To create a happy family life, working parents need to step out of our hyper-efficient work mindset and be playful and curious instead, so we can tune in to our childrens signals and understand the world from their point of view.

Here, Cleare suggests six ways to be a happy working parent:

The biggest challenge for working parents is learning to switch between two different mindsets - work-mode and parent-mode - and now that so many parents are working from home, learning to switch seamlessly between them is even more essential.

When were in work-mode, we tend to be very goal-focused and task-oriented. Doing well at work means sticking to schedules, getting through tasks efficiently, focusing on outcomes and always keeping up the pace. But when it comes to family life, children need us to deploy different strengths. They need emotionally-attuned parents who are curious and playful and empathetic, who can slow down and prioritise connecting and listening over getting the job done. Children are naturally chaotic and focused on the moment. If we approach them stuck in our efficiency-focused work-mode, we quickly get frustrated with them.

Playfulness is an essential ingredient in happy families. Children and adults need it. If you take the playfulness out of parenting, all youre left with is drudgery.

Playfulness isnt the same as doing lots of activities. Cajoling a herd of children in and out of the car to ballet rehearsals and football matches when lockdown is over doesnt add up to a fun family life. Similarly, while we might be stuck indoors a bit more at the moment, a bit of silliness is good for everyone.

Playfulness is the pixie dust that makes our lives feel lighter. It fuels childrens development, makes parenting enjoyable, strengthens family bonds and boosts everyones wellbeing.

Creating more space for playfulness will give you room to breathe, to relax, to laugh a little more (and shout a little less) and enjoy being a member of your family.

When were stuck in get-the-job-done work-mode, we tend to focus on all those tasks that need completing during family time. Feeding, washing, laundry, spellings homework, reading, telling off, chasing down lost items...

But families are made up of relationships, not tasks. If we shift our thinking about parenting away from a list of activities to be completed or a project to be undertaken and see our job as parents in terms of building relationships with our children, that opens the door to a very different dynamic.

Building a relationship isnt a job that can be ticked off a To Do list. Its about small choices we make on a day-to-day level. Its about chatting and laughing and slowing down for a few minutes to listen when our child has something to say - really listen with all our attention, not just half our brains. Because its through listening that we connect with our children on a deeper level and get to know them. Building relationships isnt about large quantities of time, its about quality moments.

Mustering the energy to manage wayward children on top of working is a big challenge. When were busy, its easy to slip into the trap of ignoring children when theyre being good and overreacting to behaviour we dont like. Your attention means everything to your children, and theyll do pretty much anything to get it.

Working parents are often racked with guilt about not being able to give their children enough attention. But its not how much attention we give thats the crucial issue, its where we direct it. Creating a happy family dynamic isnt about finding extra hours (or minutes), its about parenting smarter by targeting your attention towards the behaviour you want to encourage.

Avoid constant firefighting by setting some clear, simple and positive ground rules. Children are used to having golden rules at school or nursery, so have some at home too.

The best rules help children focus on what good behaviour looks like so they can do it more often. If the kids are constantly bickering, introduce a ground rule like be a team to encourage alternative behaviour. If mean comments are the issue, then use kind words might be a good rule. Or, if physical aggression is the problem, be gentle. Use praise and attention smartly to positively reinforce the behaviour you want to encourage.

Parental involvement is a great thing. But taking over and doing too much for our children isnt good for them. And it also risks stretching parents beyond whats humanly possible. In order to develop good self-esteem and life skills, children need to do things for themselves, to make mistakes and to learn from their failures.

Running around picking up after children who are old enough to do things for themselves is not an act of love, its an act of developmental sabotage. And it means youll never have enough time to enjoy being a member of your family. Sometimes, when it comes to parenting, less really is more.

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6 ways to be a happy working parent - Echo Live

Photos of the longest drive-thru lines in Los Angeles are a sight to see – The Takeout

Photo: AaronP/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images (Getty Images)

Brace yourself: Eater Los Angeleshas published drone photos of the long, long lines of cars in the drive-thru lanes at some of LAs popular fast food spots, and the images are fascinating but almost viscerally unpleasant. From Krispy Kreme to Raising Canes, Hollywood to Gardena, each scene depicts an orderly, cone-riddled one-way vehicular rats nest.

I lived in Los Angeles near one of the citys most popular In-N-Out Burger locations well before any pandemic, and I can attest that, whether ordering at the counter or the drive-thru, you were never In-N-Out in under 40 minutes. Hell, even Randys Donuts is a half-hour ordeal at the best of times. I can only imagine how much longer its taking now. No burger or fritter in the world is this good, is it?

Truthfully, I cant possibly knock the residents of Los Angeles for their fast food fervor. Before its closure in 2014, it was a summer ritual of mine to spend hours in line at beloved Chicago institution Hot Dougs. When the weather forecast was good, Id pick up an iced coffee just before 8 a.m., walk the two miles to the hot dog emporium, and grab a spot near the front of the ever growing line until it opened at 10 a.m. (or maybe 10:30?). There was true camaraderie in the waiting: youd ask, and be asked, if it was a first-time visit, and whether todays order might include the duck fat fries. I had a friend who always brought Yahtzee dice and wed play right on the pavement until our butts fell asleep. The hot dogs were an occasion, and the anticipation was a key part of the proceedings.

I suppose its the same principle if you head to an LA drive-thru with a roommate or significant other. As you inch forward in line, you can blast music, play games on your phone, maybe even invite the dog along for the rideEater even photographed a couple of savvy customers playing Nintendo Switch on their dashboard. Together but apart is the golden rule, and a packed fast food parking lot might be the image of our new normal.

As Eater points out, Pandemic or not, dining in cars is a California tradition and as these hour-long lines show, one not likely to go away any time soon.

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Photos of the longest drive-thru lines in Los Angeles are a sight to see - The Takeout

The Golden Rule applies now, during the pandemic, more than ever | McKibben – Tallahassee Democrat

Rev. Candace McKibben, Guest Columnist Published 9:25 p.m. ET May 3, 2020

Candace McKibben(Photo: Candace McKibben)

I have thought about the difference between prescriptive and descriptive several times of late. It is a distinction I first remember considering in seminary regarding scripture. We learned the importance of distinguishing between passages that describe what was happening and those that prescribe what ought to happen. This distinction is functional in linguistics, business, ethics, psychologyand more.

It is where we sit in the midst of this pandemic as we are learning daily the description of how the virus operates and the prescription of how we can best respond. The challenge is the unknown and the humility required for us to follow those prescriptive precautions known to be effective, when we are longing to return to some semblance of normalcy sooner rather than later.

The discipline in following the prescribed wisdom regarding COVID-19 comes from a place deep in the human spirit. Most religions and cultures have some prescription for how we treat ourselves and others and the significant relationship between the two. It is so prevalent it is known as the Golden Rule. Not silver or bronze;this rule takes first place.

From the Buddhist, Hurt not others in ways that you yourself would find hurtful, to Zoroastrianisms, That nature alone is good which refrains from doing to another whatsoever is not good for itself, the wisest among us realize the mutual benefit in looking out for each other.

Dr. Karen Armstrong, who has conducted decades of research on the worlds religions, says Confucius was the first person known to offer the Golden Rule when he told his disciples, Never treat others as you would not like to be treated yourself. Jesus, some 500 years later told his disciples, quoting Leviticus 19:18, Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. Whether approached negatively or positively, the intent is the same. We are to take into account the well-being of others in how we act.

Last summer, my granddaughter Rylee and I were driving from Jacksonville to Cocoa Beach when I asked her about her collegeapplication process. She told me she had to write an essay about her core values. I was intrigued and asked her what values she identified, expecting to hear love, courage, honesty and the like. Instead she said, Knowledge, accountability and reciprocity.

Reciprocity is the moral principle at work in the golden rule. As humans, we have the capacity for empathy, for understanding and relating to the feelings of another, for putting ourselves in the shoes of another and acting accordingly. I agree with Rylee. It is an important value, perhaps now more than ever.

As we think of the pandemic and the suffering it is causing globally, both literally and figuratively, as it impacts the whole globe in holistic ways of health and well-being, it is tempting to retreat. It is also understandable to focus on me and mine. But it is not our better angels at work when we do so. When we insist on our way at the peril of others, we are forsaking our better nature.

As we move forward, we want to find ways to continue to protect ourselves and others by washing our hands well and frequently, by wearing masks and gloves when out for necessary business, by limiting physical proximity to others while retaining social contact in the ways that are not threatening to ourselves or to others, and by doing what we can safely do to support the needs of those who are hardest hit by this pandemic.

As community members and leaders, we can listen to the wisest counsel and use our best judgment regarding re-engagement in society, caring about our own well-being and that of others. We can remember the potential for harm in not being cautious, not just harm to ourselves, but harm to others which inevitably diminishes our own spirits.

If we can continue to practice the Golden Rule, which is the prescribed way forward through this pandemic, we will come out on the other side with a description of humanity at its best, touched by the divine spark, the greater good in us all. It is my prayer that we remain vigilant in caring for each other as we care for ourselves.

The Rev. Candace McKibben is an ordained minister who serves as the director of faith outreach at Big Bend Hospice and as pastor of Tallahassee Fellowship.

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The Golden Rule applies now, during the pandemic, more than ever | McKibben - Tallahassee Democrat

Commentary: On other side of this crisis, what will humanity be? – San Antonio Express-News

Who are we in the midst of COVID-19?

Sometimes I find myself imagining the Gods eye view of our human movement during these surreal times. The image is daunting and more than the eye of my heart can take in during the most serious of moments.

Every once in a while, a wee bit of lightness of heart will pop in and the image becomes somewhat like ants at a picnic. Some scrambling. Some feasting on bits or biting. Some carrying 10 to 50 times their capacity. Some alone and lost while others run for their lives. Some huddle, focused on completing the task in front of them. Many walking and working together in a united and forward mission to a concerted drum of a destination only known to them.

The image makes me smile. It somehow lightens the load and gives me hope for us human creatures.

The pandemic has brought us all back down to earth and to our knees. The knee-state in a crisis is an observable state of being. Sometimes in the scramble it appears much like begging. The human brain in crisis is charged with chemicals that fog our reason. We may find ourselves regressing, or we may simply be grabbing for everything we can get our hands on. Solutions as well as stuff. For many, even if they rarely prayed, the knee-state looks much like prayer. The knee-state is a humbling and human movement.

Rapid research and first responders, mass consumption and economic impact, declarations and essays, poems and songs are all being created in this moment in time. We are creative creatures and social beings finding ourselves for the first moment in history contained in an incubator of the same global crisis. We find ourselves in a moment we did not plan for and certainly not a moment we would wish to be in.

Who do we want to be? This C-spin caused a global pause and is giving us opportunity to choose a clearer path. Hindsight is said to be 20/20, but we live in 2020 with the human capacity to actually see the larger-than-life view of our interdependent planet. We have the most research on best practices and the human condition than ever before, coupled with the highest levels of technology.

Wouldnt it be theoretically possible to come out on the other side of COVID-19 better, even perhaps at our best, than we were before? Is that such a far-reaching question to ask of ourselves? To expect of ourselves? We have the potential to blow ourselves up. We must certainly then have the potential to believe in the best of ourselves and each other as well.

Is there a missing element in this equation of potential? Is there a bit of lightness we can see in our current complexities that might shed a glimmer of hope on the globe?

The Rev. Ann Helmke discusses the pandemics impact on faith and worship, and the guidance found in the word of God.

There is a perennial and ancient element that spans across time, found in all the world religions. Some call it the golden rule or the ethic of reciprocity. Some call it love on behalf of all life.

We see it in San Antonio. People helping other people instead of grabbing things or giving up in despair. First responders. Health care and essential city workers.

We see it in San Antonians carrying many more times their weight in caring for others. Food banks and food pantries and senior centers providing tens of thousands of meals.

We see it in San Antonios civic leaders and faith leaders huddling together to address and complete the most complex of decisions in front of them. Meeting continually. Updating daily. Making decisions that no one wants to hear, but that everyone needs to hear, for the survival and thriving of our common humanity.

If a drone were flying above all of San Antonio, we might even see many of us working together in a united and forward mission while walking to a concerted drumbeat of a destination not yet clearly known.

Must it be this way? Not yet clearly known? Compassion is a choice and a systemic strategy of intentional actions based on millennia of human experience and research.

The best drumbeat is the one that resonates with the heartbeat.

The Rev. Ann Helmke is the faith-based initiative liaison for the city of San Antonio Department of Human Services.

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Commentary: On other side of this crisis, what will humanity be? - San Antonio Express-News

State reveals plan to test every resident and employee in all 286 nursing homes in next 2 months; posts more reopening guidance – Hoptown Chronicle

Gov. Andy Beshear and Health Secretary Eric Friedlander announced a plan Friday to test every nursing-home resident and employee in the state for free.

We are now going to be very targeted in making sure that we know the situation in each of these facilities, especially for the most vulnerable, and are able to take some quick action, Beshear said at his daily briefing. Around 58 percent of the states COVID-19 deaths have been nursing-home residents.

Friedlander said, With the ability to now test every resident of our long-term care facilities, we can take an even more aggressive approach to our battle against the coronavirus. He said the state,Norton HealthCareand local health departments and emergency management leaders would be testing every resident and every staff member at all 286 skilled nursing homes in Kentucky.

He stressed that to get tests, a facility must have a plan for how to manage whatever the tests reveal. Asked how a facility would remain staffed if it finds many of its employees are infected, he said the state would help.

Friedlander noted the state has sent medical and nursing students to help, is using the National Guard a one facility in Northern Kentucky,and has received staff help from hospitals. He said Nortonhas sent nurses and certified nursing assistants to hold facilities together, and the states nursing home task force is working on way to match up recent graduates and facilities that need staff.

He said the state has provided additional reimbursements, support and guidance to the facilities,but worried a month ago about falling short of test kits and and personal protective equipment, and frankly, we had a long way to go.

At this point, the state has tested about 10 percent of all residents, and testing all of them would take a couple of months to get all of the testing done, Friedlander said.

He said the state is prioritizing facilities with eight factors, including their current rate of infection and if they are in a county with high rates of positive tests. He said they have tested about a third of the homes that have been placed in the highest category.

The state would also test in assisted-living facilities when they start to have trouble, Friedlander said, and that would bring them to the top of the list.

Friedlander said one of the best things Kentucky did was be one of the first states to stop visitation at the nursing homes, but he acknowledged that this has been hard of residents and families, and that Mothers Day is approaching. He encouraged facilities to find creative ways to allow visitation, through closed windows, Plexiglas visitation stations or technological assistance, which the state has provided in some cases.

We know that you miss meeting with your loved ones, he said. That is a very big sacrifice that you have made, but it is an important sacrifice and as the governor says, you have saved lives.

Beshear said nine more residents and three more employees have tested positive in Kentucky long-term care facilities, bringing the respective totals to 862 residents and 356 staff. In 81 facilities, 174 residents and two staffers have died.Click herefor more information.

Reopenings:Beshear said the state had posted the minimum requirements for all businesses and organizations that will open through May 20.

Guidance has been added for government offices and agencies, which can open May 18; funeral homes, which can open May 20; and places of worship and retail under Healthy At Workatkycovid19.ky.gov.

Beshear praised the efforts of the faith community in drafting these guidelines, specifically pointing to theKentucky Baptist Conventionand theKentucky Council of Churches.

Therequirementssay that houses of worship will need to limit attendance to one-third of occupancy, including clergy; maintain six feet of physical distance between attendees, even in rows; not provide communal food or beverages; avoid handshaking and hugs; wear masks or face coverings; increase sanitization; avoid live choir or singing; consider taking temperatures or asking about symptoms, and not admit those who have them; use greeters and markers to guide social distancing; and allow only one person in a restroom at a time, with adequate hand sanitizer and soap. It adds that youth services should not resume until June 15, the same date child-care facilities are tentatively set to reopen.

Beshear said, Remember, listen to your faith leader. If they tell you that theyre not ready and that they dont think that its safe, then you should wait. He added that this should be the case for all businesses.

Testing:Beshear stressed the importance of testing and contact tracing as the state reopens its economy, and said Kentucky now has the capacity to do about 50,000 tests a week, which would more than meet the federal guidelines for reopening.

He said the next step is to make sure people use that testing capacity, even if they dont have symptoms, since many with the virus are asymptomatic but can still infect others.

Making sure people get tested is our new challenge, Beshear said, adding that is preferable to the challenges of the last two months.

We dont have to make excuses anymore, he said. Were not facing the same type of shortages. So lets make sure as we go back to being healthy at work that were doing everything we can to take care of those around us.

Again, Beshear pleaded with Kentuckians to wear masks, especially as many places reopen Monday.

Holding up his mask, he said, Knowing that the decision to wear one of these may be the difference if you are asymptomatic between someone else living and someone else dying. It is just one small thing I can do to live out my faith, that Golden Rule: How I can be a good neighbor, how I can be ethical in this time of the coronavirus?

At the start of his briefing, Beshear made a different sort of argument: The healthiest economy coming out of 2019 is the one thats able to keep the virus contained as they successfully reopen. That is what our plan is designed to do.

(Kentucky Health News is an independent news service of the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues, based in the School of Journalism and Media at the University of Kentucky, with support from the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky.)

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State reveals plan to test every resident and employee in all 286 nursing homes in next 2 months; posts more reopening guidance - Hoptown Chronicle

New Jersey Schools Work to Avoid Zoombombing Hacks – Government Technology

(TNS) As video conferencing platforms like Zoom become the norm for hosting classes online,Burlington County. N.J., schoolsare becoming increasingly comfortable with them, especially as the rest of the school year is set to take placeremotely.

But the transition has also come with some unexpected challenges around the nation, classes have beeninterrupted by "zoom bombings,"in which hackers get into online classes, and often share inappropriate language or pornographic images with the virtual classroom.

Lumberton fell victim to one of those hacks recently. The township school district and police are investigating the April 28 incident, in which a hacker displayed racist words and pornographic images to a middle school class.

Superintendent Joe Langowski said that by Tuesday, the district transitioned to Google Hangouts for all video conferencing moving forward, but wished not to speak about Zoom further.

Sometimes, the issue of "zoom bombing" can be caused by Zoom meeting links being distributed publicly, whether on a website or social media, but the cause of the Lumberton incident is still being investigated.

The FBI is also investigating nationwide zoom bombings,USA Today reported earlier in April.

"As large numbers of people turn to video-teleconferencing (VTC) platforms to stay connected in the wake of the COVID-19 crisis, reports of VTC hijacking (also called zoom-bombing) are emerging nationwide," the FBI Boston field office warned. "The FBI has received multiple reports of conferences being disrupted by pornographic and/or hate images and threatening language."

While navigating remote learning technology is new for many educators, there are some key safety features available for those using the platform.

Tabernacle is among the school districts continuing to Zoom, and Superintendent and Principal Shaun Banin outlined some of the district's safety measures Friday.

"We have it set up so there's a waiting room. By default, all education accounts have a pre-selection, so when someone signs up, the teacher has to let them in," Banin explained.

There's also an option in which the video chat host usually the teacher, for class meetings can prohibit other members of the chat from sharing their computer screen with the rest of the group, he said.

The host of a video conference also has a variety of controls, such as turning off other participants' videos or microphones, removing participants, and locking a meeting so no new participants can join it, according toZoom's guide for school administrators.

Outside of the video, the host can also prohibit private chats between members of a Zoom group and limit who can and cannot use the direct messaging feature.

Westfield Friends' Head of School Margaret Haviland said the small Cinnaminson school plans to leave some room in its budget next school year to pay for future Zoom upgrades as it continues to update its security.

"We control at a high level what teachers can and can't do," she said. "Passwords are required to get in, and we don't publish our Zoom meetings publicly. All my teachers use the waiting room feature and only admit names of students they recognize."

Recently, Westfield held a town hall meeting for parents, for which the parents had to ask Haviland's assistant to send them the meeting link in an email.

"Right now everyone's trying to find the best way to interact with their students," Banin added. "You're going to have hiccups along the way, but if you're constantly doing what you think is best, that's the golden rule in education."

2020 Burlington County Times, Willingboro, N.J.Distributed byTribune Content Agency, LLC.

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New Jersey Schools Work to Avoid Zoombombing Hacks - Government Technology

The Grandmother I Always Wanted: Things I Learned From Mother – Coronado Eagle and Journal

As a young mother, I heard a lot of yelling from neighborhood mothers reprimanding their children, and I quietly determined that I would never do that. I may not have been a yeller, but I certainly spoke harshly. My mother never yelled, never raised her voice. She would softly speak wisdom; tears might run when I was rude. Consequently, I wanted to be more like my mother.

Although she worked six days a week until I was thirteen and five days a week from 3 to 11 p.m. as an RN when I was a teenager, which permitted very little time together, her influence was indelible. When she started work as a nurse, she let it be known that when her girls called, she would talk with them. She may have been absent in body but not in attention.

Her philosophy and strong faith have carried me through my lifetime. I am grateful. She expected my sister Jean and me to do our best because our best would be sufficient. Having a strong work ethic, doing more than the minimum for an employer, earned me the Waitress of the Summer recognition when I worked at the Virginia Beach Rathskeller restaurant before my senior year in college. Since school was our job, we studied not only to get good grades but, also, to learn what we would need for the future. Preparing for life as an adult was important to her. She wanted us to be self-sufficient, to be able to take charge when circumstances demanded it. Knowing we could support ourselves would give us the confidence necessary for contentment.

Growing up, we were taught to be nice to everyone, no matter how they treated you, which was, of course, impossible for us children at times. Mother always excused bad behavior in everyone since her mantra was Be kind to everyone because you dont know what kind of day theyve had. She even excused my lippy backtalk with, Id rather you blow up at home because you have to get it out of your system some way, or youll get an ulcer. Besides, its better to behave when youre away from home.

Perhaps her best lesson for me was, Everything works out for the best in the long run, Linda, but it may be a very long run. If you have done your part and can do no more, let it rest. If the results are inevitable, you have no choice but to adjust to it. Sometimes the immediate result is only temporary. That attitude makes life much more pleasant.

Mother was adamant about following rules, whether it was game rules, underage drinking, paying the correct amount when you aged up to adult prices, reimbursing an overcharge, or being honest on your taxes. I used that concept with my children when I said, If you dont like a rule, do all you can to change it, but obey it while it remains a rule.

Obeying the rules undoubtedly came from her strong Christian beliefs, which meant more than weekly church attendance was required. Although she never preached, her life and her little sayings transferred her values and expectations to us. She lived the Golden Rule, Treat others as you want to be treated which was fully ingrained into her character. Her integrity surfaced in one saying which kept me out of a lot of trouble: It doesnt matter if Mother knows what youre doing; God sees everything you do, and thats more important.

Mother was, also, very pragmatic. She knew and accepted that sometimes you had to be at the right place at the right time and that sometimes Its not what you know but who you know. With so few jobs for a sixteen-year-old in my small hometown, I knew I got a job at the swimming pool as a cashier because my beloved Uncle Tom, an All-American for Duke University, was the manager. I, also, knew that I had to do my best to be rehired and not embarrass the family!

Mother took nutrition courses in college before entering nursing school, so we had balanced, healthy meals. Consequently, Jean and I rarely took medicine, even an aspirin. If you had a headache, obviously you had not gotten enough sleep and you went right to bed. If you had a stomachache, you must be constipated, so you immediately had to drink a large glass of water or eat a whole apple. A fever indicated you were ill, but usually that simply meant going to bed until it passed.

Eating breakfast every morning was expected: Always eat breakfast so you get those gastric juices out of your stomach, or you might get an ulcer. Since Jean and I are relatively healthy for our age, her rules have served us well. While I am a self-proclaimed junk food junky who enjoys fast food when traveling and ice cream, cookies, and desserts when my weight allows the extra calories, the three meals a day are usually supplied with lots of fruits and vegetables.

When I started journaling, I remembered her words, Never write down anything you dont want the world to read. Words are somewhat permanent. As I journal for my family to later read, I am conscious of things I want them to remember. Some things are better left unsaid, however, so I censor what I write. No one needs to relive pain that has passed.

One of my former parenting students once called after graduation and said, When I was sitting in your parenting classes, Id think, Yeah, yeah, but now I hear you talking to me when Jesse does something. I hear my mothers sayings talking to me, too. As an adult, I know her influence is still strong in my life.

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The Grandmother I Always Wanted: Things I Learned From Mother - Coronado Eagle and Journal

Ask the pros: best tips and tricks to land a job – KLKN

Heartland Staffing Solutions on North 48th and R streets would like to welcome you to the world of employment.

When youre looking for a job, it can be a difficult time. Especially through COVID and the loss of jobs nationwide, there are a lot of pressures out there.

Heartland Staffing Solutions has the tips and tricks to stay on top of the game. They work with you to find long-term career paths that sticks to your liking.

So we looked at a number of different jobs and kind of met in the middle, found a great place and just took off from there. Its really easy, said Tristan Nava, a gentleman who just recently landed a job as a Warehouse Clerk at Rivers Metal and used the job finding process through Heartland Staffing Solutions.

What would you like to do first of all, just dream, what would you like to do, then research companies that do what youd like to do and be realistic in your skill, so do an inventory of that, and then reach out to the companies, if they dont have any postings, doesnt matter, you reach out, because I bet you that one of them will be looking, but they havent posted the job yet, said Cathy Black, co-owner at Heartland Staffing Solutions alongside her sister, Tina Robinson.

I mean period, just get yourself out there, said Nava.

They say to apply, apply, APPLY.

The hard work is the golden rule. said Black. You know when I was a performer I had to audition maybe 30 times to get one gig, well you need to interview many times, you need to submit your application maybe 50 times, 100 times to get one job. If thats what it takes, its your job from 8 in the morning until 5 at night or longer until you find a job.

Then, you keep your tabs on the companies you really want to be a part of.

And follow up with a phone call, how many follow-ups did you do to the companies that you applied. Theres nothing wrong with that, said Black.

Lastly, they say there is a 4 second attention span for each individual reading your resume, so make sure the first 4 seconds exemplify who you are so that you can grab the employers attention.

When youre in your interview, you should LISTEN, SMILE, BE HONEST, and to limit what you say, because LESS IS MORE.

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Ask the pros: best tips and tricks to land a job - KLKN

AMLO demands to know who pays social media that attacks his government. – The Yucatan Times

The President urged social networking companies to explain to him how they sell advertising for bots that attck his government.

MEXICO (Times Media Mexico) Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador demanded to know the Twitter and Facebook statements for the alleged sale of advertising for bots to buy space and attack his government in social networks.

In a press conference, the head of the federal executive said that the golden rule of democracy is transparency, which his government lacks. So far, 80% of all government contracts have been directly assigned, and major constructions have been sealed as confidential.

It was explained to me a mechanism to neutralize the bots, he said It is important to ask Twitter and Facebook to explain how they sell advertising for bots and also, above all, to be accountable, thats the golden rule of democracy transparency. How much do companies in Mexico earn from these companies for buying advertising? It is not known. I think they should report,he said.

AMLOs fake followers.Twitter published an analysis confirming that 54% of Andrs Manuel Lpez Obradors followers are bots, fake hired profiles.

This percentage can be translated into 3 million four hundred and thirty-seven thousand fake users.

This was an apparent response to the Presidents statements yesterday, where he demanded that the company reveal which people were behind the attacks on its image with the use of bots.

Bots, as cybernauts call them, are automated fictitious users created to attack or defend subjects, characters, or causes, depending on who pays for the digital service of the one who manages them.

Twitters response was a very diplomatic slap in the wrist to the Mexican President. A clear example that both attacks and defenses of users in networks in favor of the image and interests of the President are a subject that lacks real followers since half are fake cybernauts paid by the federal government.

The other tool used to determine fake followers is Twitter Audit, which also gives Lopez Obrador a high amount of fake followers.

Populists around the world always do the same thing. Blame others for the very practices they conduct.

The Yucatan TimesNewsroom

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AMLO demands to know who pays social media that attacks his government. - The Yucatan Times