Populists understand the power of human emotion. Europes liberals need to grasp it, too – The Guardian

The battle for 1989 was won by illiberal populism. Thats one thing we can say with certainty 30 years on from the fall of the iron curtain. In the narrative spun by Jarosaw Kaczyski, Viktor Orbn and their supporters, democratic transformation turned out to be a fraud, liberal democracy an illusion, and integration with the EU an upmarket form of foreign occupation. The illiberal populists, under the cover of such rhetoric, simultaneously dismantle the rule of law and independent institutions. Meanwhile, liberals seem devoid of ideas or initiative, agreeing only that somehow, it all went wrong.

This is not just about melancholy and misunderstanding. In a sense, post-communist countries became a testing ground after 1989. Both our families came from Warsaw and they struggled not only to survive the upheavals of that era, but to create better lives, if not for themselves, at least for their children. Individually, some succeeded, but it came at a high price. The revolutions of 1989 meant the almost overnight disintegration of entire ways of life. That had an immense impact, even if most people would not have wanted to hang on to their experience of pure socialism.

Todays populists tend to focus only on the downsides of what came after 1989. But how have they been so effective at imposing their interpretation of events, even now, 30 years on?

In the last year of the cold war, the west of our collective imagination was a place of hope Moscow we were more familiar with, and viewed with fear. Yet, contrary to the image often conveyed, the reaction in our countries to the end of communism was far from euphoric.

The promise of freedom and a better life lay on the distant horizon. Day to day, though, we experienced a poverty more humiliating than anything that had come before especially after seeing the west with our own eyes. It is a common mistake to think that illiberal politicians in post-communist countries are popular despite these countries successes. The contrary seems more plausible: their popularity is a consequence of the success.

At a time when populist leaders are in power in other parts of the world, including the US, it may be instructive to look at the causes of illiberal populism generally.

Our focus is on an aspect of human nature that is underexplored in political analysis: namely political emotion, and in particular, the feeling of loss.

It is astonishing to us to hear people in the US, the UK, France or Italy express views so familiar to us: Our jobs are being stolen, The world is changing too much, I dont recognise my country. This is where 1989 meets 2019 at least in the populists narratives. Their pessimistic interpretation of the fall of communism is mirrored in the current over-simplifications.

The year 1989 was one of those breakthrough moments in human history whose impact is felt in contradictory ways. As Charles Dickens wrote about 1789 in A Tale of Two Cities, it was the best of times and the worst of times. It was a spring of hope, and a winter of despair, it was indeed the age of wisdom and the age of foolishness.

The same duality was felt elsewhere. As well as the fall of communism, 1989 marked the beginning of an era of global change and acceleration. Quality of life and longevity improved, as revolutions were occurring in technology, communication, and social mobility. There was simultaneous gain and loss.

Central and eastern Europe has registered extraordinary economic growth on almost every parameter since the end of communism. But change, when it happens so swiftly and completely, can also involve great loss for the individual. We dont just mean the disappearance of jobs or bankruptcies. We mean something much deeper. A loss that relates to the micro-world of secure long-term relationships, identity and feelings of security, so important in the classical liberalism of Adam Smith and JS Mill.

In German, there is a word that captures this disruption: schleudern, which means to spin round and round as in a washing machine. In the social sense, our world spun repeatedly as we strived for a better future. This is the context in which we can see that illiberal populists are effective not because they buy voters, or manipulate negative emotions, such as fear or rage. Their skill is to recognise and empathise with feelings of loss when liberals tactlessly disregard or ridicule them.

And it is how we can explain the reactionary aspect of populism in eastern Europe, and beyond. Brexiters won with the slogan Take back control, and Donald Trump cut through with Make America great again. Kaczyski in Poland, Bjrn Hcke in Germany and Thierry Baudet in the Netherlands all talk about protecting the traditional values of their societies (usually without being specific about what this would mean).

Liberals often feel overwhelmed by this kind of politics. A peculiar defeatism surrounds the failure of liberal democracy to deliver. Liberals also fear that pandering to emotion plays the same game as populists. They prefer to calm feelings down or just steer clear of them.

Enemies of democracy have, of course, always manipulated feelings. Yet we believe that theres a key lesson from 1989 that liberalism can learn. We need a passionate defence of liberal democracy and the liberal order. We also need to embrace the feeling of loss and translate it into something positive and enriching, into a feeling about political community.

How could this be done? The collective sense of loss we have been describing is akin to the grief that follows the death of a loved one. In bereavement our first reaction is to look back, to dwell on the loss. Reactionary populisms concentration on the negative aspects of transformation might be compared with bereavement. As humans we know that after bereavement comes the recovery phase. And this means looking to the future and building networks of friends. It requires courage, hope and compassion especially for those who think so differently that they vote for populists.

This is what the liberalism of the future could mean. It could retell the story of 1989, while doing justice to this great and complex moment. Central and eastern Europe still has an important message for the world. It is the knowledge that the greatest successes of liberal democracy, including 1989, were enabled by passionate hope.

Karolina Wigura is a historian, political editor of the Polish weekly Kultural Liberalna and a fellow at the Institute of Advanced Studies in Berlin

Jarosaw Kuisz is a historian, editor-in-chief of the Polish weekly Kultura Liberalna and a fellow at the Institute of Advanced Studies in Berlin

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Populists understand the power of human emotion. Europes liberals need to grasp it, too - The Guardian

Global Genomic Biomarker Market Forecast (2019-2024) Report: By Regions, Type and Application with Sales and Revenue Analysis – Internet Shots

With the help of 15 chapters spread over 100 pages this report describe Genomic Biomarker Introduction, product scope, market overview, market opportunities, market risk, and market driving force. Later it provide top manufacturers sales, revenue, and price of Genomic Biomarker, in 2017 and 2018 followed by regional and country wise analysis of sales, revenue and market share. Added to above, the important forecasting information by regions, type and application, with sales and revenue from 2018 to 2024 is provided in this research report. At last information about Genomic Biomarker sales channel, distributors, traders, dealers, and research findings completes the global Genomic Biomarker market research report.

Access Report Details at: https://www.themarketreports.com/report/global-genomic-biomarker-market-by-manufacturers-countries-type-and-application-forecast

Market share of global Genomic Biomarker industry is dominate by companies like Bio-Rad, Beckman Coulter, Myriad Genetics, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Roche, QIAGEN, Epigenomics, Almac, Pfizer, Human Longevity, ValiRx, Personalis, Eagle Genomics, Empire Genomics, Agilent, Illumina and others which are profiled in this report as well in terms of Sales, Price, Revenue, Gross Margin and Market Share (2018-2019).

Market Segment by Regions, regional analysis covers:

Market Segment by Type, covers:

Market Segment by Applications, can be divided into

Purchase this premium research report at: https://www.themarketreports.com/report/buy-now/1500402

Table of Contents

1 Market Overview

2 Manufacturers Profiles

3 Global Genomic Biomarker Market Competitions, by Manufacturer

4 Global Genomic Biomarker Market Analysis by Regions

5 North America Genomic Biomarker by Countries

6 Europe Genomic Biomarker by Countries

7 Asia-Pacific Genomic Biomarker by Countries

8 South America Genomic Biomarker by Countries

9 Middle East and Africa Genomic Biomarker by Countries

10 Global Genomic Biomarker Market Segment by Type

11 Global Genomic Biomarker Market Segment by Application

12 Genomic Biomarker Market Forecast (2019-2024)

13 Sales Channel, Distributors, Traders and Dealers

14 Research Findings and Conclusion

15 Appendix

Ask your report related queries at: https://www.themarketreports.com/report/ask-your-query/1500402

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Global Genomic Biomarker Market Forecast (2019-2024) Report: By Regions, Type and Application with Sales and Revenue Analysis - Internet Shots

Vice President Venkaiah Naidu releases commemorative postal stamp and coffee table book to commemorate 100 years of Jamshedpur – Avenue Mail

Vice President Venkaiah Naidu releases commemorative postal stamp and coffee table book to commemorate 100 years of Jamshedpur Jamshedpur, Jharkhand February 17, 2020 , by News Desk 188

Applauds Tata group`s ethical approach to business

Jamshedpur, Feb 17: M Venkaiah Naidu, Vice President of India,released the commemorative postal stamp, coffee table book at Tata Auditorium -XLRI today. He was the Chief Guest of the Commemorative Function of 100 Years of Jamshedpur and was accompanied byDroupadi Murmu, Governor of Jharkhand; Champai Soren, Minister of Welfare, Government of Jharkhand andAnil Kumar, Chief Post Master General,Jharkhand.

Addressing the gathering at Tata Auditorium XLRI, the Honble Vice President of India applauded the Tata group for its ethical approach to business and commended Tata Steel for its contribution towards improving the quality of life of the community for over 100 years. Hedescribed Jamshedpur as Indias first planned industrial city that had earned the distinction of becoming the countrys role model for sustainable urban and industrial development.

He dwelt at length on the priorities of the government and outlined the investment opportunities that can contribute to the economic growth of the country. He said that the development of a sustainable strategy is increasingly becoming an imperative for companies survival and longevity and Jamshedpur is a glowing example of sustainable development.

In her address,Droupadi Murmu, Governor of Jharkhandsaid that over the last 100 years, Jamshedpur had transformed itself to become the most populous and economically-prosperous city of Jharkhand. She stressed upon the imperatives to preserve and protect the States rich tribal culture and heritage.Tribal folk and dance forms such as Jhumar, Chhau, Mundari and Santhali must not just be preserved but also nurtured. Focus should also be laid on the preservation of tribal languages, practices and social ethos,she said.

TV Narendran,CEO & Managing Director of Tata Steel, recalled that, in the year 1919, the then Governor General of India, Lord Chelmsford, had rechristened Sakchi as Jamshedpur in honour of its Founder, Jamsetji Nusserwanji Tata. He thanked the Government of India for releasing a commemorative postal stamp to mark the centenary of the naming of the city.

Earlier in the day,Vice President of India visited the Centre for Excellence (CFE), where he and Honble Governor of Jharkhand planted banyan tree saplings. They were facilitated through a walkthrough exhibition on the 100-year journey of Tata Workers Union (TWU) by R Ravi Prasad, President TWU. Committee Members of TWU were also present on the occasion and introduced to the Vice president of India.TWU is the first union in the country to complete 100 years having been built on the fundamental principle and spirit of working together.

Vice President of India and Governor of Jharkhand were also shown the Tata Steel Archivesat CFE where the Tata Steel story was shared with them. Tata Steel Archives is the first Business Archives in the country.

Among those present at CFE from Tata Steel were Suresh Dutt Tripathi, Vice President (Human Resource Management), Chanakya Chaudhary, Vice President (Corporate Services) and other officers from the leadership team of Corporate Services.

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Vice President Venkaiah Naidu releases commemorative postal stamp and coffee table book to commemorate 100 years of Jamshedpur - Avenue Mail

Small politics and the rise of ‘black swans’ | TheHill – The Hill

During the drama of the impeachment hearings and the run up to Iowa Democratic caucuses, both the Trump administration and Congress missed two stunning yet unheralded scientific studies last month. Each study describes health or environmental findings that could present black swan political implications unforeseen events with severe consequences.

First, the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) reported that life expectancy in the United States declined for the third consecutive year Americans are simply not living as long as they did even a few years ago.The JAMA study found that middle-aged adults are dying as a result of drug overdoses, alcohol abuse, suicides, and organ system diseases across all racial groups. Specifically, New England and the Ohio Valley have witnessed the largest relative increases in midlife mortality rates. From 2010-2017 JAMA estimates that there were 33,307 excessive deaths of middle-aged adults. Worse yet, globally, the U.S. ranks 43rd in life expectancy and is falling further behind other rich nations. America is becoming a middle tier country on one of the core metrics of human development.

Second, the United Nations offered a grim assessment of global progress towards reducing carbon emissions and curbing the worse consequences of climate change. The UN observed last month that temperatures are on pace to rise as much as 5.8 degrees Fahrenheit by the end of the century. At this rate, there will be life-altering effects. Coral reefs will dissolve in increasingly acidic oceans. Some coastal cities will be inundated by rising seas. In parts of South Asia, the Arabian Peninsula and the Horn of Africa, intense heat and humidity will be incompatible with human life. Climate stress is likely to lead to deepening conflict and increased grievances of citizens against their governments.

Just in 2020, the UNs emergency response chief anticipates that 168 million people will need help and protection in crises around the world requiring nearly $29 billion in humanitarian aid.

The trajectory for chaos and displacement is likely to worsen as climate shock deepens.

These studies present far-reaching consequences for the United States and suggest that real gains in human development are reversible. This de-development or the reversal of 20th Century health gains is not likely to make headlines in the 2020 elections. In the generation ahead, declining health outcomes for the most vulnerable people and communities will deepen political gaps in the United States and fuel disruptive conflict globally.

How serious are these trends?The United States has not experienced a sustained decline in expected life span at birth in a century, a trend not seen since the mass death of World War I and the flu pandemic. Midlife mortality is not equally distributed, the top 1 percent of male income earners live 15 years longer than men at the bottom 1 percent. For women, life expectancy differs by 10 years. Midlife mortality is the result of systemic failures that are reversing human development particularly in poorer communities.

Equally as troubling, the U.S. maternal mortality rate has more than doubled from 10.3 per 100,000 live births in 1991 to 23.8 in 2014.In contrast to the significant global improvement, the U.S. is the only developed country experiencing worsening maternal mortality rates. Declining life expectancy, massive and increasing differences in longevity based on income, and increasing maternal mortality rates demonstrate that American health outcomes are fragile despite the U.S. being the largest economy in the world.

The 21st Century has experienced de-development through the lens of two brutal examples. Witness the impact of war in Syria and the consequences of widespread displacement and destruction. Venezuela, once a thriving nation, is on track to be the largest refugee crisis in 2020, fueled by authoritarian leadership which has overseen the collapse of the entire economy and drove millions into poverty.

Climate changes will serve as an accelerant to de-development and could place hundreds of millions of more people at grave risk.

Simply, climate shock threatens the reversal of progress made in the second half of the 20th century to improve the human condition. Poor communities in Bangladesh, Yemen, Somalia as well as the Mississippi Delta and Puerto Rico will carry the greatest level of social and economic disruption.

Scenes such as the New Orleans Superdome after Hurricane Katrina will be commonplace. Todays 168 million displaced could very well be the floor for global displacement. As de-development deepens, grievances against local and central governments will grow, fueling nativistic instincts among political leaders and radicalization among marginalized communities. Geo-political conflict seems inevitable, particularly as the post-World War II order begins to erode. No doubt China and Russia will seek to leverage disruption to their advantage while undermining American institutions and interests.

Political dysfunction in the federal government today does not lend itself to long-term strategic planning about black swan challenges to people, communities, or American global leadership in the next decade.Yet, the costs of worsening health outcomes arising from economic marginalization or, in the years ahead, from climate shock will present historic geo-political risks.

In the absence of serious administration or congressional leadership, strategy, innovation and solutions will have to come from states and local governments, private sector leaders, and global research universities.

The shocks are inevitable; preparation is a national choice.

R.David Harden is managing director of the Georgetown Strategy Group and former assistant administrator at USAIDs Bureau for Democracy, Conflict, and Humanitarian Assistance. He was a minister counselor in the Senior Foreign Service. In May of 2019, President TrumpDonald John TrumpRepublicans aim to avoid war with White House over impeachment strategy New York Times editorial board calls for Trump's impeachment Trump rips Michigan Rep. Dingell after Fox News appearance: 'Really pathetic!' MORE awarded Mr. Harden the Distinguished Service Award, the highest award in the Foreign Service, for sustained extraordinary accomplishment in the conduct of the foreign policy.

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Small politics and the rise of 'black swans' | TheHill - The Hill

My lover has left me at the age of 77, and I really miss her – The Guardian

The dilemma Im 77 and have been married for 54 years. Seven years ago, I delivered the eulogy for a childhood friend. Afterwards the lady next to me held my hand and said, Good job. On impulse, I later found her phone number and called her. It was the start of a seven-year affair. She knew I was married. She was separated and later divorced her husband. I told her that divorcing my wife was out of the question. Also, I said eventually that someone would come along and steal her heart and that she would leave me.

Our relationship was wonderful. In time she mentioned that she would like more. Even asked what it would be like if we were together all the time. I brushed these questions off, usually. I thought it was an ideal situation for both of us. She had grandchildren to look after and her daughter was going through a difficult marriage. Our relationship was not going any further. She turned 72 and I knew she was concerned about getting older.

Well, it happened. Her only sibling passed away and a childhood friend who she dated 50 years ago came to the funeral. Afterwards she told me they were in love and that he was her soulmate. I bid her farewell and good luck. We have not communicated for four months. Do you think shell contact me?

Mariella replies Well, this is unusual. First, it really is a whole new way of looking at what have been described perhaps erroneously as our twilight years. I used to regret the passage of time, as the births, engagement parties and wedding invites dried up and hospital visits and funerals laid a greater claim on my diary. Now Im seeing the Eulogy Years in a whole new light. Who knew the whole funeral business was such a hotbed of recoupling? Perhaps since you now have a vacancy you should go to them more often, not just to say goodbye to old friends but also acquaintances, neighbours, even being a pew-filler at the ill-attended rites of strangers. Judging by your experience it sounds as though the heightened emotional atmosphere isnt just energising the mourners to sing the hymns more fervently.

The late Jimmy Goldsmith famously said that marrying your mistress creates a vacancy, and theres obviously an empty space that you remain eager to fill. That means it wasnt just an accident of timing and chemistry that spurred you into the arms of the lady in question but, rather, an unspecified and still unfulfilled need.

I have to be true to form and sensible here. Why are you still with your wife? Do you see it as the decent, noble thing to do, despite your infidelity? Perhaps youve reached some sort of agreement that weighs the longevity of your union against indiscretions. You do sound like a casual Casanova, determining the boundaries of the relationship based on what suits you best. Is it possible that, even in your late 70s, you were just in it for the sex? If so, I dont know whether to whoop for joy that the libido can rage, rage against the dying of the light, or curl up in exhaustion at the prospect of having to keep going for another two decades.

I suspect youre not writing to me for my wise words on extra-marital relationships but because you think Im psychic! Sorry to disappoint, but I have no idea what your ex-mistress is likely to do. Your three short paragraphs are not enough to give me a clear idea of how this total stranger is likely to respond now that shes found a less furtive relationship.

What I can say is that youve had a pretty good innings. An enjoyable seven-year affair thats left your wife none the wiser seems a pretty good result. You wouldnt be human though if you didnt want more. This inclination not to count our blessings but to want to increase them seems as natural as breathing to Homo sapiens. Having brushed off this womans attempts to make the liaison less ephemeral, youve now discovered what happens when thats all you want. You wont be the first man to learn to appreciate your lover once theyve gone. Truly there really are only two courses of action. The first requires you to get in touch with this woman and admit that her absence has left you longing for contact. Though what you have to offer that she hasnt now got is hard to surmise. The second is to thank your lucky stars for what you had and what you got away with and determine to inject a little of whatever it was that affair offered, even if its simply sex, into your marriage.

To be revealed as a philanderer at any age is no great compliment but for it to happen when you truly are old enough to know better is bordering on embarrassing. My guess is that youre a decent man whos stuck with his partner through lifes ups and downs and, ironically, those are the very qualities that make you attractive to others. For my money thats a far better legacy than chasing around after a woman who clearly wants what youve already got.

If you have a dilemma, send a brief email to mariella.frostrup@observer.co.uk. Follow her on Twitter @mariellaf1

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My lover has left me at the age of 77, and I really miss her - The Guardian

Tiger Woods now exists in a realm above golf. Hes become an icon – The Globe and Mail

A few months after the 2009 car crash that began the unravelling of his career for most of the next decade, Tiger Woods returned to golf.

He wasnt much good, but he was different.

At [previous] tournaments, he would look at you and burn a hole right through you, like you didnt even exist, touring pro Jason Gore a man whod known Woods since they were grade-schoolers told Sports Illustrated years later. He started asking about my wife, asking about my kids. It was nice to see him be, you know, normal.

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The most famous stop on Woodss unlikely comeback tour happened eight months ago in Augusta, Ga., when he won the Masters. But his transformation from an alien robot sent here to destroy golf courses into a recognizably human person found its fullest expression in Australia over the weekend.

Woods arrived at the Presidents Cup a tournament that mixes the best parts of a golf major, a football pep rally and a WWE tag-team match circa 1984 as the rookie captain of the U.S. team.

Tiger Woods holds the Presidents Cup after the U.S. defeated the International team in Melbourne, Australia, on Sunday.

SIMON BAKER/AFP/Getty Images

Presidents Cup captains are traditionally over-the-hill figureheads much like actual presidents. They are there to add gravitas to the event and, one assumes, say things like, Try to hit the ball toward the hole.

Using his discretionary roster picks, Woods tapped himself for the team. That often ends in tears, but it is what youd expect from a guy who has never lacked for confidence. And he was right. Hed been the best American in the early going.

Then he did something surprising.

In the penultimate round, with the America side trailing the Rest-of-the-World team badly, Woods benched himself.

We gotta do whats best for the team, Woods not-really explained.

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Despite all the public speaking hes done in his life, Woods has never developed the knack for it. He channels all his thoughts through a motivational clich machine.

Once the cameras were on, Woods had never once taken the risk of saying or doing anything that might be held against him. Its one of the reasons that while many people admired or envied him, no one ever loved him.

This was a little different. Woods was opening himself up to a bunch of bad possibilities Tiger the ditherer, Tiger the quitter, Tiger the fraidy-cat.

And then it worked out. The Americans reeled the Internationals in on Saturday and with Woods back on the course finished them off Sunday. If not a fightback for the ages, it was still a notable one.

As he hit his winning stroke against Mexicos Abraham Ancer, Woods had his hat off and was extending his hand before the ball was in the cup. No hooting. No fist pumps. No celebrations.

Afterward, he walked over to a group of American fans for photos. He looked happy?

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This is no longer the guy we once knew.

What was most remarkable was the way in which Woodss team talked about the victory after the fact. They hadnt won with him. Theyd won for him.

It was pretty awesome to play for the greatest player ever, Matt Kuchar said.

We are very inspired to play for Tiger, with Tiger, and its so satisfying to win this Cup because of that, Tony Finau said.

Okay, so golfers arent poets. But the point is that among his peers, at least Woods has finally ascended to something approaching Arnold Palmer status. He isnt just demonstrably great at golf any more. He now exists in a realm above the game. Hes becoming an icon.

The tricky thing about icons is that, in order to be one, you must be liked.

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Athletes who are remote and make no human connections may also be considered great, but they are forgotten after a generation or so.

You dont linger in the imagination because you won X number of tournaments or trophies. Lots of people win things. Your longevity is born of stories the time you did this or said that or touched someones life in a small, but telling way. The simpler these stories are, the more they stick in the public mind.

When you think of Palmer these days, it has very little to do with his titles. A vast majority of people have never seen those wins. They may not even have seen him hit a stroke in his prime.

Palmer remains a titan because people tell stories about how lovely he was to be around. He apparently had that special skill of really seeing people, rather than looking through them.

He wasnt likeable because he was great. He was likeable in spite of it.

You cant tell that story yourself. You cant pay a PR firm or the marketing guys at Nike to manufacture it for you. Others have to volunteer for the duty.

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Woods will be 44 in a few days long past the age most athletes get to play. And people have finally started to tell those stories.

One gets the feeling that the key to that wasnt his play. It was his lack thereof. In taking his own name off the list, Woods did something he hasnt often been accused of showing humility. That it worked out only added to the meaningfulness of the gesture.

All the talk now is of what Woods will look like in 2020. Hes still old and creaky. He didnt manage much this year after the Masters. But hes just had a nice, little run of form.

Will he return next year as resurgent as he looked back in April? He needs three more majors to tie Jack Nicklaus for the most in history. Is that possible?

Im not sure it matters as much any more.

Palmer only won seven majors. Name a golfer who matters more.

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If Woodss goal now is immortality, his new target may be bagging fewer wins and being more normal.

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Tiger Woods now exists in a realm above golf. Hes become an icon - The Globe and Mail

Senior Life: When Talking to Mom and Dad About Senior Living, Ask the Right Question – The Delaware County Daily Times

As families gather together around the holidays, many adult children and their aging parents will start discussing whether its best to continue to age at home or move to a senior living community.

When you ask most seniors currently living in their family homes where they want to live, theyll tell you that they want to stay right where they are.

But thats not the right question. To get the full picture, you need to ask How do you want to live?

Most people will tell you that they want to be happy and connected to a community of friends and family. They want to be healthy and independent as long as possible.

It is in these areas that senior lifestyle communities can excel. Living at home may seem like the comfortable choice, but it can easily lead to loneliness, depression, boredom and social isolation all of which are huge contributors to mental and physical decline.

According to Kelly Cook Andress, president and founder of SageLife, a Springfield, PA-based company specializing in senior living, When you ask people how do you want to live versus where you want to live, youll see a dramatic difference. In fact, there answers are often in contradiction of each other.

People want to live in their home often because they dont want to move, she added. As a country, we are paralyzed by our stuff. We have a lifetime of stuff that we dont know how to divest ourselves of. When you ask people how they want to live, life in a senior community is much more in line with how people want to live.

SageLifes communities are dedicated to empowering seniors to age successfully and remain fully engaged. Its MOSAIC lifestyle programming encourages residents to pursue interests and discover exciting new ones by providingenriching opportunities every day, including a full schedule of lectures and discussions, concerts, classes and games, parties and picnics.

SageLifes MOSAIC lifestyle philosophy is around six fundamental tenets that keep people (not just seniors) healthier and happier: Movement, Outreach, Social, Arts, Intellect and Curiosity.

Movement

Exercise, dance and sports are all offered at Saglife. Human bodies were designed to move and the rewards for an active lifestyle are reflected in body, mind, and spirit.

Outreach

When you give of yourself and your time and talent benefits others, you reap the returns in the form of happiness and sense of purpose.

Social

Being in a community isnt just about enjoying one anothers company. People need one another. Frequent engagement with others promotes emotional and mental health and enhances longevity.

Arts

Humans are hard-wired to crave beauty. The visual and performing arts give us an outlet for creativity. SageLife provides ample opportunity for making or appreciating art.

Intellect

Never stop learning. Staying mentally active is a critical component of active aging. Challenging ourselves with new ideas sharpens the mind.

Curiosity

The freedom to explore may be the most rewarding aspect of retirement being able to follow your inquisitive mind down whichever path it leads.

Other ways in which senior living communities can be superior to living at home include: easy access to healthful and well-rounded meals and no home upkeep or maintenance. SageLifes communities in our region - including Kyffin Grove, Plush Mills, Dayleford Crossing, and Echo Lake - offer state of the art fitness centers, arts studios or makers spaces, 24- hour concierge services and personal care services.

Taking all these benefits into consideration, seniors should start to think about how they wish to spend their golden years and not simply where.

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Senior Life: When Talking to Mom and Dad About Senior Living, Ask the Right Question - The Delaware County Daily Times

Plant Compounds Used to Successfully Treat Alzheimer’s in Mice Now Shown to Prevent Other Effects of Aging – Good News Network

There are two drugs that have been developed by Salk Institute researchers to successfully treat Alzheimers in miceand now, they have found that the very same drug compounds can also slow the aging process in the brains of healthy older mice.

In mouse models of Alzheimers disease, the investigational drug candidates known as CMS121 and J147 improve memory and slow the degeneration of brain cells. Now, Salk researchers have shown how these compounds can also slow aging in healthy older mice by blocking the damage to brain cells that normally occurs during aging and restoring the levels of specific molecules to those seen in younger brains.

The research, published last month in the journaleLife, suggests that the drug candidates may be useful for treating a broader array of conditions and points out a new pathway that links normal aging to Alzheimers disease.

This study further validated these two compounds not only as Alzheimers drug candidates but also as potentially more widely useful for their anti-aging effects, says Pamela Maher, a senior staff scientist at Salk and a co-corresponding author of the new paper.

RELATED: For the First Time, Scientists Have Reversed Dementia in Mice With Drug That Reduces Brain Inflammation

Old age is the biggest risk factor for Alzheimers diseaseabove the age of 65, a persons risk of developing the disease doubles about every five years. However, at a molecular level, scientists arent sure what occurs in the brain with aging that contributes to Alzheimers.

The contribution of old age-associated detrimental processes to the disease has been largely neglected in Alzheimers disease drug discovery, says Antonio Currais, a Salk staff scientist and first author of the new paper.

Maher and David Schubert, the head of Salks Cellular Neurobiology Lab, previously developed CMS121 and J147, variants of plant compounds with medicinal properties. Both compounds tested positive for their ability to keep neurons alive when exposed to cellular forms of stress related to aging and Alzheimers disease.

Since then, the researchers have used the drug candidates to treat Alzheimers in animal models of the disease. But experiments revealing exactly how the compounds work suggested that they were targeting molecular pathways also known to be important in longevity and aging.

CHECK OUT: Scientists Discover Molecule That Triggers Self-Destruction of Pancreatic Cancer Cells

In the new research, Maher, Currais, and their colleagues turned to a strain of mice that ages unusually fast. A subset of these mice was given CMS121 or J147 beginning at nine months oldthe equivalent of late middle age in humans. After four months, the team tested the memory and behavior of the animals and analyzed genetic and molecular markers in their brains.

Not only did the animals given either of the drug candidates perform better on memory tests than mice that hadnt received any treatment, but their brains showed differences at the cellular and molecular levels. In particular, expression of genes associated with the cells energy-generating structures called mitochondria was preserved by CMS121 and J147 during aging.

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The bottom line was that these two compounds prevent molecular changes that are associated with aging, says Maher.

More detailed experiments showed that both drugs affected mitochondria by increasing levels of the chemical acetyl-coenzyme A (acetyl-coA). In isolated brain cells, when the researchers blocked an enzyme that normally breaks down acetyl-CoA, or when they added extra amounts of an acetyl-coA precursor, they saw the same beneficial effect on mitochondria and energy generation. The brain cells became protected against the normal molecular changes associated with aging.

There was already some data from human studies that the function of mitochondria is negatively impacted in aging and that its worse in the context of Alzheimers, says Maher. This helps solidify that link.

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Maher and Currais are planning future experiments to test the effects of CMS121 and J147 on how other organs age. They also hope to use the new results to inform the development of new Alzheimers drugs; targeting other molecules in the acetyl-coA pathway may help treat the disease, they hypothesize.

We are now using a variety of animal models to investigate how this neuroprotective pathway regulates specific molecular aspects of mitochondrial biology, and their effects on aging and Alzheimers, says Currais.

Reprinted from The Salk Institute

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Plant Compounds Used to Successfully Treat Alzheimer's in Mice Now Shown to Prevent Other Effects of Aging - Good News Network

AI Is Central To The Longevity Financial Industry – Forbes

150 financial institutions advancing the Longevity financial industry

There are over 1 billion people currently in retirement. New types of financial institutions are evolving to satisfy the needs of this aging population. Investment banks, pension funds, and insurance companies are developing new business models, and are using AI to improve the quality of the analytics used to formulate them. In the near future, the synergy between innovative AI and wealth management will lead to the creation of a new financial institutions optimized for the aging population. Age-friendly Longevity banks will make banking services easier and safer for seniors.

Over 150 financial companies are already developing innovative WealthTech and AgeTech products and services and AI is central to the process. AI drives Longevity, Longevity enables AgeTech, AgeTech enables WealthTech, WealthTech supports interest in Longevity as an industry. This makes the ongoing growth of AgeTech and WealthTech inevitable.Many innovative financial institutions are in development such as Longevity-focused venture funds, Longevity-AgeTech banks, Longevity index funds and hedge funds, and even a specialized stock exchange for Longevity-focused companies and financial products.

AgeTech

AgeTech refers to the technologies and services optimized for people over 60. AgeTech services enable older people to conduct banking with less difficulty and also helps protect them from financial fraud. AgeTech products for seniors include tablets, smartphones, computers, banking interfaces, medical alert systems, and phone amplifiers. AgeTech is not limited to the financial industry. For instance, theres a growing demand for smart homes for older people. Age friendly smart homes provide AI products and services that make it possible for people to stay in their own homes even if they require special care. The AgeTech segments potential is forecasted to reach $2.7 trillion by 2025, showing 21% annual market growth.

WealthTech

WealthTech companies produce products and services that simplify and enhance the creation and maintenance of wealth. WealthTech companies, which offer advice based on AI and big data, are adapting existing products and services to enhance the financial situation of people over 60. These companies are implementing innovations to address the financial challenges that many seniors face. The following are four examples of WealthTech.

Top 150 pension funds, banks, insurance companies, reinsurance companies, and asset management firms ... [+] advancing Longevity, AgeTech, WealthTech

Longevity Stock Exchange

There are hundreds of Longevity startups in the UK, EU, US and Asia and 99% of them are not publicly traded. This means that they are limited to seeking funding from angel investors and venture investors, which represents a very small fraction of available global wealth. This situation creates an extreme funding deficit and a major illiquidity problem.This situation is facing almost all DeepTech sectors, but the negative repercussions are particularly bad for the Longevity industry, as it leads to reduced quality of life and unnecessary suffering for many older people. It also threatens to inflict crippling economic effects on national healthcare systems, pensions, social security systems, and national economies. Furthermore, in many cases investors exploit the gross illiquidity for their own financial advantage, to the detriment of Longevity and DeepTech startups.

In the future a Longevity Stock Exchange will be developed to deal with specialized derivatives. This will be a means by which investors can provide increased liquidity to the Longevity industry, and will lead to a self-sustaining cycle of growth in the Financial Longevity Industry whereby the effect of aging on GDP is repeatedly offset and the wealth created is reinvested into technologically reinvigorated human capital. The increased liquidity will enable greater flexibility and greater leverage for the further growth of the companies listed on the exchange, and will help advance the Longevity industry as a whole. Setting up a Longevity Stock Exchange will require the public listing of at least 100 Longevity-focused companies to create good enough diversity and potential volume for trading.

Novel Financial Institutions for the Longevity Economy

AgeTech Longevity Banks

The growth of the aging population will be accompanied by a proliferation of other products including new types of savings accounts, specialized retirement plans, and specialized financial advising. As a consequence, new types of financial products, new asset classes, new investment strategies, and longer-dated bonds and securities will be developed. Traditional banks, as opposed to challenger banks, are making their first steps in AgeTech and adapting their infrastructure for people over 60. For example, HSBC has partnered with the Alzheimers Society to create dementia-friendly products, and Barclays is actively developing software for seniors to make their customer experience more comfortable.

Over the next few years, it is likely that WealthTech and AgeTech will come to be regarded as complementary functions and AgeTech Longevity Banks reconfigured specially for seniors will emerge. Rising life expectancy is creating new opportunities for the financial sector and as the proportion of people in retirement continues to grow, an increasing number of products and services will be offered. New financial institutions optimized for people 60+ will help transform the growing aging population from a global threat into a global opportunity and will spawn a whole new industry the capitalization of which could exceed anything ever conceived of by financial markets.

Click here to preview a new book that I co-authored with my colleague Dmitry Kaminskiy Longevity Industry 1.0 - Defining the Biggest and Most Complex Industry in Human History.

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AI Is Central To The Longevity Financial Industry - Forbes

Should you recline on an airplane? The perennial seat debate, explained. – Vox.com

It takes roughly 15 minutes for a plane to reach its cruising altitude, which means that theres a brief, uncertain period during each flight where Im left wondering: Is the person in front of me going to recline their seat?

Usually they are, and theres nothing I can do about it, unless I want to risk diverting my flight by literally fighting them. (Over the course of one week in August 2014, three different flights were diverted because fights broke out over a reclining seat.)

I am among the camp of fliers who never recline; when it comes to short domestic flights, reclining doesnt provide a major difference in comfort for me. Still, plenty of debates have raged over fliers right to recline, since people are fervently defensive of their personal space and rights as passengers. It seems to be a never-ending cultural argument, during a time when more Americans are flying and airplane seats are the smallest theyve ever been.

Even newsrooms are split. Former New York Times business columnist Josh Barro argued in 2014, When I fly, I recline. I dont feel guilty about it. And Im going to keep doing it, unless you pay me to stop.

Damon Darlin Barros colleague at the time, who was as horrified by his opinion as I was published an opposing article in favor of the Knee Defender, a nifty device (banned by some airlines) that prevents the person in front of you from reclining.

The previous year, Slates Dan Kois wrote that people who tilt their seats back are pure evil after he unsuccessfully asked the woman in front of him to partially un-recline her seat. The issue is still being debated now years later on Twitter, where people notoriously air out their travel woes.

Your discomfort isnt entirely the fault of your fellow economy passengers, although theyre an easy target for quiet rage. Its more the fault of the American aviation industry at large, which condemns us to crowded planes with limited legroom and high fares.

Plane seats have shrunk considerably over the past few decades as airlines attempt to accommodate a record number of fliers by maximizing space within an aircraft.

Airlines are a business, Debbie Carstens, a Florida Tech professor of aviation with a background in human-factors engineering, wrote to me in an email. As much as airline companies value their customers experience, profits are vital to a companys longevity.

In a 2014 column for USA Today, travel writer Bill McGee dug through decades-old reports of airline seat size and compared them to todays standards. (His analysis primarily applies to major airlines since budget carriers typically offer smaller seats that might not recline at all.) He found that American, Delta, and United Airlines offer in some aircrafts a seat pitch, or the distance between rows of seats, of only 30 inches in economy.

In years past, 31 or 32 inches were the absolute minimums. Whats more, the roomiest pitch offered by the Big Three and Southwest (31-33 inches) are now tighter than they were at all four carriers in recent years, by anywhere from 2 to 5 inches.

Economy seats are also a few inches narrower than they were in the 1990s, which is exacerbated by the fact that Americans are physically wider than they were two decades ago. The narrowest seats today are about 17 inches wide two inches tighter than what were considered narrow in the 1990s, according to McGee.

On most domestic flights served by American, United, or Southwest, coach passengers are limited to a 2-inch recline. This year, Delta is testing a two-inch reduction on seat recline for one of its new fleets a move that the airline claims will improve personal space (Delta is not adding seats or reducing legroom).

Besides size, some design experts say airplane seats are not well-designed for human bodies, which explains why theyre so uncomfortable. Think of an economy seat as a shirt thats designed to be one-size-fits-all.

People with larger bodies than average are uniquely susceptible to strict airline policies, which could require passengers who dont fit comfortably within their seat to purchase a second one. If a traveler doesnt purchase accommodations ahead of time, theres no guarantee an airline will let them fly if they dont fit in their seat. There are also passengers with physical conditions who need to recline their seats for additional comfort, no matter how short the flight is.

Consumer groups have publicly voiced complaints about shrinking seats and crowded aircrafts to the Federal Aviation Agency. Under the FAA Reauthorization Act of 2018, the agency is expected to issue regulations that establish minimum dimensions for seat pitch, width, and length. The FAA is currently conducting a study with more than 700 participants for these standard dimensions, which lawmakers have criticized for its slow-moving pace.

Small seats have been the industry standard for decades now and thats not likely to change, even with the upcoming FAA rules. Seat recliners (and those who despise them) arent likely to change their habits either.

It seems the only thing we can do is perennially argue about it, because, in the grand scheme of things, were powerless against the aviation industry. So what are you supposed to do the next time you board? I consulted Myka Meier, an etiquette expert and author of Modern Etiquette Made Easy. Everyone has a right to recline, she said, but its about timing. Having a seat recline unexpectedly can be off-putting, especially if a person wants to have a drink or enjoy a meal.

Regardless of whether your discomfort is the fault of the airlines or your fellow humans, Meier encourages passengers to be thoughtful and courteous in interactions with neighbors to reduce the likelihood of mid-flight scuffles.

What I typically recommend is not necessarily asking because the person could just say no, she told me. You can just gently lean back and notify them that youre about to recline.

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The wisdom of ancient kitchens – Easy Reader News

Added on December 12, 2019Mark McDermottManhattan Beach , newsletter

Dan Buettner in the Okinawa blue zone. Photo by Dan McLain/National Geographic

National Geographic explorer Dan Buettner investigates the food and culture of those who live the longest, and comes back with recipes

by Mark McDermott

Most mornings, Cowboy Jose Bonifacio rides his horse Corazn five miles to go see two old friends. Bonifacio is known far and wide as one of the great vaqueros, or cowboys, of the Guanacaste province on the Nicoya Peninsula of Costa Rica. He began riding horses in 1921, at the age of 4. Hes 102 years old. His two friends are both over 100.

Two years ago, National Geographic explorer Dan Buettner went looking for the great cowboy, who hes known for years. Buettner has led several expeditions to the Nicoya Peninsula because it is home to some of the longest living humans on Earth, and longevity has been his area of inquiry for the last decade and a half. Hes written four books and dozens of National Geographic articles about the so-called blue zones, the five areas scattered across the planet where people live the longest. He sought out Bonifacio who is not hard to find, having lived in the same house all his 102 years for his newest book, The Blue Zones Kitchen.

Buettners intentions were simple. He wanted to share a meal with Bonifacio and his family, and take notes. Buettner has spent more time with 100-year-olds, known as centenarians, than anyone on the planet who is not 100. His research has been about the ways of life that lead to the kind of health in which people not only live a century but do so, like Bonifacio, with gusto. Hes examined everything from habits of human connection to physical activity and even the composition of the soil and water in the lands where people live longest, but all these roads lead back to the most fundamental of human activities: sharing a meal. And this is why he found himself back at Bonifacios humble dwelling in Guanacaste.

We arrive early, waiting for him in the cool shade under the 100-year-old mango trees in his courtyard, Buettner writes. He trots up on a horse wearing blue jeans, a checkered shirt, and a jaunty-angled cowboy hat. He dismounts with a bounce and welcomes us warmly with a handshake and a half toothed smile. Hes lived in the same house his whole life, now with four generations of descendants. At 100, he still recites romantic poems and professes his love of women.

Buettner has spent time with over 300 centenarians, but none cooler than the cowboy, who on this occasion asked his daughter and granddaughter to prepare a special lunch for his visitors, Buettner and famed National Geographic photographer David McLain. The lunch was served in an outdoor kitchen, centered around an oven used by the Chorotega, a tribe of corn farmers who historically were the most powerful of the Native Americans in the region.

Dinner is served in Ikaria. Photo by Dan McLain/National Geographic

They cook over a fogn, which is a Chorortega oven that dates back before the age of Christ, Buettner said in an interview. Its sort of a U-shaped adobe appliance, so to speak, with a wooden fire. So there you are, smelling roasted corn and woodsmoke and the aromaThe beans they are making tend to be more aromatic, with peppers and onions and garlic and cilantro. And its a wooden structure with slats in it, so sunlight is angling through the slats and hitting the floor in long parallel lines, but its sort of beautifully, smokily illuminated on the inside. And you are smelling the same smells that the ancient Maya were smelling in 1,000 B.C.

Lunch was chunky vegetable soup, a veggie hash with corn and onions, hearts of palms with herbs and garlic, creamy lima beans and herbs, and fried green plantains. It was accompanied by mugs of what Buettner described as shockingly refreshing horchata and citrus fresco.

The Blue Zones Kitchen, which includes recipes for each component of the lunch, was released last week and achieved a somewhat unusual feat for what is ostensibly a cookbook: it was the bestselling book in the United States across all categories. The books success shocked even Buettner.

Its surreal, he said. After years and years of these high-minded literary pursuits, I realized what people want are just pretty pictures and a great bean recipe.

The Blue Zones Kitchen isnt like any cookbook ever before published. In it, Buettner visits kitchens in each of the five blue zones: Okinawa, Japan; Ikaria, Greece; Sardinia, Italy; Yorba Linda, California (a Seventh Day Adventist community); and the Nicoya Peninsula, Costa Rica. An earlier book, The Blue Zones Solution, also included recipes, but not presented in this way, with McLains vivid photography showing the physical beauty of the people and the food of blue zones. Its pages emanate with the warmth of human conviviality.

David and I are not cookbook writers. David and I are a writing and photography team for National Geographic, Buettner said. This book is essentially a 300-page National Geographic article, centered around food and recipes. And thats how we approached it. For the recipes, I didnt just go find some other book and copy them; I sat on stools in 80, 90 and 100-year-old womens kitchens, and I watched them. I wrote down fastidiously everything they did. I estimated quantities you know, they dont use cups or teaspoons or any of that crap. I captured these recipes, which by the way will be gone in half a generation.

The recipes from Buettners notebooks were then taken to a test kitchen and proofed out for exact quantities, and now run alongside hundreds of photos taken by McLain, which are also not the typical, prettified pictures usually found in cookbooks.

Not a single picture in the book is shot in a studio, Buettner said. Its all editorial and its all with the gifted David McLain. He shot the ingredients, the setting, the people, the cooking techniques, and then the rituals around it. So its a very different book than a cookbook.

Dan Buettner in the Costa Rica blue zone. Photo by Dan McLain/National Geographic

Buettner is well-known locally because he launched the first Blue Zones Project in the Beach Cities. The projects, which now number over 50 nationwide, are public health initiatives which take the wisdom derived from Buettners studies of actual blue zones and apply lessons programmatically; locally, the Blue Zones Project is administered by the Beach Cities Health District (see last weeks Easy Reader cover story, Tripping Over Health). Buettners central insight is that healthy behavior happens not when we focus on changing behavior, but when the environment in which we live makes healthier choices easier to make.

The Blue Zones Kitchen follows this ethos. Its easy to use. Not one of its 100 recipes requires more than a handful of ingredients. It is peasant food; simple, cheap, easy, and by the way healthy.

Its organized by genres of cooking, Buettner said. There is Greek, from Ikaria; Italian, from Sardinia; Asian, in Okinawa; Latin American, Costa Rica; and American, Loma Linda. So they are easily recognizable categories of food. They are just simple. You can add cheese if you want to some of them, but the quotidian day-to-day eating in blue zones was plant-based. They ate meat, but it was a celebratory food, and I dont need to put a recipe for roasted meat in so all the recipes are plant-based. And they all have the most important ingredient, which is taste. These recipes, theyve been cooked for at least 500 years in most of these places. The reason they survived is not because people think the recipes are healthy. Its because people like them. They are tasty.

Cowboy Jose Bonifacio in Costa Rica. Photo by Dan McLain/National Geographic

Another aspect of the book that sets it apart is its beautiful array of story, science, travel, and cultural exploration. For example, in Costa Rica Buettner found what he believes might be the most perfect breakfast in the world, featuring what locals call the tres hermanas, or three sisters: corn, beans, and squash. He recalls in loving detail enjoying this breakfast in the Cooperativa Nicoya, where a dozen women begin preparation before dawn each morning and people stop by on their way to work. The meal is the locally beloved gallo pinto, rice, and beans with garlic, onions, peppers and squash, served with freshly made tortillas, a vinegar-based hot sauce called chilero, and locally grown coffee.

At 6 a.m., the first customers file in, most of them market vendors or laborers, Buettner writes. They take seats on benches at long green tables. Cooperativa waitresses, wearing simple dresses and flip-flops, serve giant cups of weak local coffee, steaming plates of the gallo pinto, and baskets of warm tortillas. As muddy ranchero music plays from a distant radio, customers fill their tortillas with beans topped with chilero hot sauce. This is arguably the most perfect food combination ever, and for some it brings forth tears of joy.

The meal is perfect because tastes great while providing everything the human body needs for sustenance. The corn tortillas are whole-grain, low glycemic (meaning more slowly digested, absorbed, and metabolized) complex carbohydrates, Buettner reports, noting that the wood ash of the stoves breaks down the corns cell walls, thus making niacin available and freeing amino acids for absorption into the body. The black beans are rich in both antioxidants and fiber, which is colon-cleansing, lowers blood pressure and regulates insulin. Combined with rice, the beans form a perfect protein; the pepper sauce that tops it all off is a probiotic (meaning good for gut health). Even the coffee is rich in antioxidants. The total cost of the breakfast was $4.23.

Buettner writes that this meal is what the poorest people in Costa Rica subsist on. His research partners found that these very people have the longest telomeres the DNA tips that mark biological age of any in Costa Rica. He says their bodies tend to be a decade younger than their age would suggest.

Its really kind of the Zen of eating, Buettner said. Its so simple. Its like great sushi. Most cuisines are additive for example, French cuisine is cream and butter and herbs. Sushi is just beautifully one ingredient. This is three ingredients. Imagine slow-cooked beans; the beans are perfect, kind of al dente, they still have their flavor, they still have the anthocyanins, which are the anti-oxidants you find in blueberries. Add a roasted whole-grain corn tortilla: all it is whole grain corn patted down and roasted. And then some roasted squash. You put the beans in a tortilla, maybe put some hot sauce on it, or in Costa Rica its chilero, and man, you do cry tears of joyIts so easy and so cheap and the stuff is good for a long time.

Buettners blend of storytelling and science is so seamless you dont really realize you are learning. Simplicity is key. Part of this is his sources. We dont live in a time when we often have access to the elders of our tribe, and their practical, well-worn advice, as most previous generations of humanity did. Buettner shared a meal with another centenarian in Costa Rica, a 106-year-old former lumberjack named Jose Guevara.

Hed actually done a good bit of thinking about his longevity and boiled it down to three secrets: Start your day with fruit, eat beans at every meal, and practice absolute honesty, Buettner writes. Words to live by, methinks.

Much of the wisdom that comes from the blue zones is essentially remedial human training: knowledge that was baked into the way people lived for eons before the disruption caused by more modern ways of living.

Its relearning what our grandparents instinctively knew, Buettner said.

Women in Ikiaria work together in the kitchen. Photo by Dan McLain/National Geographic

The links in that chain are mostly unbroken in the blue zones. Generations know each other, and cook together. Meals are shared multi-generationally, and often communally. Some of the recipes in The Blue Zones Kitchen contain varying versions, as each village or family has its own idea of how to do things. The Melis family in Sardinia (nine siblings with a combined age of 852 years) shared their version of minestrone soup, which they told Buettner theyd eaten every day of their life. Another family shared another version.

A 100-year-old cooked me Sardinian minestrone, Buettner said. The rest of her family cooked me other things and then we sat down and drank a good bit of wine, Connoneau, which is almost always an accompaniment with meals there. And then toasts ensue, and you get that sort of perfect combination of familial warmth and alcohol, and theres no better drug.

There is science underlying the warm feeling of this scene. Sardinian minestrone is a pot of healthy amino acids with all the protein a human needs for sustenance along with huge does of fiber and healthy gut bacteria. Its cruciferous vegetablesonions, cabbage, kohlrabiregulate thyroid function, a key to longevity. And even the wine, Connoneau, is particularly flavonoid-rich and brimming with antioxidants. But the biggest factor underlying long-living is the gathering itself.

I didnt set out to try to write a cookbook from the beginning. I realized, though, that the runway for people for a healthier life is often through their mouth, Buettner said. But what makes it work, what makes it stick, and what makes it last is building a meaningful social network, or social circle, around the food. And that is in an almost hormonal senseif you are eating with somebody you like, you have less cortisol interference as compared to eating on the run or eating with some sort of existential stress, and there is a love and a joy in that which I believe adds to longevity. But more important than that, if the people you are running with are also eating largely a whole-food, plant-based diet, its not a chore. You are not getting tempted by the burgers and the baby back ribs and the chips and all the other crap that people gather around.

We are, in fact, genetically hardwired for human interaction. Previous generations of humans could not have fathomed the idea of fast food or how much we eat alone. Another common trait in all blue zones kitchens is they are social places.

We tend to be genetically endowed with a propensity for things that ensure our survival, Buettner said. And humans, unlike so many other mammals that havent been as successful, are eusocial. That weve been successful because we come together as a tribe. We naturally are drawn to each other and we can take on bigger tasks together than we can by ourselves. So to all of sudden fast forward to 2019 when everybody is imploding in their devices maybe for survivability, on its surface, we dont really need other humans. But we still have that genetic yearning for it, and the meal is the natural time to give in to that. Its the natural time to socialize because you are slowing down, you are sitting down.

Research shows that people who eat socially, particularly families, eat more nutritiously than those who eat alone.

Because when you are eating by yourself, it takes about 20 minutes for the full feeling to travel through your belly to your brain, Buettner said. So if you are eating by yourself to your favorite TV show and wolfing down your dinner, theres a very good chance that you will already be full long before your stomach knows it, long before your brain knows it. Conversely, if you are sitting down with four or five friends, you are having a conversation, you are telling jokes, you are laughing, then you take a bite of food you are less likely to overeat.

The biggest piece of advice implicit in the The Blue Zones Kitchen is simply to cook. The benefits are myriad. People in the blue zones, and those who cook in general, tend to rotate between the same 10 or 12 meals. They thus have a more consistent diet, meaning their immune systems dont have to work so hard to always counter different potential threats. A worn-out immune system is one of the things that catches up with us in older age when the body can no longer fight off cancer cells, among other things.

Cook at home. You dont have to buy my book. Theres lots of other books, Buettner said. I hear all the time, Well, I dont have time to cook. And if you take a moment and you think clearly, people who are eating junk food their whole life are probably shaving a decade off their life expectancy. If you take those 10 years and average them back through the rest of your life, youve got about 2.5 hours of a day of time that you could be spending on making good food. And youll have just as many hours in your lifetime. We fail. We get misled by a certain cultural thrust that is wrong.

I think there are a lot of people out there marketing longevity. The Blue Zones kind of genre is not just about getting more, piling on more years, its about quality along the way. Its a holistic look at longevity. And the value proposition is about 14 years. The maximum average life expectancy for humans is about 93 or 94. We are getting about 80 in America right about now, so we are leaving about 13 or 14 years on the table. We could be getting those years by living a blue zone lifestyle. But if you are living with purpose, you are socializing and connecting with friends, you have that faith-based component in place and that could be going to church, it could be going to yoga you are enjoying the journey. Its not just living long. Its living well.

It is, in a sense, the oldest story in the world, and one that is increasingly being forgotten. Buettner said that all the blue zones are increasingly being encroached upon by the disease of convenience. His reporting is documenting ways of life which are disappearing.

Okinawa in 1990 was a fantastically exotic place, and now its a jungle of Pizza Huts and A&W Root Beer. Junk food, Buettner said. Theres only a few little pockets of originality left. Costa Rica theres a damn KFC as you enter the city of Nicoya. And here is this beautiful food tradition that in Nicoya anyway its been around for 5,000 years, the Mesoamerican three sisters of corn, tortilla, beans, and squash. Which are three foods that can wholly sustain you. They are being pushed out by buckets of hormones-suffused chicken and burgers. Just like when they came to America, they are incredibly alluring. They are fast and they are cheap and they are like an orgasm in your mouth when you been used to eating sort of subtle flavors.

His mind drifts frequently to a scene on the coast of Ikaria. A woman named Athina was cooking in a kitchen crowded with women.

She is about 60, and shes been cooking for 50 years, and she learned it from her grandmother who learned it from her grandmother, Buettner said. So sitting on a stool in a tiny kitchen watching her workYou can sort of see the Aegean Sea out the kitchen window and you kind of see 500 years of history unfold. Above your head, there are all these pans, and there is this wonderful cacophony of chopping and pans bubbling and pans clattering and kids running around squealing and these sort of nomadic aromas of sage and oregano and rosemary and olive oil and the pungency of roasting squash. And Im sitting there with a glass of wine, the type of wine that is produced in Ikaria, the Pranos, the same wine that Ulysses gave the cyclops to get him drunk so he could knock him offthey are still drinking that wine in IkariaIts just happiness.

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The wisdom of ancient kitchens - Easy Reader News

Vince Carter becomes fifth player to appear in 1,500 NBA games – USA TODAY

USA TODAY Sports' Jeff Zillgitt breaks down his top five teams in the NBA so far this season. USA TODAY

MIAMI The Atlanta Hawks Cam Reddish wasnt alive when teammate Vince Carter played in his first NBA game in 1999. Atlantas Trae Young, Kevin Huerter and Bruno Fernando werent yet six months old when Carter scored 16 points in his NBA debut nearly 21 years ago.

Carter on Tuesday played in his 1,500th NBA game, joining John Stockton, Dirk Nowitzki, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Robert Parish as the only players in leaguehistory to reach that milestone.

It is a testament not only to rare longevity but his talent and ability to adjust to different roles throughout his career from lottery pick to rookie of the year to All-Star to All-NBA to reserve to veteran sage who is playing less than half the minutes he did at the peak of his NBA powers.

Basically, he was the first option, second option, third option, sixth man, seventh man, all the way down to 14th, 15th guy," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said before the game, "and most guys are not emotionally stable enough to be able handle that and be willing to sacrifice and Vince has done that.

Im a big fan of his over the years just because when youre around all the time and I dont get to know a lot of people but I feel like Ive gotten to know him and hes a first-class human being and great pro (and) somebody who should be celebrated for his career for sure.

This is, by Carter's account, his final season.

Save for the two lockout seasons which cost him more games played Carter has played in at least 60 games in 17 of his 22 seasons.

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I was just trying to calculate how many more games he has than the rest of our roster combined, Hawks coach Lloyd Pierce said.

Atlantas Jabari Parker, Alex Len, Evan Turner, Allen Crabbe and Chandler Parsons skew that calculation, but the point is taken. Carter has played more games than Young, Reddish, Huerter, Fernando, DeAndre Hunter and John Collins combined.

This is pretty special, Pierce said. He grew up here in the state. This is his last time playing here in Miami. Were conscious of all the last times that are coming up. Its quite an accomplishment many different teams, many different highlights, many different moments of his career, too many count, but were going to cherish and appreciate what we have this year.

Atlanta Hawks guard Vince Carter acknowledges the crowd during the first half of the game against the Miami Heat at American Airlines Arena.(Photo: Jasen Vinlove, USA TODAY Sports)

By the time this season is over, Carter, who turns 43 on Jan. 26, should pass Stockton and Nowitzki for third on the all-time games played list, trailing just Abdul-Jabbar (1,560) and Parish (1,611).

This season, Carter should pass Alex English for No. 22 on the all-time scoring list and finish among the top-20 all-time leaders in field goals.

For the tail end of his career, Carter has been a player who has provided insight to his teammates about topics on and off the court. It's rare to get an All-Star who is willing to do that in his 40s.

Id love to talk about the value off the court later. I still need the value on the court, Pierce said. I hope theres some box score accomplishments as well and he was tremendous the other night in Charlotte.

Thats the thing. Carter can still play. He had nine first-quarter points against Miami and had 17 points in 20 minutes, 25 seconds against the Hornets on Sunday.

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FastForward Innovations heading into 2020 with confidence – Proactive Investors UK

The investment company is currently trading at a 50% discount to the value of its net assets. Director Ed McDermott sees this as a bit of an anomaly, particularly given the performances of some of the portfolio companies. Will 2020 herald a change of fortunes?

The glossy magazines that chronicle the lifestyles of the rich and famous might show the glitterati at the opening of a new ultra-chic Mayfair nightclub.

Rock up to the same spot a week later with your mates after a sesh down the Dog and Truck and a couple of burly shaven-headed six-footers will likely show you and your friends (physically if need be) where to go.

In other words, these exclusive haunts arent for the rank and file plebs; they are for the handpicked few.

The analogy works in the world of investing, specifically when it comes to getting in on the early rounds of promising start-ups. Its an exclusive, paid-up members-only club.

In Silicon Valley, for example, you must be a fund of significant size and reputation (or a billionaire) to gain access to the Series A rounds of the next Uber, Palantir, or . Single-digit millionaires need not apply. Riches beget riches.

Here in the UK, the story is a similar one: only a small cadre of venture capitalists and well-heeled individuals tend to see the pitch decks of the best new, innovative growth businesses.

So, its a bit of a head-scratcher that shares of Ltd ()findthemself friendless at this point.

The AIM-listed investment firm is chaired by Lorne Abony, the Canadian serial entrepreneur, while his predecessor was Jim Mellon, the UK mining magnate.

FastForward has been given all-areas access to some exciting early-stage innovators and has holdings in nine businesses in the fintech, ed-tech, life sciences and cannabis sectors.

The net asset value (NAV) of these stakes has grown to 20mln, or 12.63p a share, in the last six months yet FastForwards share price has slipped to just 6.05p.

A 50% discount to NAV is an unaccustomed position for the company, which has tended to trade at a premium to its portfolios value.

In January 2018, for instance, the shares were changing hands for 24p, and less than a year ago they were marking time at 12p.

Its quite an unusual thing to be trading so far below NAV, especially with the assets we have, which tend to increase year on year [in value], said director Ed McDermott.

Two investments that have done particularly well are EMMAC, a cannabis company co-founded by former investment banker McDermott, and Juvenescence, a biotech incubator focused on human longevity.

The most recent fundraising for the latter provided a 58% valuation uplift.

EMMAC, meanwhile, has issued a loan note that could convert into equity at 62.5p a share more than double the 30p FastForward bought in at.

None of this seems to have been recognised by the market, though it should be noted it has been a rough year for companies listed on Londons junior market with Brexit and the recent general election exerting a huge drag.

Wed like to see a little more liquidity within the portfolio of assets, said McDermott, setting the scene for 2020.

2019 was a period of building up towards that. We could see three IPOs [initial public offerings] next year, maybe more.

Listing a business on the stock market via an IPO provides an opportunity for FastForward to realise value.

The cash it then receives can be reinvested in new opportunities, though there may even be scope for a pay-out, according to McDermott. Should we get a liquidity event then we are of the mind we would look potentially towards dividends.

Hopefully, the thumping victory at the polls of pro-business candidate Boris Johnson will settle nerves. Next year should be about value realisation.

We dont know what 2020 holds in terms of the market, but whatever your view, the Conservatives are much more business-friendly. That provides more confidence for anything that might float on this side of the pond, McDermott. We are quietly confident.

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FastForward Innovations heading into 2020 with confidence - Proactive Investors UK

Indian Tea Association (ITA) to highlight health benefits of tea – The Sentinel Assam

CUPPA PROMOTES LONGEVITY

The per capita consumption of tea in India is as low as nearly 750 gm per annum though it is the largest producer of black tea in the world.

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GUWAHATI: The Indian Tea Association (ITA) has decided to highlight health benefits of tea to attract the youth and children to consume the beverage. In 1989, the World Health Organization (WHO) announced that one of the major factors to human longevity is to consume more tea and less smoking. So, the ITA has decided to focus on the health benefits of tea to attract youth as well as children, an ITA official said.

The ITA, the apex and oldest organization of tea producers, will organize various events in schools, colleges and universities as the industry seeks to reach out to the consumers that it believes are fast turning to coffee and other beverages due to their more contemporary image.

In many countries including Iran and Pakistan, children are encouraged to drink tea instead of other beverages. But the number of children drinking tea, especially in urban India, is relatively less despite the fact that the beverage has health benefits. So we are planning to create awareness about health benefits of tea among school children so that they start drinking the beverage, the official said.

According to experts, tea is one of the few natural beverages in the world that does not contain salt, fat or any other high-calorie substance. Tea contains more than 450 organic compounds, and more than 15 inorganic minerals. Most of these components boost health and aid in disease prevention, a doctor at the Gauhati Medical College and Hospital said.

In 2017, the United Nations called upon the tea industry to focus on the health benefits of tea to attract the younger generation to drinking tea. The appeal was made by the working group on global markets analysis and promotion, part of the Inter-Governmental Group on tea under the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO IGG) of the UN.

The per capita consumption of tea in India is as low as nearly 750 gm per annum though it is the largest producer of black tea in the world. The figure is lower than that in Pakistan, where the per capita consumption of tea is about 1.2 kg per annum, and other tea-drinking nations like the UK and Ireland where it is even higher at 1.6 kg and 2.3 kg respectively.

Also Watch:AATASU staged protest against the Citizenship Amendment Act. 2019 in Golaghat

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Here’s how I answer when people ask the secret to a 35-year marriage – Democrat & Chronicle

Pam Sherman, The Suburban Outlaw Published 9:05 a.m. ET Dec. 20, 2019

The Shermans becoming the Shermans, 35 years ago.(Photo: Provided)

Tomorrow we're celebrating our 35th wedding anniversary, though weve been married so long we had todo the math to make sure. My husband is the one who figured it out because Ive lost track.

So many of those years are what I call, the forgotten years. When you are married as long as we've been,the years mostly become a blur, except for the really big milestones like birthing, moving and losing loved ones. But some years arent just fuzzy they draw a total blank.

Like 2006. I have no idea what happened that year. Family-wise, Its as if it doesnt exist at all like the 13th floor in a hotel. Im pretty sure I lived that year, but I couldnt tell you what happened.

Of course, if you think about it, that can help a marriage.All those small, petty fights just disappear as if they never happened. Actually, even the big ones just go away if youve forgotten the whole year.Id like to think those forgotten years were just fine. Those years are likemovie extras: You know they must have a story,but the movie just isnt about them.

Pam Sherman(Photo: Brandon Vick)

They used to designate wedding anniversaries by stones, which I guess you are supposed to give to each other, but my husband never got the anniversary gift memo so basically I get nothing but love.

But thats OK because 35 years is the coral wedding anniversary. While I know that coral is quite beautiful, I think if Ive made it to 35 years I should get something a lot better than coral.

And coral is really just beautiful from afar. Its the trick of the light in the ocean that makes it look that way. Up close, its really just a big chunk of rock that you can cut your feet on if you arent careful. And isnt that a perfect metaphor for a long marriage?

Whenever I tell people we've been married for 35 years (which we like to say really loud and slow, as if pronouncing a criminal sentence), they smile, congratulate us,even applaud us like we are circus animals who have just jumped through a ring of fire.

I think no matter how long your marriage is, there should be applause. Lets start applauding our marriages not for their longevity but for the little things that make up those forgotten years: like making it through a Monday, calendar coordinating, grocery shopping, and falling asleep together actually just sharing a bed at all, given snoring, teeth gnashing, and all sorts of human stuff going on in that bed over time.

In the long run, a marriage is made up of those moments that might have sharp edges and are beautiful both up close and from afar. Moments when you're screaming at each other and moments whenyou're crying in each others arms.And my favorite: the moments when you laugh out loud with each other.

People ask me the secret to our marriage. There is no secret its merely a choice.The choice to stay because you chose to start. The choice to commit to each other, not unconditionally but with generosity, patience and good humor. And most of all, the choice to fall in love over and over again through the course of a lifetime.

Of course, I do tell my husband my job is to keep him on his toes, and his is to sweep me off my feet even if they get cut on the coral of life whilehes doing it.

Happy holidays to all!

Find the Suburban Outlaw at thepamsherman.com and onFacebook,Twitterand Instagram at ThePamSherman.

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The Farside Moon Rover of China Breaks Moon Longevity Record – Instanews247

Chinas farside moon rover Yutu 2, part of the nations Change 4 mission, broke the longevity record for staying on the moons surface.

China Global Television Network (CGTN) previously said that the human-machine rolled by the recent record set by Lunokhod 1 rover of the Soviet Union.

Lunokhod 1 was the remote-controlled pioneer moving the robot to make a landing on another planet, operating in the sea of rains starting on November 17, 1970. Lunokhod 1 missions stopped officially about 10.5 months after on October 4, 1971. It was the 14th Sputnik 1 launch anniversary, which was the first ever-manmade satellite.

Lunokhod 1 went for 6.5 miles, which is equivalent to 10.5 kilometers on the moon surface and returned to Earth more than 20,000TV pictures and not less than 200 TV panoramas.

Yutu 2 has been on the lunar surface for a period of more than 11 months since January 3, 2019.

The rover is among Chinas Change 4 mission that includes a stationary lander. The two touched down on the surface of the 110-mile wide Von Karman Crater that lies within the Aitken Basin South pole.

CGTN reported that Yutu -2 would keep on working on the lunar surface.

Early this month, Yutu-2 and the Change 4 landers completed their work for the 12th lunar day, resetting to the dormant mode for the moon night, said the Moon Exploration and Space Program Center of the China National Space Administration (CNSA). It would take the moon about 29 days to finish one rotation on its own axis, so it is safe to say the one lunar day is equivalent to one month here on earth.

CNSA officials noted that meanwhile, the rover had traveled over 1,132 feet equivalent to 345 meters of traveling.

The record of Yutu 2 applies to surface craft only; many lunar orbiters have worked for longer. For instance, the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter of NASA launched in June 2009 is still moving on strong.

The center said that the controllers on the ground built a driving route for the wheeled rover to enable it to conduct a scientific detection of the depth of the effect cater and the supply of the ejecta. The center added that the Yutu 2rover was required to bring them more surprises and scientific discoveries.

It is believed that the rover has traveled for not less than 285meters on the surface of the moon to carry on scientific exploration on the virgin territory.

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The Madness of More Nukes and Less Rights in Pandemic Times – CounterPunch

Another perilous pandemic is sweeping the country in the midst of the coronavirus one, and it has been lurking in the shadows for years just itching for a fear-ridden moment like this to break out forcefully. Right-wing repressive forces are using this unprecedented crisis to impose unconstitutional denials of abortion rights; to drastically lower voter participation rates; to grant sweeping new powers of indefinite incarceration without trial to the Department of Justice; to relax or even abolish regulations from the Environmental Protection Agency; and to criminalize fossil fuel protests should they ever recur in the wake of the March 31 decision to proceed at full speed with the controversial Keystone Pipeline project. In these dark times, American democracy itself has fallen victim to COVID-19 and is now on life support.

At the other end of the grim life-death spectrum, nuclear weapons, ones which would end in omnicide if ever used in war, recently received a tremendous new lease on life by the Trump regime. Two weeks before Trump declared the coronavirus pandemic to be a hoax hatched by Democrats, he proposed a 25% hike in spending for modernization of US nuclear weapons. And on March 20, as the US officially marked 255 deaths by the coronavirus pandemic and 18,965 confirmed new cases, Trump formally submitted a request for nearly $50 billion in the next fiscal year to be split between the Department of Defense and Department of Energy for nuclear weapons development and deployment. Specifically, some of the key allocations for an enhanced US nuclear triad call for over $12 billion to the National Nuclear Security Administration and billions more for Columbia-class ballistic submarines; B-21 Raider strategic bombers; W87-1 warheads; modernized intercontinental ballistic missiles and air-launched cruise missiles; and B61-12 gravity bombs, a megaton-class warhead, to be deployed in Europe. A new era of nuclear weapons proliferation is upon us.

Even without these new or expanded nuclear weapons, the current US nuclear arsenal already contains the destructive equivalent of 130,000 Hiroshima-sized bombs. From 1940 until 2019, the US government has spent a conservatively estimated $8 trillion to develop its gargantuan nuclear arsenal. Nevertheless, the US is on track to spend some $494 billion more on a new generation of nuclear weapons over the next decade.

From a human needs perspective, this is sheer madness. To squander such colossal amounts of public funds on weapons of mass destruction is not only profoundly immoral, but doubly deadly. It massively deprives our overburdened healthcare system of funds and equipment desperately needed to sustain life, while simultaneously directing those funds into the creation an omnicidal potential.

Giving voice to those misguided policies and the grave dangers they invite was none other than a former US President and Five-Star General, Dwight Eisenhower: Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. This world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children..This is not a way of life at all, in any true sense. Under the cloud of threatening war, it is humanity hanging from a cross of iron. While still threatened today by the cloud of nuclear war, the cross of the coronavirus has radically changed the calculus. One of the bitter ironies of the current worldwide war against the coronavirus pandemic is that the enormous arsenal of weapons, especially nuclear ones, developed at enormous cost is utterly useless in containing, let alone vanquishing, this novel invasive invisible enemy of unknown origin.

Terribly misplaced priorities squandered trillions of dollars on non-useable weapons while leaving our social safety net, especially the failing healthcare system, in shambles. A gargantuan military arsenal does absolutely nothing to stem the deadly coronavirus pandemic, but a resultant weakened healthcare system certainly enhances its potency and accelerates its path. The US healthcare system, foolishly built upon the overriding principle of maximizing private profit, is the most inefficient and dysfunctional one in the modern world. Despite having the highest per capita medical expenditure in the world, our health outcomes regarding longevity, infant/maternal mortality. obesity and other conditions are deplorable. Basic medical supplies such as testing kits, ventilators and masks as well as hospital beds, all badly needed to combat the coronavirus, are in short supply due to years of institutionalized neglect. Yet the US government spending on healthcare has been and remains comparatively low while our military spending is, by far, the highest in the world. As the coronavirus pandemic continues to increasingly ravage our land, the US strategic stockpile of medical supplies is virtually empty while the US strategic stockpile of nuclear weapons is filled and growing, a decisive indictment of institutionalized values and misplaced priorities.

The dream of a world freed of nuclear weapons is as old at the Nuclear Age. Hundreds of millions throughout the world in the 1950s signed the anti-nuke Stockholm Peace Appeal, launched and coordinated in the USA by an embattled and elderly W.E.B. Du Bois. Over one million peacemakers filled the streets of New York City on June 12, 1982 demanding the abolition of nuclear weapons. In 2017, the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, and in the same year 122 nations formally adopted the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, the first legally binding resolution to ban all nuclear weapons. Obviously the Trump regime regards itself above international law and remains hell-bent on massive production of weapons of mass destruction. If there ever was a time to demand an end to this mad march to collective annihilation, surely it is now when humanity collectively hangs on a cross of the coronavirus pandemic.

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The Madness of More Nukes and Less Rights in Pandemic Times - CounterPunch

Choreographer Angela Goh Announced As The Recipient Of The 2020 Keir Choreographic Award – Broadway World

The Keir Foundation, Australia Council for the Arts, Carriageworks and Dancehouse have announced Angela Goh as the recipient of the $50,000 Keir Choreographic Award, Australia's most prestigious choreographic award, as well as Amrita Hepi as the recipient of the $10,000 Audience Choice Award.

The recipient of the 2020 Keir Choreographic Award is dancer and choreographer Angela Goh, for her work, Sky Blue Mythic. Performed by Goh to Corin Ileto's live operatic soundscape, Sky Blue Mythic imagined dance as a non-human entity. In a quest to move away from anthropocentrism, Goh's stark new work allows dance to alienate itself from human expression, in turn requiring the body to become an interface rather than a vehicle.

The Audience Choice Award choreographer, Amrita Hepi's work, Rinse questions whether being on the brink of extinction, or endings, has intensified the seduction of the past. An intimate solo based on a dynamic improvisational score, Rinse travels from end to end of an origin myth, positioning personal narratives in relation to dance, art, feminism, cannons, the void, desires, popular culture and colonial history.

Eight artists were selected by an international jury to take part in the biennial competition, dedicated to the commissioning, presentation, promotion and dissemination of new Australian choreography. The selected artists were: Alison Currie and David Cross, Angela Goh, Riana Head-Toussaint, Amrita Hepi, Jo Lloyd, Zachary Lopez, Lewis Major, The Farm.

A jury of international choreographers, critics and curators, Serge Laurent (FR), Mette Edvardsen (NO), Takao Kawaguchi (JP), Claudia La Rocco (USA) were tasked with the responsibility of selecting eight new commissions to compete in the semi-finals at Dancehouse, four works to be presented in the finals at Carriageworks, and the recipient of the Award announced on 14 March.

In making the announcement, Keir Choreographic Award Founder Phillip Keir said: 'Congratulations to Angela Goh, Corin Ileto and team for the glorious Sky Blue Mythic. A wonderful piece of sharply defined choreographic art that resonates with our times. And congratulations to Amrita Hepi, winner of the audience award for such a personal and beautifully observed piece of dance. It was an enormous privilege to be involved in supporting all eight dynamic and diverse pieces of best of Australian choreographic work.'

Australia Council CEO Adrian Collette said: 'Congratulations to Angela Goh, and to all the artists who participated in the 2020 Edition of the KCA. The Australia Council is delighted to once again be part of this important partnership that supportsa?? the development and presentation of new choreographic work in contemporary dance. We thank the participants for sharing their creativity, talent and passion with us.'

Carriageworks CEO Blair French said: 'Carriageworks congratulates the recipient of the 2020 Award, Angela Goh, and Audience Choice Award Amrita Hepi and is proud to continue to support all participants in making new choreographic work. Commissioning new work by Australian artists is at the heart of the Carriageworks programming and the Keir Choreographic Award is integral in this area.'

Dancehouse Artistic Director Angela Conquet said: 'I was impressed with the multitude of layers and diversity of forms that all the selected artists worked with, as well as with the rigour and creativity with which they envision and embody choreography, by replacing the body to the centre of how we filter and reflect current times.

The Australia Council for Arts, the Keir Foundation, Carriageworks and Dancehouse have confirmed their continued support to another two editions of the Keir Choreographic Award (2022 and 2024), an exciting development guaranteeing the longevity of this signature Australian commissioning program.

The Keir Choreographic Award public program, with its array of national and international jury members, panellists, guests and workshop leaders, ran concurrently with the performance seasons in both Melbourne and Sydney, providing a vital context for related and relevant discourse, reflection and debate.

Choreographic Art in the 21st Century is an increasingly expanded and international field, incorporating a multiplicity of practices and production modes, and a diversity of aesthetic, philosophical and social perspectives. Supported by the Australia Council for the Arts and launched in 2014 as Australia's only cash award for choreography, the Keir Choreographic Award looks to identify and illuminate the most urgent and experimental choreographic practices occurring in the Australian context today.

The Award has fast become the largest generator of new choreographic work in Australia and offers a rare opportunity to develop and present new work. To date, the Award has garnered further commissioning and touring support, both nationally and internationally with works including Berlin-based artist Martin Hansen's If it's all in my veins which since 2016 has been presented in Hong Kong, Paris and Berlin. Previous Keir Choreographic Award recipients include Melbourne-based artist Atlanta Eke, 2014; Sydney-based Torres Strait Islander choreographer and performer, Ghenoa Gela, 2016; and Javanese-Australian choreographer and performer, Melanie Lane, 2018.

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Choreographer Angela Goh Announced As The Recipient Of The 2020 Keir Choreographic Award - Broadway World

Relieve stress in your garden, as pressures from pandemic increase – Buffalo News

When the world wearies and society fails to satisfy, there is always the garden.

That sentiment, well known to gardeners, came from an early 20th century poet, Minnie Aumonier. It has spoken to me personally, as I have escaped to my garden in times of stress, worry or tiredness, but I am not alone in the feeling.

Gardeners through the ages have written of the benefits of gardening, which have proven to be much more than sentimental and emotional. Science validates that gardening is good for the human body, mind and spirit.

In response to COVID-19, many of us are experiencing new pressures. We have to adapt work, play and habits. Fortunately, gardening is something we can continue to do, and its important we do so.

From voices past and present, we receive the message that gardening and being in touch with nature is healthful for us, especially in tough times.

Consider just a few of those voices:

Gardening is a labour full of tranquility and satisfaction; natural and instructive, and as such contributes to the most serious contemplation, experience, health, and longevity. John Evelyn, 1620-1706 English writer, gardener, diarist.

Just for ones health ... it is very necessary to work in the garden and to see the flowers growing. Vincent van Gogh, 19th century Dutch painter.

Gardening is the greatest tonic and therapy a human being can have. Even if you have only a tiny piece of earth, you can create something beautiful, which we all have a great need for. If we begin by respecting plants, its inevitable well respect people. Audrey Hepburn, late actress and humanitarian.

Gardening is the most therapeutic and defiant act you can do; especially in the inner city, you get strawberries. Ron Finley, Los Angeles-based fashion designer known as the gangsta gardener.

Gardening simply does not allow one to be mentally old, because too many hopes and dreams are yet to be realized. Allan Armitage, horticulture professor, University of Georgia, author of numerous gardening reference books.

(For more quotes like these, and essays on gardening, see Teresa Watkins A Gardeners Compendium book series.)

With as much breadth and variety as writers and poets, scientists have published findings about the physical and mental health benefits of gardening.

From the Mayo Clinic to the National Institutes of Health and the World Health Organization, a wide range of field experiments have concluded gardening is beneficial for health whether physical (heart, nutrition, endocrine and digestive systems) or mental (dementia, memory loss, sleep disorders, depression and perceived stress) among other pathologies.

For thousands of Western New York gardeners, the benefits of gardening are self-evident. We dont need poets or scientists to tell us. Seeing the first green shoots or daffodils or daylilies produces smiles. On a sunny day, with a hint of spring in the air, simply picking up sticks is exhilarating.

As we go through extra-stressful times, be sure to give ourselves the respite and simple joy of it. Fresh air and sunshine are still free. Gardening doesnt have to be expensive. Plants can grow from seeds or little seedlings.

Gardening is not competitive and you dont have deadlines. In sadness or under stress, we can almost always feel better in a garden.

Gardening allows the best social distancing: It still takes place outside.

Sally Cunningham is a garden writer, lecturer and consultant.

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Relieve stress in your garden, as pressures from pandemic increase - Buffalo News

Staying ahead in the UKs race for tech talent – ITProPortal

Its no secret that the UK is undergoing serious change, especially as the Brexit deadline edges ever closer. But while the impact of these changes is being felt across the nation, so far its done little to impede the burgeoning tech industry. Tech Nation recently found that investment for UK scale-up tech firms has been far from stagnant, growing by 61 per cent between 2017 and 2018. In terms of venture capital investment, this makes the UK fourth in the world, behind only the US, China and India and above all other European countries.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the number of job vacancies within the technology sector has followed suit. Across the industry, there is currently an increasing need both for technical specialists and those in non-technical roles including marketing, human resources and accountancy. For those looking to make a move whether they are dissatisfied in their current position or looking for a change in career direction the volume and variety of vacancies presents an enticing opportunity.

Yet the digital skills gap has also brought about significant challenges for businesses. Its no longer simply a case of filling positions as a company expands, but also ensuring that the best and brightest talent stay within the organisation. Adding to this complexity is the rise of the quitting economy. As the idea of a traditional job for life becomes all but a distant memory, more people are voluntarily leaving their jobs than ever before. This is particularly evident among the younger generation, where 43 per cent of millennials plan to quit their job within two years, according by a recent Deloitte report.

This shift in employee attitudes, coupled with the ongoing war for digital skills, has created a difficult and intricate situation for technology organisations, whereby the number of suitable talent options falls short of the number of positions that need filling.

With the tech industry advancing at an unprecedented rate, its vital that businesses take a proactive approach to both attracting and retaining candidates. This is not only invaluable to the longevity of a business, but also key for gaining an upper hand in the competitive digital talent landscape.

As a first step, businesses in the tech sector must reconsider and reform their mind-set towards HR, shifting their focus towards people and culture. This involves ensuring that key players in the internal hiring process are seen as fulfilling more than an administrative role, and are instead fully involved in the companys decision-making process.

As the role of HR in the technology sector undergoes a transition, it vitally important that business leaders implement methods to really understand their workforce. And this is made possible by moving away from relying solely on traditional methods to applying a holistic approach. Only then can solutions be created which minimise the impact of the skills shortage, reduce churn and negate the low retention rates which are endemic across a number of industries, not just tech.

While its true that the fast-growing UK tech industry has created challenges for organisations, its also given rise to new technologies which can help ease the load, both by automating time-consuming administrative tasks and providing teams with essential insight into their people.

People analytics, for example, allow business leaders to derive an in-depth understanding of their workforce by collecting and analysing employee data. This insight can be used to identify key employees and departmental connections, allowing organisations to achieve a Google Earth view of the workplace. This information can also help anticipate issues early on and prevent them becoming more serious.

Business leaders can also use employee data to get a better picture of the individuals who make up their company. What are their likes or dislikes? Whats their commute like and how does it impact their lives? By having a deep and personalised understanding of each employee, businesses can implement new, more flexible ways of working, as well as strategies to help enhance work-life culture. And, with new data-driven technologies helping to automate administrative tasks, team leaders can strategically focus on the people and, in turn, on growing the business.

As the tech industry continues to fuel the expanding job market, the pressure on businesses to hire the best and brightest talent will only increase. To survive and succeed in this competitive environment, organisations are required to focus on delivering a personalised and positive employee experience. Through adopting a modern, holistic approach, using data to build a detailed and actionable picture of the entire workplace, business leaders can begin to really understand the workforce and their needs.

In doing so, organisations within the technology sector can navigate obstacles such as the digital skills gap and the quitting economy. And by getting ahead in the tech talent race, they can help businesses continue to drive innovation and progress within the UK tech industry.

Ronni Zehavi, CEO, Hibob

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