These companies are racing to roll out COVID-19 treatments – WICZ

By Paul R. La Monica, CNN Business

Big Pharma companies and biotechs are racing to come up with an effective treatment for the Covid-19 novel coronavirus.

Several high profile companies are working on new experimental vaccines. Drug giant Johnson & Johnson is the latest to announce a promising vaccine candidate, saying on Monday that it plans human testing by September with the hopes of having more than one billion doses of a vaccine available for emergency use by early 2021.

J&J said it was partnering with the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services to produce the vaccine. Shares of J&J surged nearly 7% on the news Monday.

Many other companies are also working on vaccines, including small biotechs Moderna, Novavax and Inovio as well as Big Pharma firm Pfizer, which is partnering with Germany's BioNTech.

Shares of Moderna, Novavax, Inovio and BioNTech have all soared this year, even as the broader market has plunged due to worries about the impact of the coronavirus on the global economy. (Pfizer is down nearly 20%.)

But making and testing new vaccines may not wind up being the fastest way to treat Covid-19, says Sergey Young, founder of the Longevity Vision Fund -- a firm that invests primarily in smaller private biotechs.

Some firms are hoping that existing medications for other infectious diseases and immunological disorders can be used to tackle the global pandemic.

"This is the first time in history where companies are trying to repurpose drugs this fast, and that is exciting," Young said. "A vaccine is in the more distant future. We pray that one can come by the autumn."

Young pointed to three drugs in particular that might wind up being effective in treating symptoms of Covid-19. The first -- and the one that has gotten the most attention -- is remdesivir, a drug made by Gilead Sciences that was originally used for Ebola and other highly contagious diseases.

Officials at the World Health Organization have touted remdesivir as having the most potential to effectively treat coronavirus patients. The WHO has begun clinical tests of the drug on patients in Spain and Norway.

"Remdesivir is still an investigational medicine. We are planning for the outcome we all hope for -- that it will prove to be a safe, effective treatment -- and in the meantime we are taking the ethical, responsible approach to determining whether that is the case," said Gilead chairman and CEO Daniel O'Day in an open letter released Saturday.

Longevity Vision Fund's Young added that two other medications could be helpful in treating coronavirus as well: the HIV medication Kaletra, which is produced by AbbVIe and is a combination of the antiviral drugs lopinavir and ritonavir; and Kevzara, and a rheumatoid arthritis treatment made by biotech Regeneron and European drug titan Sanofi. (The reporter of this story owns shares of AbbVie.)

Sanofi is also working on a vaccine with BARDA funding from the US government.

Meanwhile, Chinese health officials have also been testing another rheumatoid arthritis drug -- Roche's Actemra -- on Covid-19 patients.

The hope is that one or more of these existing medications will help alleviate the worst symptoms from the coronavirus, buying more time for companies developing vaccines to come up with a longer term solution to stop the spread of the disease.

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These companies are racing to roll out COVID-19 treatments - WICZ

Nazgul & Dementors: 5 Things They Share (& 5 Ways They Are Completely Different) – Screen Rant

Both the Harry Potter universe and Tolkien's legendary The Lord of the Rings are replete with entities of the vilest nature -- magical creatures that do not fit into the human range of consciousness.

RELATED:Harry Potter Vs Frodo Baggins: Who's The More Heroic

The Nazgl are the Ringwraiths, some of the most powerful servants of the Dark Lord, Sauron. They have a major role to play as they hunt for the Ring and go after the Fellowship of the Ring and Frodo Baggins, the ring-bearer. On the other hand, the dementors are nasty, dark creatures that act as prison guards at Azkaban, the wizard prison in the Potterverse.

Let us see the ways in which they are similar and how they differ from each other.

The dementors, too, are wraithlike creatures, hooded with no concrete physical form. They are more like dark shapes, to be precise. In terms of appearance, the Nazgl and the dementors are quite similar in that both are dark, formless shapes that ignite fear in peoples hearts.

RELATED:The Lord Of The Rings: 10 Of The Worst Things That Happened In Middle Earth (Besides Sauron)

Dementors, on the other hand, look like decaying corpses and were never humans in the first place. They are, Rowling says, one of the foulest creatures to walk the earth, inhabiting some of the darkest, filthiest places. The absence of anything remotely human in them is one of their defining traits. Being non-humans, they also never had a physical form, unlike the Nazgl.

The Nazgl are the most terrible servants of Sauron, the primeval dark force that presides over Mordor, and plan to take over the whole of Middle Earth, in Tolkiens epic fantasy universe. These are dark entities whose souls have been tarnished by the extraordinary power of the Rings and their fate is now bound to that of Sauron.

RELATED:Harry Potter: 10 Hidden Details About Dementors You Probably Missed

The Nazgl, though, having been humans once, require the use of actual physical weapons to fight their enemies. They are shown to be using daggers, swords and terrifying maces. Although they are invisible to those who cannot see into the wraith world, their past history as men makes it imperative that they carry weapons.

Similarly, the dementors, as the name suggests, are symbols of gloom and despair, leaving a person without a happy thought. They feed off happiness and their arrival drowns people in the depths of depression. The more they feed the more their numbers multiply, making them some of the most hated, disgusting and terrifying creatures in the wizarding world.

RELATED:Lord of The Rings: 10 Best Quotes From The Return of The King

The dementors, in the Harry Potter universe, are innumerable and nowhere does Rowling state whether or not they can die and if so, how. One can assume that since they feed on human happiness, they might also rot away if they are not able to feed. But this is pure conjecture since Rowling never actually mentions whether dementors have specific longevity, or for that matter if they can be killed.

The dementors presence, although not poisonous per se, can be felt from quite a distance. The victim feels a sweeping sensation of cold as the dementor approaches. The feeling precedes the dementors arrival and is capable of turning water into ice. Both entities bring with them a sense of doom and overwhelming horror.

RELATED:Lord Of The Rings: Members Of The Fellowship, Ranked

The dementors, however, are not bound to anybody elses fate. Although they chose to ally with Voldemort in the final battle, they are not necessarily servants to You-Know-Whos whims. It is said that they go where they can feed the most, so it is safe to assume that they owe no loyalty to anyone. While the Nazgl serve the Ring and Sauron, the dementors as such serve no-one in particular.

Similarly, the dementors, as Potter fans know, disperse at the sight of pure happiness. The Patronus charm that is used to get rid of them is nothing but concentrated happiness of the purest kind. The blinding Patronus created from a happy memory scares the dementors away.

Unlike these winged wraiths, however, the dementors are never seen traveling on mounts. They are floating creatures that were never human and hence do not need mounts, winged or otherwise, to carry them.

NEXT:Harry Potter: 10 Hidden Details About The Cupboard Under The Stairs You Never Noticed

Next10 Low Budget Sci-Fi Movies That Are Better Than Blockbusters (& Where To Stream Them)

Surangama, or Sue, as she is called by many, has been writing on films, television, literature, social issues for over a decade now. A teacher, writer, and editor, she loves nothing better than to curl up on a lazy afternoon with her favorite book, or with a pen and a notebook (a laptop would have to do!) and a foaming cuppa tea on the side.

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Nazgul & Dementors: 5 Things They Share (& 5 Ways They Are Completely Different) - Screen Rant

Doing business in the time of COVID-19 – CanadianManufacturing.com

March 17, 2020by Alanna Fairey, Associate Editor

PHOTO: Getty Images

Since December 2019, the world has been closely following the news of the coronavirus, and while the impact on human health has been significant, its also taking a toll on small and large companies all over the world who are planning for contingencies and trying to make sense of the virus.

According to Export Development Canada (EDC), the challenge to the global economy and Canadian exporters ultimately depends on the severity and longevity of COVID-19.

EDCs webinar, Coronavirus (COVID-19): Managing the impact on global supply chains, hosted on March 11, provided insight on how Canadian exporters can be prepared to take on the risk of doing business in rapidly changing international markets and what services EDC can offer.

Moderated by Dominique Bergevin, EDCs manager of commercial markets and small business, the panelists included vice-president and chief economist Peter Hall; senior account manager of commercial markets & small business, Amira Dali; and bank channel director, Rajesh Prashadcolah.

With COVID-19 impacting the global supply chain, Hall stressed that it is important for businesses to have contingency plans in place for key suppliers for liability purposes.

This may include reviewing some of the existing terms and conditions with your customers, your suppliers and ensuring that the language will protect you from future events, Hall said.

When it comes to suppliers, most people think both companies are providing you the raw materials are equipped to ensure operation, but a key supplier can also be your banker advisors.

Added Hall: Its important to have these conversations with their partners in advance.

While the significant decrease in numbers has many feeling fearful of a recession, Hall said that this will not be the reality in the long-term.

The key message here is that there is a limit to the duress, and there is a limit to duration and thats not what the popular medium is generally playing on my channel. Its very much about fear, Hall said.

For her part, Dali stressed that it is important to have risk management systems that encourage businesses to be proactive rather than reactive to the hurdles that COVID-19 is imposing.

Risk management strategies should be made of four segments which include: risk avoidance, risk sharing, risk reduction and risk transfer.

Dali also said that is essential for exporters to have insurance plans set up and to have conversations with financial partners prior to a pandemic to understand what financing options are best available.

No matter what industry that youre in, theres a resource available out there, starting with your trades and missionaries, Dali advised. The Trade Commissioner Service is a great starting point, whether locally or whether internationally.

While the repercussions of COVID-19 were events that could not have been foreseen, Hall concluded the webinar by reminding viewers that the experiences of COVID-19 can help them make plans for their business and their third parties moving forward.

Having contingency plans in place for key suppliers and customers will help mitigate some of that and this may include reviewing some of the existing terms and conditions with your customers, your suppliers and ensuring that the language they will protect you from future events, Hall said.

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Doing business in the time of COVID-19 - CanadianManufacturing.com

Last Nights on Londons Stages, Before the Lights Went Out – The New York Times

LONDON Nol Coward wrote Blithe Spirit in a mere six days, and the perennially popular play opened on the West End in 1941, running for nearly 2,000 performances setting a record in London for a nonmusical.

Its longevity back then is in stark contrast with the most recent outing of the play here, with Jennifer Saunders, of Absolutely Fabulous fame, playing the bicycle-riding medium Madame Arcati, who communicates with the dead. A victim of circumstances beyond the control of even the most supernaturally minded, the director Richard Eyres comparatively somber revival played its last performance at the Duke of Yorks Theater on March 14; the run had been due to finish on April 11.

The production closed early after Londons West End theaters took coordinated action on Monday to close themselves down and help stop the spread of the coronavirus. Londons West End, like Broadway, has gone dark, and no one knows when the lights will come back on.

As premature closings go, the timing here was somewhat ironic, when you consider how audiences throughout World War II flocked to Blithe Spirit, Cowards inquiry into the frustrations, erotic and otherwise, of Charles (Geoffrey Streatfeild), a novelist whose first wife returns from the grave. (She died, were told, while recovering from pneumonia, which may well have had an eerie resonance for nervous playgoers today.)

When she rises up, the mischievous Elvira (Emma Naomi) scatters calculated chaos in her wake. Its giving nothing away to tell you that she ends up taking Charless second wife, the whiplash-tongued Ruth (Lisa Dillon, giving the performance of the night), over to the other side with her, though neither woman will go quietly from the land of the living.

This was easily the least buoyant Blithe Spirit Ive seen, which was presumably intentional on the part of Eyre, the distinguished director who once ran the National Theater. The trend of late has been to find in Cowards outwardly breezy plays something more psychologically acute, as was the case when Andrew Scott, of Fleabag fame, stormed the Old Vic last summer in Present Laughter. Against expectation, a character long presented as a devil-may-care narcissist was revealed to be an anxious man-child, as well. Both revivals remind us that Coward possessed a keen understanding of human behavior, in addition to a quick wit.

In this Blithe Spirit, Charles and Ruths marriage seems far from blissful well before Elvira arrives on the scene, and Eyre takes the verbal brickbats they lob at each other for real. This, like Present Laughter, is a Coward play centered around a man who draws women to him when he would rather be left alone: Both plays end with their flustered heroes fleeing female companionship, but for what precisely? Coward leaves the sequels up for grabs.

The fate of this show, however, is sealed though no one could have guessed how quickly it would flit from view. Think of the cast as the casualties of an invisible terror. It was one that Saunders, top-billed albeit in a supporting role that Judi Dench is playing in a forthcoming film, acknowledged when Madame Arcati a germaphobe before her time reacted in spontaneous disgust at shaking another characters hand. I doubt those who laughed at that gesture last week would do so now.

Across London last week, a city in gathering distress was met with theater that chimed with the prevailing mood. Before the shutdown, I caught what turned out to be the final matinee of Shoe Lady, an arrestingly quirky play from E.V. Crowe at the Royal Court Theater, best described as a surrealist nightmare in the style of Caryl Churchill.

Its like were all on the edge, says Viv, a realtor whose life goes into free-fall when she loses a shoe on the London Underground. Buck up, she says, all the while succumbing to a growing sense of anxiety, brilliantly captured by Katherine Parkinson, accentuating her characters panic the more determinedly she keeps smiling. Running just over an hour, Vicky Featherstones production cant have anticipated how much the play, which might otherwise have seemed a theatrical caprice, felt instead like a parable of precariousness in a society that, much like Viv, seems to be losing its grip.

The connection between life and art was even more keenly felt on Monday at the Southwark Playhouse, in southeast London, one of the few theaters to offer a show on the evening when the bigger houses around town were calling it quits.

There, I was among a surprisingly full house to catch the last performance of the director Jonathan OBoyles hyper-intense revival of The Last Five Years, the Jason Robert Brown musical about a couple falling apart. (Think of it as the Marriage Story of the early 2000s.) The conceit of a show that alternates perspectives across 90 minutes is that one character, Jamie (the excellent Oli Higginson), tells his version of events from the beginning, whereas his ex, Cathy (Molly Lynch), begins her version of events at the end.

But there was no doubt for those in the room that we were all witnessing a finish of a different sort, given that it is entirely unclear when any of us will find ourselves in a London playhouse again. The audience that night had seemed especially focused, as if everyone present was savoring for keeps the experience of live performance.

Taking an empty Underground train home, I couldnt help but feel that Jamie and Cathys unraveling had acquired a resonance well beyond what the composer-lyricist Brown could have imagined. I wont soon forget the surge of feeling throughout the auditorium when the show got to its closing sequence, and ended on a single word: Goodbye.

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Last Nights on Londons Stages, Before the Lights Went Out - The New York Times

Half of Workers Aren’t Accounting for This Massive Retirement Expense – The Motley Fool

There's a lot to think about as you're preparing for retirement. Not only do you have to consider how much you should save by the time you retire, but you'll also need to plan for how you'll spend all your time, how much you'll be receiving in Social Security benefits, and more.

But there's one factor that many workers aren't accounting for as they're planning for their senior years, and it can potentially cost you tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Image source: Getty Images.

Nearly half (48%) of workers say they haven't accounted for healthcare expenses in their retirement plan, a report from theTransamerica Center for Retirement Studies and the Aegon Center for Longevity and Retirement found. Of those who aren't planning for this expense, nearly 30% admitted it's because they simply never thought about it before, while 26% said they expect the public healthcare system to take care of their expenses.

If you're not preparing for healthcare costs in retirement, you could be in for a costly surprise. Even with Medicare coverage, you'll still be responsible for certain expenses, including premiums, deductibles, copays, and coinsurance. These costs can add up, too. In fact, the average retiree spends around $4,300 per year on out-of-pocket healthcare costs, according to a study from the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.

This number also doesn't include costs associated with long-term care -- which can be one of the most significant expenses you'll face in retirement. Approximately 70% of today's retirees will need long-term care eventually, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and those who do need this type of care require it for an average of three years.

If you do end up needing long-term care, you can expect to spend a good chunk of change. The average semi-private room in a nursing home costs more than $6,800 per month, and if you end up spending three years in a nursing home, that comes out to nearly $250,000 on long-term care alone. In addition, Medicare typically won't cover long-term care, so you'll be left to foot this massive bill out-of-pocket.

All of these expenses can take a huge bite out of your retirement fund, so the more you can prepare for them ahead of time, the better off you'll be.

It can be challenging to prepare for medical expenses because nobody knows exactly how much care they'll need in retirement. You may never need long-term care and can get by spending only on Medicare premiums and other routine costs, in which case your healthcare expenditures will be minimal. Or you may develop costly health problems and may end up needing several years of long-term care, which could lead to hundreds of thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket costs.

Although you can't prepare for every expense you'll face, it's a good idea to plan for everything, just in case. First, think about how much you'll be paying for Medicare coverage. Original Medicare consists of Part A and Part B. Retirees typically won't pay a premium for Part A coverage, but you will face a deductible of $1,408 per benefit period. For Part B, the standard premium is around $144 per month and the deductible is $198 per year.

Keep in mind, however, that Original Medicare does not cover routine dental or vision care (which includes teeth cleanings, fillings, yearly eye exams, prescription glasses, etc.), nor does it cover prescription drugs. For this type of coverage, you'll need to enroll in a separate plan such as Medicare Part D or a Medicare Advantage plan -- which will be an additional cost.

To prepare for long-term care, you have a couple of options. First, you could sign up for long-term care insurance. This type of insurance could greatly reduce the amount you'll pay out-of-pocket if you end up needing long-term care, but it can be pricey -- especially the longer you wait to sign up. The average 55-year-old couple can expect to pay around $2,500 per year in premiums, according to the American Association for Long-Term Care Insurance, but the older you are when you sign up, the more you'll pay.

Another option to help pay for medical expenses is to start saving in a health savings account (HSA). A HSA is similar to a retirement account in that you can invest your money, let it grow for years, then withdraw it during retirement. However, there are extra tax benefits with an HSA: Not only are your contributions tax-deductible upfront, but your withdrawals are also tax-free as long as the money goes toward medical expenses.

Healthcare expenses certainly aren't the most exciting aspect of retirement, which makes them easy to overlook as you're planning. But if you don't account for these costs, it could come back to hurt you later. By preparing the best you can now, you'll ensure healthcare expenses won't catch you off guard.

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Half of Workers Aren't Accounting for This Massive Retirement Expense - The Motley Fool

What Jason Hope Says About New Longevity Research – HealthTechZone

Throughout the past decade, various topics related to stem cells have made headlines across all platforms. From being hailed as the most innovative method for eradicating specific diseases, to being protested by various groups and organizations, the use of stem cells has gained national attention repeatedly. With promising initial scientific findings, and avid researchers aiming to solidify the presence of stem cell usage in the realm of science on a normalized basis, increasing numbers of startups, biotech giants, and independent companies are forging ahead with stem cell-related projects. As global connectivity, technological advancements, and the marriage between medicine and technology continues to evolve swiftly, Jason Hope sees stem cells will undoubtedly remaining in the spotlight.

Over 20 years ago, scientists successfully extracted the first human embryonic stem cells, and effectively grew these cells in a lab setting. The remarkable feat of being able to successfully grow the parent cells, which essentially allow for the growth of new cells in the body, was a hopeful moment for the medical sector involved in creating effective regenerative treatments for conditions like heart disease, Alzheimers, stroke, and Parkinsons Disease. Using basic reasoning, the successful regeneration of parent cells could provide the regeneration of undesired cells, leading to anti-aging results, or effective care for many age-related conditions that deteriorate the body over time.

Though this initial breakthrough was promising, the scientific community has not yet made significant strides in bringing stem cell therapy to market in a way that is well-researched, backed by medical associations, and commonly accepted by the scientific community. In fact, the only readily utilized stem cell treatments are related to successfully growing blood cells from matching donors for patients with various blood disorders. According to entrepreneur, philanthropist, and expert in the realm of anti-aging and longevity, Jason Hope, these initial utilization of stem cells are commendable, but require a lot more research in order to maximize the potential widespread benefits of stem cells in medicine.

Hope, who has devoted much of his philanthropic endeavors within the medical industry via groups like the SENS Organization, recognizes that most stem cell implementations are rightfully considered experimental until appropriate research, testing, and development can occur. As an expert in the realm of anti-aging, and the championing of increasing health throughout a lifetime, Jason Hope recognizes the potential distrust that can be formulated by the general public as a result of eager companies making lofty claims or promoting potentially faulty treatments not yet fully vetted by the medical community. Thus, while he remains avidly enthralled by the potential maximization of stem cell therapies, hope supports the long-term research needed to safely, successfully, and effectively generate breakthrough stem cell treatments.

Providing continued backing for the extensive research completed at the SENS (Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence) Organization, Hopes contributions aid in the research aiming to create preventative treatments for degenerative diseases and utilizing breakthrough science to increase the overall long-term quality of life for individuals. Instead of focusing on the treatment of symptoms and the disease throughout the progression of the condition, the scientists at SENS work to examine ways to successfully prevent the disease from happening. Through this boundary-pushing work, a lot of their research focuses on stem cell intervention. According to Hope, stem cell treatments for Parkinsons Disease are now in the second stage of clinical trials at SENS. While the process of undergoing such extensive trials may appear slow, it is crucial to maintaining overall public support via successful treatment launches and promising in terms of the long-term possibilities linked to stem cell treatments.

In addition to the research being conducted by SENS, preliminary medical studies are being conducted with a myriad of uses for stem cells. Experimental stem cell transplants of retinal cells were recently utilized in a small research study of macular generation, providing initially promising results for the handful of patients who have received artificially generated retinal cells. Elsewhere, scientists have begun to explore ways to minimize potential rejection of stem cells in organs like the liver, through maximizing the most conducive environment for stem cells to thrive. While these slow-moving vehicles of change are less prominent than startups promising the proverbial Fountain of Youth via experimental stem cell treatments, these medically sound research studies are forming the backbone of stem cell treatment for the future.

As with all scientific and medical innovations, Hope also recognizes the potential risks, hurdles, and roadblocks within the growing field of stem cell research, and integration into medicine. From supply chain concerns to potential long-term side effects, and the risk of overly eager startups making too-lofty claims, Hope understands that the road to the everyday utilization of stem cells remains lengthy and potentially bumpy. However, the proverbial juice may very well be worth the squeeze in this example. As stem cells harvest the potential power to overturn the degenerative effects of some of the most prominent diseases, allow individuals to maintain active health for elongated periods of time, and increase the quality of life for countless individuals, expanding upon the initial promising research is potentially a pivotal point for the medical community and humankind. Though the road to successful scientific integration of stem cells is long, the potential healthcare benefits are limitless, and according to industry experts like Jason Hope, worth investing in, exploring, and championing.

About Jason Hope

An avid entrepreneur, investor, and philanthropist, Jason Hope is a futurist involved in the championing of technological advancement, community involvement, and innovative medical interventions. Deeply passionate about the anti-aging, longevity, and human advancement niche of biomedicine, Hope remains actively involved in various scientific organizations.

After receiving a degree in Finance from ASU, and a subsequent MBA from ASUs W.P. Carey School of Business, Hope developed a successful mobile communications company. Professionally, he currently focuses on investing in startups and developing grant programs for small businesses.

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What Jason Hope Says About New Longevity Research - HealthTechZone

What is human centred AI and how can it impact business performance? – ITProPortal

Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML) arent new, in fact mechanical automation has been around for decades so why is there still an incredibly slow adoption rate across modern-day workforces?

Although it might not have been called AI or ML until recent times, the world has been surrounded by examples of this technology from having an x-ray to taking out a mortgage. Its primary purpose is to exist to try and make things simpler, quicker and easier for people.

And yet, despite being present for nearly a century, the concerns that machines are going to take over the world or that theyre untrustworthy and will take everyones jobs remains the same today.

For years, businesses have been trying to outdo one another with revolutionary promises and yet theres still a lack of understanding of what AI and ML represents and how it can and cant drive an organisation forward.

Thats because theres still a lack of trust and its become apparent that many people are still reluctant to hand over the reins to a machine when confidence is low. Its something that isnt new for those who occupy the world of business intelligence because the industry knows how AI promises everything but doesnt always deliver. Uncertainty has ensued because automation hasnt quite solved initial problems, but at the same time no-one is being automated out of a job either.

A great example to truly highlight how this translates into business performance is by looking at online delivery brand, Amazon. This is an organisation that deploys hundreds of robots which have been simplistically coded to collect products off the shelf and not bump into one another which is the AI part.

And the same concept can be applied in business. For example, if a person has applied for a bank loan within the last 20-25 years, its unlikely they will have had their initial query dealt with by a human. It will have been digested by a machine an algorithm that categorises individuals alongside others who have similar attributes.

AI isnt magical but it can collate large volumes of data by the second, which is an obvious advantage for the fast-paced and heavily evolving economic climate.

So, it does pose the question of exactly how does human centred AI truly impact business performance?

For larger scale AI adoption, organisations must think outside the box and perhaps onto the tennis court. Yes, this maybe a strange path to take, but the sports Hawk-Eye technology system could provide some food for thought when analysing AIs success through a transparent lens.

Looking back to the days when John McEnroe would infamously contest huge calls with showmanship and bravado, Hawk-Eye today often limits those moments instead shutting down any questionable decision with critical evidence to back up the umpires call.

And the reason why many players and the crowd accept those crucial outcomes is because tennis hasnt black boxed its automation. Instead, every single person watching can see exactly how the decision has been made by the machine, which introduces a greater level of fairness and trust that wasnt there before.

Line judges provide the human element, but its the machine that augments their decisions. Now because its done so well, its become a part of the game alongside other sports.

However, where mechanical AI hasnt fared as strongly is the example of VAR recently introduced into the English Premiership. If anything, its riled footballing crowds up even more to voice their displeasure, all because the machines decisions arent being shared with them. What it has determined is a lack of trust from supporters and onlookers because they havent played any part in the final decision.

For human centred AI to have a true impact on an enterprises bottom line and adoption level, there must be observation points included something which business intelligence is built upon. Having machinery that allows customers to understand and see how decisions are being made can instil a vast amount of trust and willingness to have confidence in the detail it forecasts.

There isnt a crystal ball when it comes to knowing exactly how the business landscape is going to evolve day-to-day but having smart platforms that can consume key trends and marketplace developments can help to balance business risk and determine decisions more swiftly.

And when wrong conclusions are met, thats where humans or rather the observers come in to tweak and adjust the model so that the path is corrected, and danger is subsequently averted.

Think of Tesla and how its self-drive capabilities are truly innovative. But, it can still get things wrong and if the driver isnt prepared for that, the results could be catastrophic. However, where this manufacturer prevails is by utilising a smart screen which shows how its making decisions. As a result, the person behind the wheel understands when to trust the vehicle to take control, and when they need to intervene.

Again, the same can be said for organisations and their employees who become the observers. To begin to achieve success, the team needs the desired information from AI, in order to elevate their jobs, watch the machine in action and work side-by-side all of which comes via business intelligence.

Examining real-time activity, enterprises are in fact creating cockpits where humans can step in where needed and trust the machine to effectively understand the detail and make commercially savvy decisions all of which the customer sees too.

Everybody has a part to play in ensuring what technology works best for their business and automation should ultimately be embraced rather than feared. However, for there to a positive impact made on business performance, firms must firstly get their business intelligence right and continuously study its ML as a pre-requisite.

Simplify the tools, demystify the black box and provide smart intelligence that isnt magical, but can instil trust, transparency and longevity for organisations.

Ken Miller, co-founder and CTO, Panintelligence

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What is human centred AI and how can it impact business performance? - ITProPortal

Catherine Opie: ‘Beauty has to encompass more about the human condition’ – CNN

Written by Catherine Opie

Beauty is often thought of in relation to fashion and femininity. Its construct in pop culture is something that I've always tried to work with in different ways in relation to my work as a photographer. Beauty is complicated; it's an individual response to how we live our lives -- but it can also encompass kindness and compassion.

I don't think that real beauty is easily defined, otherwise it's cliched. I'm a self-identified butch dyke, I'm a big woman, and even though I might struggle with my body, I still find it really beautiful in terms of what it can do. Artists who challenge the idea that only a certain type of person or body can be valued are showing that what's considered "the other" can be beautiful too.

I find an enormous amount of beauty in being political and intellectual. Beauty isn't necessarily surface-level; it can also be about one's personal life and contain conflicting ideologies. You can create a certain aesthetic around those ideas, draw someone in with an element of beauty, and then push those boundaries by posing questions.

"Self-Portrait/Nursing" (2004) Credit: Catherine Opie

It's also important to make photographs that inspire one to really look, to be drawn in, instead of just glancing at something quickly. For me, beauty is also about being held.

I've experienced that captivating feeling in a series of three portraits taken by Dutch photographer Rineke Dijkstra in 1994. They feature three different women in the hospital, just after giving birth. They stand, nude, holding their newborns, and at times you see a trail of blood running down a leg, or the marking of a caesarean scar. I find beauty in the honesty of these images, and I'm moved by how they show a mother's protective nature.

People in my community were shocked when I became pregnant. It didn't seem like butch women like me birthed children.

But, I knew I always wanted to be a mom. When I gave birth to Oliver in 2002 , I took a self-portrait while nursing, recalling the forms of Madonna and child.

"Self-Portrait/Cutting" (1993) Credit: Catherine Opie

"Self-Portrait/Nursing" became the third in what could be considered a trilogy of photographs, with my earlier photographs "Self-Portrait/Cutting" and "Self-Portrait/Pervert" from the 1990s. The photograph with "pervert" cut into my chest, when I participated in Los Angeles's queer BDSM community, is a little too extreme for me now. It was important for me to make it, but there's some work that you don't necessarily want to live with every single day. I was talking about beauty in it, though, and the formality of a photograph. It engages you; it's very well-designed. For a large queer body to both hold space, and to seduce you, was a radical concept.

For me, it was perfect to complete this trilogy with the nursing image, which fulfilled my own longing to be a mother. I love the photograph because he was such a beautiful baby -- and he still is. At my last opening, Oliver sat on my lap and told me how proud he was of me as an artist. The fact that my 18-year-old son will still come and cuddle in my lap, mirroring the moment I photographed him while nursing, is incredibly touching to me.

"Rusty" (2008) Credit: Catherine Opie

I try to show that kind of vulnerability when photographing male beauty. In the 2000s, I took tender photographs of high school football players that show both their vulnerability as well as their performance of masculinity. Some of those images are hung now for the "Masculinities" show at the Barbican in London.

Chicken from "Being and Having" (1991) Credit: Catherine Opie

The show also includes images from "Being and Having," which I hung in 1991, of my queer friends and I acting out exaggerated masculinity in moustaches and beards. The show included portraits of my longtime friend Pig Pen. Pig Pen is beautiful to me -- it's in their butchness, the way they hold their body. I'm drawn to the slippage of identity. We met in Los Angeles, running in the same circles, hanging out in queer clubs and being a part of grassroots organizations like Act Up and Queer Nation. The presence of our friendship, which spans decades and multiple bodies of work, is also really important to me. Sentimentality and nostalgia can also shape our perceptions of beauty.

"Pig Pen (Tattoos)" (2009) Credit: Catherine Opie

Today I think we're getting around to understanding that it's also important to show people who are aging. There's something beautiful to that. I think about portraits of John Baldessari, David Hockney or Edith Windsor, all taken in their 80s, and what it means to kind of sit with somebody and photograph them when they're of that age. It's another way of talking about the beauty of longevity. Youth culture isn't the only important area to explore in beauty and fashion. It's important to represent the transitions of a person's body throughout their life.

"David" (2017) Credit: Catherine Opie

We have to question the norm. And if we question the norm, then we question ideas that surround beauty. For me, beauty has to encompass more about the human condition and the times we are living in. I see just an enormous amount of hatred these days. It's troubling; I didn't think that we would return to this level of bigotry. In response, we have to figure out how to really support one another -- to treat people with decency. It's important to realize that beauty is actually tied to ideas around happiness. How do we become fulfilled in that way? And can we fulfill it through acts of kindness?

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Catherine Opie: 'Beauty has to encompass more about the human condition' - CNN

Making The Jetsons Jealous: Peter Diamandis Says The Future Is Better, And Coming Faster Than You Ever Dreamt – Thrive Global

Flying cars. Peopleliving forever. The cost of education, energy, and food brought close to zero.

It would soundlike crazy talk if it were coming from anyone other than Peter Diamandis, creatorof the XPRIZE, founder of the Abundance 360 conference, and author of the mostinfluential books ever written about what the future holds.

In Abundance, published in 2012 and co-authored with Steven Kotler, Diamandis described how technology is bringing the bottom billion out of poverty and into a healthier, happier, opportunity-filled world. They then carried the theme forward in their second book, Bold, and returns to the ideas in their latest effort, The Future Is Faster Than You Think: How Converging Technologies are Transforming Business, Industries, and Our Lives, again with co-author Steven Kotler.

The opportunities that are coming our way in the next five to ten years are astonishing, Diamandis says. Entrepreneurs need to realize that we will make more wealth in the next decade than in the entire previous century. The worlds biggest problems are also the worlds biggest business opportunities. Technology is going to transform absolutely everything, and much faster than people realize.

Diamandis says thathis purpose in writing The Future IsFaster Than You Think is to remove fear.

The mission of the book, he says, is to give people a hopeful but also opportunistic view of the future. Im trying to show where the technologies are and how things will change in every area of life.

Diamandis ticks offtransportation, healthcare, energy, food, insurance, finance, entertainment, andretail as among the areas that will be radically different before we know it.He speaks of the convergence of multiple forms of technology coming together tocreate new business models.

Very few people, he says, when they were children, dreamt of working a cash register, being a parking attendant, or being a housekeeper. They probably had more aspirational objectives for their lives.

The three Ds that will dominate the next decade are dematerializing, democratizing, and demonetizing. In other words, so many functions are moving to the digital world, where they become open to everyone, and not just a select few. At the same time, the cost of living is going to drop so radically that people wont have to work for the sake of paying for their lives. More and more people will be able to do whatever they really want to do.

The book explains wheretechnology is headed, and then demonstrates how the convergence of these newtechnologies will enable opportunities for people that sound like something outa science-fiction movie. It concludeswith a section on the risks and migrations attendant to those changes.

Take longevity, Diamandis says, warming to one of his favorite topics. We are approaching whats called longevity escape velocity. This means that for every year you grow older, science finds a way to extend your life by one year. Age becomes a treatable disease instead of a death sentence.

Diamandis takespains to explain that the societal shifts, due to the obviation of jobs likelong haul trucker, will not be as abrupt or disastrous as people think. In thebook, he notes that it will take half a century before all of todays jobs vanish,only to be replaced by even better opportunities for people at every level ofthe socioeconomic spectrum.

Is he worriedabout a caste system evolving, creating a world of a few technological havesand countless technological have-nots?

Not at all, Diamandis replies. If you look back anywhere from a few centuries to a few millennia, kings, queens, and pharaohs were the haves and everyone else lived in absolute squalor. For millennia, 99.9999% of human beings have lived in survival mode.

Going forward, there will certainly be a small number of super-haves, as there have always been, but everyone else will have unlimited access to healthy food, water, energy, and healthcare, at low or no cost. Thats something unprecedented in human history.

In tomorrows world, every child will be born to extraordinary opportunity. Thats a lot better than the world we know today.

Diamandis pointsout that the technology tends to get radically cheaper as more people adopt it,which means that new opportunities become available to the masses at much lowerprice points than those paid by early adopters.

The only people who had the first cellphones were Wall Street investment bankers, he says. Those phones were the size of briefcases, they cost a million dollars, and they dropped calls every two blocks. But as time went on, the cost of a phone dropped to the point where practically everyone on the planet can have a smartphone. Thats why I say, democratized equals demonetized. The future is coming faster, and better, and cheaper than anyone can imagine.

And these thingsarent 25 to 50 years from now. Theyre literally around the corner. The bookexplains how and why.

For furtherinformation, and special pre-publication bonuses, including copies of Abundance and Bold for people who buy the book in advance, visit http://www.futurefasterbook.com.

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Making The Jetsons Jealous: Peter Diamandis Says The Future Is Better, And Coming Faster Than You Ever Dreamt - Thrive Global

Why Is Everyone Running for President So Old? – The National Interest Online

Every remaining major candidate vying to become anominee for the U.S. presidency is aseptuagenarian. While the aged field of candidates comes with its own set of concerns, it is asign of the countrys progress toward keeping people alive and healthy for longer than ever before.

In the race for the highest office in the land, the socalled Silent Generation is making itself heard. Senator Bernie Sanders (DVT), the oldest candidate, is 78years old, as is former New York mayor Mike Bloomberg, who dropped out of the race this morning. Former vice president Joe Biden is 77years old. President Donald Trump is 73years old. At 70years old, Senator Elizabeth Warren (DMA) is the youngest of the major candidates. She was born in mid1949.

Several major candidates have birthdays coming up before the Election Day. By November 3rd, Senator Sanders will be 79, President Trump will be 74 and Senator Warren will be 71years old. Biden will turn 78 shortly after the election, on November 20th.

When the current President was sworn into office at the age of 70, he was the oldest president ever inaugurated in the United States. It looks like he or whoever assumes the presidency in 2021 will beat that record.

Even among the minor candidates still in the race, septuagenarians are represented. Former Massachusetts Governor Bill Weld, who is challenging the president for the Republican nomination in aprotest campaign, is 74years old. Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard (DHI), who ispolling atless than 2percent nationally, is the only remaining candidate born after 1950. She is 38.

When the septuagenarian candidates were born, the polio vaccine was yet to be created, there were no commercial computers, no human being had yet been to outer space and interracial marriage was still illegal in several U.S. states.

In 1950, U.S. life expectancy stood at 68.2years,accordingto the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The U.S. life expectancy has soared since then and atemporary dip over the last couple of years due to the opioid epidemic has since reversed. The CDCs most recent figures estimate that the U.S. life expectancy reached78.7yearsin 2018an increase of 0.1year from 2017. That means that just within the lifetime of Senator Warren, the youngest major candidate, U.S. life expectancy has expanded by over adecade.

Healthy life expectancy or the number of years one can expect to enjoy good health, has also increased significantly. An American can expect to enjoy around 68 and ahalf years of good health, on average, according to the World Health Organizationsmost recentestimate, for 2016.

The actuarial tables suggest that whichever septuagenarian wins in November, he or she willlikelysurvive the next four years. Based on the average for their age, thats a76.8 percent chance for Sanders; 79.2 percent for Biden; 84.8 percent for Trump and, reflecting that women tend to outlive men, a91.8 percent chance for the relatively youthful Warren. Still, there is no doubt that the vice presidential candidates willmattermore than usual this election cycle.

The countrys Founding Fathers likely could not have imagined afuture with such remarkable longevity. The septuagenarian field of major candidates has sparked concerns over the state of the various candidates health and mental acuity. While those worries should be taken seriously, the fact that so many septuagenarians are running reflects the broader demographic trend of Americans livinglonger, healthier lives and remaining active for many more yearsa fact that should be celebrated.

This article by Chelsea Follett originally appeared in the CATO at Liberty blog in 2020.

Image: Reuters.

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Why Is Everyone Running for President So Old? - The National Interest Online

Dermal Fillers Market is Projected to Expand at a CAGR of 8.6% from 2018 to 2026 – 3rd Watch News

Transparency Market Research (TMR) has Published a new report titled, Dermal Fillers Market Global Industry Analysis, Size, Share, Growth, Trends, and Forecast, 20182026. According to the report, the global dermal fillers market was valued at US$ 2,584.9 Mn in 2017. It is projected to expand at a CAGR of 8.6% from 2018 to 2026. Expansion of the market can be attributed to technological advances leading to the development of newer hyaluronic acid dermal fillers with higher efficiency and long-lasting abilities, marketing strategies employed by market players, increasing awareness about these products on social media, and rising fad of anti-aging among people.

Biodegradables is anticipated to be a lucrative segment

The report offers detailed segmentation of the global dermal fillers market. Based on product, the market has been classified into biodegradable and non-biodegradable. The biodegradable segment dominated the market in 2017. It is likely to maintain its dominance during the forecast period. Biodegradable dermal fillers usually consist of purified dermal components derived from animal, human, or bacterial sources. Expansion of the segment can be attributed to the high safety profile of these fillers and recent technological advances that offer longevity on the usage of biodegradable fillers.

Request a PDF Brochure https://www.transparencymarketresearch.com/sample/sample.php?flag=B&rep_id=26816

Hyaluronic acid segment to expand at a robust CAGR

In terms of material, the dermal fillers market has been split into calcium hydroxylapatite, hyaluronic acid, collagen, poly-l-lactic acid, PMMA, fat, and others. The hyaluronic acid segment dominated the market in 2017. It is likely to maintain its dominance and expand at a high CAGR during the forecast period. More than 60% of dermal filler procedures performed globally are carried out with hyaluronic acid fillers. According to International Society of Plastic Surgeons (ISAPS), over 3,298,266 hyaluronic acid dermal filler procedures were performed annually. Additionally, technological advances have led to the development of various forms of hyaluronic acid dermal fillers, which differ according to the concentration of hyaluronic acid and the degree of crosslinking. These are known to enhance the longevity of the filler effect. These factors are anticipated to drive the market.

Rising fad of anti-aging driving the facial line correction treatment segment

Based on application, the dermal fillers market has been segregated into facial line correction treatment, lip enhancement, scar treatment, and others. The facial line correction treatment segment dominated the market in 2017. It is likely to continue the trend and expand at a high CAGR during the forecast period. Expansion of the segment can be attributed to the rising trend of anti-aging and increasing awareness about esthetic appearance among people. Additionally, facial line correction treatment appeals to varied age demographic, ranging from young adults to enhance their youthful features to middle-aged adults for volume restoration and older individuals to maintain age-related symptoms. Marketing strategies employed by market players, wherein celebrities promote their products, are fueling the desire among the population to mimic their favorite celebrities. This, in turn, is boosting the demand for facial line correction treatment procedures.

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Dermatology clinics to expand at high CAGR

In terms of end-user, the market has been split into hospitals, ambulatory surgical centers, dermatology clinics, and others. In terms of revenue, the hospitals segment dominated the market in 2017. It is likely to maintain the trend during the forecast period. However, the dermatology clinics segment is anticipated to expand at a robust growth rate during the forecast period. Robust expansion of the segment can be attributed to the increase in dermatology consultations and surge in preference for specialist dermatologists.

Growth in Asia Pacific to be driven by Japan and India

In terms of revenue, North America dominated the global dermal fillers market in 2017. The U.S. was the major revenue generating country in the region. Expansion of the market in the country can be attributed to a rise in the number of dermal filler procedures performed annually. According to American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS) over 2.3 million dermal filler procedures were performed in 2017, an increase of over 3% over 2016. The market in Asia Pacific is expected to expand at a high CAGR during the forecast period. Expansion of the market in the region can be attributed to the increasing demand for dermal filler procedures in Japan, India, and China. Hyaluronic acid dermal filler procedures are highly common non-surgical procedures performed in various countries across Asia Pacific, including Japan, China, India, and Thailand.

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Strategic acquisitions is a key strategy adopted by key players

The report provides profiles of leading players operating in the global dermal fillers market. These players include Allergan plc, Sinclair Pharma (a subsidiary of Huadong Medicine Ltd), Merz Pharma GmbH & Co. KGaA, Nestle Skin Health (Galderma), BioPlus Co., Ltd., Bioxis pharmaceuticals, SCULPT Luxury Dermal Fillers LTD, Dr. Korman Laboratories Ltd., Prollenium Medical Technologies, Advanced Aesthetic Technologies, Inc., and TEOXANE Laboratories.

For instance, in 2014, Nestle acquired several dermatology brands owned by Canada-based pharmaceuticals group Valeant, which added a range of dermal fillers to the Nestle skincare business. Nestles skincare business was established through the acquisition of Galderma. In the same year, Allergan acquired Aline hyaluronic acid (HA) thread technology from Aline Aesthetics, a wholly owned subsidiary of TauTona Group.

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Dermal Fillers Market is Projected to Expand at a CAGR of 8.6% from 2018 to 2026 - 3rd Watch News

Zelda Was One of the Greatest Modern Writers of Religious Experience in Any Language – Mosaic

In the world of modern Hebrew letters, some names have achieved international recognition: from S.Y. Agnon and ayyim Naman Bialik to, more recently, Amos Oz and Yehuda Amichai. The names of others, whose contributions to Hebrew literature may be no less significant, tend to resonate in smaller, more localized circles.

Among the latter figures is the poet Zelda Shneerson Mishkovsky (1914-1984)known simply as Zelda to her many devoted readers in Israel. Indeed, her place in the world of Hebrew letters is secure, having been recognized through the award of both the Bialik and the Brenner prizes,two ofIsraels highest literary honors. That place is also unique: more than three decades after her death, Zelda remains one of the greatest modern writers of religious experiencein Hebrew or in any other language.

Who was she?

Zeldas rendering of religious experience was undoubtedly informed by her early life. Born in Russia in the waning days of the tsarist empire, she spent her first decade under the new dispensation of the Bolsheviks. Her formative childhood environment, however, was the world not of Communist atheism but of Chabad asidism. Zeldas first cousin, older than she by a dozen years, was Menachem MendelSchneerson, who in 1950 would become the seventh leader of the Chabad-Lubavitch dynasty: the Lubavitcher rebbe.

At twelve, Zelda emigrated to mandatory Palestine with her family. The Schneersons settled in Jerusalem (bejeweled in the sun,/ smiling like a bride), where she would spend most of her adult life. Nor did the spiritual world of her early years ever leave her. She remained devoutly religious her whole life and would often allude to asidic themes and symbols in her poetry. That poetry depicts a world of divine sparks and miracles, a world in which God is at times a living entity, as solid as a human lover or friend. But hers is also a world of profound loneliness and isolation, a world in which death maintains an unshakable presence and God is often hidden.

Zeldas father died about a year after the familys move to Jerusalem, and her grandfather soon after. In Jerusalem, she attended a religious girls school and then the Mizrai Teachers Seminary. It was while a student at the latter that she first began writing and publishing poetry in newspapers and magazines.

Over the next two decades, Zelda lived in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, and Haifa, teaching Hebrew to new immigrants, caring for her ailing mother, and working as a teacher in an elementary school. Even as a teacher, she brought her radiant vision to her work, calling small kindnesseslike lending an eraser, or handing out drawing papermaking sparks. Among her second-grade pupils was Amos Oz, who many years later, in his 2002 memoir A Tale of Love and Darkness, would write:

[Zelda] revealed a Hebrew language to me that I had never encountered before. . . . A strange anarchic Hebrew, a Hebrew belonging to stories of the pious and to asidic tales and folk parables, a Hebrew overflowing with Yiddish, violating every rule, mixing feminine with masculine, present with past, noun with adjectivea sloppy, even muddled Hebrew.

But what vitality there was in these stories! When a story was about snow, it seemed written in words of snow. And when it was about fires, the words themselves burned.

Despite her pedagogical gifts, Zelda felt teaching stifled her poetry. When she married ayim Aryeh Mishkovsky in 1950, she gave up teaching and began writing more intensely. Still, it wasnt until 1967after much urging from her husband and friendsthat Leisure, her first book of poems, was released. She was fifty-three years old.

Leisurelaunched Zelda from near-anonymity into the heart of the Israeli literary world. Some of the excitement was undoubtedly due to the novelty of her biography, buther work also gained attention for breaking poetic ground. Ignoring the genre boundaries and rhythmic patterns that then still largely governed the writing of Hebrew verse, her work, as the singerChavaAlbersteinwould observe, sounded a new melody on the Hebrew poetry scene.

From 1967 onward Zelda published prolifically, releasing a book of poetry every three to four years. Her second book, The Invisible Carmel (1971), was dedicated to the memory of ayim, who passed away shortly before its publication. In the following years, deathalways a major themebecame even more prominent. Her preoccupation with mortality led to one of her most brilliant poems, Heavy Silence, a meditation on language, meaning, and grief.

Here and throughout, the translations are by Marcia Falk in The Spectacular Difference: Selected Poems of Zelda (2004):

Death will take the spectacular differencebetween fire and waterand cast it to the abyss.

Heavy silencewill crouch like a bullon the names we have giventhe birds of the skyand the beasts of the field,the evening skies,the vast distances in space,and things hidden from the eye.

Heavy silence will crouch like a bullon all the words.And it will be as hard for me to partfrom the names of thingsas from the things themselves.

O Knower of Mysteries,help me understandwhat to ask foron the final day.

Few would have expected Zeldas poems, which, like this one, brim with allusions to biblical and mystical texts, to resonate with readers across all segments of Israeli society. Yet she was never exclusively either a poets poet or a aredipoet. Indeed, each of her sixbooks was a national bestseller, and the ranks of her admirers included kibbutzniks, soldiers, yeshiva students, and academics.Her verses have been put to music in popular Hebrew songs, most notably byAlberstein, and one poem in particular, Each of Us Has a Name, is a frequent feature of Holocaust Remembrance Day ceremonies in Israel.

It is true, however, that today, despite her popularity, she is more likely to be mentioned by the keepers of advanced Israeli culture as a token curiosity (Israels first religious female poet) than as a serious literary artist. Nor was she ever recognized with the Israel Prize, the nations highest cultural honor. In 2004, the literary critic Alit Karper wrote in Haaretz that Twenty years after her death from cancer, Zelda is mainly a very forgotten poet. And outside of Israel, as I noted at the outset, her work is virtually unknown.

Countless forces contribute to the making of a writers reputation and cultural longevity, some of which have little to do with the actual work. (The Canadian scholar H.J. Jackson once listed such fame-enhancing factors as dying young, having a politically contentious youth, and living in a pretty, pilgrimage-friendly place.) As for Zelda, one might speculate that her work has been overlooked in part because her poems seem so simple.

In contrast to poets whose work cries Decipher me!, Zeldas poemsparticularly those rooted in concrete imagesexhibit a straightforwardness that makes them approachable despite their often antiquated language, minimal punctuation, and erratic line breaks. Thus, a poem titled The Crippled Beggar 1 is about a crippled beggar; another, called Strange Plant, is about a strange plant. Nor is this an artifice: according to her translator Marcia Falk, Zeldas poems are never put-ons, never show-offs, and above all, never artificial. . . . They seem, rather, to have been born whole and delivered to us in a single breath.

This accessibility is one of Zeldas greatest strengths, for her poems can be read and appreciated by readers of various skills and levels of Jewish literacy. But the fact that her poems do not declare themselves as difficult has undoubtedly led some who should know better to dismiss her work after skimming only the surface. Take, for example, the following untitled poem:

In the morning, I thoughtLifes magic will never return,it wont return.Suddenly in my house, the sunis a living thing,and the table with its breadgold.And the flower and the cupsgold.And the sadness?Even thereradiance.

Simple enough. The poem contains no obvious allusions or impressive formal displays, and its main technical achievement seems to lie in its use of abrupt line breaks that, in emphasizing the moments transience, curtail any hint of sentimentality.

But, as always with Zelda, there is more here than meets the eye. In her system of personal symbols (other instances include The Sun Lit a Wet Branch, The Old House, Strange Plant, and many more), gold is associated with light and divine presence: a connection most likely adapted from the kabbalistic idea of the infinite light of God overflowing through metaphysical emanations to the lower human world. In this poem, the idea of an impassable gulf between the earthly realm and the realm of the divine is openly challenged. God, Zelda suggests, can be found not only in the synagogue but in the small nouns that make up our world: the table with its bread, a bunch of flowers, cups.

But there is more. The quiet lines and the table with its bread/ gold./ And the flower . . . / gold are borrowed, nearly word for word, from Kings 1 7:48-49, a passage describing the golden table and vessels in the Great Hall of Solomons Temple. The terms, almost seamlessly incorporated into the body of her text, carry theological weight, implying not only that God is present in the mundane but that discerning the divine in the mundane is in itself an act of worship.

Embedded within this unassuming poem is thus a distinctively asidic theology, an alternative to the desacralized cosmos in which most of us live. That theology is communicated through reference to Judaisms sacred texts, deployed so deftly as to be nearly invisible. Zeldas work can be read and enjoyed without knowledge of her specifically asidic background, but it cannot be fully appreciated without a sense of her religious world.

In this same connection, its important to stress that some of the best notes struck by this poet of religious experience reflect the moments when that experience fails to line up precisely with theology. Take, for example, Who Can Resist the Beauty of the Light:

I bore my anger to show to the light,seeking comfort in its beauty,

but I was not worthy in its eyes,I was not worthy in its eyes.

Why is your life dark? it said.You are not in the depths of the pit.This must be a lack of love.

And I wept.I wept deeply.

Like many of Zeldas poems, this one has a patina of childishness. The poem is filled with simple contrasts: light/dark, comfort/disquiet, life/(intimated) death. As in a childrens story, the light speaks. As in a nursery rhyme, the poem doubles and repeats. But the simplistic structure and fable-like images belie the complexity of the literary and emotional framework.

Most obvious in this respect is the reference to Psalms 88:7: Thou hast laid me in the nethermost pit, in dark places, in the deeps. This psalm is itself one of the darkest in that biblical book, its mood described by the religious historian Martin Marty as a wintry landscape of unrelieved bleakness. Unlike other psalms dealing with themes of death and abandonment, Psalm 88 is essentially nineteen verses of unmediated gloomwhich makes it a fitting background to the emotional state of Zeldas speaker.

Other allusions in the poem are similarly apparent only in the original Hebrew, and then mostly to readers deeply familiar with Judaisms foundational texts. Since this presents a common problem in reading Zeldas work in translation, we may pause here for a word about Marcia Falks efforts to overcome it. Although her renderings excel at conveying the intimacy and simplicity of Zeldas work, more subtle references are sometimes elided. Here, for instance, the word translated by Falk as my anger () might better be rendered as my disquiet. The phrase appears in Exodus, Proverbs, and Job, among other places, but its root form appears most notably in Samuel 2 19:1together, significantly, with a form of Zeldas archaic (and I wept), another highly inflected word in the poem.

This is the only verse in the Bible in which both words appear in conjunction, and at a moment of extreme intensity: And the king was much moved, and went up to the chamber over the gate, and wept. The verse marks the start of Davids lament for Absalom, perhaps the most famous of all biblical expressions of grief: O my son Absalom, my son, my son Absalom! would I had died for thee, O Absalom, my son, my son!

Yet the context of the kings outcryin particular, the fact that Absalom was killed as he attempted a coupis sometimes overlooked. In fact, the lament is itself followed by a considerably less famous passage in which David is reminded by his nephew Joab, who is also the commander of the royal army, that had Absalom lived and the coup succeeded, the kings wives, sons, daughters, and servants would all have been slaughtered.

In other words, Absalom, O Absalom! is an expression of inappropriate grief. And it is precisely in that sense that Zeldas references to Samuel align her I with David. Like David, Zeldas speaker senses that her griefor at least the depth of itis misplaced, uncalled-for. She mourns, like David, but believes she ought not to. Her life is dark, but she, like him, is not truly in the nethermost pit.

Also critical to understanding Who Can Resist the Beauty of the Light is some knowledge of the Chabad approach to grief and joy, and in particular Chabads emphasis on divine providence: the belief that, for the faithful, all that occurs is ultimately the result of Gods benevolent care for us. Complete trust in that benevolence allows an individual to welcome suffering with joy and love, for everything has its origin and its end in God, the Infinite Light invoked in the poems title.

For Zelda, these ideas were not abstract theological concerns. The death of her husband ayim left her bereft. Even years later, many of her poems describe the pain of widowhood. As letters exchanged between her and her cousin Menachem Mendel Schneerson reveal, the opposing spiritual valences of suffering and grateful happiness were at the forefront of her mind. At one point, Schneerson writes, From the spirit of your letters, I get the impression that though I keep writing you to take a more joyful perspective, . . . my words have made no mark. . . . But I will persist, and repeat myself even 100 times, and you will forgive me.

Despite these urgings, Zelda was unable to subsume her pain in faith. Her poems suggest that she saw this lack of love as a spiritual failing. And that brings us to the core of Who Can Resist the Beauty of the Light, which lies precisely in the speakers sense that she has failed to live up to ideals she feels are impossible but cannot relinquish. Caught between what she believes (all that occurs is the result of Gods will) and what she experiences (darkness and pain), the speakers only recourse is tears: And I wept./ I wept deeply.

In less skilled hands, that thought, along with the poem that expresses it, would have tipped into sentimentality, or blasphemy. But Zelda navigates the tension with grace. By suffusing her lines with words from sacred Jewish texts and Hebrew liturgy, she creates a work that, even in its angst, reads also as an expression of stubborn, stiff-necked love. If Who Can Resist the Beauty of the Light does not end with a reevaluation of the speakers disquiet, neither does it conclude with a rejection of the light. Instead, pain stands alongside belief, neither one dislodging the other, neither one offering resolution.

Religious experience is notoriously difficult to express in words. The reason may owe in part, as Wittgenstein suggested, to the difference between how we use and relate to religious language and how we use and relate to everyday speech. In part it may also owe to the fact that the most meaningful religious experiences are often characterized by paradox: think of the medieval Christian mystic Julian of Norwichs vision of a small hazelnut that somehow also contains everything that is made.

Of all the possible modes of linguistic transmission, perhaps the one uniquely suited to the expression of religious experience is poetryprecisely because of poetrys capacity to convey paradox, holding multiple contradictory ideas open at the same time. Its therefore unsurprising that almost all of the Hebrew Bibles most moving expressions of religious experience derive from the poetic books: Ecclesiastes, Psalms, Job, Song of Songs, Proverbs, Lamentations. These are not the texts that give us answers, but the ones that best present our questions while assuring us that we are not alone in asking them.

Like those biblical books, Zeldas poetry speaks to the tension of a lived religious life, the places where theology and experience refuse to meld. In her work, the divine is at once radically immanent and hopelessly distant. Death negates human instrumentality, but also allows for the discernment of wonder. A righteous God permits the faithful to suffer.

Theodicy, suffering, redemptionits all there. And that is what entitles Zeldas work to a place at the center of the modern Hebrew canon and to be recognized for what it is: a masterful expression of religious experience that, refusing both blasphemy and sentimentality, offers instead a form of prayer.

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Zelda Was One of the Greatest Modern Writers of Religious Experience in Any Language - Mosaic

Precision Medicine Software Market : The Report Analysis And Overview of Global Market In Term Of Size, Share, Growth And Development 2019-2024 :…

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Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Never Stopped Reinventing Itself – Vulture

Youd be forgiven for writing off Marvels Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. as a typical freak-of-the-week procedural early in its run. At its launch, its premise was simple: follow the missions of a team of agents from the awkwardly named Strategic Homeland Intervention, Enforcement, and Logistics Division, an intelligence agency with global reach, as they investigate enhanced beings and unusual gadgets. Its formula was familiar, akin to old Syfy staples like Eureka and Warehouse 13. But by the closing episodes of its first season, this premise was blown up along with the eponymous organization, which was dismantled from within by rogue agents and labeled a terrorist group by the U.S. government. And what emerged from the rubble was a fundamentally different show.

Over the course of six seasons, S.H.I.E.L.D. has evolved into a science-fiction fantasia, what one character describes as a fifth-dimensional freak show, exploring human mutation, artificial intelligence, virtual reality, space exploration, time travel, and even magic (a.k.a. unexplained science, as agents Fitz and Simmons would say). In its previous season, it became a full-blown space opera, equipped with aerial shots of spaceship fleets and the gaseous surfaces of distant planets, not to mention two alien species intent on invading Earth. And when S.H.I.E.L.D. returns for its seventh and final season tonight, it will continue to be a different show from the one that premiered in the fall of 2013. Promotional material promises more time travel, more threats of alien colonization, and more life-model decoys, but its too early to determine where this new mission will take the agents geographically, emotionally, or even temporally the season begins in 1930s New York, but the likelihood of it staying there for long is slim. So whether you wandered away from the show during its first year or some time in a subsequent season, now is a good time to revisit how its reconfigured itself over the years.

What makes the evolution of S.H.I.E.L.D created by Joss Whedon, Jed Whedon, and Maurissa Tancharoen intriguing is not merely that it touches on numerous science-fiction tropes or that it has graduated from episodic to more serialized storytelling over the years. Nor is it the fact that it holds the distinction of being the first show to bring the shared universe of the MCU to the small screen and has subsequently outlasted other Marvel projects scattered across Netflix and Disney-owned ABC, Freeform, and Hulu. (Its the last show produced by Marvel Television under Jeph Loeb, the studio having since folded under the Kevin Feigeheaded Marvel Studios.) No, whats most fascinating about S.H.I.E.L.D. as it enters its endgame is how its committed to the practice of essentially adopting a new subgenre every ten or so episodes, particularly later in its run, which breaks its 22-episode seasons into multi-episode arcs. So while much of season one is a spy procedural, the first half of season four is a ghost story. And around the time Dolores Abernathy began questioning the nature of her reality on Westworld, S.H.I.E.L.D. became a robot thriller, with A.I.D.A., a life-model decoy created to protect field agents, searching for a way to achieve her own humanity in the second half of season four. The series bounds from one subgenre to the next at such rapidity that theres barely time to to wrap your mind around one concept before its on to the next, with characters openly decrying the pace at which the team faces new trials and tribulations. But this breakneck speed also means that there are few filler episodes, allowing the show to maintain its momentum within and between seasons.

Thats not to say that there are no periods of downtime, moments in which, usually after the defeat of some megalomaniac, the agents can recline and enjoy each others company. Because for all of its superhuman phenomena, S.H.I.E.L.D. foregrounds human connection and the capacity of humans to do right by each other. The found-family sentiment is as prevalent here as it is on other long-running workplace-based shows if not more so, since the agents live, work, and regularly face their mortality together. This is particularly true of the relationship between Phillip J. Coulson (Clark Gregg), the team patriarch, a man who has given his life to S.H.I.E.L.D. in every sense, and Daisy Johnson (Chloe Bennet), an orphan whos spent her life searching for her family, only to be traumatized by the truth of her origin.

As the best science-fiction dramas tend to do, S.H.I.E.L.D. grounds its fantastic elements with real emotion. And its marriage of the two is so successful that in season five, which features Inhuman fighting pits and insatiable space roaches, its the civil war that erupts within the team that foments the greatest tension. The question of whether to allow Coulson to die, if saving his life could mean the destruction of Earth, seems easy enough to answer: Whats one mans life when the world hangs in the balance? But the agents are so dedicated to each other and to their mission that, for some, it does become a dilemma, yet another hard choice for people used to making hard choices, having already endured years of personal sacrifice to stave off near-annual extinction-level threats.

After scoring two unexpected season renewals (its no coincidence that the season-five finale is called The End), S.H.I.E.L.D. is going out on its own terms with season seven, a coveted planned conclusion in a television landscape rife with sudden cancellations. Fittingly, the show that originally brought the world of the MCU to the small screen will also serve as an outro to the cinematic universes first phase in television, as Marvel Studios ushers in a new phase with a slew of series produced for Disney+, set to begin rolling out later this year. S.H.I.E.L.D.s longevity is no doubt partly due to its penchant for reinvention, its ability to explode the scope of its storytelling season after season. But while the show has come a remarkably long way from its pilot, with the core group of agents now bouncing around the past, the characters ever-deepening devotion to each other has served as an emotional through line, a constant for the characters (and viewers) to hold on to as the narrative rapidly changes around them. And now, with their final adventure about to begin, theres no better time to join the team.

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Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Never Stopped Reinventing Itself - Vulture

Mike Shalin’s Working Press: Belichick out to show he can win with Stidham – The Union Leader

IF YOU have been paying attention to your New England Patriots during this time of isolation, you might have noticed a subtle changing of the guard at Gillette Stadium.

You might have noticed that Jarrett Stidham is now the New England quarterback.

Thats right. Tom Brady is living in Derek Jeters mansion in Florida. Mediocre veterans have floated past Bill Belichicks office window, without any obvious interest from the boss. Cam Newton? No. Jameis Winston? Nah. Andy Dalton? As of Saturday morning, nothing. The draft came and went and no QB was taken by the Pats, who did sign one, Michigan States Brian Lewerke, as a free agent.

All signs were pointing at Stidham, the second-year fourth-round draft pick who mostly stood and watched Brady and a shaky, no-Rob Gronkowski offense fail to get far in a bid for Lombardi Trophy No. 7. Stidham played some very little but must have impressed enough in practice to show he deserves the shot at replacing Brady when (if???) things kick into gear for 2020.

For two decades, it was about Brady. Brady and Belichick. Belichick and Brady. No. 1 and No. 1A. The argument raged over who was more important to the dynasty.

Now, Belichick remains. And this whole Stidham thing could simply be about the coachs immense pride as he looks to show the world it was actually Belichick/Brady (in that order) the whole time.

Brian Hoyer is around to help push Stidham, but this appears to be the kids job to lose. Belichick seems just fine with that.

As NBCSports Boston said in a recent headline: Who Won the 2020 Draft? Jarrett Stidham

While the AFC Least isnt as bad as it once was (do the Pats now have the weakest starting QB in the division?), its still not a killer road for at least another division title in 2020.

If they go to the playoffs in what doomsayers are thinking will be a lost post-Brady season, then Belichick wins. On the other hand, if Tampa Bay goes to the playoffs (and perhaps even becomes the first team to host a Super Bowl), Bradys the clear winner.

The GOAT

For those into the argument over whether Brady is the greatest of all time and place Joe Montana second the website thedelite.com agrees with half your position.

The site has ranked the top 40 QBs and while Brady is No. 1, Montana comes in at just No. 7.

On Brady, they said, When you combine statistical greatness, consistency, clutch performances and winning in the regular season and playoffs, there is simply no better quarterback than Tom Brady. The sheer number of playoff games hes started in equal more than two full NFL seasons, making his longevity in the game even more impressive, and his .732 winning percentage in them is also staggering.

Drew Brees came in second, followed by Peyton Manning, Dan Marino, Steve Young, Aaron Rodgers, Montana and then Brett Favre.

Joe Cool never led the NFL in passing yards, despite routinely throwing for more than 3,000 yards, they said of Montana. His best feature was accuracy, leading the league in completion percentage five times, ranking 15th in NFL history in that statistic for his career. Montanas 1989 run in the playoffs is still one of the best for a quarterback ever, as he threw for 800 yards, 11 touchdowns and no interceptions on the way to winning his fourth ring.

Drew Bledsoe was No. 31, Dan Fouts 32 and Joe Namath 38.Cheese trouble

All signs are pointing toward things getting rocky fast in Green Bay after the Packers, on the 15th anniversary of drafting Rodgers as Favres successor, tabbed Jordan Love in the first round.

Aaron Rodgers should mentor Jordan Love, said FS1s Colin Cowherd. If Aaron Rodgers and we know hes been frustrated before by people in the organization. In two years, if Aaron Rodgers is done and can get out. You know what would have to happen to the Packers to be willing to do it?

Favre, surprised at the pick, made 15 years to the night from when the Pack tabbed Rodgers to replace HIM, also predicted this wont end well. Meanwhile, Rodgers, a factor in Mike McCarthy leaving Green Bay, was apparently already at it with his current coach.

Wrote The Athletics Bob McGinn: Public niceties aside, my sense is (Matt) LaFleur, fresh from a terrific 13-3 baptismal season, simply had enough of Rodgers act and wanted to change the narrative. With a first-round talent on the roster, the Packers would gain leverage with their imperial quarterback and his passive-aggressive style.

If the Packers do indeed want to become a running team next season (BCs AJ Dillon was also selected), they surely wouldnt want Rodgers rocking the boat and becoming even more difficult to coach.

Bucs headache

Gronkowski claimed he had been studying the Tampa Bay playbook weeks before the Bucs traded for him. The NFL is likely investigating his new team for possible tampering.

Pats fans everywhere will expect Roger Goodell, still not a fan favorite in New England, to lower some kind of boom on the Bucs but its hard to imagine this really going anywhere. Right?

I was in a Tampa Bay Buccaneers playbook four weeks ago, and I wasnt even on the team, Gronk, now a former wrestler, boasted.

He scrambled, tweeting, he was just joking around.

Bring it back

OK, I surrender. Im ready to have sports return, in any form.

No fans? Got it. Playing baseball in Florida and Arizona? Check.

Saturday was supposed to be Kentucky Derby day (the first Saturday in May). Did you have an annual Derby party?

I dont know about you, but watching any of these old games the MLB and NHL Networks have given us plenty to watch I immediately hit Google and check the box score, so I know who won and how so I can leave and return.

MGM sent letters to all the sports saying it would be happy to house all athletes at the MGM Grand, with families residing at the nearby Luxor.

Bob Nightengale of USA Today broke a story last week that had baseball dispensing of its two leagues and going to three divisions of 10 teams each. The plan would be set up geographically to limit travel.

The games would be played in home parks (great news for us official scorers), with the Red Sox in the same division as both New York teams.

A schedule could consist of 99 or 100 games. How about playing each division opponent 11 times each with no games outside the division? There would be inter-league built right in.

In addition to wearing a mask and scoring games at Fenway, I will watch at home.

No fans would be weird to watch on television. Heck, youd be able to hear everything on the field, the court or the ice. Theyd have to use a delay to bleep out the language. Would they pipe in phony crowd noise, which has been working (as a joke) for Bill Maher on Friday nights?

Without crowd noise, the grunting of the 350-pound football linemen would be clear as a bell. A torn-up knee would be accompanied by screams of pain. In short, wed learn a lot more about these guys and how human they can be despite playing like animals in the jungle.

Last Dance

Hey, are you watching the Bulls documentary? Episodes 5 and 6 are tonight. The production is full of the hate between the Bulls and Bad Boy Pistons.

Its clear Michael Jordan and Isiah Thomas are NOT friends. Jordan called Thomas a bad name and Thomas, who has had all kinds of trouble since leaving the court (see Madison Square Garden sexual harassment case) and still graces us with his presence on TV, answered this week.

Its fitting Thomas middle name is Lord.

Speaking to CBS, Thomas said, I respect him a lot as a basketball player, I have nothing against him, but I faced better players than him.

He listed Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Larry Bird and Magic Johnson ahead of Jordan.

Looking around

The Red Sox were supposed to be hosting the Texas Rangers this weekend.

Jayson Tatum is one of the NBAs bright young stars and hes starting to get plenty of endorsement work.

The Bruins took a gamble when they gave Jaro Halak a two-year deal after he finished his rocky six-year contract with the Islanders. To say it worked out would be understatement and he just signed a one-year/$2.75 million contract extension last week. With Tuukka Rask leaving the door ajar on retiring after this interrupted season, Halak would be No. 1 in Boston next year. The Bs could do worse.

From the MGM proposal to the leagues: Any person entering the integrated resort would have to go through agreed health, safety, and quarantine protocols. Basketball could be played on five courts built on the Mandalay Bay site, the home of the WNBAs Aces.

Andre Dawson, now a mortician in his native Miami, on working during the pandemic, to the Associated Press: Its very sad. Its very sad. Because people mourn and grieve differently and theyre not getting through that process as they would under normal circumstances. You see a lot of hurt and pain. Morticians see hurt and pain all the time; but this has to be SO different as the bodies pile up and families dont get to grieve properly.

My nephew went to and graduated Michigan State. Bro tells me Lewerke is nothing special. But the kid is athletic and you wonder what Belichick has in store for him.

Remember, Julian Edelman had 30 touchdown passes and 31 interceptions his last year at Kent State.

NBCSports Boston continues its Celtics games/series productions tonight. It runs through the end of the month more chances for Cs fans to complain about officials having it in for their team.

So sorry to hear about the passing of former Boston Herald colleague Mike Carey, gone at 72. Great NBA writer. RIP!!!

From the NFL combine overview on Lewerke: Scouts have gone from bullish to bearish on Lewerke after his dismal two-year run following a promising 2017 campaign. He looks the part from an operational standpoint with good size and mobility, but hes been unable to inspire confidence in his ability as a field leader. If coaching improves his footwork and follow-through, he might see some improvement from an accuracy standpoint, but its hard to say if it will be enough.

I watched a 2013 Giants-Dodgers game the other day with the great Vin Scully doing the telecast. The Dodgers left runners on base all day before Buster Posey won it for the Giants with a home run. Said Scully, in a way only he could say it, the Dodgers Waited around all day to get beat ... and they got beat.

Tremendous success story being written by a young hockey player. Two years after suffering a broken back in that horrific Humboldt bus crash, Graysen Cameron has committed to play and go to school at Northland College in Ashland, Wis.

From @petervescey: Incredulously, Mark McNamara, who has passed away, Is the fourth 76ers center of the 1980s to die at 60 or younger; Moses Malone, Caldwell Jones and Darryl Dawkins are the other three. Bless one and all!

Complete with the video, the Bengals tweeted good-bye to Dalton early this week. Read the tweet: We have released QB Andy Dalton. Andy has not only been an outstanding player on the field, but a role model in the Cincinnati community for the last nine years. Thank you for everything, Andy.

Mike Shalin covers Boston pro sports for the New Hampshire Union Leader and Sunday News. His email address is shalinmike@yahoo.com. Follow him on Twitter @mscotshay.

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Mike Shalin's Working Press: Belichick out to show he can win with Stidham - The Union Leader

Column: Why Ahmaud Arbery deserved to live – The Augusta Chronicle

I write in response to Matthew Hutchersons letter to the editor published in The Augusta Chronicle on May 12 titled Black racism murdered Arbery.

It is indubitable that many have been stirred to emotion at the very unfortunate and equally untimely death of Ahmaud Arbery in the Satilla Shores neighborhood of Brunswick. I know I was. Nevertheless, there is absolutely nothing to doubt about the cause of his death and why it took over two months to make an arrest after his death, and I can note without fear of contradiction that what Dr. Hutcherson candidly delineates as being black racism is, in no way, responsible for the death of Ahmaud.

The letter suggests that any attempt to perpetuate black culture as a part of the pluralistic beauty of the American fabric - by way of being visible in the media and on television, while exposing the truths of the black experience in America in all facets of society - in some way fosters black racism. Stating such is both an insult and is stupefyingly color-blind to the struggles of the past that black people in America had to overcome to foster a sense of belonging and community in a country that we were forcefully brought to commencing in 1619, enslaved in, helped build and invent, defend in arms, and of which we have been fortunate as a result of the bloodshed, marches, sweat, prayers and tears of many to rise to the upper echelons of leadership.

Dr. Hutchersons comments are supremely out-of-touch with black American reality, white American reality, and reality in general in allowing the past struggles and triumphs to be our collective impetus to unite as a human race with no consideration of skin complexion and move forward. His attempts in his letter to provide an apology of Ahmauds pursuit and murder, be it an endeavor to foster unity, sows remarkable divide and refutes the beauty of the Rev. Martin Luther Kings egalitarian dream.

Dr. Hutcherson pitiably confuses his contrived black racism with what is actually black exceptionalism, which is allowed under the auspices of the Declaration of Independence of this country in its opening statements that all men are created equal and are permitted the God-given rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. How we as black people express our culture allows us to fulfill that and in no way poses a threat, as Dr. Hutcherson attempts to convey, to our individual and collective longevity as an ethnicity of people. Our culture gives us pride. Our culture gives us purpose. Our culture gives us power.

Let me tell you what killed Ahmaud. Two shotgun wounds to the chest facilitated by one also to his wrist killed Ahmaud. That ammunition was employed by two men, and they allowed their implicit biases; their mistaken knowledge of how and when to execute an antiquated citizens arrest statute; a dash of mistaken identity; and a generous helping of racism, whatever color it be, to influence them. They viewed Ahmaud as different. They viewed him as other. They viewed him as not belonging, and therein lies the notion of why they chose to take control of his body, and that they did. They construed him to be out-of-place, stood as impromptu judge and jury, and together decided a verdict for an unarmed young American male merely getting some exercise.

To suggest otherwise or falsely denote premises that Ahmaud was a victim of his own ethnicitys attempts to be a visible component of the American experience is to suggest that he had no business there anyway. It is to condone what the McMichaels did as OK. It is to permit Ahmaud Arberys death or that of any other young black person in this country going out for an innocent jog close to home.

My point is just like every other American who is entitled to life, Ahmaud too was entitled to life. Just like every other American who is entitled to liberty, Ahmaud too was entitled to liberty. Just like every other American who is entitled to the pursuit of happiness, Ahmaud too was entitled to the pursuit of happiness.

To suggest otherwise is un-American, egregious and an utter disgrace to how far weve come in the struggle of our people to achieve equality in every respect and the fullness of the American dream.

The writer is a physician who lives in Atlanta and Augusta, his hometown, part-time.

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Column: Why Ahmaud Arbery deserved to live - The Augusta Chronicle

Trouble at TMCC: Faculty organization threatens censure, investigation of president – ThisisReno

This Is Reno has been hit incredibly hard due to COVID-19. Any amount is appreciated.

Truckee Meadows Community College continues to experience turmoil among its ranks. The Nevada Faculty Alliance in mid-March petitioned Nevadas Board of Regents for immediate redress of what it said was a toxic and fear-ridden environment at the college.

The state board of the Nevada Faculty Alliance demands that the Nevada System of Higher Education take immediate proactive steps to restore shared governance, academic freedom, due process, faculty rights, and basic human rights at TMCC, the organization wrote in a letter to Nevadas Board of Regents and chancellor. If these matters are not resolved satisfactorily, then the State Board will consider a public censure of the TMCC administration and a recommendation of a formal investigation to our AAUP national organization.

AAUP is the American Association of University Professors, a national organization for higher education faculty that promotes academic freedom and faculty input into higher-education governance.

Since the creation of the Nevada Faculty Alliance in 1983 the organization has never formally censured an administrator in the Nevada System of Higher Education. However, due to the toxic, fear-ridden, and deteriorating culture at TMCC we are now seriously considering such a move, Faculty Alliance representatives wrote.

The representatives also said two other NSHE campuses are facing similar issues to TMCCs: Great Basin College and UNLV.

At TMCC, they cited verbal abuse and threats by president Dr. Karin Hilgersom and her administration.

The president purposefully uses bullying, threats, divisiveness and retribution as tactics to create a climate of fear and an us versus them atmosphere among the TMCC faculty and staff, the group wrote. The NFA State Board is disturbed by verbal abuse and threats made against TMCC NFA officers and members by the president.

Although the NFA letter was authored by representatives from each of Nevadas higher-education campuses, Hilgersom dismissed the allegations as coming from a vocal minority at TMCC who she said are cruelly dishonest and defamatory.

These vocal few members of a small local union chapter of the Nevada Faculty Alliance propagate misinformation designed to distract me and TMCCs leadership team from the only thing that matters at the momenthelping our community make it through an unprecedented crisis, she said. How much longer will the NFA majority accept the tactics of an unethical minority in their midst? And how much longer must the entire TMCC community suffer as a result of the actions of the few?

A recent faculty survey, which Hilgersom described as unethically delivered, was completed by 62 percent of the administrative and teaching faculty.

More than 25 percent who completed it indicated the campus climate has moderately or greatly improved while 57 percent said it had moderately or greatly deteriorated.

One faculty member said: faculty who speak up can also expect to be harassed with formal reprimands or investigations, and when formal complaints are filed, they are not processed according to TMCCs rules.

The Faculty Alliance echoed this point:

The TMCC Human Resource office has been relegated to a political arm of the president to obfuscate, mount phony complaints against targeted faculty, and shelter aberrant presidential behavior. The NSHE system attorney assigned to TMCC seems to have become the personal attorney of the president to facilitate the same kind of harassment or cover up. The contractual grievance process, when used appropriately, identifies and alleviates problems institutionally. Under the current model the system attorney finds Code or contractual weak spots then hides behind manufactured deadlines and legalese to prevent a fair and impartial hearing or a mutual resolution of grievances.

When evaluated two years ago, Hilgersom received a mixed review.

Nevada System of Higher Education Chancellor Thom Reilly said Hilgersoms evaluation showed that she had work to do when it came to communications, particularly campus morale, conflict resolution and shared governance, as This Is Reno reported at the time.

There are recommendations on how to address those issues, particularly around the issue of communication, Reilly told regents at the June 2018 meeting.

(There will be) lots of active listening and making some strides on some of the perceptions on campus on the issue of shared governance. To that end, most recently, the president and her staff, as well as the faculty and Nevada Faculty Association, participated in a 3-day, very-extensive mediation training on the issues of shared governance that I understood went very well and there were some agreed upon metrics and agreed upon ways to move forward.

It was recommended Hilgersom retain the services of a coach to help with these efforts. Kate Kirkpatrick, the colleges director of marketing and communications, said that TMCC spent $2,500 on a search firms executive for the communications coaching services.

Faculty representatives said it didnt work.

Unfortunately, these problems at TMCC remain, they wrote. President Hilgersom appears to have satisfactory external relationships with entities in the community, but the TMCC internal community, the faculty and staff, is deeply troubled by her management style towards employees.

Former instructor Kyle Simmons lawsuit against TMCC, for discrimination and wrongful termination, was dismissed earlier this year. NSHE attorney John Albrecht argued TMCC was immune from litigation in federal court under the 11th Amendment.

Defendants argue that because TMCC is not a legal entity, only a community college operated by NSHE, it is not a proper party and must be dismissed, U.S. District Judge Larry Hicks wrote in February. The court finds that NSHE and the Board [of Regents] operate as a branch of the Nevada State government and are state entities immune from suit pursuant to the Eleventh Amendment.

Simmons said he is refiling the lawsuit in district court.

Instructor Thomas Cardoza filed a suit against TMCC in 2018, which was later dismissed. He re-filed his lawsuit last November. An amended complaint was filed this week. He names NSHE Chancellor Reilly and TMCC administrators as defendants.

A lawsuit filed last year by a professor, William Gallegos, was recently resolved. He was granted emeritus status, according to his attorney. No additional details were provided.

The vice president for the campus NFA chapter last year praised Hilgersom.

I regularly work with all of the TMCC administrators and find President Hilgersom approachable, available and willing to sit down and talk about issues with people who care about TMCC, Julie Muhle told This Is Reno.

Others, while acknowledging problems, also praised her performance but were critical of the administration at TMCC in general.

[Hilgersoms] a visionary, has great ideas and does so much for the students, a former employee said, speaking on the condition of anonymity.

She loses sight of the faculty, they added. Administration at TMCC causes people to do crazy, crazy things. Theres so much turmoil at NSHE as it is.

A part-time faculty member, also speaking off the record, said he appreciates TMCCs leadership.

I think theres a split in the faculty. Some full-time faculty dont like her, but not all, the adjunct instructor said. Shes tried to make changes, tried to bring new ideas, but Ive never viewed her as disliked. She has done so much for the part-time faculty, including longevity pay [and other benefits].

Hilgersom said the criticisms of her administration are a distraction from TMCC dealing with a massive public health crisis.

Now is not the time to advance self-serving grievances and agendas. This does nothing but distract all of us from acting in the best interest of the institution, our students, and the community we serve, she proclaimed.

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Trouble at TMCC: Faculty organization threatens censure, investigation of president - ThisisReno

The Trail Leading Back to the Wuhan Labs – National Review

Medical workers in protective suits attend to a patient inside an isolated ward of the Wuhan Red Cross Hospital in Wuhan, the epicenter of the novel coronavirus outbreak, in Hubei Province, China, February 16, 2020.(China Daily via Reuters)Theres no proof the coronavirus accidentally escaped from a laboratory, but we cant take the Chinese governments denials at face value.

It is understandable that many would be wary of the notion that the origin of the coronavirus could be discovered by some documentary filmmaker who used to live in China. Matthew Tye, who creates YouTube videos, contends he has identified the source of the coronavirus and a great deal of the information that he presents, obtained from public records posted on the Internet, checks out.

The Wuhan Institute of Virology in China indeed posted a job opening on November 18, 2019, asking for scientists to come research the relationship between the coronavirus and bats.

The Google translation of the job posting is: Taking bats as the research object, I will answer the molecular mechanism that can coexistwith Ebola andSARS-associated coronavirus for along timewithout disease, and its relationship with flight and longevity.Virology, immunology, cell biology, and multiple omics are used to compare the differences between humans and other mammals. (Omics is a term for a subfield within biology, such as genomics or glycomics.)

On December 24, 2019, the Wuhan Institute of Virology posted a second job posting. The translation of that posting includes the declaration, long-term research on the pathogenic biology of bats carrying important viruses has confirmed theorigin of bats of major new human and livestock infectious diseases such asSARSandSADS,and a large number of new bat and rodent new viruses have been discovered and identified.

Tye contends that that posting meant, weve discovered a new and terrible virus, and would like to recruit people to come deal with it. He also contends that news didnt come out about coronavirus until ages after that. Doctors in Wuhan knew that they were dealing with a cluster of pneumonia cases as December progressed, but it is accurate to say that a very limited number of people knew about this particular strain of coronavirus and its severity at the time of that job posting. By December 31, about three weeks after doctors first noticed the cases, the Chinese government notified the World Health Organization and the first media reports about a mystery pneumonia appeared outside China.

Scientific American verifies much of the information Tye mentions about Shi Zhengli, the Chinese virologist nicknamed Bat Woman for her work with that species.

Shi a virologist who is often called Chinas bat woman by her colleagues because of her virus-hunting expeditions in bat caves over the past 16 years walked out of the conference she was attending in Shanghai and hopped on the next train back to Wuhan. I wondered if [the municipal health authority] got it wrong, she says. I had never expected this kind of thing to happen in Wuhan, in central China. Her studies had shown that the southern, subtropical areas of Guangdong, Guangxi and Yunnan have the greatest risk of coronaviruses jumping to humans from animals particularly bats, a known reservoir for many viruses. If coronaviruses were the culprit, she remembers thinking, could they have come from our lab?

. . . By January 7 the Wuhan team determined that the new virus had indeed caused the disease those patients suffered a conclusion based on results from polymerase chain reaction analysis, full genome sequencing, antibody tests of blood samples and the viruss ability to infect human lung cells in a petri dish. The genomic sequence of the virus now officially called SARS-CoV-2 because it is related to the SARS pathogen was 96 percent identical to that of a coronavirus the researchers had identified in horseshoe bats in Yunnan, they reported in apaperpublished last month inNature. Its crystal clear that bats, once again, are the natural reservoir, says Daszak, who was not involved in the study.

Some scientists arent convinced that the virus jumped straight from bats to human beings, but there are a few problems with the theory that some other animal was an intermediate transmitter of COVID-19 from bats to humans:

Analyses of theSARS-CoV-2 genome indicate a single spillover event, meaning the virus jumped only once from an animal to a person, which makes it likely that the virus was circulating among people before December. Unless more information about the animals at the Wuhan market is released, the transmission chain may never be clear. There are, however, numerous possibilities. A bat hunter or a wildlife trafficker might have brought the virus to the market. Pangolins happen to carry a coronavirus, which they might have picked up from bats years ago, and which is, in one crucial part of its genome, virtually identical toSARS-CoV-2. But no one has yet found evidence that pangolins were at the Wuhan market, or even that venders there trafficked pangolins.

On February 4 one week before the World Health Organization decided to officially name this virus COVID-19 the journalCell Research posted a notice written by scientists at the Wuhan Institute of Virology about the virus, concluding, our findings reveal that remdesivir and chloroquine are highly effective in the control of 2019-nCoV infection in vitro. Since these compounds have been used in human patients with a safety track record and shown to be effective against various ailments, we suggest that they should be assessed in human patients suffering from the novel coronavirus disease. One of the authors of that notice was the bat woman, Shi Zhengli.

In his YouTube video, Tye focuses his attention on a researcher at the Wuhan Institute of Virology named Huang Yanling: Most people believe her to be patient zero, and most people believe she is dead.

There was enough discussion of rumors about Huang Yanling online in China to spur an official denial. On February 16, the Wuhan Institute of Virology denied that patient zero was one of their employees, and interestingly named her specifically: Recently there has been fake information about Huang Yanling, a graduate from our institute, claiming that she was patient zero in the novel coronavirus. Press accounts quote the institute as saying, Huang was a graduate student at the institute until 2015, when she left the province and had not returned since. Huang was in good health and had not been diagnosed with disease, it added. None of her publicly available research papers are dated after 2015.

The web page for the Wuhan Institute of Virologys Lab of Diagnostic Microbiology does indeed still have Huang Yanling listed as a 2012 graduate student, and her picture and biography appear to have been recently removed as have those of two other graduate students from 2013, Wang Mengyue and Wei Cuihua.

Her name still has a hyperlink, but the linked page is blank. The pages for Wang Mengyue and Wei Cuihua are blank as well.

(For what it is worth, the South China Morning Post a newspaper seen as being generally pro-Beijing reported on March 13 that according to the government data seen by thePost, a 55 year-old from Hubei province could have been the first person to have contracted Covid-19 on November 17.)

On February 17, Zhen Shuji, a Hong Kong correspondent from the French public-radio service Radio France Internationale, reported: when a reporter from the Beijing News of the Mainland asked the institute for rumors about patient zero, the institute first denied that there was a researcher Huang Yanling, but after learning that the name of the person on the Internet did exist, acknowledged that the person had worked at the firm but has now left the office and is unaccounted for.

Tye says, everyone on the Chinese internet is searching for [Huang Yanling] but most believe that her body was quickly cremated and the people working at the crematorium were perhaps infected as they were not given any information about the virus. (The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says that handling the body of someone who has died of coronavirus is safe including embalming and cremation as long as the standard safety protocols for handing a decedent are used. Its anyones guess as to whether those safety protocols were sufficiently used in China before the outbreaks scope was known.)

As Tye observes, a public appearance by Huang Yanling would dispel a lot of the public rumors, and is the sort of thing the Chinese government would quickly arrange in normal circumstances presuming that Huang Yanling was still alive. Several officials at the Wuhan Institute of Virology issued public statements that Huang was in good health and that no one at the institute has been infected with COVID-19. In any case, the mystery around Huang Yanling may be moot, but it does point to the lab covering up something about her.

China Global Television Network, a state-owned television broadcaster, illuminated another rumor while attempting to dispel it in a February 23 report entitled Rumors Stop With the Wise:

On February 17, a Weibo user who claimed herself to be Chen Quanjiao, a researcher at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, reported to the public that the Director of the Institute was responsible for leaking the novel coronavirus. The Weibo post threw a bomb in the cyberspace and the public was shocked. Soon Chen herself stepped out and declared that she had never released any report information and expressed great indignation at such identity fraud on Weibo. It has been confirmed that that particular Weibo account had been shut down several times due to the spread of misinformation about COVID-19.

That Radio France Internationale report on February 17 also mentioned the next key part of the Tyes YouTube video. Xiaobo Tao, a scholar from South China University of Technology, recently published a report that researchers at Wuhan Virus Laboratory were splashed with bat blood and urine, and then quarantined for 14 days. HK01, another Hong Kong-based news site, reported the same claim.

This doctors name is spelled in English as both Xiaobo Tao and Botao Xiao. From 2011 to 2013, Botao Xiao was a postdoctoral research fellow at Harvard Medical School and Boston Childrens Hospital, and his biography is still on the web site of the South China University of Technology.

At some point in February, Botao Xiao posted a research paper onto ResearchGate.net, The Possible Origins of 2019-nCoV coronavirus. He is listed as one author, along with Lei Xiao from Tian You Hospital, which is affiliated with the Wuhan University of Science and Technology. The paper was removed a short time after it was posted, but archived images of its pages can be found here and here.

The first conclusion of Botao Xiaos paper is that the bats suspected of carrying the virus are extremely unlikely to be found naturally in the city, and despite the stories of bat soup, they conclude that bats were not sold at the market and were unlikely to be deliberately ingested.

The bats carrying CoV ZC45 were originally found in Yunnan or Zhejiang province, both of which were more than 900 kilometers away from the seafood market. Bats were normally found to live in caves and trees. But the seafood market is in a densely-populated district of Wuhan, a metropolitan [area] of ~15 million people. The probability was very low for the bats to fly to the market. According to municipal reports and the testimonies of 31 residents and 28 visitors, the bat was never a food source in the city, and no bat was traded in the market.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization could not confirm if bats were present at the market. Botao Xiaos paper theorizes that the coronavirus originated from bats being used for research at either one of two research laboratories in Wuhan.

We screened the area around the seafood market and identified two laboratories conducting research on batcoronavirus. Within ~ 280 meters from the market, there was the Wuhan Center for Disease Control & Prevention. WHCDC hosted animals in laboratories for research purpose, one ofwhich was specialized in pathogens collection and identification. In one of their studies, 155 bats including Rhinolophus affinis were captured in Hubei province, and other 450 bats were captured in Zhejiang province. The expert in Collection was noted in the Author Contributions (JHT). Moreover, he was broadcasted for collecting viruses on nation-wide newspapers and websites in 2017 and 2019. He described that he was once by attacked by bats and the blood of a bat shot on his skin. He knew the extreme danger of the infection so he quarantinedhimself for 14 days. In another accident, he quarantined himself again because bats peed onhim.

Surgery was performed on the caged animals and the tissue samples were collected for DNA and RNA extraction and sequencing. The tissue samples and contaminated trashes were source of pathogens.They were only ~280 meters from the seafood market.The WHCDC was also adjacent to the Union Hospital (Figure 1, bottom) where the first group of doctors were infected during this epidemic.It is plausible that the virus leaked around and some of them contaminated the initial patients in this epidemic, though solid proofs are needed in future study.

The second laboratory was ~12 kilometers from the seafood market and belonged to Wuhan Institute of Virology, Chinese Academy of Sciences . . .

In summary, somebody was entangled with the evolution of 2019-nCoV coronavirus.In addition to origins of natural recombination and intermediate host, the killer coronavirus probably originated from a laboratory in Wuhan. Safety level may need to be reinforced in high risk biohazardous laboratories. Regulations may be taken to relocate these laboratories far away from city center and other densely populated places.

However, Xiao has told the Wall Street Journal that he has withdrawn his paper. The speculation about the possible origins in the post was based on published papers and media, and was not supported by direct proofs, he said in a brief email on February 26.

The bat researcher that Xiaos report refers to is virologist Tian Junhua, who works at the Wuhan Centre for Disease Control. In 2004, the World Health Organization determined that an outbreak of the SARS virus had been caused by two separate leaks at the Chinese Institute of Virology in Beijing. The Chinese government said that the leaks were a result of negligence and the responsible officials had been punished.

In 2017, the Chinese state-owned Shanghai Media Group made a seven-minute documentary about Tian Junhua, entitled Youth in the Wild: Invisible Defender. Videographers followed Tian Junhua as he traveled deep into caves to collect bats. Among all known creatures, the bats are rich with various viruses inside, he says in Chinese. You can find most viruses responsible for human diseases, like rabies virus, SARS, and Ebola. Accordingly, the caves frequented by bats became our main battlefields. He emphasizes, bats usually live in caves humans can hardly reach. Only in these places can we find the most ideal virus vector samples.

One of his last statements on the video is: In the past ten-plus years, we have visited every corner of Hubei Province. We explored dozens of undeveloped caves and studied more than 300 types of virus vectors. But I do hope these virus samples will only be preserved for scientific research and will never be used in real life. Because humans need not only the vaccines, but also the protection from the nature.

The description of Tian Junhuas self-isolation came from a May 2017 report by Xinhua News Agency, repeated by the Chinese news site JQKNews.com:

The environment for collecting bat samples is extremely bad. There is a stench in the bat cave. Bats carry a large number of viruses in their bodies. If they are not careful, they are at risk of infection. But Tian Junhua is not afraid to go to the mountain with his wife to catch Batman.

Tian Junhua summed up the experience that the most bats can be caught by using the sky cannon and pulling the net. But in the process of operation, Tian Junhua forgot to take protective measures. Bat urine dripped on him like raindrops from the top. If he was infected, he could not find any medicine. It was written in the report.

The wings of bats carry sharp claws. When the big bats are caught by bat tools, they can easily spray blood. Several times bat blood was sprayed directly on Tians skin, but he didnt flinch at all. After returning home, Tian Junhua took the initiative to isolate for half a month. As long as the incubation period of 14 days does not occur, he will be lucky to escape, the report said.

Bat urine and blood can carry viruses. How likely is it that bat urine or blood got onto a researcher at either Wuhan Center for Disease Control & Prevention or the Wuhan Institute of Virology? Alternatively, what are the odds that some sort of medical waste or other material from the bats was not properly disposed of, and that was the initial transmission vector to a human being?

Virologists have been vehemently skeptical of the theory that COVID-19 was engineered or deliberately constructed in a laboratory; the director of the National Institutes of Health has writtenthat recent genomic research debunks such claims by providing scientific evidence that this novel coronavirus arose naturally. And none of the above is definitive proof that COVID-19 originated from a bat at either the Wuhan Center for Disease Control & Prevention or the Wuhan Institute of Virology. Definitive proof would require much broader access to information about what happened in those facilities in the time period before the epidemic in the city.

But it is a remarkable coincidence that the Wuhan Institute of Virology was researching Ebola andSARS-associated coronaviruses in bats before the pandemic outbreak, and that in the month when Wuhan doctors were treating the first patients of COVID-19, the institute announced in a hiring notice that a large number of new bat and rodent new viruses have been discovered and identified. And the fact that the Chinese government spent six weeks insisting that COVID-19 could not be spread from person to person means that its denials about Wuhan laboratories cannot be accepted without independent verification.

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The Trail Leading Back to the Wuhan Labs - National Review

War on air pollution A call to action – The Financial Express BD

Sarwar Md. Saifullah Khaled | Published: March 23, 2020 22:04:32 | Updated: March 24, 2020 21:33:45

Air pollution is one of growing environmental hazards in Bangladesh. As such the country has now been grappling with air pollution. Exposed to various diseases and financial losses caused by air pollution, the citizens, especially in major cities, continue to breathe in the most polluted air in the world. It's a situation which prompted national dailies to write editorials repeatedly on the matter.

Dhaka, the sprawling overcrowded mega-city, has turned into an ecologically critical area. The High Court, at one point, observed that it was time to declare Dhaka as an 'ecologically critical area' due to widespread pollution, and issued a nine-point directive to address air pollution.

As construction of various large infrastructures increased between 2016 and 2019, Dhaka's air quality worsened simultaneously, the environment minister told parliament on February 16. The minister said that the factors responsible for air pollution in Dhaka city are brick kilns, smoke from vehicles, construction of different infrastructures and road digging, civic wastes, and biomass etcetera.

The United Nations (UN) says that clean air is a human right. A report in 2018 noted that due to air pollution Bangladeshis lose about two years of their longevity on average. Environmental activists expressed views that most people are unaware of the effects of air pollution on human health. They also emphasised raising awareness among the people. Some distinguished environment specialists blamed apathy and nonchalance of the authorities concerned for the air pollution peril. They said the government has a big project to check air pollution under which footpaths and foot-over bridges are constructed. But it is not understandable as to what are the relations between air pollution, foot-paths and foot-over bridges.

A World Bank (WB) repot in 2016 said air pollution has emerged as the deadliest form of pollution and fourth leading risk factor worldwide for premature deaths. The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates show that 600,000 children died in 2016 from acute respiratory infection caused by air pollution. The report noted that air pollution also impacts neurodevelopment and cognitive ability and can trigger asthma, and childhood cancer.

At least 123,000 people died in 2017 in Bangladesh due to indoor and outdoor air pollution. The authorities concerned have still been foot-dragging over the issue although at least four major health risks, as mentioned above, plague the cities and other parts of the country.

It augurs well, however, as the minister said in parliament that the government has taken various measures including enacting the Clean Air Act-2020 for effectively controlling air pollution at large as part of a long-term plan. Improvement in air quality across the country requires shutting down of illegal brick kilns, stopping unfit vehicles from plying, checking dust pollution during development works, and taking projects for afforestation.

To clean city roads all over the country appropriate, adequate and sufficient measures need to be taken immediately. These may include setting up of high-speed water sprinklers at different hotspots in the capital and elsewhere, dust suckers and introduce vacuum sweeping trucks instead of manual brooms. It is surely conceivable that controlling air pollution is an uphill task but it must be waged with full vigour right now. The issue brooks no delay.

Sarwar Md. Saifullah Khaled is a retired Professor of Economics and Vice Principal at Cumilla Women's Government College, Cumilla.

sarwarmdskhaled@gmail.com

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War on air pollution A call to action - The Financial Express BD

How To Turbocharge Customer Experience With Automation – Forbes

Customer experience is arguably the ultimate marketing tool, and companies are getting increasingly sophisticated in using customer data and situational information (e.g., context) to curate that experience online. Several years ago, Gartner Inc. projected that, by this time, more than 80% of organizations would be competing primarily on the basis of customer experience, and research by Forrester estimates that these organizations will have greater brand recognition, higher order value and better customer retention.

Right now, as an extremely difficult situation unfolds across the globe, the online customer experience is fast becoming the customers only option. So the aspiration for brands to deliver automated services is more relevant than ever. Whether through relevant and helpful recommendations, on-point engagement, lightning-fast responsiveness or other tactics, brand leaders are setting the bar for other companies to meet.

As brand ambassadors, marketing is often at the forefront of creating this joined-up customer experience to ensure the right offers are made at the right time. Yet, delivering a highly curated and contextualized customer experience is a monumental task. Companies must be able to combine past customer interactions, secondary data sources, current context and desired outcomes, pulling data from both outside and across the organization from customer service and sales to product and legal teams. Pair these challenges with clunky, legacy systems that are difficult to flex to meet business needs, and the results are siloed systems that are hard to integrate and customer information that is trapped partway between legacy systems and new IT infrastructure.

According to the Adobe "2019 Digital Trends" report, based on a survey of 12,500 professionals in marketing and IT, customer-focused organizations are "four-and-a-half times more likely than other companies to have a highly integrated, cloud-based technology stack (32% vs. 7%)." Given that, how do marketing teams pull from modern and legacy systems to get that joined-up customer experience without a wholesale (and IT-dependent) digital transformation?

As a chief marketing officer myself, I've found automation to be the key to achieving this level of customer experience. And at Bizagi, we help our clients bridge various systems and data sources through our digital process automation platform to give them the access needed to deliver enhanced customer experiences.

How Automation Can Improve Customer Engagement

We often see insurance companies working with a technology stack that has evolved over the years by stitching different components together, and not necessarily in a cohesive manner. Through automation, insurers can map their customer journey across departments including IT, claims and product to better understand how customers behave and identify pain points that inform their marketing decisions. Not only is this approach more efficient, but it also provides a more responsive and personalized experience. In fact, while it might seem counterintuitive, automation can actually introduce a perceived "human touch" to processes by eliminating delays or miscommunication while simultaneously offering relevant and helpful messages at just the right time all critical factors to ensuring a valued customer experience.

Similarly, banks are turning to automation to keep pace with increasing customer expectations for service and responsiveness. The biggest challenges financial service providers face in customer experience efforts are with data analytics, technology and getting a complete customer view, as reported by The Financial Brand. This is unsurprising considering the complex IT infrastructure and inflexible legacy systems of most banking and financial businesses. By simplifying technology and streamlining customer engagement processes with automation, banks can leverage customer insights and data analytics to provide more relevant products and services to customers, or they can deliver communication through the customer's choice of media, such as email or text message (SMS).

Five Tips For Getting Started

It's no surprise that companies from all industries are looking for ways to digitally transform in hopes that they can better understand and engage customers. Here are some practical tips for businesses looking to start digitizing customer experience today:

1. Remember your people. Today's customers aren't easily satisfied, and they won't wait around; responses need to be relevant and instantaneous. While the joined-up view helps achieve this objective, it's also important to consider how you make these customer insights available to your people. If technology enables great customer experiences, it's often people who deliver them. Digital platforms must, therefore, be intuitive and accessible so that colleagues and partners can turn information into action.

2. Capitalize on critical moments. What are the main customer engagement points for your business? Quoting? Onboarding? Renewal? Focus appropriately, as poor experiences in these moments can be determinative in customer longevity or, conversely, have an outsized impact on order value.

3. Don't leave your legacy; take it with you. You don't need to rip and replace your current IT infrastructure (for example, a legacy customer relationship management or support ticket system). Your data doesn't have to be in one place, as long as you can wrap it in an agile process platform.

4. Start small and scale quickly. Change doesn't have to be disruptive; the most effective change often comes in small shifts that customers pick up on instinctively. Similarly, the iterative approach allows you to see what works best before fully committing (this is also effective for showing success to justify funding).

5. Add some intelligence. You can use technology to do more than aggregate and surface data; it can learn from that data, applying behavioral analysis or predictive analytics to not only automate but also control and improve customer engagement. For example, automated processes can make a next-best offer based on current context or interaction, or speed approvals and recommendations based on past or just-like transactions.

When it comes to enhancing customer experiences, there are endless methods and digital tools for better understanding, attracting, engaging and maintaining customers. Yet, all of these approaches become much more effective with access to a joined-up view of the customer. By leveraging process automation, you can consolidate customer data and unify it across systems and departments, personalizing customer interactions at a time when their expectations are higher than ever before.

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How To Turbocharge Customer Experience With Automation - Forbes