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Daily Archives: February 10, 2021
Arroyo on ‘business churn,’ shared services, and trends Pascack Press & Northern Valley Press – Pascack Press & Northern Valley Press
Posted: February 10, 2021 at 1:06 pm
FROM JANUARY 2020: (From left) Montvale Council President Douglas Arendacs, Chamber Secretary Christine Issackedes, Emerson Mayor Danielle DiPaola, Chamber President Robin Effron Malley, Woodcliff Lake Mayor Carlos Rendo, Park Ridge Mayor Keith Misciagna, Oradell Mayor Dianne Didio, Hillsdale Mayor John Ruocco, Township of Washington Mayor Peter Calamari, Chamber Vice President Skip Kelley, Chamber member Olga Epstein, and Westwood Mayor Raymond Arroyo. This year's get-together was virtual.
WESTWOOD, N.J.Mayor Ray Arroyo had more to say than his time allowed at the Jan. 27 session of the 2021 Greater Pascack Valley Chamber of Commerce Mayors Breakfast, held on Zoom this year instead of at the warm and gracious Iron Horse Restaurant.
I didnt realize the 5-minute rule was in effect, especially with the number of questions that were put forth, he told Pascack Press following the annual event, which was his second such since being sworn in as mayor.
Of note, he said keeping parking, a finite resource, in sight, We anticipate increases in vehicular traffic and in shopper parking demand as a result of the ongoing addition ofas [host] Robin [Malley] stated, thousands of apartments nearby along the north-south corridor.
That point resonated with Arroyos fellow mayors, all of whom have had to contend with the pressures of development and redevelopment, anddepending on ones point of viewoverdevelopment.
Arroyo shared his prepared remarks with us, and so this is an expanded look, in the mayors words (lightly edited), at challenges and trends in his borough, the self-described hub of the Pascack Valley:
Regarding the Central Business District, first floor vacancies, and new occupancies: Last year I rebutted claims that downtown Westwood was struggling to find tenants, that businesses were closing at uncomfortable rates. This was before the Covid-19 pandemic hit.
Based on data Id asked Celebrate Westwood to provide, I can report this year, that over the past 12 months10 of which were within the ongoing global pandemic16 businesses have either closed or relocated out of Westwood.
Eighteen businesses have newly opened or expanded to nearby storefronts along the ground floor of the Westwood Central Business District. That is a net positive gain of two businesses to the Hub of the Pascack Valley.Breaking it down a bit further, two of the five businesses that closed include Bank of America and New York Sports Club. Their spaces are unused and under renovations respectively, and their closures were in the works prior to the pandemic.
The Sports Club will become a new mixed use residential/commercial anchor on the south end of the district, offering five affordable units per the terms of Westwoods Fair Share Housing Settlement agreementThe bankhoused in an imposing Art Deco landmark building at the towns main intersectionwas a victim of the growing inutility of brick-and-mortar bank locations in downtown settings.
This reverses a trend that was popular just 15 years ago.
Online banking and mobile apps have done to retail bank branches specifically what Amazon has done to brick and mortar retail more generally. Westwood now has three former bank sites empty and available. So far, two of the threewith the upside of plentiful onsite parkinghave generated interest for adaptive reuse.
Of the 16 storefronts that went dark during 2020, nine are now reoccupied or soon will be, and 10 belong to nine entrepreneurs new to Westwood. They have brought their business models to a town that they believe will withstand the pandemics worst economic impacts.
This new investor interest and business churn has occurred not only during severe public health and economic crisis, but without Westwood having added new uses, recommended for as-of-right zoning amendments in its recent Master Plan re-enact.
Nevertheless, Westwoods well managed and cared for Central Business District remains a desirable destination for business investment due to its scale, charm, and pedestrian friendly environmentunique for our areaand for its Parking Authoritys engaged management of customer, commuter and employee parking.
The ParkMobile app, implemented by the WPA in fall 2020, streamlines the downtown parking experience and allows for better data collection. This data, when used in conjunction with recording the manual meter and kiosk collections, will better inform our land use, planning decisions.
Westwoods parking inventory has been mostly fixed for 25 years. The additional meters were added in private/public partnerships pursuant to developers agreements across two CBD properties.
Keeping this finite resource in mind, we anticipate increases in vehicular through-traffic and consumer parking demand, stemming from the pending addition of thousands of apartments across neighboring towns, this to partially satisfy their affordable housing mandates.
We have taken a cautious approach with respect to adding parking intensive uses as of right in the CBD. We plan to study, post-pandemic trends with an eye towards appropriately scaled growth, intensity, and commercial improvements.
Historically, Westwoods land use governance has been thoughtful and deliberative: qualities that have avoided mistakes and produced much evident success. Wed prefer to plan for additional public parking, or better allocation of existing resources, based on data and actual observation rather than assuming that rideshare services, and public transportation, will soon replace owner operated vehicles in a truly appreciable way.
In fact, over the last decades, neither train nor bus commuters have generated much CBD activity, except for the occasional coffee and newspaper a commuter may grab in the morning or a take-out dinner meal in the evening. And now, without those 300 daily train commuters passing through the Westwood Train Station, commuter/consumer impact is even more negligible.
The post-pandemic rebound of transit into New York City is an unknown, but will likely follow a long-term trajectory.
High earning knowledge workers in finance, insurance, information services, and tech prefer the work at home model. Time is a most precious commodity. For many industries, there is no need and, perhaps, a newfound detriment to the commuters three-hour round trip daily slog:
Employees save on the expense of NYC priced travel, clothing, food, and entertainment and employers reduce their overhead rental costs for vanity office locations, utilities, maintenance, and client entertainment expenseswhile realizing increased productivity.
Those saved dollarsrepatriated from NYCbecome discretionary dollars that can be spent locally. Few commuters are currently on the trains and buses, but Goldbergs is still booming. CBD lunch business, largely moribund pre-pandemic, has also picked up, in line with more folks working from home.
Today, office buildings in New York City are allowed 40% occupancy under Covid regs, but in practice, facility managers are seeing closer to 10% occupancy.
Make no mistake: people and businesses are leaving for reasons other than the virus. Murders in New York City were up 42% and shootings up 15% in 2020 over 2019s totals.
The streets are filthy, the subways are dangerous, and business properties are not adequately protected. Those who can are voting with their feet, just as the citys similar unraveling in the 1990s brought myself and my wife to Westwood.
We ought not emulate that governance. Repeating its follies will only produce the same results here. But what does it all mean for the suburbs and for post pandemic localism?
After the 1918 pandemic, the euphoria of the roaring 20s spread nationwide. Westwood, for its 2.3 square miles, saw its third largest population boom in population growth, trailing only by comparison to the decade after its 1894 incorporation, and the postwar baby boom.
Similar pent-up demand is in the offing for us as long as the economy, like the virus, remains poised to surge locally. I believe it is. That belief is not based on faith. Its based upon the reasoned investments entrepreneurs have continued to make in Westwood despite the pandemic, and in our currently booming residential real estate market. That market is fueled by those seeking to trade overpriced, cramped and dangerous urban living arrangements for suburban, small town spaciousness, personal safety and the relative ease with which one can be socially distancedand comfortably sheltered from the storm.
In 2020 almost half51 out of 105single family homes in Westwoodsold for over their asking prices. In the second half of the year, 40 out of 75 sold for above list. With interest rates still low, Realtors are reporting increased foot traffic at open houses, and multiple same-day offers.
Westwood continues to offer what urban refugees like myself and my wife sought 27 years ago. And people are willing to pay a premium for it. The governing bodys job is not to screw it up.
As we look toward a post-pandemic future, we need to be smart about our expenditures and the ways in which our municipalities are funded. Despite the positive net of businesses in the Central Business District, we know many are struggling to make ends meet and our property owners have taken on additional burdens to retain viable tenants.
Our tax assessor has written down commercial values by 5%, adjusting to the economic hardships the pandemic lockdown and restrictions have wreaked on commercial property owners. This was done not only in the interest of equity, but in the hopes of reducing the number of tax appeals which generate litigation expenses and refund payments should property owners prevail.
In 2020 we realized an $86,000 shortfall in anticipated revenues. We were able to mitigate some of that through a hiring freeze, as well as reduced spending on salaries wages and overtime. Fortunately, the borough was reimbursed for its covid-related expenses via the Bergen County Cares Municipal Grant Program.
One place where we might best be able to lessen the strain of tightened budgetary belts is through the consideration of shared services. Westwood is open to participating in mutually beneficial, shared service arrangements.
For example, in 2018, both Westwood POA and HUMC donated two newer passenger vans to the borough, replacing two older ones that frequently broke down. The vans regularly serviced a small group of Westwood seniors, but CDL drivers were hard to get for the relatively few hours they were in service.
The pandemic shut that service down, but Councilman Chris Montana, SAB liaison, is working with Emerson Mayor Danielle DiPaola to expand the universe of users via a shared service provided for seniors in both towns. We can start in small impactful ways.
My final points bring us back to the omnipresent pandemic. As you know, COVID 19 vaccine distribution is managed federally, on a per capita basis. That puts populations with higher percentages of at-risk demographics at a disadvantage.
Other states, not so situated, are able to inoculate their 65 and older populations and get the vaccine into their general populations sooner, while we in New Jersey, particularly Bergen County, are backlogged with seniors waiting for appointments, contingent on the shots arriving.
We know many seniors do not have the computer skills to navigate the online application for pre-registration. Westwoods Senior Advisory Board is putting together a team of volunteers willing to help our seniors by preregistering them online and following up to make sure they know where and when to arrive for inoculations. Volunteers have offered to drive them to their appointments as well.
Councilwoman Cheryl Hodges organized a similar effort during the pandemics March/ April peak, shopping on behalf of seniors to reduce their exposure to Covid-19.
We are also exploring the possibility of in-town vaccinations for seniors and inquiring how shut-ins might receive in-home inoculations.
We especially appreciate our ongoing relationship with PVMC, which has provided weekly updates on hyper-local case and transmission rates, hospitalizationsfacilitating an analysis on what this all means for our community.
Our master planners have always recognized the importance of our hospital, perhaps never more so than during this pandemic. And for that reason, the governing body will be taking up their land use recommendations for the Hospital Zone, in order to strengthen this important institutional sector of our local economy.
Each town shares similar burdens but each brings its own subplots and inflections. We each have excellent professional advisors, citizen volunteerswhether elected officials, board appointees or people who truly care about each other.
We still have a number of hard months ahead of us but the light at the end of our tunnel is not that of an oncoming, largely empty NJT train: its the light of our post-pandemic afterlife summoning us forth.
Were going to be okay.
Westwood Mayor Ray Arroyo
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Autotrader Announces Best New Cars for 2021 to Help Car Shoppers Find Their Perfect Match – PRNewswire
Posted: at 1:06 pm
ATLANTA, Feb. 10, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- The search to find your perfect match, whether looking for a love interest or a new vehicle, can be a daunting and time-consuming task. While Autotrader may not be able to help your love life, it understands the importance of finding 'the one' vehicle that fits your lifestyle and checks a list of ideal qualities. With that in mind, the experts at Autotrader have taken the stress out of car shopping by looking at more than 300 models available, narrowing them down to a list of 12new vehicles that are a cut above the rest to determine the Best New Cars for 2021.
"Whether you are a first-time car buyer or a seasoned pro, there are hundreds of different models currently on the market and that can make it overwhelming to find a car that fits your specific needs," said Brian Moody, executive editor for Autotrader. "If you want to get busy and start doing some home test drives, our Best New Cars for 2021 is a great place to start. This list of the 12 best new vehicles will make finding your next car easy and fun, covering a variety of different lifestyles the road trippers, the off-roaders, those with luxurious taste, and even those who want to help make the environment a little greener."
The Best New Cars for 2021 is comprised of 12 vehicles selected by a team of experts at Autotrader, who collectively tested and scored new models using a range of criteria. Each chosen vehicle has unique features specific to anyone's lifestyle needs, including interior comfort, build quality, tech features, driving experience and more. Vehicles had to be of the current or next model-year and score a 4.0 or higher on a 5-point scale. Editors also considered the types of vehicles consumers are shopping for most and capped the base price for consideration at $75,000, ensuring they offer a strong value for the cost.
Autotrader Best New Cars for 2021*
2021 Acura TLXAcurahas returned to its luxury/performance roots with the fully redesigned TLX -- this time, with a greater emphasis on performance and technology. It's an excellent sport sedan that has nimble handling, a smooth ride and a pleasing engine note. If you're in the market for a midsize sport sedan, but you don't like the price or ownership costs of the German all-stars, then the TLX is an excellent alternative with little compromise.
2021 Chevrolet TahoeThis redesigned Chevy Tahoe has four-wheel independent suspension, which provides a more comfortable ride both on- and off-road, and offers more interior space for both passengers and cargo. It comes in an appealing range of engines, including diesel. The new Tahoe is an evolution of a winning formula.
2021 Ford Bronco SportFord fantastically executed the bold undertaking of bringing the personality of the new Bronco into a smaller crossover that's not afraid of a little adventure. The Ford Bronco Sport is a road-friendly crossover that has off-road capabilities. Ford also did an excellent job of making the Bronco Sport a totally new and unique crossover, while still embracing the spirit of the larger Bronco.
2021 Ford F-150Ford knows a thing or two about what people want in a full-size pickup truck, and the 14th-generation F-Series simply gives us more of everything. This new Ford F-150 gives drivers more choices, more flexibility and more details that make using a truck easier, including a ruler built into the inside of the tailgate, power outlets and upscale interior options.
2021 Genesis GV80The new Genesis GV80 is a midsize premium SUV with available three-row seating that starts under $50,000, squarely competing with much more expensive European rivals. This imposing, slick, refined, and comfortable SUV may be completely new, but it's already at the top of its class.
2021 Hyundai Santa FeHyundai's update of the two-row Santa Fe makes it feel like a larger vehicle with a lot more variety under the hood. There's a powerful turbo option, a hybrid (standard AWD), and a plug-in hybrid model. Hyundai is rather good at SUVs and at hybrids, and it was about time the two came together. The interior is notable, too. Hyundai vehicles are quietly becoming more and more premium with each update.
2021 Kia K5Replacing the Kia Optima, the new Kia K5 is a midsize sedan with a head-turning exterior and a roomy, high-tech interior. Cool-looking high-end options, sharp handling, and a fresh new look are all reasons to test drive the new K5. It's an eye-catching sedan that's good enough to make BMW 3-Series shoppers seriously reconsider their optionsespecially in GT trim.
2021 Kia SorentoThe new Kia Sorento goes from budget-friendly SUV to near-luxury SUV just by adding a few options. With the Sorento, Kia has captured the spirit of the wildly popular Telluride in a smaller package. The interior and engine choices are impressive and it's fun to drive. The new, rugged-looking X-Line version is especially noteworthy.
2021 Lexus ISThis newly updated sedan is beautifully balanced, precise and crisp, and a pleasure to drive. The update comes with long-term reliability and an affordable ownership experience, something you don't always get in a driver-focused car. This latest version of the IS shows that Lexus is serious about delivering both luxury and sporting performance.
2021 Nissan KicksThe Nissan Kicks is the most affordable car on the list with a sub-$20k starting price, and it has tons of personality and customizability that a wide range of drivers can afford. It's a great first car because of its price, value, tech and personalization options. This Nissan crossover is proof that an affordable new SUV doesn't have to be just basic transportation.
2021 Toyota VenzaThe Toyota Venza is back, this time as a hybrid-only midsize two-row crossover. This vehicle debunks the myth that hybrids are a compromise on performance for better fuel economy. A totally new and modern crossover SUVif you are considering a hybrid luxury SUV, make sure to test drive the Venza.
2021 Volvo XC40 The Volvo XC40 is an excellent small SUV. The Recharge version is especially compelling because it's a fully electric vehicle with stand-out styling, 402 horsepower and 208 miles of range. It has impressive acceleration and decent range, plus Volvo's well-earned reputation for safety. It's an all-electric subcompact luxury crossover that does just about everything well.
In addition to providing a resource for shoppers to help narrow down their search for the perfect vehicle, the trust and speed of Autotrader's digital shopping experience makes the process a breeze. Buying a car is now easier and safer than ever with the addition of Autotrader's Dealer Home Services, which helps shoppers buy and service a car without ever leaving the safety and comfort of their homes.
To learn more about the Best New Cars for 2021 from Autotrader, including photos, detailed vehicle information and available inventory, visit http://www.Autotrader.com/BestNewCars.
For more information and news from Autotrader, visit press.autotrader.com, follow us on Twitter at https://twitter.com/Autotrader_com(or @Autotrader_com), Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/autotrader_com/(or @autotrader_com), like our page on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/autotrader/, and LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/company/autotrader-com.
About AutotraderAutotrader is the most recognized third-party car listings brand, with the most engaged audience of in-market car shoppers. As the foremost authority on automotive consumer insights and expert in online and mobile marketing, Autotrader makes the car shopping experience easy and fun for today's empowered car shopper looking to find or sell the perfect new, used or Certified Pre-Owned car. Using technology, shopper insights and local market guidance, Autotrader's comprehensive marketing and retailing solutions allow consumers to build their deal online, and guide dealers to personalized digital marketing strategies that grow brand, drive traffic and connect the online and in-store shopping experience. Autotrader is a Cox Automotive brand. Cox Automotive is a subsidiary of Cox Enterprises. For more information, please visithttp://press.autotrader.com.
About Cox AutomotiveCox Automotive Inc. makes buying, selling, owning and using vehicles easier for everyone. The global company's more than 27,000 team members and family of brands, including Autotrader, Clutch Technologies, Dealer.com, Dealertrack, Kelley Blue Book, Manheim, NextGear Capital, VinSolutions, vAuto and Xtime, are passionate about helping millions of car shoppers, 40,000 auto dealer clients across five continents and many others throughout the automotive industry thrive for generations to come. Cox Automotive is a subsidiary of Cox Enterprises Inc., a privately-owned, Atlanta-based company with annual revenues of nearly $20 billion. http://www.coxautoinc.com
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Chinas Mars Mission Begins Orbit of the Red Planet – The New York Times
Posted: at 1:05 pm
China has landed on the moon three times, and even managed to bring one of its robotic lunar explorers back to Earth. Can it now pull off the challenge of landing on Mars?
The countrys space agency completed a key step toward that goal on Wednesday when Tianwen-1, the spacecraft the country launched last July, began its orbit of the red planet, according to state media reports. By accomplishing this feat, China completed its first successful journey to another planet in our solar system.
The spacecraft was also the second to arrive at Mars in two days, following a United Arab Emirates probe that began orbiting the neighboring world on Tuesday.
Tianwen-1 left Earth last summer, taking advantage of a period when Mars and Earth were closest to each other during their journeys around the sun. That allowed a relatively short transit between the two worlds.
To catch up with Mars, the spacecraft fired its engines on several occasions, correcting its course so it could approach the red planet at the correct angle. After the most recent engine firing on Feb. 5, the probe sent back pictures of the red planet from a distance of about 1.3 million miles.
On Wednesday at 7:52 p.m. in Beijing (6:52 a.m. Eastern time), the engine lit up again for 15 minutes, expending much of the spacecrafts remaining fuel in a braking maneuver. That slowed it considerably, and allowed the probe to be captured by Martian gravity into an elliptical orbit. It will now circle at a safe distance, joining the cast of other robotic explorers in Martian orbit as it prepares for that later surface landing attempt.
In arriving at Mars, China far surpassed its last attempt at an interplanetary mission, which failed nearly 10 years ago, although through no fault of the countrys own. That Mars-bound spacecraft, Yinghuo-1, burned up in Earths atmosphere when the Russian rocket it was traveling on failed in flight.
But while the arrival at Mars was a new milestone for Chinas space program, a bigger challenge for the Tianwen-1 mission is a few months away.
The orbiter carries a lander and a rover which will make the difficult transit to the surface. China says it will attempt to land on Mars as early as May, but it has not specified a date.
Its destination is Utopia Planitia, a large basin in the northern hemisphere that most likely was once impacted by a meteor, and which was visited by NASAs Viking 2 lander in 1976. One goal of the Tianwen-1 mission is to better understand the distribution of ice in this region, which future human colonists on Mars could use to sustain themselves.
Landing on the red planet is perilous. Spacecraft descend at a high speed and the thin atmosphere does little to help slow the trip to the ground. Air friction still generates extreme heat that must be absorbed or dissipated. A number of Soviet, NASA and European missions have crashed. Only NASA has landed intact more than once.
The Chinese spacecraft will spend months orbiting Mars to check systems and pick a landing spot that will not be too treacherous.
Should it land in one piece, the rover will need a name. After nominations from people in China, a panel of experts selected 10 semifinalists. Among them, according to state media, are Hongyi, from a Chinese word for ambition and persistence; Qilin, a hoofed creature of Chinese legend; and Nezha, a young deity who is considered a patron of rebellious youth.
Since China launched its mission to Mars in July, it has been to the moon and back.
The Change-5 mission lifted off in November, collected lunar samples and then brought them back to Earth for scientists to study. It was the first new cache of moon rocks since the Soviet Unions last lunar mission in 1976.
Chinas Change-4 mission, the first to land on the moons far side, is still in operation and its Yutu-2 rover is still studying the lunar surface more than two years after it launched.
The first robotic probe to arrive at Mars this year was Hope, an orbiter from the United Arab Emirates emerging space agency. It arrived on Tuesday, and will embark on a study of the red planets atmosphere, helping planetary scientists understand the weather dynamics of Mars.
The third new visitor to Mars will be Perseverance, NASAs newest rover. It launched a bit later than the other two spacecraft last July, and will skip Martian orbit, heading directly to the planets surface on Feb. 18.
The robotic explorer would be NASAs fifth rover on Mars, and it is very similar to Curiosity, which is now exploring the Gale crater. The new rover carries a different set of scientific instruments and will explore the Jezero crater, a dried-out lake that scientists believe could be a good target to seek fossilized evidence of extinct Martian microbial life.
The mission will also attempt a new first on the red planet: flying a helicopter in the wispy Martian atmosphere. NASAs Ingenuity helicopter will be dropped off by the rover not long after landing. Then it will attempt a number of test flights in air as thin as the upper reaches of Earths atmosphere, aiming to demonstrate that Mars can be explored through the air as well as on the ground.
Its getting a bit crowded around the red planet.
In addition to the new arrivals, six more orbiters are currently studying the planet from space. Three were sent there by NASA: Mars Odyssey, launched in 2001, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, launched in 2005, and MAVEN, which left Earth in 2013.
Europe has two spacecraft in orbit. Its Mars Express orbiter was launched in 2003, and the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter lifted off in 2016 and is shared with Russias space program.
India operates the sixth spacecraft, the Mars Orbiter Mission, also known as Mangalyaan, which launched in 2013.
Two American missions are currently operating on the ground. Curiosity has been roving since 2012. It is joined by InSight, which has been studying marsquakes and other inner properties of the red planet since 2018. A third American mission, the Opportunity rover, expired in 2019 when a dust storm caused it to lose power.
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Chinas Mars Mission Begins Orbit of the Red Planet - The New York Times
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X-Men: The Shadow King Is Corrupting the Youngest Mutants | CBR – CBR – Comic Book Resources
Posted: at 1:05 pm
The Shadow King is working behind the scenes with the children on Krakoa and it seems he's trying to humiliate the young X-Men... or worse.
WARNING: The following contains spoilers for New Mutants #15 by Vita Ayala, Rod Reis & VC's Travis Lanham, on sale now.
While most mutants are trying to live in peace in their new utopia on Krakoa, some couldn't help but remain bad. Sabretooth lost his freedom at the very start of the nation's development. Mister Sinister has his own devious plans in motion thanks to his hidden cloning labs. Sebastian Shaw has a seat at the big table and still killed Kate Pryde, although he was since punished. Now, it seems Shadow King has started to orchestrate something behind the scenes, planting discontent in the younger mutants' minds.
New Mutants #14 opened with Amahl Farouk's origin and how he went from an idealistic young boy who wanted to do good and help others into the vengeful and manipulative Shadow King. Giving so much time to his origin, it is clear that the youngest mutants on Krakoa, and their new instructors of the original New Mutants team members, might have a lot to fear from the powerful mutant, who found a home high in the mountains of Krakoa.
RELATED:X-Men: New Mutants Looks Back At Marvel's Most Unhealthy Relationship
The New Mutants aretraining the kidsbut some new students feel like outsiders, even among their mutant brethren. Four of these mutant children are Anole, Rain Boy, Cosmar, and N0-Girl. The four childrenend up goingto the mountains and found Shadow King.It was there that they had a lot to tell him, including what they learned. He welcomed them all to sit around a fire and tell him their stories because they have "all the time in the world." However, this is the Shadow King, and these are all impressionable children, so there is no way he is just playing the role of the kind old mutant who wants to hear their stories.
He's still with the kids and this time he was watching and helping train them. They were all working hard for Shadow King, who taught these impressionable young mutants there are no odds they can't overcome, and then he mentions the Crucible. He especially praises Cosmar, congratulating her on how far she has come. When she asks him to come to watch her fight, he tells her he wouldn't miss it for the world. The Crucible is a ritual death where a mutant who has yet to regain his or her powers fights another mutant to the death and they return with their powers returned. The problem here is that Cosmar has her powers.
At the wedding reception forDouglas and Bei, Cosmar approached Dani Moonstar and asked her to be her partner in the Crucible, something Cosmar had wanted since she first manifested her powers. However, Dani rejected her and said the Crucible is to heal mutants rubbed of their gifts, but that Corsar is perfect the way she is. Cosmar ran off in tears, saying Dani's powers never mutated her and as she left broken, Shadow King gave a toast to the youth and a great future.
RELATED:X-Men: New Mutants Sets Up the Return of a POWERFUL Mutant God
There is a disturbing aside in the book from the journal of Amahl Farouk where the Shadow is clearly manipulating him, making him think he is using his powers to help others be better until eventually realizing he needs to shape and rule the world from the shadows. There was no way that the Crucible could have cured Corsar's physical mutations, so Shadow King only filled the child with false hopes. Whether he is trying to turn the youth of Krakoa against the elder mutants or just humiliate them, this was one of the harshest things he could have done to a mutant like Cosmar who looks up to him.
KEEP READING:X-Men: One New Mutant Just Got an IMMORTAL New Title
Taskmaster #2
Shawn S. Lealos is a freelance writer who received his Bachelor's degree in Journalism from the University of Oklahoma with a minor in Film Studies. He has worked as a journalist for 25 years, starting in newspapers and magazines before moving to online media as the world changed. Shawn is a former member of the Society of Professional Journalists and a current voting member of the Oklahoma Film Critics Circle. He has work published on websites like The Huffington Post, Time Warner Cable, Yahoo Movies, The Movie Network, Chud, Renegade Cinema, 411mania, and Monsters & Critics. Shawn is also a published author, with a non-fiction book about the Stephen King Dollar Baby Filmmakers and has begun work on a new fiction series as well. Visit Shawn Lealos' website to learn more about his novel writing and follow him on Twitter @sslealos.
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After GameStop, A Better Way To Take On Wall Street? – NPR
Posted: at 1:05 pm
Editor's note: This is an excerpt of Planet Money's newsletter. You can sign up here.
In the economist's utopian vision of the stock market, clearheaded investors diligently evaluate companies and invest only in the ones they expect to grow and thrive. In the process, investors direct resources where they'll be most productive, benefiting the overall economy.
The GameStop circus over the last few weeks showed again that the real stock market is a far cry from Utopia. To some, GameStop was a chance to make a quick buck on a speculative roller coaster. To others, it was a way to stick it to Wall Street. But if taking on Wall Street really is the goal, meme-fueled rallies aren't likely to bring lasting change.
A growing chorus of policy wonks is arguing we should channel populist discontent with Wall Street in a more productive direction. Instead of trying to hurt hedge funds by artificially inflating the price of a company that's basically Blockbuster for games, they say, we should mobilize to impose a tax on stock trading. This could help bring greater sanity to trading and limit one of Wall Street's competitive advantages: high-frequency trading with supercomputers that can make like gazillions of transactions per second.
"A small tax 0.1% on each Wall Street trade would reduce high frequency trading, a practice which drains profits from retail investors and benefits only the very rich," tweeted Congresswoman Ilhan Omar during the GameStop firestorm.
The idea behind this kind of levy is not new. It's had all sorts of iterations over the years: a financial transactions tax, a speculation tax, a Tobin tax, and years before the stock trading app was founded a "Robin Hood" tax. A core idea behind all of these taxes has been to raise the cost of trading in order to discourage investors from making frivolous bets, and to encourage them to invest only if they believe companies will be profitable over the long run. But rather than rising, the cost of trading has gone in the opposite direction in recent decades. Today, for both Wall Street investors with supercomputers and small-time investors with apps, it costs almost nothing to trade.
From James Tobin to Larry Summers, a long line of economists has supported the idea of a financial transaction tax. In his magnum opus, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, John Maynard Keynes expressed his enthusiasm for one. "The proper social purpose" of Wall Street, he said, "is to direct new investment into the most profitable channels in terms of future yield." But when it begins to resemble "the activities of a casino, the job is likely to be ill-done." Hello, GameStop.
In 2011, a thousand economists from 53 countries signed a letter urging G20 countries to implement a small financial transaction tax to raise funds for fighting global poverty. But not all economists support the idea. Right-leaning economists and think tanks tend to argue that it will cause trading to move to other nations, discourage trades that benefit the overall economy, and fail to raise much money.
Numerous countries already have financial transaction taxes, and, we should note, their track record is mixed. Sweden adopted one in 1984, which they kept tweaking to try to get to work. By 1986, if you bought or sold a stock through a Swedish brokerage firm, you faced a 1% tax. Foreign brokerage firms, however, were exempt as a result half of all stock trading moved from Sweden to London. Meanwhile, the tax never raised much revenue, so it was eliminated in the early 1990s.
The UK's financial transaction tax has been a bit more successful. In 1694, King William III levied a stamp duty on all paper transactions. A version of that levy still exists, taxing many stock trades at 0.5%. Unlike the defunct Swedish tax, it applies to trades of shares of any UK company, regardless where traders are based. A report from Brookings finds the British stamp duty, unlike the Swedish version, has been pretty successful, showing how much policy details matter.
The United States actually also has a financial transaction tax. It funds the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). But the tax is so minuscule nobody seems to notice it. For most kinds of financial transactions, the rate the SEC will charge for 2021 is $5.10 for every million dollars traded (which, by the way, is a tax rate of .00051%). Since the financial crisis, a long list of progressive politicians have called for new financial transaction taxes, including Rep. Peter Defazio, who introduced such a bill last month.
Would a financial transaction tax have stopped the kind of wild swings in GameStop's stock we've seen over the past few weeks? Probably not. With a 0.1% tax, if you bought $400 worth of GameStop stock, the tax would be just 40 cents. But such a tax would add up to a much bigger deal for high-frequency traders, who can make multiple trades in milliseconds. While it may not have the razzle dazzle of Reddit-inspired stock roller coasters, taxation might be a more effective way to curb Wall Street excesses.
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The Mysteries and Motifs of Pandemic Dreams – The New Yorker
Posted: at 1:05 pm
One night in May of last year, the animator Marcie LaCerte dreamed that she found herself in the middle of a crowded Gap without a face mask. The scene brought on a familiar panic; the classic dream distress of being naked in public, with the faux pas updated to fit pandemic life. LaCerte animated the dream, along with a series of others, for the film above, Invisible Monsters and Tomato Soup, produced by Stevie Borrello and Meghan McDonough.
The idea for the film arose during the early weeks of the pandemic, when the three filmmakers were, like many people, catching up via video call. They had been experiencing vivid and odd dreams since going into lockdown, and began collecting ones from others, solicited through social media, Reddit, survey sites, and from their own acquaintances. They combed through the more than eighty responses they received, looking for interview subjects with visually compelling dreams, eventually narrowing the list down to twenty, from respondents spanning five continents.
LaCerte told me that, throughout the process, the filmmakers kept in mind the fact that dreams recounted in the light of day tend to be less than riveting. Listening to a dream can be exhausting, LaCerte said, because its typically a whole big narrative, with details that are only relevant to one persons subconscious. In order to counter that phenomenon, they focussed on teasing out concepts that ran through multiple dreams, in an effort to glean something universal, despite the disparate experiences of dreamers in countries with very different responses to the pandemic. Borrello described the process as like being a detective with wires on a board, finding the themes that connect and then whittling it down. These ranged from small oddities that cropped up repeatedly, like lizards and childhood acquaintances, to broader tropes, like experiences of physical touch tinged with danger.
To place the motifs they were getting from respondents into the context of the field of dream research, the filmmakers consulted Deirdre Barrett, an assistant professor of psychology at Harvard and the author of Pandemic Dreams. The filmmakers latched onto a phenomenon that Barrett has identified as invisible monsters, stand-ins that crop up in place of COVID-19 in anxiety dreams. Barrett told me that, when a crisis isnt associated with specific memorable images, one disaster will show up as another. In contrast, dreams that she studied in the aftermath of 9/11 were, for example, quite closely tied to reality. Even when the event itself didnt appear, planes, crumbling buildings, and fire were constant tropes. Although masks and ventilators do make appearances in the COVID-19 dreams that Barrett has recorded, particularly those of health-care workers, the virus itself is more slippery in its representations, sometimes replaced by invisible spectres, like threatening footsteps or simply the knowledge that something ominous lurks outside, and sometimes by concrete dangers appearing in place of the virus, like natural disasters or evil beings.
The dreams in Invisible Monsters and Tomato Soup run the gamut: some are nightmares; some feature figures of comfort, as McDonough put it, like the grandmother of a childhood friend. To capture this range in her animation, LaCerte created a visual world that fit multiple moods. Rather than make the monsters and threatening figures appear frightening, as they were in the original dreams, LaCerte gave them kind eyes and friendly smiles. A pair of menacing, knife-wielding radioactive lizards share an endearing moment, when one presents the other with a bouquet. Even a Boschian blue demon sitting in the middle of a fiery hellscape gobbling up a human victim has a surprisingly pleasant expression on its face. LaCerte uses color to communicate changes in tone. Nightmares appear in dark, saturated tones, shifting to a gentler, pastel palette for dreams about reassuring visits from the dead or distant loved ones. A bright shade of scarlet runs through the changing color schemes, evoking, by turns, danger (a hand whose touch feels like fire), warmth and light (lanterns at a Chinese market, hot sand), and comfort (cans of Campbells soup). Barrett told me that colorful, vivid dreams have become more common during the pandemic, along with dream recall, particularly for people who had previously suffered from a chronic lack of sleep. Pandemic-induced insomnia aside, working or attending school from home has allowed some people to sleep in slightly later than they had normally, and to experience the longer REM periods that occur in the final cycles of sleep.
In March, Barrett began collecting dream reports from around the world using a survey and categorizing the thousands of responses she received into a few core groups: dreams about the dead, isolation, illness, and so on. Common themes have evolved over the course of the pandemic. Last spring, many dreams reflected fears about infection itself, expressed through swarms of insects or toxic air. As the pandemic dragged on, these gave way to dreams about secondary implications: financial and employment anxiety, dread about returning to offices, dread about not returning to offices, and stress about helping kids with schooling at home, such as the one Barrett recorded in which a mother dreamed that her ten-year-olds entire class was being sent to her house for her to teach until the school could reopen.
As vaccines have been rolled out in recent months, Barrett told me, dreams about a post-pandemic world have started to crop up. Everyones COVID-free dreamscape is different: one woman found that a whale had moved into her swimming pool; another described a world in which Bernie Sanders was President and was busy rolling out plans to kick-start the economy with a marijuana initiative. More and more frequently, Barrett told me, dreamers are envisioning an environmental reset, in which they step outside into a utopia filled with clear air, clean water, and thriving wildlife. In the final image of Invisible Monsters and Tomato Soup, a woman flies above this kind of world. During the pandemic, dreaming has become something of a hobby, this dreamer explains via voiceover. At the end of each day, she cant wait to go to bed she says, gliding gently over chartreuse hills and baby-blue lakes.
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National Geographic Announces Spring 2021 Content Rollout at the Television Critics Association Winter Press Tour – Business Wire
Posted: at 1:05 pm
WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--National Geographic President of Content Courteney Monroe unveiled today the spring schedule of premieres for National Geographics premium science, adventure and exploration content at the Television Critics Association Virtual Winter Press Tour.
In the wake of this extraordinary and unprecedented year, we remain focused at National Geographic on telling stories that remind us that beauty and wonder still exist in our world, said Monroe. From IMPACT with Gal Gadot to Secrets of The Whales and the return of Uncharted with Gordon Ramsay, National Geographic transports audiences around the globe, inspiring a new generation of explorers and adventurers.
Highlights of National Geographic Contents new premieres include the highly anticipated March 21 debut of Genius: Aretha starring Cynthia Erivo as Aretha Franklin; March 29 premiere of a night of adventure with new series Race to the Center of the Earth, from The Amazing Race producers, paired with a new season of fan-favorite adventure series Running Wild with Bear Grylls; Memorial Day premiere of new personality-driven series Breaking Bobby Bones paired with a new season of Gordon Ramsay: Uncharted; new digital doc shorts series National Geographic Presents: IMPACT with Gal Gadot dropping on April 19 across National Geographic digital and social platforms; and the Disney+ Earth Day premiere of the original series Secrets of the Whales, from executive producer James Cameron and featuring National Geographic Photographer Brian Skerry.
Full press releases and trailers for Genius: Aretha, Running Wild with Bear Grylls, Race to the Center of the Earth, National Geographic Presents: IMPACT with Gal Gadot, Secrets of the Whales, Gordon Ramsay: Uncharted, Breaking Bobby Bones and Red Summer can be found at natgeotvpressroom.com.
National Geographic Content - NEW PREMIERE DATES (U.S. ONLY):
MARCH
OWN THE ROOM on Disney+ from National Geographic Documentary Films (NEW DOC)Premieres Friday, March 12LINK TO TRAILER: https://youtu.be/BS1n2UDqYzU
Five students from disparate corners of the planet take their big ideas to Macau, China, host of one of the most prestigious entrepreneurship competitions in the world, the Global Student Entrepreneur Awards. Santosh is from a small farming town in Nepal; Alondra works the register at her familys bakery in Puerto Rico; Henry is a programming wiz from Nairobi; Jason is a marketing machine from Greece; and Daniela is an immigrant escaping the crisis in Venezuela, taking on the chemical industry from her lab at NYU. Theyve each overcome immense obstacles in pursuit of their dreams, from hurricanes to poverty to civil unrest. Their ideas have already changed their own lives, but are they ready to change the world?
DR. OAKLEY, YUKON VET on Nat Geo WILD (Returning Series)Premieres Saturday, March 13, 9/8cAll previous seasons of Dr. Oakley, Yukon Vet are available to stream on Disney+
Every day is a unique challenge for Dr. Michelle Oakley, the only all-species vet for hundreds of miles across the Great North. Whether wrestling bison, tracking ibex in the mountains, performing surgery on a wolverine, or braving fierce landscapes to return moose calves to the wild, Dr. Oakley will do whatever it takes to keep the animals in her charge safe and healthy.
GENIUS: ARETHA on National Geographic (New Season of Anthology Series)(Imagine Entertainments Brian Grazer and Ron Howard, Clive Davis, 20th Television, MWM Studios and EUE/Sokolow)Four-night Television Event Premieres Sunday, March 21 at 9/8c, with back-to-back episodes, available next day on HuluLINK TO TRAILER: https://youtu.be/ryGpdVuuq_Y
Genius is National Geographic's critically acclaimed anthology series that dramatizes the fascinating stories of the worlds most brilliant innovators, their extraordinary achievements and their volatile, passionate and complex personal relationships. This third season will explore Aretha Franklins musical genius and incomparable career, as well as the immeasurable impact and lasting influence she has had on music and culture around the world. Franklin was a gospel prodigy, an outspoken civil rights champion and is widely considered to be the greatest singer of the past 50 years, receiving countless honors throughout her career. Starring double-Oscar nominee Cynthia Erivo as Aretha Franklin and Emmy-award winning Courtney B. Vance as C.L. Franklin, Genius: Aretha will be the first-ever, definitive and only authorized scripted series on the life of the universally acclaimed Queen of Soul. Previous seasons, Genius: Einstein and Genius: Picasso are available to stream on Hulu.
RUNNING WILD WITH BEAR GRYLLS on National Geographic (Returning Series)Premieres Monday, March 29 at 9/8cThe previous Nat Geo season of Running Wild with Bear Grylls is available to stream on Disney+
National Geographic is officially the new home of the wildly popular hit series Running Wild with Bear Grylls. In its second season on National Geographic, world-renowned survivalist Bear Grylls returns to the wilderness eager to push the mental and physical limits of a brand-new slate of celebrities in the hit adventure series Running Wild with Bear Grylls. Hollywoods fan favorites come along for another adventurous ride to join Grylls in new challenges that make even the bravest shudder. Each week, a new celebrity guest leaves the luxury of their homes to venture into some of the most extreme environments in the world to conquer fears, test their limits and sometimes dabble in natures not-so-tasty delicacies. Continuing to push superstars comfort levels, this season Grylls travels the globe from the deserts of Utah to the Dolomites of Italy and the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California for more epic, life-changing adventures. This seasons celebrities include: Anthony Mackie (The Falcon and the Winter Soldier), Bobby Bones (Breaking Bobby Bones, American Idol), Terry Crews (Brooklyn Nine-Nine, Deadpool), Gina Carano (The Mandalorian), Keegan-Michael Key (Brain Games, Prom), Danica Patrick (former professional racing driver), Danny Trejo (Machete, Sons of Anarchy) and Rainn Wilson (The Office, Utopia).
RACE TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH on National Geographic (New Series)Premieres Monday, March 29 at 10/9cLINK TO EXCLUSIVE SCENE FROM THE PREMIERE EPISODE: https://youtu.be/IXT6mU-4Bbo
The epic seven-part series, created by award-winning producers Bertram van Munster and Elise Doganieri, is an adrenaline-fueled global competition that pits four teams of three against one another in a nonstop sprint across the globe for a $1 million prize. Race to the Center of the Earth is an extreme non-elimination competition that follows four groups of adventurers, each starting from different corners of the earth, as they race to a buoy holding the grand prize. Racing from different corners of the planet South America, Russia, Canada and Southeast Asia, the teams will face untamed jungles, frozen arctic, arid deserts, bustling cities, treacherous mountains and vast oceans to reach the location where all four routes intersect. The first team to arrive at the buoy claims it all. Embarking on the adventure of a lifetime, these adventurous teams, made up of friends and co-workers, are confident their bond is what will lead them to the finish line.
APRIL
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC PRESENTS: IMPACT WITH GAL GADOT on National Geographic digital and social platforms (New Digital Series)Premieres weekly beginning Monday, April 19LINK TO TRAILER: https://youtu.be/2pTc4DfFH3Q
In the heart of some of the most difficult circumstances in the world, there exist beacons of hope. National Geographic Presents: IMPACT with Gal Gadot is a compelling new six-part short-form documentary series from executive producers Gal Gadot (Wonder Woman), Jaron Varsano (Cleopatra), Academy Award-winning filmmaker Vanessa Roth (Freeheld), Entertainment Ones (eOne) Tara Long (Emmy-nominated L.A. Burning: The Riots 25 Years Later) and RPCs Ryan Pallota, that follows the powerful stories of resilient young women around the globe who overcome obstacles and do extraordinary things.
SECRETS OF THE WHALES on Disney+ (New Series)Four-Part Event Series Premieres Earth Day, April 22(From executive producer James Cameron and featuring National Geographic Explorer and Photographer Brian Skerry)
Epic, revealing and emotional, thats what you get when immersed in the secretive world of whales and see life and love from their perspectives. From Academy Award-winning filmmaker and conservationist James Cameron, Secrets of the Whales plunges viewers deep within the epicenter of whale culture to experience the extraordinary communication skills and intricate social structures of five different whale species: orcas, humpbacks, belugas, narwhals and sperm whales. Featuring the expansive knowledge and skill of acclaimed National Geographic Explorer and Photographer Brian Skerry, the four-part Earth Day special-event series unveils new science and technology to spotlight whales as they make lifelong friendships, teach clan heritage and traditions to their young, and grieve deeply for the loss of loved ones. Filmed over three years in 24 global locations, throughout this epic journey, we learn that whales are far more complex and more like us than ever imagined. Narrated by award-winning actress and conservationist Sigourney Weaver (Alien, Avatar, Gorillas in the Mist), this is a personal story that very few are lucky enough to witness until now.
In addition, National Geographic magazines May issue (available online at natgeo.com mid-April) will be a single topic Earth Day issue showcasing Skerrys bold new photography. Skerrys latest work will also be featured in the National Geographic book Secrets of the Whales, timed to the series (on sale April 6).
KINGDOM OF THE POLAR BEARS on Nat Geo WILD (New Special)Two-hour Special Premieres Earth Day, April 22 at 8/7c
As the Arctic changes faster than ever, Dennis Compayre, a veteran polar bear guide, makes an epic first-time journey following his beloved bears through the brutal Canadian winter and onto the frozen waters of Hudson Bay. In this high-stakes, high-reward venture, the team documents the secret world of polar bears and the mysterious and disappearing kingdom of ice that sustains them. The winter hunting and birthing season is a critical time for these bears and is largely undocumented, deemed too difficult and dangerous for humans to follow until now. The team, armed with traditional ecological knowledge and the latest 4K camera technology, witnesses never-before-seen seal-hunting strategies and documents rapid adaptations to climate change, including whale predation and open-water hunting.
MAY
CRITTER FIXERS: COUNTRY VETS on Nat Geo WILD (Returning Series)Premieres Saturday, May 22, 9/8cSeason one of Critter Fixers: Country Vets is available to stream on Disney+
Dr. Hodges and Dr. Ferguson are two lifelong friends who own and operate Critter Fixer Veterinary Hospitals, located 100 miles south of Atlanta. Together with their loving staff, these physicians bring real heart, soul and a lot of humor to their treatment and care of more than 20,000 patients a year across their two locations. Between emergency visits to the office and farm calls throughout rural Georgia, this special team is constantly bombarded with unique cases. From adhering Tilapia scales to save an attacked dog to assembling a splint on a rare South American bird, for the Critter Fixer team, there is no such thing as normal.
GORDON RAMSAY: UNCHARTED New Episodes on National Geographic (Returning Series)Eight-Part Third Season Premieres Monday, May 31 at 9/8c, Available Next Day on Disney+Seasons one and two of Gordon Ramsay: Uncharted are also available to stream on Disney+LINK TO CLIP: https://youtu.be/HaAItN-Bva8
Gordon Ramsay laces his boots, grabs his knives and buckles up as he hits the road to embark on exhilarating adventures, exploring world cultures through food in National Geographics Gordon Ramsay: Uncharted. The multi-Michelin-star chef and Ironman athlete feasts his way around the globe risking life and limb in daring missions in pursuit of culinary inspiration and edible excellence. Under the guidance of local experts and food legends he meets along the way, Ramsay will partake in culinary customs, learn about delicious delicacies and taste fresh flavors unique to each region. In the upcoming third season, Ramsay goes off the grid and off recipe as he feasts his way through Texas, Portugal, Croatia, Puerto Rico, Iceland, Maine, the Smoky Mountains and Mexico.
BREAKING BOBBY BONES on National Geographic (New Series)Premieres Monday, May 31 at 10/9c, with two back-to-back episodes, then moves to Sundays at 10/9c with two new episodes premiering each weekLINK TO TRAILER: https://youtu.be/nxMGX6ffveA
In each half-hour episode of Breaking Bobby Bones, Bobby Bones pursues his own mantraFight. Grind. Repeat.by traveling to far-flung destinations across the country to find people with unique jobs, skills, hobbies and abilities. Upon arrival, he meets local everyday heroes who challenge him to conquer (or at least attempt) the tricks of their trades while exploring the triumphs and tragedies that made these heroes who they are today. Through their joint experiences, viewers come along for the ride learning what its like to become a tenacious stunt artist, kayak the Colorado River blindfolded and play para hockey on a sled. Its an action-packed celebration of Americans who work hard, play hard and, above all, take pride in everything they do.
JUNE
RED SUMMER (w.t.) on National Geographic (New Documentary Film)Premieres June 2021LINK TO TRAILER: https://youtu.be/Wz0MNOivGY4
National Geographic Documentary Films partners with acclaimed filmmaker Dawn Porter ("The Way I See It," "Good Trouble: John Lewis") and Trailblazer Studios on a documentary special that sheds new light on a century-old period of intense racial conflict. Red Summer (working title) comes 100 years on from the two-day Tulsa Massacre in 1921 that led to the murder of as many as 300 Black people and left as many as 10,000 homeless and displaced. The film will premiere in June on National Geographic, commemorating Juneteenth when the last Black slaves in the U.S. heard of their emancipation. Award-winning Washington Post journalist and Tulsa native DeNeen Brown is at the heart of the film, reporting on the search for mass graves in her hometown. Digging into the events that lead to one of the worst episodes of racial violence in America's history, Brown uncovers new insights into this early 20th century period known as the Red Summer. Brown is uniquely placed to explore today's new civil rights movement in the context of the Tulsa Massacre and the Red Summer. With inside access to family members of those killed, law enforcement, archeologists and historians, Brown makes sense of the science and the politics intertwined throughout the search for Tulsa's mass grave. Leaving no stone unturned, Red Summer also untangles the role the media played in covering events at the time in order to reveal the full extent of the nation's buried past.
AMERICAS FUNNIEST HOME VIDEOS: ANIMAL EDITION on Nat Geo WILD (New Series)Premieres Sunday, June 20 at 8/7c
Americas Funniest Home Videos has been a household staple since its inception, providing hilarious entertainment from some of the most happy coincidences and epic fails in television history. But theres no question that animal videos featuring furry friends and scaly celebrities are the most entertaining yet. A spinoff of the ABC hit, Americas Funniest Home Videos: Animal Edition presents knee-slapping, tear-jerking animal humor to Nat Geo WILD!
About National Geographic Partners
National Geographic Partners LLC (NGP), a joint venture between The Walt Disney Company and the National Geographic Society, is committed to bringing the world premium science, adventure and exploration content across an unrivaled portfolio of media assets. NGP combines the global National Geographic television channels (National Geographic Channel, Nat Geo WILD, Nat Geo MUNDO, Nat Geo PEOPLE) with National Geographics media and consumer-oriented assets, including National Geographic magazines; National Geographic studios; related digital and social media platforms; books; maps; childrens media; and ancillary activities that include travel, global experiences and events, archival sales, licensing and e-commerce businesses. Furthering knowledge and understanding of our world has been the core purpose of National Geographic for 133 years, and now we are committed to going deeper, pushing boundaries, going further for our consumers and reaching millions of people around the world in 172 countries and 43 languages every month as we do it. NGP returns 27 percent of our proceeds to the nonprofit National Geographic Society to fund work in the areas of science, exploration, conservation and education. For more information visit natgeotv.com or nationalgeographic.com, or find us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, LinkedIn and Pinterest.
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Green Borneo Kratom Review – Is This Strain Really Impactful? – Big Easy Magazine
Posted: at 1:03 pm
There is a good chance that you might have already heard about Kratom or even seen the product online or in stores. That is because this Asian herb extract is rapidly growing in popularity in the USA.
For people living in southeast Asian countries though, Kratom is an age-old herbal remedy for treating several diseases. The medicinal properties of Kratom and the effects may differ from one variant to the other.
Green Borneo Kratom is the most preferred type because of its well-rounded properties. The nootropic properties of this vein are wholesome and more effective than their Kratom siblings.
If you are new to Green Borneo Kratom, this review lays out all the information you need to know. We analyze the medicinal properties, its benefits, and recommend some of the best ways to consume the extract. Stay with us as we explore how this Kratom strain can best benefit your needs.
Visit the Official Website of Green Borneo Kratom
Green Borneo Kratom is a botanical product derived from the Mitragyna Speciosa tree. This leaf extract is well known for its psychoactive effects. This plant belongs to the coffee family that is extensively grown in tropical regions. Kratom plants are harvested in their natural environment, deep in the jungles to ensure the finest quality substance.
Green Borneo Kratom is a type of Kratom specifically grown on Asias largest island, Borneo. Indonesia dominates the production and export of this herbal product as it owns a majority of the Borneo island.
The herb has got the western world excited in recent years, but the local civilization has been using these leaves for centuries to treat various physical and psychological ailments.
Indigenous farmers have been harvesting the Green Borneo Kratom for ages unknown for medicinal purposes. It is the top go-to option for the tribals in this religion to relieve excruciating muscle and joints pain, viral fever, and so on.
The locals also understand that a steady dose of this leaves extract can enhance their capacity to undertake laborious tasks that are an integral part of their livelihood.
It is quite fascinating that under prime climatic conditions, the Kratom plant can grow up to 60-80 feet. As the bigger leaves contain a higher concentration of alkaloids, only these leaves are used for medicinal purposes. The leaves are dried and powdered with extreme caution to pack maximum goodness in the extract.
Green Borneo Kratom is the most popular stain among various varieties of the plant simply because it holds maximum medicinal properties with the least negative side effects. The Green strain is one of the most effective nootropics for relieving anxiety, chronic pain and to keep your energy levels souring.
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All varieties of Kratom veins are known to have psychoactive properties. The Green Borneo Kratom in particular consists of prominent alkaloids like Mitragynine, Speciogynine, Mitraphylline, 7-Hydroxymitragynine, and 9-Hydroxycorynantheidine.
Mitragynine, the main bioactive compound in Green Kratom, has anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and antibacterial properties. These alkaloids bind with the pituitary gland in our body to trigger the release of endorphins. As a result, you would feel a numbing effect, pain relief, muscle relaxation, and relief of fatigue.
Green Borneo is one of the most effective bioproducts with elevated nootropic effects. Whether consumed directly or blended with food or beverages, the Green strain can keep you alert, motivated, and focused. By providing a well-balanced psychological stimulation and relieving chronic physical pain, Green Borneo delivers a well-rounded effect.
Green Borneo Kratom is widely available in its dried and powdered form. As this psychoactive product offers the perfect combination of pain relief and boosting your energy, its applications are many folds.
Researchers strongly believe that the Green strain is the more preferred stain because it enhances performance and social outcomes.
All forms of Kratom are best consumed orally. Experts and users agree that the Green strain delivers a better flavour and sophisticated effect. Toss n wash is the most popular and super simple way to take your daily dose of Kratom. Measure the quantity, toss it into your mouth, and wash it down your throat with a glass of water.
Add it to your favourite fruit juice or smoothie to get the kick of positivity every morning. If you are a tea lover, try brewing yourself a cup of refreshing green kratom tea.
Some of the leading brands offer this product in the form of capsules for easy consumption and appropriate dosage. Based on your pain levels and requirements, you can balance the consumption of pills.
If you want to take Kratom the tasty way then you have some delicious recipes that you can quickly cook up. Add just the right amount of this bright green powder to your cookies, health bars, honey balls, and so on. Kratom gummies and candies are also available to please your sweet tooth.
It is important to note that the Green Borneo Kratom is a lot safer and has minimal potential for substance abuse when consumed in a limited quantity. At the maximum, its addiction can be compared to that of caffeine.
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While red and white Kratoms are the two extremes in their effects, the Green strain fits in the middle bringing you the best of health benefits and minimal euphoria effect.
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Kratom similar to marijuana has many varieties that are addressed as strains. They are basically categories on the basis of their place of origin and the alkaloid profile.
The 3 major Kratom strains are
White Vein Kratom
Similar to tea leaves, kratom leaves are harvested when they are young to make white vein kratom. This strain has a distinctly acquired taste that may not be pleasing to all the users.
This kind of Kratom is equally potent to other varieties and can effectively induce a calming effect. Generally, people who are looking for an energized morning drink, replace their coffee with this variety.
As the production of the White vein, Kratom is sparse, the variety is priced higher than others. Furthermore, the white variety may not be the best choice if you are new to kratom.
Red Vein Kratom
This comes from the kratom leaves that have red veins on leaves and stems. The red vein kratom plants grow in abundance and harvested extensively.
The Red vein is best known to render a relaxing and euphoria effect. Users opt for this type to treat sleep disorders, chronic pain, and muscle soreness. If you are looking to replace your painkillers with kratom, this is the most suitable variant.
The effects of Red strain are mild and thus do not lead to dependence on Kratom.
Green Vein Kratom
This is extracted from kratom leaves with mid-level maturity. When the leaves are picked, all the medicinal qualities would have reached their peak. The effect of Green kratom, simply put, is between red and white strains. We can best describe it as a powerful natural energy booster and pain reliever with mild sedative effects.
As it delivered a more balanced effect, Green vein Kratom is the most desired kind. The nootropic properties of this variety ensure that although you feel relaxed and calm, your mind is still extremely alert, focused, and motivated.
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You would agree with us that Kratom is a powerful herb with a wide spectrum of benefits. The Green Borneo Kratom especially packs natures goodness in a distinct way.
As we consider the healing properties and benefits of the Green Borneo, we are convinced that it can be a worthy alternative to OTC painkillers.
To determine which Green Borneo Kratom brand suits you the best, you need to try some of them. We suggest going with organic and genuine products even if they are priced on the higher side. Based on your experience and expectations, determine the dosage.
When taken in moderation, Green Borneo Kratom can be a powerful addition to your diet, keeping you upbeat and energized, all day long.
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This highly potent Kratom strain is for anyone who has been taking OTC painkillers for a long time without much relief. Green Borneo is known to reduce even chronic pain without rendering any euphoria effect.
This natural extract is a preferred alternative to opioid drugs that have strongly negative effects. Green Borneo when taken in mild doses works more like caffeine, elevating your energy levels, mood, and performance.
It is quite challenging to generalize the dosage because the metabolism rate, body structure, and tolerance level vary from person to person. One should consider the fact that Green Borneo Kratom is more potent and the effects are more long-lasting.
For someone who is just getting introduced to Kratom 0.5 to 1 gram per dose is sufficient. Take it easy and see how well your body responds.
Here are the general guidelines for regular users of Green Borneo Kratom
Excessive dosage may lead to irritability, stomach aches, drowsiness, and nausea.
Among all the variants of Kratom, the Green strain is extremely popular among users. You can find a good number of genuine Kratom vendors selling their products either in powder form or as capsules. While some of the manufacturers have made Green Borneo Kratom available exclusively online, some brands are available in stores as well. Buy Kratom, Green Leaf Kratom, Golden Monk, Kraken Kratom, Organic Kratom USA, and so on are a few of the popular and trusted brands in the USA. Do make it a point to read the product details and reviews before you go ahead and buy the product.
Kratom is federally legal in the USA. You can use this botanical product for wellness as well as recreational purposes. However, several states have banned the use of Kratom.
Advanced scientific research and awareness have led a few states to reverse the ban and made it available. Thus if you are travelling with Kratom from one state to another, ensure that the product is deemed legal in that region.
It is for certain that Green Borneo is packed with medicinal properties that benefit your life in multiple ways. Having said that, we should also remember that all Kratom strains have psychoactive or mind-altering effects.
First-time users may experience constipation, dry mouth, lack of sleep, loss of appetite, and even weight loss. In such cases, you need to reduce the quantity and the frequency of Kratom dosage.
You can safely reap the goodness of this extract by taking it in a limited quantity. Mild to moderate dosage will not cause any negative effects. But when taken frequently or high dosage may lead to Kratom tolerance or even worse, dependence.
One can easily avoid such harmful side effects by strictly moderating their Green Borneo consumption. People with a history of substance abuse should be very watchful not to overdose themselves.
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Green Borneo Kratom Review - Is This Strain Really Impactful? - Big Easy Magazine
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Manifestations of Higher Meaning: On Dana Gioia’s The Catholic Writer Today and Studying with Miss Bishop – Los Angeles Review of Books -…
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FEBRUARY 7, 2021
FOR 15 YEARS Dana Gioia held down a day job as an executive at General Foods, successfully managing Jell-O and Kool-Aid. Meanwhile, he established a growing reputation as a poet that he concealed from his corporate colleagues. He was Catholic, like his working-class Mexican/Sicilian parents, and he had studied poetry at Harvard with (among others) the illustrious Elizabeth Bishop. Recently, this former Chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts and founder of The Big Read, this poet laureate emeritus of the state of California, has published two new volumes of admirably finished essays, the first on his religious identity and some authors who share it, and the second on his early personal acquaintance with great poets and writers. In The Catholic Writer Today, Gioia does not turn to the contemporary church to find a renewal of arts and culture, instead looking to a rosary of Catholic writers who keep stepping into the center of the western tradition. In Studying with Miss Bishop, Gioia reflects, heymishly, often hilariously, on his coming of age as a poet in the company of poets.
These are not Gioias first major works of nonfiction. His essay Can Poetry Matter? made the cover of the May 1991 issue of The Atlantic, making it impossible for him to hide his writing life from his fellow execs. He opens that essay with the following assessment: American poetry now belongs to a subculture [] Like priests in a town of agnostics, [poets] still command a certain residual prestige. But as individual artists they are almost invisible. This paradigm-shifting homily, delivered with the logic of a 13th-century Scholastic, marked Gioia as a meaning-maker on the national stage, a position he continues to occupy. Gioias most recent essays land far from the precinct of Limbo that coterie poetry and its criticism have come to inhabit. These memoirs especially endow otherwise mundane experiences with numinous significance. As he says in the poem The Stars Now Rearrange Themselves, Another world / Reveals itself behind the ordinary.
Dana Gioia has become increasingly a spiritual writer. The Catholic Writer Today describes close encounters with Catholicism both lived and represented:
Catholicism currently enjoys almost no positive presence in the American fine arts [Though] Roman Catholicism now ranks overwhelmingly as the largest religious denomination in the United States with more that 68 million members. (By contrast, the second largest group, southern Baptists, has 16 million members.) [] To visualize the American Catholic arts today, dont imagine Florence or Rome. Think Newark, New Jersey.
Yet, as Gioia continues, there is more to contemporary Catholicism than sociopolitics. By Catholic, for example, he means not only the immigrant peasant religion that many of us in Gioias generation inherited, but an assumption that there is a sharable language that transcends words. In Gioias work, small manifestations of higher meaning sunder time, like a breaking and entering of the divine into the earthly, like a blade of lightning / harvesting the sky (Prayer). In the essay Poetry as Enchantment, he explains that, in the creative realm, Catholicism foregrounds the larger human purposes of the art which is to awaken, amplify, and refine the sense of being alive.
My favorite essay in the book is Singing Aquinas in L.A., which begins, When I was a child in parochial school, we began each morning with daily Mass. [] The Mass, which was conducted entirely in Latin, meant little to me. I endured it respectfully as a mandatory exercise. As for the singing, he writes, Here is the hymn [in Latin]. If you dont know what the words mean, dont worry; neither did I. Nor do I intend to translate them now. That is the point of the essay. He means that the power of poetry transcends the words on the page, or, as he puts it in the poem Words, Words, Words, Words are the cards, not why the game is played.
The Catholic Writer Today seeks, above all, to acknowledge the continuity between the living and the dead, and advocates for a common redemption through literature without pedantry or the crotchets of the fanatic. The table of contents lists essays on St. Paul, Elizabeth Jennings, Brother Antoninus, Dunstan Thompson, Gerard Manley Hopkins, and John Donne.
At 12 years old, Donne attended Hart Hall, Oxford (today Hertford College) as a Roman Catholic because they had no chapel and he could avoid common worship. His mothers great-uncle was St. Thomas More. When Donne was 21, his younger brother, Henry Donne, died of a fever in prison, where he had been sent for harboring a proscribed Catholic priest. His two maternal uncles, both Jesuits, were forced into exile. After these things, John Donne opened a massive division within himself, and became Anglican. Upon this matter, Gioia comments:
The Catholic cult of martyrdom troubled Donne as a sort of theologically assisted suicide. In his family the topic had been much pondered. His mother took pride in the familys legacy of martyrs. He had also begun to dislike and distrust Jesuit intrigues against Elizabeth I and the Anglican Church that so often occasioned the arrests and executions.
This, I think, underemphasizes the anguish Donne must have experienced in leaving the Catholic Church in whose defense his close relatives had suffered and died. Gioias commentary on Donnes anti-saccharine deployment of the English sonnet, however, is remarkable. Gioia never doubts, furthermore, Donnes familiarity with sin and its attractions, and highlights the consciousness of sin in his work. Gioia says, Donne took the song-like form of the Renaissance English lyric and gave it a quality of symphonic development. Donnes interior torment, especially as he faces death, gives rise to a baroque conversation between violence and salvation. Yet, as in Holy Sonnet 14, he never submits entirely to God I, like an usurpd town to another due, / Labor to admit you the constricted opening of a sinful soul cannot contain the divine.
Donne was a convert to the church which made him famous; the same is true of Gerard Manley Hopkins (184489), the other major poet included in this volume. Hopkins sacrificed much for example, a career at Oxford by converting to Roman Catholicism when he was an undergraduate. Catholics could not receive degrees at Oxford until 1911, a lively reminder of the survival of English anti-Catholicism. His parents disowned him. He abandoned hope of a major Oxford professorship to teach the equivalent of parochial middle school. He tried to give up writing; even after he began, under obedience, to write poetry again, he published nothing. His friends and religious superiors hated his work. Gioias essay on Hopkins acknowledges his eventual status as one of the most frequently reprinted poets in English. Gioia also recognizes his holiness:
If modern Christian poetry has a saint, it is Gerard Manley Hopkins. No other poet, at least in English, occupies such a lofty position in terms of both literary achievement and spiritual authority. [] His reputation transcends questions of purely literary merit. He is venerated as a figure of sanctity, redemptive suffering, and heroic virtue.
Its probable that Roman Catholicism taught Hopkins who was raised as a High Anglican amid luxury and learning more about being a devisor of major art than did private drawing lessons, prep school, or Oxford. His celebration of the nature he observed approaches but skirts the pantheism of his Romantic forebears. The preeminent detail about both Hopkins and his extraordinary body of writing is surely that he foregrounded theological considerations. For him, a world without a living God would have been unthinkable. Gioias essay put this into clear focus. This clarity of focus and of exposition are the chief merits and pleasures of every chapter in The Catholic Writer Today.
In My First Acquaintance with Poets (1823), William Hazlitt details his meetings with Romantic poets, especially Coleridge, and so reveals a great deal about his youthful self: My heart, shut up in the prison house of this rude clay, has never found, nor will it ever find, a heart to speak to; but that my understanding also did not remain dumb and brutish, or at length found a language to express itself, I owe to Coleridge. So too does Dana Gioia assign credit to his early literary influences in his newest and fantastically charming collection of essays, Studying with Miss Bishop: Memoirs from a Young Writers Life.
Gioia introduces the volume with an acknowledgment of six people whose examples helped me become a writer. He also makes clear that literary life is strange and that, given everything we will learn about the author in his first chapter, Lonely Impulse of Delight, the course his adult life took was unlikely. He quotes Goethe, who says that to be lucky at the beginning is everything. Growing up in a large, crowded apartment in Hawthorne, California, constantly surrounded by his extended family, Gioia had a lucky beginning because he inherited an enormous eclectic library from his late uncle, the proletarian intellectual Ted Ortiz. One observation from this chapter expresses Goias quiet pride in his background: Italians, he writes, admire any highly developed special skill carpentry, cooking, gardening, singing, even reading. The best skills helped one make a living. The others helped one enjoy living. And with the same practical humility, he reveals the origins of his autodidactic impulses: Kids had time on their hands. We had to entertain ourselves, which meant exploring every possible means of amusement our circumscribed lives afforded. I paged through every book on every shelf.
By the time we reach the title essay, Gioia, the first in his family to attend college, has reached the academic pinnacle of advanced study Harvard graduate school and has enrolled in a tiny seminar with one of the major American poets of the 20th century, Elizabeth Bishop:
Im not a very good teacher, Miss Bishop began. So to make sure you learn something in this class I am going to ask each of you to memorize at least ten lines a week from one of the poets we are reading. Had she announced that we were all required to attend class in sackcloth and ashes, the undergraduates could not have looked more horrified.
Since that moment, Gioia has famously memorized thousands of lines of poetry and can recite them with the skill of a Shakespearean actor (check out his son Michael Gioias project, Blank Verse Films, for a selection of Gioias recitations). Thus we glean one solid piece of advice for any young poet.
The essay Studying with Miss Bishop was first published in The New Yorker on September 15, 1986. To what greater Olympus could a young man of letters aspire? Some readers at that time, including me, had also studied at Harvard under Miss Bishop in the 1970s, and the essay struck us as so spot-on that it took our breath away. Gioias subject emerges as self-effacing, and in representing her so astutely, he effaces his own ego as well. She is a reluctant teacher, a shy performer, quietly meticulous. She is dizzy with relief when the semester finally ends and she need teach no longer in that drab subterranean seminar room in Kirkland House.
Gioia describes Miss Bishop as his favorite teacher at Harvard, and also writes that Robert Fitzgerald the acclaimed translator of classical poetry was his favorite. Gioias essay on Fitzgerald is the masterpiece of the collection. Fitzgeralds History of English Versification has proved so influential on certain young writers and through them on current poetrythat it merits description, Gioia begins, following up with his own mini-seminar. He also took Fitzgeralds Comparative Literature 201: Narrative Poetry, about which he comments:
Fitzgerald slowed down our reading not only by compelling us to take careful notes but also by forcing us to differentiate Ktesippos, Agelaos, Amphimedon, Antinoos, and Eurymakhos from one another figures we would otherwise have lumped together indiscriminately as Penelopes suitors.
The essay contains numerous extended punctilios (by the time Fitzgerald dismissed us with several handouts to scan, a hundred pages of Saintsbury to read, and two verse exercises [three stanzas in strict Sapphics and fourteen lines of Catullan hendecasyllabics], the class had become less crowded) and I wondered if Gioia had fully measured how very, very much he had himself been formed by the great Boylston Professor. Toward the end of the chapter, he delivers a wise and beautiful analysis of how Fitzgeralds teaching had driven home the immense difficulty of mastering the humane arts: They require a life of constant application. Also, Forty years later [] the extent of Fitzgeralds influence appears a verifiable fact of literary history. Also, He was the only professor I had in eight years of college and graduate school who was a practicing Catholic.
Thus, Gioias latest book, also proves his most self-revelatory. In it, one of our countrys best literary personages takes pains to position himself on the shoulders of such unexpected giants as his Uncle Ted Ortiz, merchant marine, killed in a plane crash in his 20s. He pays a characteristically Catholic obeisance of not just reverence but also homely affection to the process and people who helped him arrive at himself.
Peggy Ellsberg is a poet and scholar who teaches English at Barnard College. She is the author of Created to Praise: The Language of Gerard Manley Hopkins (Oxford University Press, 1987) and The Gospel in Gerard Manley Hopkins: Selections from His Poems, Letters, Journals, and Spiritual Writings (Plough, 2017).
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‘Ghost in the Shell: SAC_2045’s Exploration of Transhumanism and a Post-Human Future – LIVING LIFE FEARLESS
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In the year 2045, a post-cyberpunk Japan has emerged in an increasingly de-centralized, globalized world. Yet despite a host of breakthrough innovations and technical advancements, many of these have developed out of necessity. In a future time period where the countrys national security has become increasingly volatile, the government and its people are faced with organized high-stake crimes, rebel opportunists, cyberbrain hackers and meddling foreign government operations invested in securing military secrets. To combat these growing threats to public security, Motoko Kusanagi and her team of Ghosts are pulled from their mercenary work with the private military company Obsidian and are re-activated as government-hired specialists of Section 9: an anti-crime, counter-cyberterrorism task force. In this Netflix Original series, Ghost in the Shell: SAC_2045, the world is bleak and the stakes are high: economies have fallen, cities lie empty and war has become big business.
Advanced robot AIs capable of emotion, bio-tech enhancements, and cybernetic neural-linking: these are some of whats possible in future Japan. Every aspect of the show seeks to explore our relationship with technology, but it also touches on the concept of our own social and human evolution. What would it look like if we could upgrade our bodies and minds, expanding our abilities beyond our known and accepted limitations? How would the creation of superhuman transhuman cyborgs affect social attitudes and are we to think of them as separate to or beyond human definition?
Unit members of Section 9 define these future realities in their bio-technological augmentation. For example, Batou (Kisanganis second in command) has replaced his eyes with artificial ones allowing him to track and scan easier. A sniper has implanted a targeting device with satellite feed in his left eye which increases his deadly accuracy. Meanwhile all team members have the ability to remotely sync their cyborg brains, enabling them to brain dive and connect to each other regardless of distance. This technical harmonization of coherent thought processing gives them an edge and creates a more effective fighting unit. But despite all these flashy advances, Motoko Kusanagi possesses something entirely unique that separates her from her counterparts: a full-body prosthesis. Major, as she is also known, possesses a body that is a completely fabricated android shell. This shell houses her cyberbrain which contains or expresses the electrical code of her conscious self or ghost. This is the real conceptual lynch pin on which the show is based and compels viewers to think a little deeper about the questions surrounding cyborgism and its links to artificial or enhanced consciousness. Thinking further, we quickly find ourselves in a dimensional quagmire and identity paradox: who is Major Motoko Kusanagi if her body is a technological recreation? Is she still human despite the fact that her brain (which is itself cyber-enhanced) is the only human part of her left?
Human consciousness and its evolution, location AND definition, still have managed to largely escape understanding
These questions tie into two relevant topics. Firstly it relates to the real-world applications of cybernetics. Already we can see through current research that we are on the cusp of becoming cyborgs ourselves through the following ways: neural linking the brain to mind-controlled robotic prosthetics, theoretical thought messaging or technical telepathy, brain and heart implants designed to monitor or support regulatory systems, and inserting sub-cutaneious chips, the mass-commercialization of which will allow people to control features in their Smart Homes. Secondly, human consciousness and its evolution, location AND definition, still have managed to largely escape understanding by even our most advanced minds. It is what Brian Cox and other physicists call the hard problem in that they cannot agree on what consciousness is, where it resides or if its just an epiphenomenon. This idea has been expanded upon by Rupert Sheldrake who outlines these problems:
Consciousness itself is problematic. It ought not to exist, we ought not to be conscious. Its an embarrassment for materialism that we are.
Right at the outset, Ghost in the Shell: SAC_2045 pulls no punches. It begins laying out the contextual groundwork that details how warfare as an industry began. In the year AD 2042, the following transpired:
The Great 4 (American Empire, China, Russia, and EU) sought economic sustainability for its members. Using AI code 1A84, the American Empire initiated war as an industry. The world dubbed it sustainable war.'
This speculative cyberpunk paradigm is alluring as it leans straight into the style of cognitive dissonance that George Orwell popularized in 1984. The term sustainable war, is itself fascinating primarily because it fits two ideologies together that are diametrically opposed in that they are not, in any way, possibly sustainable at all. The widespread violence and threat escalation between powers or rival military companies would eventually wipe everyone out. This volatile industry, created by a future American government, reveals a hard truth: that its symptomatic of an unstable, autocratic control system that is bringing the entire social order into further collapse.
This speculative cyberpunk paradigm is alluring as it leans straight into the style of cognitive dissonance thatGeorge Orwellpopularized in1984
This is most relevant as Major Kusanagi and her team of mercs operate in the aftermath of the aforementioned destabilization of the four superblock powers which happened when each nation power sought their own interests. If there is anything familiar about this, there are some real world/Orwellian parallels that add plausibility to Ghost in the Shell. Beside the post-war connotations, a cataclysmic collapse of all society has rocked the world. This involved a major global default of all transactions (akin to financial depressions of the past and present) where paper money has become useless (as it did in the Second World War) and digital currencies, both saved and indebted, have all been wiped clean (a growing concern as monetary systems shift towards a cashless society). Further to this, the real 1984 moment comes when viewers learn that anyone with a cyberbrain can be infiltrated, fed false memories or can be possessed/controlled in Manchurian Candidate like fashion. This is war on the final frontier: that of the mind.
Also it shows how warlike civilization still is. This is totally believable when viewers consider that, after endless decades of military engagements, people are still fighting with and in foreign countries now. So in 2045, the ongoing warring between nations is not just a continuation of modern political divisions, social unrest and human misery, but some go so far as to claim that this is a reflection of the war machine propagated by the military-industrial complex which President Eisenhower warned us about:
All of these combined realities have pushed many people to the brink and has triggered a rapid escalation of war as an industry. Every nation, even the more advanced ones, now suffer from both internal and external threats such as widespread rioting, cyberterrorism, and civil war. One only needs to look at the pages of recent history to know that these things are prodromic (in that theyre a symptomatic representation of the current era of global expansion).
As highly trained as Section 9 is, their battle experience and cyber skills are nevertheless challenged with the advent of a new enemy: the post-human. After their first chilling encounter with such an inhuman entity, the Major and her team later discover that the government has captured one of them in a secure facility. They soon are briefed on a sergeant major who began life as a normal citizen. Then some radical shift in his psyche occurred, which began as a mysterious fever and progressed into a catatonic state where he ceased to be able to move independently or communicate. When this sickness had abated, the soldier had changed dramatically, losing his personality, his capacity for empathy and acquiring superhuman abilities that enabled him perform multiple cyberbrain hacks simultaneously as well as predetermine bullet trajectories before guns have been fired.
What we could be seeing is the dawn of a new intelligence
This concept brings viewers back to Major Motoko Kusanagi and the paradox of the ghost that inhabits her manufactured shell. Yet here the idea takes on a more insidious tone: the cyberbrain itself has evolved, taking over the human mind. What we could be seeing is the dawn of a new intelligence. Not just of artificial consciousness, but one where the post-human cyber mind has become the dominant mental force of its host organism. As the character, John Smith, explains: it is now in control and operates on its own agenda. If this is true, then who are post-humans and what do they want? What will happen to a society overrun with something that looks human but is without feeling? Could the characteristics of this intelligence, including its thought processing, be simply adaptive in that they have merely copied and internalized human traits such as aggression and a war-like nature?
Ghost in the Shell: SAC_2045s high-concepts of transhumanism, sustainable war, and post-humans paint a bleak picture of our future, but its a future that we could very well be headed towards.
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