The Prometheus League
Breaking News and Updates
- Abolition Of Work
- Ai
- Alt-right
- Alternative Medicine
- Antifa
- Artificial General Intelligence
- Artificial Intelligence
- Artificial Super Intelligence
- Ascension
- Astronomy
- Atheism
- Atheist
- Atlas Shrugged
- Automation
- Ayn Rand
- Bahamas
- Bankruptcy
- Basic Income Guarantee
- Big Tech
- Bitcoin
- Black Lives Matter
- Blackjack
- Boca Chica Texas
- Brexit
- Caribbean
- Casino
- Casino Affiliate
- Cbd Oil
- Censorship
- Cf
- Chess Engines
- Childfree
- Cloning
- Cloud Computing
- Conscious Evolution
- Corona Virus
- Cosmic Heaven
- Covid-19
- Cryonics
- Cryptocurrency
- Cyberpunk
- Darwinism
- Democrat
- Designer Babies
- DNA
- Donald Trump
- Eczema
- Elon Musk
- Entheogens
- Ethical Egoism
- Eugenic Concepts
- Eugenics
- Euthanasia
- Evolution
- Extropian
- Extropianism
- Extropy
- Fake News
- Federalism
- Federalist
- Fifth Amendment
- Fifth Amendment
- Financial Independence
- First Amendment
- Fiscal Freedom
- Food Supplements
- Fourth Amendment
- Fourth Amendment
- Free Speech
- Freedom
- Freedom of Speech
- Futurism
- Futurist
- Gambling
- Gene Medicine
- Genetic Engineering
- Genome
- Germ Warfare
- Golden Rule
- Government Oppression
- Hedonism
- High Seas
- History
- Hubble Telescope
- Human Genetic Engineering
- Human Genetics
- Human Immortality
- Human Longevity
- Illuminati
- Immortality
- Immortality Medicine
- Intentional Communities
- Jacinda Ardern
- Jitsi
- Jordan Peterson
- Las Vegas
- Liberal
- Libertarian
- Libertarianism
- Liberty
- Life Extension
- Macau
- Marie Byrd Land
- Mars
- Mars Colonization
- Mars Colony
- Memetics
- Micronations
- Mind Uploading
- Minerva Reefs
- Modern Satanism
- Moon Colonization
- Nanotech
- National Vanguard
- NATO
- Neo-eugenics
- Neurohacking
- Neurotechnology
- New Utopia
- New Zealand
- Nihilism
- Nootropics
- NSA
- Oceania
- Offshore
- Olympics
- Online Casino
- Online Gambling
- Pantheism
- Personal Empowerment
- Poker
- Political Correctness
- Politically Incorrect
- Polygamy
- Populism
- Post Human
- Post Humanism
- Posthuman
- Posthumanism
- Private Islands
- Progress
- Proud Boys
- Psoriasis
- Psychedelics
- Putin
- Quantum Computing
- Quantum Physics
- Rationalism
- Republican
- Resource Based Economy
- Robotics
- Rockall
- Ron Paul
- Roulette
- Russia
- Sealand
- Seasteading
- Second Amendment
- Second Amendment
- Seychelles
- Singularitarianism
- Singularity
- Socio-economic Collapse
- Space Exploration
- Space Station
- Space Travel
- Spacex
- Sports Betting
- Sportsbook
- Superintelligence
- Survivalism
- Talmud
- Technology
- Teilhard De Charden
- Terraforming Mars
- The Singularity
- Tms
- Tor Browser
- Trance
- Transhuman
- Transhuman News
- Transhumanism
- Transhumanist
- Transtopian
- Transtopianism
- Ukraine
- Uncategorized
- Vaping
- Victimless Crimes
- Virtual Reality
- Wage Slavery
- War On Drugs
- Waveland
- Ww3
- Yahoo
- Zeitgeist Movement
-
Prometheism
-
Forbidden Fruit
-
The Evolutionary Perspective
Daily Archives: May 9, 2021
Notre Dame rises up just in time to avoid being swept and advance to semifinals – The Advocate
Posted: May 9, 2021 at 11:09 am
CROWLEY After 13 innings of futility at the plate between Fridays 9-4 loss and six innings of Saturdays second game against No. 9-seed Holy Savior Menard, it turned out all No. 1-seed Notre Dame needed was its back against the wall.
Maybe it was the pressure of potentially sweeping Division IIIs top-seed. Maybe the well of grit ran deeper for the Pios.
Maybe it was divine intervention due to an unlikely heros morning plans.
Whatever it was, Notre Dame used a three-run top of the seventh inning to steal victory from defeats clutches in a 3-2 win over Menard in game two, and used that momentum to run-rule the Eagles 10-0 in five innings of the rubber match to advance to this weeks state tournament at McMurry Park in Sulphur.
They will play No. 4-seed St. Thomas Aquinas at 10 a.m. Wednesday on Field 41 in the Division III semifinals.
Were going to get some rest (the next couple of days), and then weve gotta come out on fire, Notre Dame head coach Chris Stephens said. Because we cant play six (bad) innings against STA and expect to come out on top. Were going to try to put some pressure on them early and do what we like to do.
Notre Dame found itself flummoxed through most of the first game by Menard starter Cooper Scott, whod limited the Pios to three hits heading into the seventh inning.
When the seventh inning was led off by pinch hitter Austin Doucets single, it came after an extended break for Doucet and, strangely enough, his making Confirmation in the Roman Catholic Church.
(Doucet) got confirmed this morning and hadnt hit in maybe three weeks, and we thought he was a small target to (pitch) to, Stephens said. He got out there, got two strikes and did what we wanted him to do. He gets the hit to start the rally. I cant tell you how proud I am for all of that.
Doucets hit was followed by two Menard errors before senior Dom Thibodeauxs 2-RBI double put the Pios over the top to take the win.
Hes been our rock all year long, Stephens said of Thibodeaux.
The late game two rally was the springboard for the run-rule win in the deciding game.
In the third game, the Pios rode a seven-run second inning to take early control.
The Pios sent 13 batters to the plate, pounded out six hits and forced two Menard errors in that inning alone and never looked back.
Things just started going, Stephens said. The starter was missing inside a little and our guys arent going to move. Well take the hit by pitch all day long.
Those runs provided plenty insurance for senior starter Ethan Menard, who allowed only three hits in the game three win.
Hed struggled some in the middle of the season, Stephens said. We started stretching him out last week to four-inning work. He came out and pitched a great game today. I thought we threw well all weekend, despite the mistakes that caused (Fridays) loss.
Read the original here:
Notre Dame rises up just in time to avoid being swept and advance to semifinals - The Advocate
Posted in Rockall
Comments Off on Notre Dame rises up just in time to avoid being swept and advance to semifinals – The Advocate
The Big BandAid: Aaron Rodgers is the only thing that can heal the hurt from Denvers downer of a draft – Mile High Sports
Posted: at 11:09 am
Riddle me this: How can a team thats won a grand total of 12 games in the last two seasons (none of which were playoff games, by the way), and possesses the 9th and 35th pick in the NFL Draft, not come away with a rookie whos already penciled in to start Week 1?
I, for one, am not quite sure how, but thats exactly what happened in Denver over a three-day stretch that many Broncos fans would prefer to forget.
Lets be clear though: George Patons first draft as the general manager of the Denver Broncos was not a bad one. In his first draft on the job, Paton most definitely landed talented players. Fans, for the most part, didnt have any issues with the players Denver did take; the issues festered from the ones Paton didnt take. It just wasnt the draft that Broncos fans wanted. It could also be said that its not the draft the Broncos needed.
The players headed to Denver, particularly the first two taken Alabama cornerback Patrick Surtain II and North Carolina running back Javonte Williams should prove to be excellent players. Both talented. Both tough. Both rated highly by plenty of draft experts.
Neither, however, are instantly penciled in as starters as of today. Thats not because they couldnt start for plenty of teams they could. Its only that the Broncos have quality veterans already occupying their positions (at least for 2021).
Then theres the elephant in the room; not addressing the quarterback situation is atop the list of frustrations in Denver. There was the pre-draft excitement that future Hall of Famer Aaron Rodgers could be secured through a trade with Green Bay. It didnt happen (for anyone) ,but wen Ohio States Justin Fields miraculously fell to No. 9 right in Patons lap the former Viking executive said, Thanks but no thanks. More on that later.
Inside linebacker might be the only position that could stop the Broncos defense from being truly special this season, as the team hasnt had a sideline-to-sideline ILB since Danny Trevathan circa 2015. Penn States Micah Parsons, who many believed could put an end to that streak, was there at No. 9, too. But Parsons was also passed up in favor of Surtain II. Thats not to say Parsons is better or worse than Surtain both should be special but the Broncos had already spent the bulk of free agency shoring up the defensive back depth, so adding yet another seems head-scratching if not unnecessary. Ironically, Parsons is already the odds-on favorite to win NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year. Preseason awards arent worth anything, so thats not to say someone else maybe even Surtain II couldnt win it, but it perhaps indicates how most might evaluate the Broncos pick. There was a feeling that perhaps Notre Dame inside linebacker Jeramiah Owusu-Koramoah could be the target in Round 2 (or later), but clearly the Broncos had been eyeing Williams, as evidenced by their move up to get him.
Meanwhile, Melvin Gordon still resides in the Broncos backfield and Josey Jewell is currently the teams starting middle linebacker.
Middle linebacker was finally addressed with the final pick of the third round, as Paton grabbed Ohio States Baron Browning. Of all the Broncos picks, Browning might have the best shot to begin the season on top of the depth chart. But thats not a sure thing by any means.
We like his speed, like his athleticism, Fangio said of his rookie inside linebacker. We think he will be a major contributor on special teams and compete for one of the linebacker spots.
Browning could ultimately be phenomenal, but major contributor on special teams doesnt exactly instill confidence that the problem has been solved.
In short, with his first draft as the Broncos GM, Paton had the chance to win our hearts (Fields), warm our hearts (by filling an undeniable need with Parsons or Owusu-Koramoah), but instead left our hearts feeling empty. As good as Surtain, Williams and perhaps even Browning might be, none of them will be the difference between the Broncos going to the Super Bowl or not.
Whether Paton broke our hearts remains to be seen.
If Justin Fields turns out to be great. If Mac Jones turns out to be great. If Micah Parsons wins Defensive Rookie of the Year.
But those things are out of Patons control.
What remains in his control, however, is how hard he chooses to pursue Aaron Rodgers.
With Justin Fields, there was a chance (however major or minor youd like to believe) that the Broncos could have had their franchise quarterback a necessity in seriously contending for a Super Bowl. With Rodgers, theres a good chance the Broncos could compete for a fourth world championship this season.
General Paton might very well know talent. In fact, his choices of both Surtain II and Williams serve as evidence of that. But heres what Minnesota didnt teach him: Here, in Denver, Colorado, we dont win Super Bowls without a Hall of Fame quarterback. Thats just a fact. Thats a truth weve come to know and understand very well.
Funny thing, the closest that lesson ever came to being recently learned in Minnesota was in 2007 Patons first year with the Vikings when none other than Hall-of-Famer Brett Favre slung the rock all the way to the NFC Championship Game (a game they should have won, in fact). And while the Vikings had a few nice years after that including another trip to the conference finals in 2017 courtesy of one of the luckiest, flukiest touchdown catches in the history of football there were no championship parades in or around the Mall of the Americas. Ironically, the only times the Vikings have ever reached the Super Bowl, they did so behind you guessed it a Hall of Fame quarterback (Fran Tarkenton).
So here we sit, a mile high but feeling lower than low.
Why?
Well, we know better. We know that no matter how good our new cornerback or running back might be, were not going to the Super Bowl this year or any year soon.
Champ Bailey was one of the greatest cornerbacks to ever play the game, and it took a Hall of Fame quarterback to get him to his first and only Super Bowl.
In the 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004 and 2005 seasons, the Denver Broncos finished third or higher in the AFC in team rushing yards. They were good very good but never went to a Super Bowl. Why? The only answer we can come up with is that they didnt have a Hall of Fame quarterback. Thats all we know here in Denver.
Whether George Patons first draft with the Broncos was good, great or mediocre (thats not the point here), this team is going nowhere soon. At least nowhere important.
Unless, one of two things happen:
Drew Lock becomes the next Josh Allen and then some
Or, Aaron Rodgers becomes the next future Hall-of-Famer to call himself a Denver Bronco.
Super Bowls are what matter around here. Luckily, we have a decent idea of whats required to win one. And while George Paton has a six-year deal, the natives are getting restless. That might not be fair to him, but thats the way it is Denver. Above all, we need hope, but the 2021 NFL Draft didnt deliver any of that.
Aaron Rodgers will.
Mr. Paton, if its not too much to ask
Original post:
Posted in Rockall
Comments Off on The Big BandAid: Aaron Rodgers is the only thing that can heal the hurt from Denvers downer of a draft – Mile High Sports
Veteran Rocker PHIL NARO Loses Cancer Battle; "One Of The Finest Human Beings I Have Ever Known," Says BILLY SHEEHAN – bravewords.com
Posted: at 11:09 am
Toronto-based rocker Phil Naro has passed away following a long battle with cancer. Bruce Pilato, President/CEO at Pilato Entertainment Marketing & Media LLC, broke the news this morning, sharing the following statement from Phil's family:
"It is with great sadness that we must announce the passing of our son, father, friend and musician Phillip Sampognaro, known professionally as Phil Naro. Phil fought a valiant battle against cancer over the last few years but left this earth last night surrounded by his family and closest friends.
A citizen of both The United States and Canada, he died at his home in Rochester. Funeral arrangements and tributes will be announced shortly. He is survived by sons James and John; brother Joseph; and his mother, Maria, who he loved dearly.
Phil was one of those rare individuals known as a singers singer. A staple of both the Canadian and US music scene, Phil had become a mainstay in venues ranging from clubs to large performing arts centers and massive arenas. He had just completed the debut album from the band Lips Turn Blue (formerly D Drive) which had secured a worldwide record deal, and a reunion album with Billy Sheehan & Talas, of which he was a member in the 1980s.
Phil had successfully balanced an in-demand solo career with a number of high-profile projects with other superstar musicians from bands such as The Rascals, Vanilla Fudge, Whitesnake, Yes, ASIA, and guitarist Ron Thal (ex-Guns N Roses) as a member of The Platinum Rock All Stars. Phil was capable of an extraordinary number of music styles all built around his unmistakably powerful voice. Fortunately, Phil left us with an extraordinary amount of recorded music, which will allow his artistic legacy to live on forever."Billy Sheehan took to social media to pay tribute to Phil Naro, stating: "Phil Naro. One of the finest human beings I have ever known. Im deeply saddened to report his passing. He fought a valiant battle till the end, and inspired all who knew him to stay positive and keep going against all odds. A dear friend, spectacular singer and performer, songwriter, and lead singer in the version 2 Talas - actually version 7 or 8as we were just completing a new record together, we found out the situation. Phil fought like a champion and brilliantly performed and completed vocals for the album, in spite of shouldering the knowledge that he was in a serious health situation. On behalf of myself and all who were lucky enough to know him, I wish him peace for all eternity, and thank him for sharing his life, love, friendship and talent with the world. God bless you, Phil. Rest in peace dear friend. We will meet again. My deepest condolences to his wonderful family, his dear sweet Mom, and his two sons."An excerpt from Phil's bio from the Pilato Entertainment Marketing & Media LLC page follows:
Born and raised in Rochester, NY, Naro moved to Toronto nearly three decades ago, where he raised his family and set up his base for a thriving music career. Recently he moved closer to the Buffalo/ Canada border and performs frequently in both Canada and the United States.
I moved to Canada because my first wife was from there, said Naro. Soon after I moved there, I began working on the vibrant Toronto music scene. It didnt take long before I realized it was a great place to be based; I could work in a major music market and still be close to my family in Rochester.
After finishing school, Naro made the brave decision to only work as a full-time musician. He played in both cover and original bands before landing the gig singing with Talas. While in Talas during the 1980s, Phil enjoyed great success performing with many of the 80s top hard rock attractions including Yngwie Malmsteen, Anthrax, White Lion, Quiet Riot, and Iron Maiden. When Talas broke up after Sheehan formed Mr. Big, Naro began a successful career as singer/guitarist both as a solo act and in a duo named The Phil & John Show.
It wasnt long before Phil Naro became the go-to-guy for a number of highly successful tribute shows including Classic Albums Live, and bands performing the music of Led Zeppelin, Yes, and ELO. Said Naro: Some people in the industry wondered why I chose to work in tribute projects when I already had a career as a national artist doing original material. The reason was simple: it kept me working six nights a week in markets like Toronto and other major cities. That was the best exercise I could give my voice. I knew years ago, if you dont use it; you lose it.
After working with KISS founding member Peter Criss and Canadian rockers Coney Hatch, Naro lent his powerful voice to a number of modern-day prog rock bands. He co-wrote and recorded several tracks with guitarist and founding member of The Rascals, Gene Cornish. Of those, A Thousand Times, appears on the new A Life In Song album.
The constant work and great reviews got Naro noticed by other music celebrities who soon wanted to work with him. In 2016, Naro helped form The Platinum Rock All-Stars, a supergroup that features drummer Vanilla Fudge/ Cactus/ Jeff Beck drummer Carmine Appice; Sons Of Apollo, ASIA, ex-Guns N Roses guitarist Ron Bumblefoot Thal; bassist Tony Franklin (ex-Whitesnake, The Firm); and YES / ASIA/ Buggles keyboardist Geoff Downes. We have only played a handful of shows together because of everyones hectic schedule, said Naro, but I really love working in the All Stars. Collectively the members have sold something like 130 million records, and we play all the hits of the groups that they came from. On stage, we have a blast and so does the audience.
Read more here:
Posted in Rockall
Comments Off on Veteran Rocker PHIL NARO Loses Cancer Battle; "One Of The Finest Human Beings I Have Ever Known," Says BILLY SHEEHAN – bravewords.com
Gojira frontman Joe Duplantier on activism, metal purists and sweating the small stuff – Guitar.com
Posted: at 11:09 am
Fortitude, the new album from metal quartet Gojira, was written and recorded before March 2020. Not that youd know, listening to it between lyrics pining for Another World, the invigorating riffs and the sense of unity communicated, it seems tailor-made as an antidote to pandemic exhaustion.
A year ago, it was already a little trite to begin an interview with COVID-19-based scene-setting. Heading into May 2021, it feels redundant, like establishing the interview took place on Earth. But Gojiras music has always been about cultivating inner strength in the face of a seemingly doomed state of affairs. The band have spent their discography articulating a response to the destruction of our planets environment and wildlife, the consumerism that feeds it and the authorities that arent doing enough to stop it. Its a frustration that weve become all too familiar with over the last year, compounded by the isolation of pandemic travel restrictions.
Musicians, in particular, are of course, massively affected by the latter. Fortitude marks the first time Gojira arent celebrating an album release while the band is on the road. Thats how albums come alive, Joe Duplantier tells us, as we catch up with him at the tail end of Fortitudes press cycle. Hes clearly a little tired of working remotely: gearing up for an album release over phone calls and Zoom meetings places a huge gulf in between the hard work and its results.
Normally, were somewhere in Europe between two gigs and the album comes out. The band and crew are on the bus, were celebrating together. But for Fortitude, the mixed-up schedule means seeing fan reactions through a screen, rather than through the faces of the front row. When thats not happening, its just like were dropping an album and thats it.
Across Gojira albums old and new, all four members stay completely locked together as they traverse ever-shifting time signatures and lightning-paced riffs. Its perhaps unsurprising, then, that a familial connection forms their sounds central pillar Joe Duplantier is joined by his brother Mario on drums, alongside guitarist Christian Andreu and bassist Jean-Michel Labadie. Following the pandemic hitting the US, the Duplantier brothers returned to their family home in south-west France.
Not touring is a major pain, but its a great opportunity for us to be home with our families and you know, find out what it is to have not a normal life, but a little more normal, Joe says. If it was a normal life, I guess we would go to work every morning and do something other than, you know, do interviews
The family presence in Gojira was put in a new light on their previous album, Magma. Its writing and recording was overshadowed by the death of the Duplantier brothers mother early into its making. While the resulting album allowed an expression of grief, the songs within became tied to a particularly painful moment for the pair. They wanted to move on. In deliberate contrast, as the band started writing Fortitude in 2018, they committed to one thing: to have fun this time. It sounds like they did, as Gojiras signature sound is bolstered by some surprising additions: Theres more clean singing, some massive, triumphant group vocals, and even some bona-fide rock guitar solos.
I had a blast! Joe exclaims, before recalling: Back in 2000, we [the Duplantier brothers] had a band with high school friends, we were doing a mix of a lot of things. A bit of Red Hot Chilli Peppers, System Of A Down, Death, even pop. I was doing solos at the time, but I was almost pretending to do them I never had the inclination to be a shredder.
If there are solos in Gojira, theyve been mainly textural up until Fortitude doing a similar job as a new riff or an effects-laden ambient passage. But if you put a few notes together, you immediately have thatfeeling of playing a solo, Joe says. Im discovering now that I enjoy doing this, actually. I take it seriously but Im aware that my language and my skills are very limited. I play with what I have, theres a few tricks I can do with the high notes and Im enjoying doing them! he says, and air-guitars away on an invisible 22nd fret.
Really, the expanded tonal palette of Fortitude shouldnt be too surprising, even if some moments make you check youre still listening to the same band. Gojira have introduced at least one curveball on every album. Synthesizers, samples, strange vocal processing, raw acoustic recording a tendency to curve away from typical metal production has always been there, but never in such sharp focus as on Fortitude.
What you see of Gojira on an album is just the tip of the iceberg: our musical realm is much, much larger than just death metal, Joe explains. And we sprinkle every album with a little bit of it, you know, a bit of tribal music, or some weird singing in a transition.
Even on 2005s From Mars To Sirius, there are drums that sound almost like hip hop, and then theres whales on top. Its been always present in our discography. But for the first time, I think we embraced that. Instead of limiting it to just little transitions, we started to put these things into more epic songs. More melodic. Were exploring a little bit of our secret realm that we have. Joe laughs and says: Its like we have tools and weapons hidden, and were going to start pulling them out one by one as we record albums.
Intense music can attract intense people, and so watching a metal band embrace the melodic and joyous side of things can be like watching someone play pinata with a wasps nest. But death metal purists have never gotten under Duplantiers skin: he references Carcass Swansong, a blisteringly fun record that embraces rock n roll alongside melodic death metal. It was a change in sound which stirred up controversy even before online comments sections made that easy. Many people didnt understand it, because it was full of rock. All of a sudden, they went from these dissonant sounds and gory lyrics to something that sounded more like an anthem
And I really loved that album. I was a bit intrigued. A bit disturbed, even. But it was a good thing for my development as a person to hear Carcass playing rock. Its fun!
People take themselves too seriously. They take the whole metal thing too seriously. I think were here to have fun, you know. Were born. And then we do a few things. And then we die. Why not have fun? Instead of trying to fit in little boxes.
Joe brushes the purists off once more: I like to think the album is going to make a lot of people happy. But of course we have the haters, you know. Zero haters on an album means your album has gone completely unnoticed
Joe Duplantier of Gojira. Image: Suzi Pratt / Getty Images
The typical process of tracking guitar for a metal album normally involves recording a direct signal alongside a placeholder guitar tone. After editing together a perfect performance and beginning the mixing process, you can throw that in a different amp and re-record it, Duplantier explains. Its magic. It was absolutely incredible when that happened in the music industry.
It was a big thing for guitarists to know that if theyre not satisfied with their sound when they mix, it can change it. But what I learned with years of experience is theres a moment for everything. When it comes to mixing, theres a world of problems to tackle.
Youre doing very specific work to balance volumes and frequencies. Theyre battling each other. Its very complicated. Its usually towards the end of the process, theres a deadline coming. So the momentum is not great to reamp. Its time-consuming. And its nerve-wracking, especially closer to a deadline.
Instead, the band mixed as they went first establishing a drum sound, and obsessing over the details as they recorded. That allowed us to see where the guitars would need to stand in the mix. If we had some very messy drums with all the frequencies, it would be a world of low end, you know, like a soup. When you mix as you record, then you know a little more what you want from every instrument.
One benefit of this approach was the absence of a well fix it later attitude the connection to the songs was much more immediate, closer to playing live. When I track a guitar with drums that sound already super roomy and punchy, it makes me want to play a certain way, it gives me more energy while I track. Its a pretty horrible feeling when you track an album and everything sounds terrible. But you have to imagine that its going to sound good at mixing, I didnt have to do that this time. It was very inspiring to see the songs building with already good sounds, the sounds that we wanted, pretty much.
It also made the mixing process much easier on legendary recording engineer Andy Wallacem who took on mixing duties for Fortitude. We only had to fine tune a little bit, each one at mixing. I was on the phone with him because the pandemic was happening when the mix started and he said, oh my god, it looks like its already mixed. We almost reversed the way we did things before. And I cannot go back now.
Image: FilmMagic / Getty Images
While most Gojiras albums grapple heavily with spiritual and environmental themes, there was never really an explicit decision to make that the case. When I start singing, I have little control over whats going to come out of my mouth, Joe explains. Im a very emotional person.
When Im singing, theres something in me so strong that when it comes out I have little time to control it. And I like to keep it this way. Since day one, when we started to jam, it was immediately about things that were fascinating me, or things that I felt like there was an emergency about or my views on the world.
As we try to probe deeper into the background of Fortitudes themes, Joe deflects and instead hopes that the album can stand on its own. Talking about songs its like talking about a painting. When you do a painting its because you have no words. So you do it, you make a painting, and then people need to put words on it. But the person whos done it doesnt necessarily have the words.
The whole interview exercise is very interesting, because its sort of forcing me to put words on what we do. Of course, sometimes theres nothing to add, Im just filling the blanks, and I end up saying bullshit.
One thing that Joe does add is that for him, rock acts are intrinsically linked to themes of activism. Rock is the music of rebellion, it has all the components. Its got to have something that will make you think, something that will activate you. If it doesnt, the words that come out, the music that comes out, its just a noise.
And we are a product of this society. We are a product of the images we saw on TV when we were kids or we see all around us we travel the world. We played in India, we played in South America, we played in Japan, we go everywhere, and we see how people live and how people think and how people are. It creates a feeling, it grows and then it comes out when we make a song in a certain way.
We ask if we shouldnt overthink these things. Joe says: Sometimes. Its good to think too, you know. Sometimes I consider myself an activist because I really want to participate in this world and be part of a solution, instead of being part of the problem.
A standout in this regard is of course Amazonia, which doesnt stop at lyrics condemning the fact that The greatest miracle / Is burning to the ground. The single was launched alongside Project Amazonia, a fundraising campaign in aid of the Articulation Of Indigenous Peoples of Brazil. So far, over a quarter of a million dollars has been raised for the charity, which advocates for the rights of those most affected by the Amazons destruction, with fans bidding on instruments and memorabilia donated from around the world of heavy music.
It enlightened me a little bit, Joe says. I realised that it is possible. Its something that Im preaching, you know, in Magmaand Silvera: When you change yourself / You change the world its something like a mantra.
Im trying to educate myself with this thought, this mantra, to not despair. Its also a conclusion. A spiritual journey brought me to this conclusion that yes, we have power over this world.
We can have a beautiful outlook on life because we decide to, You could wake up one morning and decide that today youre going to do good around you. We have so much power, and we tend to forget about it because we feel overwhelmed by governments and establishments.
That was all that was behind Project Amazonia. I just gave a few phone calls. And next thing you know, I was talking to leaders of tribes in the Amazon. Then after that I started to call people that could help, and it all came together.
This is one of the highlights of my life, this project. I would like to add that this operation is not over. And help is needed, money is needed. The situation with the Amazon forest deserves to be understood in and taken care of, by the world.
Image: Xavi Torrent / Getty Images
Joe acknowledges that not everyone can pull strings to get instruments donated by a host of high-profile musicians: Of course, Im in a position where I can do this, but it doesnt need to be that special. It could be within your community, you can make a tremendous difference around you.
Duplantier gives another example of this mantra, a more personal one, and one thats a little more accessible than starting a massive charity auction. The number one thing we can do to help the planet is to go vegan, he says. Because the meat industry is on top of being a really really, really cruel business based on suffering, pain and killing also incredibly demanding for our environment. It needs a lot of resources. The Amazon forest is directly linked to the meat industry, maybe 80 per cent of the problem is the meat the cattle, the soybeans to feed the cattle, and so on.
Duplantier clearly has conviction in the belief that If you change yourself, you change the world. Project Amazonia is just Gojiras latest link to an activism cause, as anyone whos noticed the Sea Shepherd stand at a Gojira gig will know, but at the same time: Were just a freaking rock band, Joe says. We want people to smile and bang their heads and be happy. Youve got to think of that too.
Fortitude is out now.
Read the original here:
Gojira frontman Joe Duplantier on activism, metal purists and sweating the small stuff - Guitar.com
Posted in Rockall
Comments Off on Gojira frontman Joe Duplantier on activism, metal purists and sweating the small stuff – Guitar.com
Joe Perry Taking Part in 3-Day COVID-19 Conference at the Vatican – WROR
Posted: at 11:09 am
Joe Perry is taking part in a three-day conference about COVID-19 and other health issues at the Vatican which will also feature Pope Francis and Dr. Anthony Fauci.
Per theAssociated Press (AP),the conference begins today (May 6) and will run through Saturday, May 8. This conference was originally planned to take place in May 2020 but was postponed due to the pandemic. The topics that will be covered have since evolved from the conferences original plans, but the overarching theme of how science, solidarity and spirituality can help address various global health threats remains.
So, what exactly is Perry doing at the conference that will also feature video remarks from the Pope and Dr. Fauci? The AP notes, A Harvard neuroscientist is leading a conversation about brain health and rock stars with Aerosmith guitarist Joe Perry.
Perry isnt the only celebrity appearing at the conference. The AP also added, Soprano [Renee] Fleming is participating in a panel discussion on the role of music in treating cardiac patients. Supermodel Cindy Crawford has a slot to talk about beauty from the inside out, and Chelsea Clinton is teaming up with an Italian public health official to promote equal access to health care.
COVID-19, of course, will be the big health topic of this conference. The AP also reports, Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel is speaking about the mRNA technology behind Modernas coronavirus vaccine, while his counterpart at Pfizer, Albert Bourla, is heading up a discussion on preparedness for future global health crises.
Erica Banas is a rock/classic rock news blogger who's well versed in etiquette and extraordinarily nice.
Read this article:
Joe Perry Taking Part in 3-Day COVID-19 Conference at the Vatican - WROR
Posted in Rockall
Comments Off on Joe Perry Taking Part in 3-Day COVID-19 Conference at the Vatican – WROR
New West police relieved theyre now getting COVID-19 vaccinations – The Record (New Westminster)
Posted: at 11:09 am
Frontline workers in the New Westminster Police Department are relieved theyre finally getting their COVID-19 jabs.
While frontline workers in many neighbouring communities had been receiving their vaccinations in recent weeks, New West police, firefighters and teachers only started getting their shots this week. Frustration and anger among local police came to a head last weekend after several officers were in contact with a suspect who had tested positive for COVID-19.
Seriously unhappy to learn up to 6 @NewWestPD members have to self-isolate now after finding out a prisoner they dealt with is Covid+. It is quite frustrating our staff still have not been scheduled for vaccination under the @Fraserhealth first responder priority program while most surrounding jurisdictions have, Deputy Chief Const. Paul Hyland said in a comment posted on Twitter. Our members are literally putting themselves in harms way each shift and often don't control the circumstances in which they interact with public. Really hoping we can make this happen soon!
Chief Const. Dave Jansen said the New Westminster Police Department had been working on the issue for a while behind the scenes with the provinces police services branch and Fraser Health, but Hylands tweet drew media attention to the issue.
Jansen said he completely agreed elderly folks and people with medical conditions should have been prioritized for vaccinations, but frustration began to mount as frontline workers in the Vancouver Coastal Health region and in hotspots across Fraser Health started were deemed priority groups and getting their shots and New Westminster police, fire and education officials had received no firm timeline for their vaccinations.
Then whats happening is we are seeing everybody has gotten vaccinated, from what I could tell, from Whistler out to Chilliwack. So you name it Maple Ridge, Port Moody, White Rock. All these areas had been vaccinated or had been given the go-ahead to be vaccinated, and we still hadnt got a firm date for New Westminster, he told the Record. It just became very frustrating to try and understand.
In an email to the Record, one local cop stated officers do their best to socially distance, wear a mask and sanitize and wash their hands frequently, but they have to enter several houses on each shift places where they could potentially be exposed to people who have COVID-19, including people from cities in the region considered to be hotspots. In addition to concerns about their own safety, police officers were concerned about the risk of getting the virus and spreading it to their families and other community members including people at Royal Columbian Hospital.
Royal Columbian is a major trauma centre for the region. We are there all the time, Jansen said. Even the nursing staff were surprised that we were not vaccinated because we are in and out of that hospital all the time. And the risk that brings not only to us but also to them as we are coming in there. It just seemed odd.
After last weekends media coverage, action started happening on the vaccination front much to the relief of local cops.
According to Jansen, Vancouver Coastal was able to provide some AstraZeneca shots for some NWPD members and Fraser Healths vaccination clinic at Anvil Centre had about 10 or 12 extra doses available last Sunday.
I went down there to talk to some of our members who were going down there. There was complete relief, he said. Then on Monday, we got the call from Fraser Health that they were rolling out the program for all frontline staff. Not all of our staff get it, but the ones that have interaction with the public are eligible to go get it now. So thats good.
Jansen said he isnt angry at Fraser Health, as he can only imagine what its going through with the rollout of vaccinations across such a vast region, adding that the situation was difficult to understand because so little information was being provided.
I am very thankful that Fraser Health listened and they were able to ramp it up by a week or two and that all our teachers and firefighters and police officers get vaccinated, he said. I think thats the best thing for the safety of our community.
On the frontlines
The New West police officers who came into contact with a COVID-positive man have all been cleared to return to work, Jansen said.
None of them caught COVID from the interaction, he said. I was confident that was probably the case because they were wearing appropriate PPE, but it just was one of those things that highlighted the risks that frontline personnel face.
Along with the physical toll associated with COVID, Jansen said frontline officers have had to deal with the stress of reporting to duty and dealing with members of the public who may potentially have the virus. He experienced that firsthand recently, when the NWPDs management went out on the road for a shift, and a call went out about a man walking down the street with a machete.
Just pure luck, we happened to be right there, and the individual is coming walking down the sidewalk. So I am wearing a mask, but you dont have time to get your gloves and get your visor. Youve got to hop up and get engaged right away, he said. So its a real reminder, a lot of times, and Im sure the firefighters are in similar situations, where you just dont have that time to get as geared up as youd want to. It was just an added level of stress that I didnt think they needed to have to deal with.
While some older members of the NWPD, including Jansen, are in age groups that have been able to get their COVID-19 vaccinations, that wasnt the case for younger members who didnt qualify for the AstraZeneca rollout.
We had a lot of staff that are just too young, especially on our frontlines, he said. When you get hired as a police officer, the first place you go for a good five-plus years, usually is you go to patrol, and you are the frontline responders. But they are usually going to be those 22- to 27-year-olds. Most of our staff on the frontlines are under 30 years of age.
Jansen estimated seven to 10 NWPD employees, including police officers and civilian staff, have had coronavirus in the past year.
I think we still have one individual who is still experiencing the effects of it. Everyone else has returned to work, he said. At one stage we did have three members of our traffic section, all at one time, out. That was pretty significant for us. I dont know how that compares to other police departments around, but for us it is impactful. It wasnt something that we couldnt continue on operations, but it certainly is something that is impactful.
Follow Theresa McManus on Twitter@TheresaMcManusEmailtmcmanus@newwestrecord.ca
Read more from the original source:
New West police relieved theyre now getting COVID-19 vaccinations - The Record (New Westminster)
Posted in Rockall
Comments Off on New West police relieved theyre now getting COVID-19 vaccinations – The Record (New Westminster)
Bank of England does not see COVID bankruptcy wave – Haldane – Reuters UK
Posted: at 11:09 am
The Chief Economist of the Bank of England, Andy Haldane, listens from the audience at an event at the Bank of England in the City of London, London, Britain April 27, 2018. REUTERS/Toby Melville
The Bank of England does not expect to see a wave of bankruptcies among British firms when the government ends its coronavirus emergency support for the economy, BoE Chief Economist Andy Haldane said on Friday.
Many debts racked up recently by companies are spread over long durations "which increases the chances of them being able to be paid back and therefore bankruptcy is not picking up very much from current relatively subdued levels," Haldane said.
"But ultimately there are risks around that and we'll need to track them through," he said in a presentation to businesses, a day after the BoE sharply raised its forecasts for British economic growth in 2021.
Data published last week showed company insolvencies in England and Wales fell to their lowest level in more than 30 years in early 2021 as the government's support helped businesses to ward off bankruptcy.
Haldane also said there were "significant risks" that inflation could come in either above or below the BoE's latest forecasts. These predict inflation will be close to its 2% target in two to three years' time, after an initial overshoot as the economy recovers from the pandemic.
"Currently we see those (risks) as being broadly symmetric, but they're big on both sides and there's no escaping that given where we are economically right now," Haldane said.
BoE Deputy Governor Ben Broadbent, speaking alongside Haldane, said policymakers were less likely to loosen policy than they thought three months ago.
"The bias toward easing that we might have had is less pronounced," he said.
Broadbent highlighted a change in the BoE Monetary Policy Committee minutes, which on Thursday stated: "The MPC would continue to monitor the situation closely and would take whatever action was necessary to achieve its remit."
In March that passage had read: "If the outlook for inflation weakened, the Committee stood ready to take whatever additional action was necessary to achieve its remit."
That gives you an idea of how some of the downside risks - although they are still there - have diminished, Broadbent said.
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
View post:
Bank of England does not see COVID bankruptcy wave - Haldane - Reuters UK
Posted in Bankruptcy
Comments Off on Bank of England does not see COVID bankruptcy wave – Haldane – Reuters UK
Bankruptcy judges and Congress must close the Sackler loophole – The Boston Globe
Posted: at 11:09 am
That cant be allowed to happen. Bankruptcy judges should heed the formal objections filed by Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey and dozens of other state officials seeking to stop the family, which is not party to the companys bankruptcy proceedings, from shielding the majority of their fortunes from it in exchange for a $4 billion payment and forfeiture of company control.
The move, using an obscure legal device called a nonconsensual third-party release, would essentially strip state and local officials from the policing power they ought to possess to hold those responsible for the crisis responsible and fail to adequately compensate all those who have been harmed, according to a brief filed last week by Healey and other officials.
And beyond that, Congress must act to close this virtual escape hatch for wrongdoers to use company bankruptcy proceedings to escape individual personal liability.
A bevy of lawsuits accuse the Sacklers, the family that founded and controlled Purdue, and in particular Dr. Richard Sackler, of aggressively promoting and marketing OxyContin for years to increase the drugs use and maximize profit while misleading doctors and patients about the drugs addictiveness. They did this while seeking to shield their own family name well known in the world of philanthropy from the taint of scandal. Since their actions came to light, in part due to the efforts of the Globes sister publication STAT, museums from the Louvre in Paris to the Smithsonian Institutions in Washington have dropped the Sackler name. Tufts University has also dropped the name from its programs and buildings, including the medical school.
The company has also been in the crosshairs of federal and state officials, who accuse it of accelerated payments to members of the Sackler family after it was fined for its role in the opioid crisis. Between 2007 and 2017, based on the companys own court filings, the family was paid nearly $11 billion, compared to just $1.3 billion from 1995 to 2007. Healey called that disclosure the very definition of ill-gotten gains.
Yet, despite their own admitted guilt, state officials claim in their brief, filed in a New York bankruptcy court Friday, the company and other debtors seek to cram down an unconfirmable plan that, among other things, would absolve [the Sacklers] in exchange for the stretched-out payment of only a tiny fraction of their independent liability, unlawful gains, and current wealth, over the objection of Attorneys General from 24 States and the District of Columbia, representing 53% of the U.S. population.
Bankruptcy judges have wide discretion in approving proposed settlements, but in this case, the interest of justice requires that there be the possibility of holding family members responsible if they misled those seeking relief from chronic pain, sending millions of them down a painful and dangerous path of addiction. Doing otherwise runs contrary to the principles of fairness and equity by which all judges are bound.
And Congress should act to ensure that state attorneys general never again have to rely on the individual judges to guard against this misuse of bankruptcy courts. Legislation introduced by Representative Carolyn Maloney, Democrat of New York, and whose cosponsors include Massachusetts Representatives Katherine Clark, Ayanna Pressley, Stephen Lynch, and Jim McGovern, called the Stop Shielding Assets from Corporate Known Liability by Eliminating Non-Debtor Releases (SACKLER) Act, would close the loophole the Sacklers seek to exploit.
If the Sacklers deal is finalized something that could happen as soon as this month if the states objection is dismissed it would set a dangerous precedent that protects the wealth of wrongdoers so long as their companies go bankrupt. Thats a legacy that the courts and Congress must avoid.
Correction: A previous version of this article misstated that Richard Sackler was the founder of Purdue Pharma, instead of a member of the family that founded and controlled the company. It also misidentified whom the state officials claimed admitted guilt; it was the company and its debtors, not the Sackler family.
Editorials represent the views of the Boston Globe Editorial Board. Follow us on Twitter at @GlobeOpinion.
Here is the original post:
Bankruptcy judges and Congress must close the Sackler loophole - The Boston Globe
Posted in Bankruptcy
Comments Off on Bankruptcy judges and Congress must close the Sackler loophole – The Boston Globe
Is the NRA’s bankruptcy filing a way to escape regulation? – PBS NewsHour
Posted: at 11:09 am
Steven Church:
That's precisely what the argument was on the side of the New York attorney general and their allies who were arguing with them.
The NRA is making the claim that, even though they have plenty of money, this lawsuit is an existential threat to their existence, because one of the things that could happen is that the judge a judge in New York, if they side with the New York attorney general, could dissolve the NRA, and all of the NRA assets, which amounts to tens of millions of dollars, could be given away to other similar type nonprofits.
So they argued, because that's a threat, because that's a possibility, they should be allowed to file bankruptcy, even though they have plenty of cash, they're solvent, they're paying their bills on time, and it doesn't look like they face any immediate threats.
Visit link:
Is the NRA's bankruptcy filing a way to escape regulation? - PBS NewsHour
Posted in Bankruptcy
Comments Off on Is the NRA’s bankruptcy filing a way to escape regulation? – PBS NewsHour
We Can’t Hold Off the Bankruptcy Wave Forever – Bloomberg
Posted: at 11:08 am
When Covid-19 first plunged Europe into lockdown last spring, there were plausible predictions of a tidal wave of corporate insolvencies. Thathasnt happened, at least not yet.
The number of companies declaring bankruptcy declined by about a fifth in the euro area last year, even as economic output contracted more than 6%. Firms were saved by overwhelming government support,including hundreds of billions of euros of public loan guarantees, wage subsidies and loan forbearance by banks. Rules were relaxed on when businesses must file for insolvency.
European bankruptcies are being artificially suppressed
Source: Eurostat
The big question is whether Europe has merely delayed the inevitable by propping up financially distressed enterprises (unkindlydubbed zombies by economists), or whether resurgent demand and accelerating vaccination rates can keep the bankruptcy wave at bay. Theres been more groundfor optimism recently but many company failures stilllookunavoidable.
Leaving aside high-profile implosions, like the ones at budget airline Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA, Topshop owner Arcadia Group and fraudulent fintech Wirecard AG, the recent insolvency trend has been the opposite of what usually happens in a recession.
Bankruptcies soared during the last crisis. This time they fell
Source: Coface
Compared with the U.S., where large companies such as car-rental giant Hertz Global Holdings Inc. and telecoms provider Frontier Communications Corp.had to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, some European countries have beenespecially forgiving. Germany recorded the smallest number of corporate insolvencies since at least 1999;English and French bankruptciesare the lowest in more than 30 years.
More from
With big parts of the economy left relatively unscathed by the pandemic, interest rates still at rock bottom, consumers ready to spend their pandemic savings and Europes 750 billion-euro ($900 billion) Covid recovery fund poised to start disbursements, its tempting to think the worst is over.
Policy makers, though, shouldnt consider the low number of insolvency filings in Europe as a sign of corporate health,the European Systemic Risk Board which oversees the continents financial system has warned.It noted that in a worst-case scenario the current calm might be the sea retreating before a tsunami.
Because of government loan guarantees, business failureswould also further damage public finances. Thats one reason Frances President Emmanuel Macron and other leaders are in a hurry to relax lockdown restrictions. Every day of lost revenues deepens the hole from which companies must climb.
Genuine zombie businesses those that were financially distressed before the pandemic but were able to avoid filing for creditor protection last year will, however, remain in that hole. Many insolvencies have been postponed rather than prevented, notes French credit insurer Coface SA. Euler Hermes, another credit insurer, expects global insolvencies to be 13% higher in 2021 than in 2019. In 2022 it expects insolvencies will be 27% higher than in 2019.
Given the circumstances, that would be a decent outcome. Even once-healthy companies are burdened with huge borrowings and reopening for business brings new risks.After a long hibernation firms have to rebuild inventory and rehire staff, potentially sinking them further into debt.The travel and hospitality industries face the biggest difficulties, which bodes ill for southern Europe where they account for a bigger share of output and governments have less fiscal firepower. Spain and Italy may see more insolvencies than Germany.
A tricky dance is now underway in which governments and lenders try to wean companies off financial support while separating businesses with sound long-term prospectsfrom the no hopers. Telling one from other isnt easy.
After a long hiatus Germany says over-indebted businesses should file promptly for insolvency. A German government backstop for the credit insurance that underpins vital trade expires next month.
And yet, with national elections looming in Germany and France and governments everywhere under pressure over their handling of the pandemic, theres a strong temptation to keep the cash spigot open. Look at how Paris has showered money on Air France-KLM. Britains small businesses have been given up to 10 years to repay so-called Bounce Backloans. Much of the 47billion pounds ($65billion) theyve borrowed will probably never be recouped.
Its no wonder European banks are sounding more sanguine about commercial lending. Lloyds Banking Group Plc and HSBC Holdings Plc have unwound some bad-loan provisions, while Austrias Erste Group Bank AG says the vast majority of customers resumed loan payments without delay.Even if this confidence turns out to be misplaced, the financesector is better capitalized now than before the last recession. Shareholders are more upbeat, too: The Euro Stoxx banks index has gained 23% this year.
Free-market acolytes will say Europes decision to prop up zombies has already done lasting damage by preventing labor and capital from shifting to more dynamic businesses. Creative destruction is essential to capitalism, they say. Productivity will suffer.
Thats too crude. While massive government intervention is often targeted poorly, it has preventedthe collapse of healthy businesses. Employees kept their jobs and banks were able to keep extending credit. Europes recession was brutal but it could have been much worse.
A year ago no lender or government could judge reasonably which companies prospects had been permanently impaired. By the summer they should have a much better idea. Some hard decisions await.
This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.
To contact the author of this story:Chris Bryant at cbryant32@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story:James Boxell at jboxell@bloomberg.net
Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.
Continue reading here:
Posted in Bankruptcy
Comments Off on We Can’t Hold Off the Bankruptcy Wave Forever – Bloomberg