Daily Archives: August 2, 2021

Big Tech wrestles with unpredictable back to work reality as pandemic surges – eMarketer

Posted: August 2, 2021 at 1:47 am

The news: Coronavirus infections in the US are on the rise in every state because of the highly contagious Delta variantjust as companies are returning employees to in-person work. Big Tech companies are being forced to reassess back-to-office timeframes as well as whether to impose vaccination and mask policies, per Mashable.

How we got here: As the nations vaccination rates plateau, the sudden and sustained spread of COVID-19 variants has resulted in surging infections in every state.

The bigger picture: Businesses have looked to Big Tech companies as models for implementing remote and hybrid work during the pandemic, and have largely followed their lead on return-to-office policies. These policies have been a source of tension between employers desire to return staff to the office, and employees preference to remain remote. Meanwhile, many tech workers looking to change jobs are seeking more flexibility around remote work per Fast Company.

The dilemma: Big Tech companies who were looking at returning to work by September are scrambling plans made before the sudden surge of the highly contagious Delta variant. The unpredictable nature of coronavirus variants and increased rates of infection will continue to confound businesses as they struggle to remain profitable while keeping employees and customers safe.

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As Big Tech Booms, Play the Strength With ‘TECL’ – ETFdb.com

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The whos who of big tech are once again leading a rally in the markets, and traders have an opportunity to play the boom with the Direxion Daily Technology Bull 3X ETF (TECL B+).

Familiar market leaders like Apple, Microsoft, YouTube, and Googles parent company Alphabet are once again helping to lead stocks back into the green following some recent volatility. All four companies celebrated strong earnings reports recently.

Apple, the worlds most valuable public company, said profits nearly doubled last quarter, iPhone sales jumped an impressive 50%, and revenue for every major product line grew at least 12% annually, a Morning Brew article noted. Microsoft had its most profitable quarter ever thanks to greater demand for its cloud-computing services and workplace software. CEO Satya Nadella said the words enterprise metaverse on the earnings call, and not even he knew what it meant.

Alphabet, Googles parent company, said ad revenue increased 69% [redacted joke], the article added. The real highlight was YouTubewith $7 billion in quarterly revenue, its oh so close to eclipsing Netflixs sales numbers ($7.3 billion).

Of particular importance to TECL is the two dueling operating systemsApple and Microsoft. Both stocks comprise over 35% of the funds holdings as of July 28, so the fund goes as they go.

Of importance for traders, in particular, is still the effects of the pandemic and the new Delta variant. Large tech companies like Google and Facebook are addressing the rise in Covid cases, which will be something to watch in big tech.

Alphabet Incs Google and Facebook Inc said on Wednesday all U.S. employees must get vaccinated to step into offices. Google is also planning to expand its vaccination drive to other regions in the coming months, a Reuters article said.

With its triple leverage, TECL is certainly not for the weak of heart. The fund seeks daily investment results, before fees and expenses, of 300% of the daily performance of the Technology Select Sector Index.

The fund, which is up over 50% this year, invests at least 80% of its net assets (plus borrowing for investment purposes) in financial instruments, such as swap agreements and securities of the index, ETFs that track the index, and other financial instruments that provide daily leveraged exposure to the index or ETFs that track the index. The index includes domestic companies from the technology sector.

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Forget Big Tech! These Were the Real Nasdaq Winners Wednesday. – Motley Fool

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Stock markets opened mixed on Wednesday morning, but the Nasdaq Composite (NASDAQINDEX:^IXIC) was an early winner. As of 10:30 a.m. EDT today, the Nasdaq was up 0.75%, while other major market benchmarks were flat to down slightly.

Many investors focused on the big-name tech stocks that reported their results after the bell on Tuesday, many of which helped move the overall market. However, some stocks that have almost nothing to do with technology were actually the biggest winners on the Nasdaq. Below, we'll look more closely at Tilray (NASDAQ:TLRY) and The Chefs' Warehouse (NASDAQ:CHEF) to see why their gains overshadowed Big Tech on Wednesday.

Shares of Tilray jumped 19% Wednesday morning. The marijuana stock reported its first financial results since closing its merger with industry peer Aphria, and investors liked what they saw.

A look at fiscal fourth-quarter numbers makes it clearer why shareholders were so happy. Acquisitions played an instrumental role in pushing net revenue up 25% compared to the year-ago period, with sales of beverages from the SweetWater business it acquired in November 2020 and wellness-related revenue from Manitoba Harvest combining with Aphria's influence on the top line. Moreover, Tilray reversed a year-ago loss with net income of $33.6 million.

Image source: Getty Images.

Tilray has made major moves to get its business headed in the right direction. Cost-saving measures are paying off, and market share has grown steadily. One key marketing move has involved using SweetWater to come out with cross-branded products to promote cannabis brands, such as the new Broken Coast BC Lager that highlights the Broken Coast craft cannabis line of products.

Investors had been concerned about prospects coming into the report, but they seem more confident about the cannabis company's future now. If economic reopening can continue, then it would be an even bigger positive for Tilray.

Elsewhere, shares of The Chefs' Warehouse were up more than 12%. The distributor of gourmet food products reported strong second-quarter results that left investors pleased with what they're seeing from the pandemic recovery.

The bounce Chefs' Warehouse saw was astounding. Sales soared 111% in the second quarter compared to year-ago numbers. The company reversed a massive year-earlier loss, posting modest adjusted earnings of $0.04 per share. CEO Chris Pappas explained that the return of dine-in restaurant options and greater capacity have been instrumental in its comeback, and by June, sales were back in line with pre-pandemic numbers from 2019.

Chefs' Warehouse still indicated some reluctance to suggest that it has fully put its challenges behind it. The food distributor chose not to issue full-year guidance for 2021, saying that it has to know more about not only general economic recovery but also the pace at which large events and travel-related business activity move back toward pre-pandemic levels.

Nevertheless, the gains for Chefs' Warehouse reflect the expectation that its restaurant and food service customers will make a full recovery after a highly challenging period for the food industry. That's positive news for consumers as well as for the company, and Chefs' Warehouse is hopeful that favorable trends will continue throughout 2021 and beyond.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the official recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium advisory service. Were motley! Questioning an investing thesis -- even one of our own -- helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer.

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Congress Must Empower the FTC To Fight Big Tech’s Abuses | Opinion – Newsweek

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In April, the U.S. Supreme Court stripped the Federal Trade Commission of a powerful tool for holding trillion-dollar Big Tech monopolistsGoogle, Amazon, Facebook and Appleaccountable for their outrageous market abuses. In many respects, the agency's ability to secure hefty equitable reliefsuch as restitution or disgorgementin federal court was the one thing preventing these Goliaths from abusing the American people without consequence. Absent new legislation, the public is sure to suffer at the hands of Big Tech. Congress must act to empower the FTC to do its job.

The FTC is the nation's premier consumer-protection agency. Every year, it holds countless bad actors accountable for abuses committed against everyday Americans, ranging from identity theft and fraud to anticompetitive practices in violation of federal antitrust law. The agency has proven to be a particularly effective tool for holding Big Tech accountable for its many misdeeds. While the FTC can, and does, enforce the law through administrative proceedings, it often takes its claims against bad actors directly to court, which can provide quick and effective relief. Many times, the mere threat of FTC action is enough to prevent illegal conduct.

For decades, the FTC has used Section 13(b) of the Federal Trade Commission Act not only to obtain injunctions preventing future unlawful conduct, but also to force companies and individuals to relinquish money they wrongfully obtained from the public. That all changed on April 22, when the Supreme Court issued its long-anticipated decision in AMG Capital Management, LLC v. FTC. In a unanimous opinion authored by Justice Stephen Breyer, the high court ruled that Section 13(b) does not authorize the FTC to seek monetary disgorgement from businesses that engage in abusive practices. While the FTC may still obtain a court order forbidding a company from continuing its bad conduct, the agency must rely on a less efficientand less effectiveadministrative process to recoup money taken as a result of that conduct.

It would be an understatement to say that the Court's decision represents a setback for the FTC's efforts to hold Big Tech accountable for abuses against Americans. Over the past five decades, the FTC had used Section 13(b) to return literally billions of dollars to everyday Americansmoney that seedy companies wrongfully took from unsuspecting consumers. For example, Google and its subsidiary YouTube agreed to a record $170 million settlement in 2019 after the FTC brought an enforcement action in federal court challenging YouTube's practice of illegally collecting personal information from children without their parents' consent. The Supreme Court's elimination of the FTC's authority to seek disgorgement will make recoupments such as this impossible. In fact, even before the Court rendered its decision, companies under investigation by the FTC began refusing to agree to settlements, predicting (correctly) that the FTC would soon lack the ability to obtain court-ordered equitable relief.

Now is not the time to let Big Tech run wild. Whether it was Twitter's decision to block a legitimate news story that risked harming the Biden campaign, Facebook's efforts to shield the founder of Black Lives Matter from embarrassment or Amazon's censorship of books critical of transgender ideology, conservatives are well-acquainted with Big Tech's unfair treatment.

Perhaps the most egregious example, of course, was the coordinated effort of Apple, Google and Amazon to destroy Parler, which progressives feared could provide a platform for independent voices challenging leftist orthodoxy. The Supreme Court's decision will only embolden such bad behavior. Indeed, Big Tech has already begun to leverage the Supreme Court's decision to avoid FTC enforcement entirely. For example, Facebook now argues that the FTC lacks the means to hold it accountable for allegedly maintaining an illegal monopoly through anticompetitive conduct. Until the FTC's power to seek equitable relief in federal court is restored, the American people will lack an effective tool for combating Big Tech's many and growing abuses.

Now is the time for our representatives in Washington to act. As the Supreme Court noted in its AMG Capital Management, LLC decision, Congress has already considered at least one bill that would restore the FTC's ability to make Big Tech pay for the harms it inflicts on everyday Americans. And in recent testimony before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, the FTC encouraged Congress to introduce similar legislation once again. The American people depend on robust enforcement to hold giants like Google, Facebook, Amazon, Apple and Twitter in check; a toothless FTC simply isn't up to the task.

Congress should send a bill to the president's desk without delay. No one should be above the lawnot even Big Tech.

Mike Davis is president and founder of the Internet Accountability Project. He is a former top attorney for the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary and previously served in the United States Department of Justice. Davis also clerked for Justice Neil Gorsuch, both on the Tenth Circuit and on the Supreme Court.

The views expressed in this article are the writer's own.

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8.2 Types of Crime Social Problems

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Learning Objectives

Many types of crime exist. Criminologists commonly group crimes into several major categories: (1) violent crime; (2) property crime; (3) white-collar crime; (4) organized crime; and (5) consensual or victimless crime. Within each category, many more specific crimes exist. For example, violent crime includes homicide, aggravated and simple assault, rape and sexual assault, and robbery, while property crime includes burglary, larceny, motor vehicle theft, and arson. Because a full discussion of the many types of crime would take several chapters or even an entire book or more, we highlight here the most important dimensions of the major categories of crime and the issues they raise for public safety and crime control.

Even if, as our earlier discussion indicated, the news media exaggerate the problem of violent crime, it remains true that violent crime plagues many communities around the country and is the type of crime that most concerns Americans. The news story that began this chapter reminds us that violent crime is all too real for too many people; it traps some people inside their homes and makes others afraid to let their children play outside or even to walk to school. Rape and sexual assault are a common concern for many women and leads them to be more fearful of being victimized than men: In the 2011 Gallup poll mentioned earlier, 37 percent of women said they worried about being sexually assaulted, compared to only 6 percent of men (see Figure 8.1 Gender and Worry about Being Sexually Assaulted (Percentage Saying They Worry Frequently or Occasionally)).

Figure 8.1 Gender and Worry about Being Sexually Assaulted (Percentage Saying They Worry Frequently or Occasionally)

Research on violent crime tends to focus on homicide and on rape and sexual assault. Homicide, of course, is considered the most serious crime because it involves the taking of a human life. As well, homicide data are considered more accurate than those for other crimes because most homicides come to the attention of the police and are more likely than other crimes to lead to an arrest. For its part, the focus on rape and sexual assault reflects the contemporary womens movements interest in these related crimes beginning in the 1970s and the corresponding interest of criminologists, both female and male, in the criminal victimization of women.

Certain aspects of homicide are worth noting. First, although some homicides are premeditated, most in fact are relatively spontaneous and the result of intense emotions like anger, hatred, or jealousy (Fox, Levin, & Quinet, 2012). Two people may begin arguing for any number of reasons, and things escalate. A fight may then ensue that results in a fatal injury, but one of the antagonists may also pick up a weapon and use it. About 2550 percent of all homicides are victim-precipitated, meaning that the eventual victim is the one who starts the argument or the first one to escalate it once it has begun.

Second, and related to the first aspect, most homicide offenders and victims knew each other before the homicide occurred. Indeed, about three-fourths of all homicides involve nonstrangers, and only one-fourth involve strangers. Intimate partners (spouses, ex-spouses, and current and former partners) and other relatives commit almost 30 percent of all homicides (Messner, Deane, & Beaulieu, 2002). Thus although fear of a deadly attack by a stranger dominates the American consciousness, we in fact are much more likely on average to be killed by someone we know than by someone we do not know.

About two-thirds of homicides involve firearms, and half involve a handgun.

Third, about two-thirds of homicides involve firearms. To be a bit more precise, just over half involve a handgun, and the remaining firearm-related homicides involve a shotgun, rifle, or another undetermined firearm. Combining these first three aspects, then, the most typical homicide involves nonstrangers who have an argument that escalates and then results in the use of deadly force when one of the antagonists uses a handgun.

Fourth, most homicides (as most violent crime in general) are intraracial, meaning that they occur within the same race; the offender and victim are of the same race. For single offender/single victim homicides where the race of both parties is known, about 90 percent of African American victims are killed by African American offenders, and about 83 percent of white victims are killed by white offenders (Federal Bureau of Investigation, 2011). Although whites fear victimization by African Americans more than by whites, whites in fact are much more likely to be killed by other whites than by African Americans. While African Americans do commit about half of all homicides, most of their victims are also African American.

Fifth, males commit about 90 percent of all homicides and females commit only 10 percent. As we discuss in Section 3.1 Racial and Ethnic Inequality: A Historical Prelude, males are much more likely than women to commit most forms of crime, and this is especially true for homicide and other violent crime.

Sixth, the homicide rate is much higher in large cities than in small towns. In 2010, the homicide rate (number of homicides per 100,000 population) in cities with a population at or over 250,000 was 10.0 percent, compared to only 2.5 percent in towns with a population between 10,000 and 24,999 (see Figure 8.2 Population Size and Homicide Rate, 2010). Thus the risk for homicide is four times greater in large cities than in small towns. While most people in large cities certainly do not die from homicide, where we live still makes a difference in our chances of being victimized by homicide and other crime.

Figure 8.2 Population Size and Homicide Rate, 2010

Source: Data from Federal Bureau of Investigation. (2011). Crime in the United States, 2010. Washington, DC: Author.

Finally, the homicide rate rose in the late 1980s and peaked during the early 1990s before declining sharply until the early 2000s and then leveling off and declining a bit further since then. Although debate continues over why the homicide rate declined during the 1990s, many criminologists attribute the decline to a strong economy, an ebbing of gang wars over drug trafficking, and a decline of people in the 1525 age group that commits a disproportionate amount of crime (Blumstein & Wallman, 2006). Some observers believe rising imprisonment rates also made a difference, and we return to this issue later in this chapter.

Rape and sexual assault were included in Chapter 4 Gender Inequalitys discussion of violence against women as a serious manifestation of gender inequality. As that chapter noted, it is estimated that one-third of women on the planet have been raped or sexually assaulted, beaten, or physically abused in some other way (Heise, Ellseberg, & Gottemoeller, 1999). While it is tempting to conclude that such violence is much more common in poor nations than in a wealthy nation like the United States, we saw in Chapter 4 Gender Inequality that violence against women is common in this nation as well. Like homicide, about three-fourths of all rapes and sexual assaults involve individuals who know each other, not strangers.

As noted earlier, the major property crimes are burglary, larceny, motor vehicle theft, and arson. These crimes are quite common in the United States and other nations and, as Table 8.1 Number of Crimes: Uniform Crime Reports (UCR) and National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS), 2010 indicated, millions occur annually in this country. Many Americans have installed burglar alarms and other security measures in their homes and similar devices in their cars and SUVs. While property crime by definition does not involve physical harm, it still makes us concerned, in part because it touches so many of us. Although property crime has in fact declined along with violent crime since the early 1990s, it still is considered a major component of the crime problem, because it is so common and produces losses of billions of dollars annually.

Much property crime can be understood in terms of the roles and social networks of property criminals. In this regard, many scholars distinguish between amateur theft and professional theft. Most property offenders are amateur offenders: They are young and unskilled in the ways of crime, and the amount they gain from any single theft is relatively small. They also do not plan their crimes and instead commit them when they see an opportunity for quick illegal gain. In contrast, professional property offenders tend to be older and quite skilled in the ways of crime, and the amount they gain from any single theft is relatively large. Not surprisingly, they often plan their crimes well in advance. The so-called cat burglar, someone who scales tall buildings to steal jewels, expensive artwork, or large sums of money, is perhaps the prototypical example of the professional property criminals. Many professional thieves learn how to do their crimes from other professional thieves, and in this sense they are mentored by the latter just as students are mentored by professors, and young workers by older workers.

If you were asked to picture a criminal in your mind, what image would you be likely to think of first: a scruffy young male with a scowl or sneer on his face, or a handsome, middle-aged man dressed in a three-piece business suit? No doubt the former image would come to mind first, if only because violent crime and property crime dominate newspaper headlines and television newscasts and because many of us have been victims of violent or property crime. Yet white-collar crime is arguably much more harmful than street crime, both in terms of economic loss and of physical injury, illness, and even death.

What exactly is white-collar crime? The most famous definition comes from Edwin Sutherland (1949, p. 9), a sociologist who coined the term in the 1940s and defined it as a crime committed by a person of respectability and high social status in the course of his occupation. Sutherland examined the behavior of the seventy largest US corporations and found that they had violated the law hundreds of times among them. Several had engaged in crimes during either World War I or II; they provided defective weapons and spoiled food to US troops and even sold weapons to Germany and other nations the United States was fighting.

Although white-collar crime as studied today includes auto shop repair fraud and employee theft by cashiers, bookkeepers, and other employees of relatively low status, most research follows Sutherlands definition in focusing on crime committed by people of respectability and high social status. Thus much of the study of white-collar crime today focuses on fraud by physicians, attorneys, and other professionals and on illegal behavior by executives of corporations designed to protect or improve corporate profits (corporate crime).

In the study of professional fraud, health-care fraud stands out for its extent and cost (Rosoff, Pontell, & Tillman, 2010). Health-care fraud is thought to amount to more than $100 billion per year, compared to less than $20 billion for all property crime combined. For example, some physicians bill Medicare and private insurance for services that patients do not really need and may never receive. Medical supply companies sometimes furnish substandard equipment. To compensate for the economic loss it incurs, health-care fraud drives up medical expenses and insurance costs. In this sense, it steals from the public even though no one ever breaks into your house or robs you at gunpoint.

Although health-care and other professional fraud are serious, corporate crime dwarfs all other forms of white-collar crime in the economic loss it incurs and in the death, injury, and illness it causes. Corporate financial crime involves such activities as fraud, price fixing, and false advertising. The Enron scandal in 2001 involved an energy corporation whose chief executives exaggerated profits. After their fraud and Enrons more dire financial state were finally revealed, the companys stock plummeted and it finally went bankrupt. Its thousands of workers lost their jobs and pensions, and investors in its stock lost billions of dollars. Several other major corporations engaged in (or strongly suspected of doing so) accounting fraud during the late 1990s and early 2000s, but Enron was merely the most notorious example of widespread scandal that marked this period.

While corporate financial crime and corruption have cost the nation untold billions of dollars in this and earlier decades, corporate violenceactions by corporations that kill or maim people or leave them illis even more scandalous. The victims of corporate violence include corporate employees, consumers of corporate goods, and the public as a whole. Annual deaths from corporate violence exceed the number of deaths from homicide, and illness and injury from corporate violence affect an untold number of people every year.

The asbestos industry learned in the 1930s that asbestos was a major health hazard, but it kept this discovery a secret for more than three decades.

Employees of corporations suffer from unsafe workplaces in which workers are exposed to hazardous conditions and chemicals because their companies fail to take adequate measures to reduce or eliminate this exposure. Such exposure may result in illness, and exposure over many years can result in death. According to a recent estimate, more than 50,000 people die each year from workplace exposure (American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations [AFL-CIO], 2010), a figure about three times greater than the number of annual homicides. About 1,500 coal miners die each year from black lung disease, which results from the breathing of coal dust; many and perhaps most of these deaths would be preventable if coal mining companies took adequate safety measures (G. Harris, 1998). In another example, the asbestos industry learned during the 1930s that exposure to asbestos could cause fatal lung disease and cancer. Despite this knowledge, asbestos companies hid evidence of this hazard for more than three decades: They allowed their workers to continue to work with asbestos and marketed asbestos as a fire retardant that was widely installed in schools and other buildings. More than 200,000 asbestos workers and members of the public either have already died or are expected to die from asbestos exposure; most or all of these deaths could have been prevented if the asbestos industry had acted responsibly when it first discovered it was manufacturing a dangerous product (Lilienfeld, 1991).

Unsafe products also kill or maim consumers. One of the most notorious examples of deaths from an unsafe product involved the Ford Pinto, a car first sold in the early 1970s that was vulnerable to fire and explosion when hit from behind in a minor rear-end collision (Cullen, Maakestad, & Cavender, 2006). Ford knew before the Pinto went on the market that its gas tank was unusually vulnerable in a rear-end collision and determined it would take about $11 per car to fix the problem. It then did a cost-benefit analysis to determine whether it would cost more to fix the problem or instead to settle lawsuits after Pinto drivers and passengers died or were burned and injured in rear-end collisions. This analysis indicated that Ford would save about $87 million if it did not fix the problem and instead paid out compensation after Pinto drivers and passengers died or got burned. Because Ford made this decision, about five hundred people eventually died in Pinto rear-end collisions and many others were burned.

The toll of white-collar crime, both financial and violent, is difficult to estimate, but by all accounts it exceeds the economic loss and death and injury from all street crime combined. White-collar crime is thought to involve an annual economic loss of more than $700 billion annually from corporate fraud, professional fraud, employee theft, and tax evasion and an annual toll of at least 100,000 deaths from workplace-related illness or injury, unsafe products, and preventable environmental pollution. These figures compare to an economic loss of less than $20 billion from property crime and a death toll of about 17,000 from homicide (Barkan, 2012). By any measure, the toll of white-collar crime dwarfs the toll of street crime, even though the latter worries us much more than white-collar crime. Despite the harm that white-collar crime causes, the typical corporate criminal receives much more lenient punishment, if any, than the typical street criminal (Rosoff et al., 2010).

Organized crime refers to criminal activity by groups or organizations whose major purpose for existing is to commit such crime. When we hear the term organized crime, we almost automatically think of the so-called Mafia, vividly portrayed in the Godfather movies and other films, that comprises several highly organized and hierarchical Italian American families. Although Italian Americans have certainly been involved in organized crime in the United States, so have Irish Americans, Jews, African Americans, and other ethnicities over the years. The emphasis on Italian domination of organized crime overlooks these other involvements and diverts attention from the actual roots of organized crime.

What are these roots? Simply put, organized crime exists and even thrives because it provides goods and/or services that the public demands. Organized crime flourished during the 1920s because it was all too ready and willing to provide an illegal product, alcohol, that the pubic continued to demand even after Prohibition began. Today, organized crime earns its considerable money from products and services such as illegal drugs, prostitution, pornography, loan sharking, and gambling. It also began long ago to branch out into legal activities such as trash hauling and the vending industry.

Government efforts against organized crime since the 1920s have focused on arrest, prosecution, and other law-enforcement strategies. Organized crime has certainly continued despite these efforts. This fact leads some scholars to emphasize the need to reduce public demand for the goods and services that organized crime provides. However, other scholars say that reducing this demand is probably a futile or mostly futile task, and they instead urge consideration of legalizing at least some of the illegal products and services (e.g., drugs and prostitution) that organized crime provides. Doing so, they argue, would weaken the influence of organized crime.

Consensual crime (also called victimless crime) refers to behaviors in which people engage voluntarily and willingly even though these behaviors violate the law. Illegal drug use, discussed in Chapter 7 Alcohol and Other Drugs, is a major form of consensual crime; other forms include prostitution, gambling, and pornography. People who use illegal drugs, who hire themselves out as prostitutes or employ the services of a prostitute, who gamble illegally, and who use pornography are all doing so because they want to. These behaviors are not entirely victimless, as illegal drug users, for example, may harm themselves and others, and that is why the term consensual crime is often preferred over victimless crime. As just discussed, organized crime provides some of the illegal products and services that compose consensual crime, but these products and services certainly come from sources other than organized crime.

This issue aside, the existence of consensual crime raises two related questions that we first encountered in Chapter 7 Alcohol and Other Drugs. First, to what degree should the government ban behaviors that people willingly commit and that generally do not have unwilling victims? Second, do government attempts to ban such behaviors do more good than harm or more harm than good? Chapter 7 Alcohol and Other Drugss discussion of these questions focused on illegal drugs, and in particular on the problems caused by laws against certain drugs, but similar problems arise from laws against other types of consensual crime. For example, laws against prostitution enable pimps to control prostitutes and help ensure the transmission of sexual diseases because condoms are not regularly used.

Critics of consensual crime laws say we are now in a new prohibition and that our laws against illegal drugs, prostitution, and certain forms of gambling are causing the same problems now that the ban on alcohol did during the 1920s and, more generally, cause more harm than good. Proponents of these laws respond that the laws are still necessary as an expression of societys moral values and as a means, however imperfect, of reducing involvement in harmful behaviors.

American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO). (2010). Death on the job: The toll of neglect. Washington, DC: Author.

Barkan, S. E. (2012). Criminology: A sociological understanding (5th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.

Blumstein, A., & Wallman, J. (Eds.). (2006). The crime drop in America (2nd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Federal Bureau of Investigation. (2011). Crime in the United States, 2010. Washington, DC: Federal Author.

Fox, J. A., Levin, J., & Quinet, K. (2012). The will to kill: Making sense of senseless murder. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.

Harris, G. (1998, April 19). Despite laws, hundreds are killed by black lung. The Courier-Journal (Louisville, KY), p. A1.

Heise, L., Ellseberg, M., & Gottemoeller, M. (1999). Ending violence against women. Population Reports, 27(4), 144.

Cullen, F. T., Maakestad, W. J., & Cavender, G. (2006). Corporate crime under attack: The fight to criminalize business violence. Cincinnati, OH: Anderson.

Lilienfeld, D. E. (1991). The silence: The asbestos industry and early occupational cancer researcha case study. American Journal of Public Health, 81, 791800.

Messner, S. F., Deane, G., & Beaulieu, M. (2002). A log-multiplicative association model for allocating homicides with unknown victim-offender relationships. Criminology, 40, 457479.

Rosoff, S. M., Pontell, H. N., & Tillman, R. (2010). Profit without honor: White collar crime and the looting of America (5th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.

Sutherland, E. H. (1949). White collar crime. New York, NY: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston.

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8.2 Types of Crime Social Problems

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Greenville woman arrested on identity theft, insurance fraud after crash in Wilson County – WNCT

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by: NC Department of Insurance

Angela Kaye Whidbee (Pitt County Sheriffs Office photo)

RALEIGH, N.C. North Carolina Insurance Commissioner Mike Causey on Tuesday announced the arrest of a Greenville woman and charged her with identity theft and insurance fraud, both felonies.

Angela K. Whidbee, 33, of 2804 Santonsburg Road, Greenville was arrested. Special agents with the Department of Insurances Criminal Investigations Division accuse Whidbee of telling a state trooper and Wilson Medical Center that she was another person by giving the other womans name, date of birth, address and drivers license number to avoid legal consequences of an automobile crash that occurred on March 15, 2018, in Wilson County.

According to the arrest warrant, Whidbee also gave the other womans name to Sentry Insurance Co. in support of an automobile insurance policy claim. The offenses occurred between March 15, 2018, and Sept. 10, 2020.

Special agents and Pitt County deputies arrested Whidbee on July 15.

Insurance fraud is not a victimless crime; we all pay for it through higher insurance premiums, said Commissioner Causey. Help us keep insurance premiums low by reporting suspected fraud.

If you suspect insurance fraud or other white-collar crimes, please report it. You may report fraud anonymously by calling the N.C. Department of Insurance Criminal Investigations Division at 919-807-6840. Information is also available at http://www.ncdoi.gov.

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The billionaires’ space race is just the beginning | TheHill – The Hill

Posted: at 1:46 am

On the eve of Jeff BezosJeffrey (Jeff) Preston BezosIt's time for US to get serious about cleaning up space junk Press: Give those unemployed writers a job! Progressive group launches M ad campaign to call for tax hikes on the rich MORE triumphant launch into space, Berkeley economics professor and former Clinton Labor Secretary Robert Reich took to Twitter and offered a little snark.

No one needs Bezos to launch rockets into outer space. We need him to pay his fair share of taxes so people can thrive here on Earth.

The world is very fortunate that professor Reich was not around 100 years ago when Bill Boeing and Donald Douglas were vying to see who would be the first to use the then-new technology of the airplane to transport cargo and passengers around the world. Otherwise, millions of people might not be boarding airliners every day to visit relatives or attend business meetings in far-off destinations.

The suborbital jaunts accomplished by Richard Branson and Bezos were not just expressions of egos. They constituted the next steps in the creation of a brand-new industry, space tourism. Their main rival, SpaceXs Elon MuskElon Reeve MuskTesla's Musk voices support for Epic amid Apple lawsuit Tesla reports over 0M in energy business revenue in second quarter As inflation and government debt surge, Washington is ignoring our most critical economic crisis MORE, is already planning flights of his Crew Dragon with private passengers willing to pay lots of money for an out-of-this-world experience in low Earth orbit. The first of these missions, Inspiration4, is being mounted to raise money for St. Judes Childrens Research Hospital. Branson and Musk will charge a little less money for a few minutes of weightlessness and the best view of the Earth most have ever experienced.

While only the well-to-do will be able to afford private space travel, for the time being, that state of affairs will not last forever. Technological progress and economies of scale will combine to bring down the cost of a space vacation, bringing it into reach for more people. The same process that created the aviation industry will more than likely replicate itself with the commercial space sector.

Sometime in the future, people will be able to board a rocket ship and fly to a private space station for a week filled with experiences that currently only government astronauts and a few rich people have been able to have. A company called Axiom Space, which is partnering with SpaceX for private flights of the Crew Dragon, is already planning such an orbiting facility, which will primarily be for research and microgravity manufacturing. Interiors of the crew quarters are being designed by French industrial designer Philippe Starck. None other than former NASA Administrator Jim BridenstineJames (Jim) Frederick BridenstineThe day President Kennedy sent America to the moon Bill Nelson is a born-again supporter of commercial space at NASA Has the Biden administration abandoned the idea of a moon base? MORE suggested that private people will one day voyage to commercial space stations, according to CNBC. The future is going to be human space stations, commercially owned and operated, he said.

The billionaires space race has already been of enormous benefit to NASA. SpaceX is transporting astronauts and cargo to and from the International Space Station for far less cost than the space shuttle used to. The first American astronauts back to the moon will ride to the lunar surface on a specially outfitted SpaceX Starship rocket, currently being tested at Boca Chica, Texas. Bezos is developing the Blue Moon lunar lander to compete with SpaceX, now with billions in incentives. NASA has chosen the SpaceX Falcon Heavy to launch the Europa Clipper for a savings of almost $2 billion over the Space Launch System.

Cheap access to space and returning to the moon are the keys to creating a space-based economy. Resources mined on the moon could be shipped to manufacturing facilities in Earth orbit. Space resource extraction is one of the projects being developed by Blue Origin. Space factories would use microgravity to create products that would be impossible to build on Earth. Combined with space tourism, space manufacturing would create immeasurable wealth.

The idea that two suborbital hops will lead to an Earth-moon economic sphere might seem like science fiction. However, a group of Japanese businesses, academics and elected officials recently proposed such a vision that they labeled Planet 6.0.

Boeing and Douglas might have shaken their heads at the idea of a world bound together by airliners. When they started civil aviation consisted mostly of barnstorming stunts at county fairs, the equivalent of Bransons and Bezos suborbital hops. Yet what was the future to them is our present. No reason exists to suppose that the realm of human activity cannot be extended to low Earth orbit, the moon and, perhaps in the fullness of time, beyond. Such a future would make better use of the billions held by people like Bezos, Musk and others than to be paid as part of their fair share of taxes.

Mark Whittington, who writes frequently about space and politics, has published a political study of space exploration entitled Why is It So Hard to Go Back to the Moon? as well as The Moon, Mars and Beyond, and, most recently, Why is America Going Back to the Moon? He blogs at Curmudgeons Corner. He is published in the Wall Street Journal, Forbes, The Hill, USA Today, the LA Times and the Washington Post, among other venues.

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Peter Thiel flexes financial muscle ahead of 2022 | TheHill – The Hill

Posted: at 1:44 am

Tech billionaire Peter Thiel is establishing a reputation as a financial powerhouse in GOP circles, shaking up marquee 2022 races with contributions that could make him among the biggest players in the midterm elections.

Thiel raised eyebrows with separate $10 million donations believed to be the largest in history to outside groups supporting Senate candidates to super PACs supporting two of his proteges, venture capitalist and Hillbilly Elegy author J.D. Vance in the open Ohio Senate race and Thiel Foundation executive Blake Masters in the Arizona race against Sen. Mark KellyMark KellyHarris's bad polls trigger Democratic worries Bipartisan group says it's still on track after setback on Senate floor Poll: Two-thirds of AZ Democratic voters back primary challenge to Sinema over filibuster MORE (D).

Hes also expected to write checks for candidates in House and gubernatorial contests.

The investments from the early Facebook investor and PayPal cofounder, who also has ties to former President TrumpDonald TrumpTrump PACs brought in over M for the first half of 2021 Chicago owes Trump M tax refund, state's attorney mounts legal challenge Biden hits resistance from unions on vaccine requirement MORE, are early signals Thiel intends to use his financial largesse to disseminate his avowed libertarian stances.

Peter has a vision for America that includes more personal freedom and less government intervention, and hes willing to put up his own money to make it a reality, said GOP donor Dan Eberhart.

The combination of Peters money and his libertarian political views could be a powerful force in the GOP this cycle, he added. Peter is a serious power broker in Republican politics right now.

The massive donations are just the latest and largest from the longtime GOP contributor.

Thiel, a 53-year-old German-born entrepreneur, first burst onto the conservative scene in 2009 with an essay detailing his libertarian beliefs, a departure from the overwhelmingly liberal bent of Silicon Valley.

Hes since written checks to several lawmakers who share his worldview before seeing his influence expand via his relationship with Trump. Thiel served on Trumps transition team after his 2016 victory, and their relationship grew from there, expanding his access to the White House.

His donations to Vance and Masters indicate a desire both to up libertarianism's presence in Congress and to elevate close allies. Vance worked for Thiel in Silicon Valley and later obtained an investment in his own firm from the entrepreneur, while Masters rose to become chief operating officer of Thiel Capital and president of the Thiel Foundation.

You put those two things together, the personal relationship, along with the fact that they're supportive of his worldview, and I think that very likely explains the level of support, said one Republican operative whos supportive of both Vance and Masterss campaigns.

Thiels power play comes amid shifting dynamics within the GOP.

Trumps departure from the Oval Office set off shockwaves throughout the party, leaving no figurehead in public office to advance the America First populism that Trump unleashed, which remains popular with the grassroots and at times aligns with Thiels ideology.

That sets up an opportunity for Thiel to elevate candidates he believes could satisfy Republican voters hunger for more populist voices but who don't irk centrist voters the same way Trump did.

The base is changing, Eberhart said. Republicans need candidates who reflect the new populist direction Trump has taken the party and who are also acceptable enough to voters that they can win a general election. Peter may be able to do that better than anyone else right now.

Observers say Thiels sway in GOP circles is formidable given the heft of his donations, suggesting he could be a growing influence as elections become increasingly more expensive.

I think he's seeing what a lot of these folks have seen over the last 10 years, which is these races are getting more expensive, and if I want to have influence and I want my guy to win or my gal to win, you're going to be spending a lot more money, one GOP official said.

He does pull up a seat at the table as a big player, for sure.

The investments in Vance and Masters also provide tangible impacts for both of their campaigns.

As first-time candidates, both, particularly Masters, will have to boost their name recognition, as well as build up email lists and other campaign infrastructure. But with the $10 million investments to supportive outside groups, theyll be able to go beyond those basic building blocks and even start going on the attack.

What these donations do, is it made both of them automatically real candidates, right from the get go. Because when you have $10 million sitting in a super PAC, no one can deny that you should now be taken seriously as a candidate, said the GOP strategist whos supportive of both.

I think J.D. would have gotten a lot of media attention, regardless. Blake probably wouldn't have gotten any attention without that donation, the strategist added. I think that's the most tangible immediate effect. And then the long-term effect is, that's $10 million that could be spent to raise their name IDs; that's $10 million that can be spent to kneecap their opponents. And it's not something that you usually see with first-time candidates.

Beyond the specific donations, Vance and Masters could also benefit from Thiels existing contributions to conservative groups and proximity to Trump, which may make other figures and groups wary of endorsing their opponents for fear of losing Thiels money or rankling his allies.

It makes them think twice about endorsing because they'd like to get some of Peter Thiels money too. And a good way to make sure you dont get Peter Thiels money is to endorse against his candidate, said one GOP strategist involved in Senate races, including one against a Thiel-backed candidate. So, he essentially freezes some of the most powerful forces in politics with the threat ofretribution and not continuing to spend his money on their projects.

Already, Thiels donations have swayed other donors to get off the sidelines.

An adviser to Rep. Ted BuddTheodore (Ted) Paul BuddTrump takes two punches from GOP Schumer, Tim Scott lead as Senate fundraising pace heats up Pro-impeachment Republicans outpace GOP rivals in second-quarter fundraising MORE (R-N.C.), who is running in North Carolinas open Senate race with Trumps endorsement, said the campaign got a jolt of support after Thiel cut a check.

I cant speak to other states, but here in NC, the Thiel contribution on the national level layered with maxed out contributions from prominent NC job creators have opened up a lot of new pathways for our campaign, the source said. Folks who had earlier indicated that they were going to sit out the primary on the sidelines are now proactively calling us to offer support.

While Thiel's support for Vance and Masters has yet to deliver a Trump endorsement in either of the Ohio or Arizona Senate race, his backing has already swayed other donors to get off the sidelines in the midterms.

Vance, Masters and other Thiel-supported candidates will have to prove themselves as attractive contenders in their own right, and other Republicans in top races are expected to raise hefty sums as well.

But even those on the wrong end of Thiels donations concede the entrepreneurs giving is significant.

It's an elite impact, said the strategist involved in a campaign running against a Thiel-backed hopeful.

However, Thiels gargantuan donations also make him a target, and critics say theyve stocked early ammunition against him.

Neither Vance nor Masters have longstanding ties to the conservative movement, raising criticisms of their bona fides, and Thiels own background at Facebook could be a knock amid conservative grievances about Big Tech.

Defenders rebut that criticism by pointing to Thiels early support of Trump in 2016 and well-known libertarian beliefs in liberal California. But opponents are nonetheless expected to use it as a way to knock their newly well-funded opponents.

A board member of Facebook is funding my opponents campaign? That's pretty easy to get out of your mouth, said the GOP strategist working on a rival campaign.

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The International Space Station Had a Rough Day – The Atlantic

Posted: at 1:44 am

Mission control in Houston first noticed it Thursday morning.

The International Space Station was drifting. The station is always moving, of course, in a looping trajectory around Earth. But this, what mission control was seeing in the latest data, was unexpected, and unnerving. On Thursday morning, the space station was suddenly and mysteriously deviating from its course.

The massive pieces of NASA-built hardware that hold the space station in place couldnt keep up with the motion, and within minutes, the station had been thrown out of its usual orientation.

NASA quickly turned to Roscosmos, Russias space agency. To counter the shift, Moscows mission control commanded one of its modules on the space station to ignite its engines, then instructed a cargo ship to fire its thrusters too. Inside the station, astronauts reconfigured important systems. Twice, ground control lost communications with the crew for several minutes. The longer the space station remained off track, the more scrambled its operations, including the communication system and solar panels, could become.

Read: A very relatable moment on the International Space Station

It took about an hour to drag the ISS back into its proper configuration, and regain what its operators call attitude control. The source of the disruption was another Russian module, which had just arrived at the station. The module, a laboratory named Nauka, the Russian word for science, had already had a rough journey, punctuated by propulsion and communications issues, with Russian engineers rushing to put it in the right orbit. Several hours after it docked, the module, reacting to a software glitch, started firing its thrusters uncontrollably, jostling the space station. When Nauka went rogue, and Moscow instructed hardware on the other side of the station to respond, the ISS found itself in what a NASA mission-control operator called a tug of war.

Seven astronauts were on board at the timethree American, two Russian, one French, and one Japanese. NASA later told reporters that the astronauts hadnt felt any shaking or movement, and officials tried to assure the public that the crew was safe. There was no immediate danger at any time to the crew, Joel Montalbano, the ISS program manager at NASA, said in a press conference. Obviously, when you have a loss of attitude control, thats something you want to address right away, but the crew was never in any immediate emergency or anything like that.

Montalbano and other NASA officials stressed that the agencys workers are prepared for all kinds of emergencies, and that they werent worried, because they hadnt exhausted their contingency plans. But this shake-up was an uncommon event; the station has experienced inadvertent thruster firings, such as Naukas, maybe only three or four times in its 20-year history. And even if theyre resolved quickly, without real incident, theyre inevitably unsettling. In my experience, people in space are always in danger, tweeted Wayne Hale, a former flight director and manager at NASAs space-shuttle program, which experienced two fatal accidents that claimed the lives of a total of 14 people.

The Nauka scare called to mind an incident that occured in 2018, when mission controllers noticed that the space stations air pressure had started dropping slightly, a sign of a tiny leak. In that case, the crew was asleep. Officials decided that the pressure change was small enough that it didnt warrant waking the astronauts. In the morning, the crew scoured the station and found a tiny hole in a Soyuz capsule, a Russian astronaut vehicle. Officials said the crew was never in serious danger, but no one wants a leak of any kind on the ISS, and the hole was quickly plugged up. Russian cosmonauts eventually conducted a spacewalk to examine the hole from the exterior, but to this day, Roscosmos wont say how it got there.

Read: Even astronauts binge-watch TV while in space

So many aspects of spaceflight are autonomous now, including the cargo ships that dock to the ISS and the capsule that recently took Jeff Bezos to the edge of space and back. Blue Origin passengers dont have to fly the capsule as astronauts have in the past. Neither do SpaceX passengers, who go well beyond the edge of space and all the way into orbit; last year, when two NASA astronauts test-drove a SpaceX capsule to the ISS, they flew on autopilot, taking control of the vehicle for only a few minutes, just to see how it handled. (At the time, Russian officials were the ones worried that SpaceXs new flight software could malfunction and shove the capsule at the station.) But even today, spaceflight is far from routine, and not as smooth as recent feats have made it seem. Yes, two billionaires have flown to space in less than a month, and yes, they made it look easy. But space travel, by professional astronauts and tourists alike, remains dangerous. The futures that Bezos and Elon Musk sometimes imagineof human beings living in artificial-gravity stations around Earth, or in an outpost on the moon, or in a glass dome on Marsare fragile in that way.

The ISS is one of the most impressive engineering feats in history, assembled in orbit piece by piece by astronauts with the nerve to handle a tool kit while floating in space. The station was not meant to last forever, and someday, after some difficult decisions by the agencies that run it, it will be deemed too expensive or too old, and, like other stations before it, will likely be retired into the depths of Earths oceans. In its two decades, the ISS has served as more than a workplace or a laboratory for its rotating crews of spacefarers. It is also a home; astronauts share cleaning chores, celebrate holidays together, even binge-watch TV shows like the rest of us. I imagine that, after a few months of ISS life, astronauts are so used to floating that they drift off to sleep as easily as they would in bed on Earth. But in an instantin the sudden rogue firing of a moduleastronauts can be jolted back to the reality of what the ISS is, a metal tube traveling at 17,500 miles an hour, far beyond the reach of Earths protective, life-giving atmosphere. Future space travelers, whether they journey to the edge of space or another world, cant lose sight of that, no matter how lovely the view outside the window is.

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When and where to look to spot the International Space Station on Saturday – News 5 Cleveland

Posted: at 1:44 am

CLEVELAND Calling all sky watchers!

Northeast Ohio is in for a treat with one of the best International Space Station passes of the year. This ISS crossing will be nearly directly above our area Saturday evening.

WEWS

WHERE AND WHEN TO LOOK:The International Space Station will appear in the northwestern part of the sky at 10 degrees. It will move toward the southeast and will set below the horizon in the southeast part of the sky at 19 degrees above the horizon. The ISS will be visible tonight at 9:51 p.m. for six minutes. The max height will be 88 degrees above the horizon.

This is the highest passing of the year!

wews

HOW TO FIND IT:The horizon is at zero degrees, and directly overhead is ninety degrees. If you hold your fist at arms length and place your fist resting on the horizon, the top will be about 10 degrees. The space station looks like an airplane or a very bright star moving across the sky, except it doesnt have flashing lights or change direction. It will also be moving considerably faster than a typical airplane. It travels at about 17,500 mph!

WEWS

CONDITIONS FOR VIEWING:The weather will be great for spotting the ISS. The sun will set around 8:45 p.m., so this passing will occur about an hour after the sun goes down. It will be mostly clear to partly cloudy across the area and temperatures will be in the low 70s to upper 60s.

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