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Daily Archives: August 25, 2022
Dallas feels real good about the progress Michael Gallup is making – Blogging The Boys
Posted: August 25, 2022 at 2:14 pm
Cowboys feel real good about where Michael Gallup is in his rehab - Charean Williams, PFT
Maybe Michael Gallup will not go on the PUP list.
Cowboys receiver Michael Gallup said at the start of training camp that returning for the season opener was not a reasonable possibility. The Cowboys, though, still have him on active/physically unable to perform, leaving the question of whether he might return before the minimum four games he would miss on reserve/PUP.
You know how this fourth quarter goes in the rehab, Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy said, via Calvin Watkins of the Dallas Morning News. All I can tell you is when we have the meeting every morning, (associate athletic trainer) Britt Brown is obviously running the rehab, and he feels real good about Michaels progress as far as his timeline and so forth. He hasnt had any setbacks, and I hope we will continue to be blessed with that process. Hes doing really well.
The Cowboys could look outside the organization to find a swing tackle.
Nate Solder. There was a time when Nate Solder was one of the hottest names in the free agency market. A second-round pick from Colorado in 2011 (the same year the Cowboys took Tyron Smith out of USC), Solder spent the first seven seasons of his career with the New England Patriots where he helped them win two Super Bowls while blocking for Tom Brady.
He then hit free agency in 2018 and signed a four-year $62 million deal with the New York Giants. Solder would start 48 games in four seasons (he sat out in 2020 due to COVID-19 concerns) but was never close to the player New York expected him to be.
Solder signed a new deal with the Giants in 2021, which allowed him to become a free agent after the season. There was a time when it sounded as though he would retire, but he has not done so yet so he could be convinced to join a team for the coming season. Even with his struggles, Dallas should consider giving him a home for the year. Solder not only has experience at both left and right tackle but also did a decent job in run-blocking last season. He wouldnt be called upon to start every game but is a savvy veteran who would be an upgrade over Ball.
Cooper Rush and Will Grier are neck and neck for the backup QB spot.
In two preseason starts, Rush led the Cowboys on nine offensive possessions with one scoring drive. Grier, who missed the first preseason game at Denver with a sore groin, returned for five offensive drives against the Chargers on Saturday night leading to two scoring drives.
As the Cowboys enter the final week of the preseason, its clear the No. 2 quarterback hasnt been established. That was tough missing last week, said Grier, who completed six of 10 passes for 98 yards in the Chargers game. But been ready to go, been preparing since last year [and] just trying to get better every day. It was kinda just get out there and get the first one over with and [get] more and more comfortable in the offense.
Grier is a 2019 third-round pick by Carolina and has played in just two regular season games. The last time he saw game action was Aug. 27, 2021 for the Panthers where he completed five of seven passes for 47 yards in a 34-9 preseason victory over Pittsburgh. Grier also had a 24-yard fourth quarter touchdown run in that game. But the Panthers released him, allowing the Cowboys to snag him. He was inactive for 16 weeks of the 2021 season.
Keep these things in mind when projecting a final 53.
There will be just two. Some teams keep two quarterbacks, some keep three. The determinant is whether or not a team is keeping a developmental quarterback on the roster. When the Cowboys drafted Ben DiNucci (2020) and Mike White (2018), they stashed them as their third quarterback. The Cowboys dont have a development guy this year who warrants holding a roster spot, so they should be rolling with just two guys that will come from either Cooper Rush or Will Grier.
Running backs matter, but not to Dallas. Running back is a grueling position and many teams keep four of them on the roster to give themselves enough depth. However, the Cowboys are a little different. In three of the last four years, the Cowboys have only kept two running backs, including last season when they started the year with just Ezekiel Elliott and Tony Pollard. They do sometimes keep a fullback if a player like Jamize Olawale or Rod Smith also brings special teams ability to the roster, but they dont currently have any fullbacks on the roster.
The UDFA has impressed so far.
Davis, an undrafted free agent signed in April, has pieced together an impressive last several weeks at camp and the attributes routinely put on display in team practices are spilling over into scrimmages and, more importantly, preseason games.
His success creates a very poignant question as the Cowboys work to reduce their roster ahead of the August 30 deadline: is Dallas open to carrying four running backs on their active roster?
Dowdle entered camp healthy and fully recovered from a hip injury that cost him the entirety of what mightve been a very promising 2021 season, and hes showed no signs of having lost a step - neither in practices, scrimmages nor games - and running backs coach Skip Peete notably cast his early vote for RB3 in early August; but also left the door open for Davis and Aaron Shampklin to find a way to enter the conversation.
What does your final 53-man roster look like?
The first pertains to the leagues waiver system: When a player with three or fewer accrued seasons is cut, he is waived; when a player with four or more accrued seasons is cut, he is released. There is a big difference between being waived and released. A released player can be cut today and re-signed tomorrow while a waived player must clear waivers before a return.
For example, quarterback Will Grier has three accrued years. If cut, he would be subject to waivers. The Cowboys could re-sign him only if all 31 other clubs declined to submit a claim within a day of his cut being processed.
The second rule adds a dimension to the first.
A player on injured reserve is eligible to return later in the season only if his IR placement occurs after next Tuesdays 3 p.m. roster cutdown deadline from 80 to 53 players. At least two Cowboys players, wide receiver James Washington (foot) and rookie tackle Matt Waletzko (shoulder), are strong candidates to go on IR with the activation option. They would need to appear on the initial 53.
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Dallas feels real good about the progress Michael Gallup is making - Blogging The Boys
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Packers’ special teams still a work in progress – Packers Wire
Posted: at 2:14 pm
The Green Bay Packers special teams unit is still having issues.
In Fridays preseason game against the New Orleans Saints, Green Bay had 12 men on the field for a punt return during the third quarter. Then, on the following punt return, only 10 men were on the field.
These kinds of mental mistakes were a common occurrence for one of the worst special teams units in history last season when the 2021 Packers finished dead last in Rich Gosselins annual special teams rankings.
A dismal year led to the firing of Maurice Drayton after just one season. Green Bay replaced him with Rich Bisaccia, who is considered one of the best coordinators in the game, however, even Bisaccia is having trouble curing the Packers special teams woes.
Not having enough guys on the field is an easy fix, but it is also easily avoidable.
It is what it is, and thats something were well aware of, and well clean up, head coach Matt LaFleur said postgame.
Its an odd oversight from someone like Bisaccia, who is one to harp on the details. Hes one of the most vocal coaches at practice, who is not afraid to correct a player if something is not done exactly the way he wants. After all, hes a football savant with nearly 40 years of experience.
Bisaccia doesnt take credit for coining the term WE-fense when referring to special teams, but that is a mantra hes adopted from his years of coaching in college and the NFL. He views special teams as a collaborative effort that is only as good as the sum of its parts.
There was a point in college where there wasnt a lot of attention paid to special teams, and I was fortunate enough to be with a college coach that thought it should be an emphasis, Bisaccia said Thursday. It just became something that we could all do together. It wasnt just guys that played on offense or just guys that played on defense. It was something that we could all do together to help our team win. And its just kind of grown from that. Coach LaFleurs done a great job of making it part of our vernacular around here.
Its a fitting term that has certainly caught on around the building, but so far, it hasnt translated onto the field. Last weeks preseason opener against the San Francisco 49ers had its up and downs as Amari Rodgers returned a kickoff for 50 yards. Then, later in the game, kicker Gabe Brkic missed a chip shot from 32 yards.
The plan is to play more starters on special teams in 2022 if it means avoiding another disappointing year. However, that hasnt been the case in the preseason, as most of Green Bays starters are sitting. That includes veteran kicker Mason Crosby, who is rehabbing a knee injury.
The Packers will hope to have their veteran kicker and a healthy number of starters contributing on special teams to start the season. By then, not having the correct numbers of players on the field should be a thing of the past. Then again, more goes into fielding a successful special teams unit.
I think were a work in progress, said Bisaccia.
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A disturbance entering the Caribbean has potential to develop this weekend, forecasters say – Yahoo News
Posted: at 2:13 pm
The National Hurricane Center is monitoring two areas, one is a disturbance poised to enter the Caribbean.
As of 8 a.m. Thursday, its odds of developing further held steady at 20% over the next five days. Though, according to the National Hurricane Center, conditions could become more favorable for development this weekend or early next week as it moves through the central and western Caribbean.
It is producing disorganized thunderstorms as it moves at 15 mph early Thursday.
Currently, it is expected to stay well south of South Florida as it moves west.
A second area of interest has emerged off the African coast and is expected to move west at 10 to 15 mph. As of early Thursday, the National Hurricane Center had given it a 10% chance of developing in the next 48 hours and a 20% chance in the next five days.
It my also slowly develop this week or over the weekend.
This could end up being just the third August since 1961 there hasnt been a tropical storm in the Atlantic, according to AccuWeather.
There have only been three named storms so far this season Alex, Bonnie and Colin with the last one, Colin, dissipating on July 3, meaning this more than 50-day streak is the third-longest time in Atlantic hurricane history without a named storm since 1995.
The next named storm will be Danielle.
The longest dry spell since 1995 has been 61 days, from June 18 through Aug. 18 in 1999. However, that two-month run of inactivity was followed by a frenetic conclusion of the hurricane season that featured five Category 4 storms (Bret, Cindy, Floyd, Gert and Lenny) and the drenching Category 2 Irene, which achieved a rarity, with its eye passing over Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties in mid-October.
Forecasters say dry air, Saharan dust and wind shear have been among the reasons there havent been more storms this year.
The most active part of hurricane season is from now, mid-August, until the end of October, with Sept. 10 the statistical peak of the season.
Story continues
The last Atlantic hurricane was Sam, which became a hurricane Sept. 24 and maintained that status until Oct. 5 as it cut a path between the United States and Bermuda.
Of the three named storms so far this season, only Alex made its presence known in South Florida by dumping as much as 12 inches of rain in some areas.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration issued its updated hurricane season predictions earlier this month.
NOAA predicts 14 to 20 named storms and six to 10 hurricanes with three to five being major, meaning Category 3 or higher.
Hurricane season ends Nov. 30.
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HSI Announces Crackdown on Firearms, Ammunition Smuggling to Haiti, the Caribbean – HS Today – HSToday
Posted: at 2:13 pm
Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Miami announced Aug. 17 efforts to curb the increased flow of weapons, weapon parts and ammunition to Haiti and the Caribbean. Anthony Salisbury, special agent in charge of HSI Miami, along with Department of Homeland Security (DHS) partners made the announcement.
HSI and our partners will investigate and seek to prosecute any individuals involved in illegal arms trafficking, said Salisbury. Today we make it very clear that the United States, and in particular south Florida, is not open for business regarding the illegal trafficking of weapons.
Partners included:Vernon T. Foret, director, field operations Miami/Tampa field offices; U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP); Rear Admiral Brendan C. McPherson, commander of the Seventh Coast Guard District; Timothy Emerick deputy director, Southeast Region, CBP Air and Marine Operations; Walter N. Slosar, chief patrol agent Miami Border Patrol Sector; Michelle Alvarez, first assistant U.S. attorney for Southern District of Florida; Jonathan Carson acting special agent in charge U.S. Department of Commerce Miami Field Office, Bureau of Industry and Security; Tyra J. Cunningham assistant special agent in charge Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF); and Maj. Fernand Charles, Miami Dade Police Department (MDPD), Organized Crime Bureau.
Over the last three months, HSI has seen a substantial increase in the number of weapons, along with a serious increase on the caliber and type of firearms, being illegally trafficked. Some of those weapons include .50 caliber sniper rifles, 308 rifles, and a belt fed machine gun.
In the wrong hands, these weapons could cause mass casualties. Because of this, HSI and counterparts within DHS, Department of Commerce, ATF, MDPD, and the U.S. Attorney for Southern District of Florida are vigorously pursuing this issue and implementing countermeasures. These measures include extra resources within HSI Miami, primarily through our Border Enforcement Security Taskforce (BEST) groups, charged with combating emerging and existing Transnational Criminal Organizations and increased inspections of U.S. export shipments to ensure compliance with federal export laws.
Agencies are also leveraging information developed from investigations and partnerships with foreign customs officials and police to target shipments and individuals that may be engaged in smuggling. These efforts not only concern the physical movement of illegal weapons but also the financial flows that support this illicit activity.
HSI recognizes this is an effort that goes well beyond law enforcement capabilities, which is why it encourages anyone with information about cross-border weapons trafficking to contact HSI at the HSI Tip-Line by calling 866-347-2423. Tips can be anonymous and there is potential reward money for accurate information. For more information on HSI Miami, follow@HSI_Miami.
Read more at ICE
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A Bucket-List Caribbean Private Island Villa (And It’s All-Inclusive) – Caribbean Journal
Posted: at 2:13 pm
Its one of the great fantasies of Caribbean travel: your own private island, teeming with white-sand beaches, edged by sparkling turquoise, just you and the wonder of the Caribbean Sea.
And for decades, thats what Palm Island has been, the sought-after private-island destination in the heart of the Grenadines.
Even better? Its also an all-inclusive resort, a unique combination in the Caribbean.
And now Palm Island, one of the jewels of the Elite Island Resorts portfolio, has unveiled a major new addition.
They call it the Seahorse Villa, and its a new bucket-list, toes-in-the-sand luxury destination in the Caribbean.
The 4,000-square-foot private retreat has two bedrooms in a setting right on the sand.
The interiors are filled with locally-crafted furniture, large wicker pendant shades, high-vaulted ceilings and lovely little touches.
Theres a large kitchen with a breakfast bar, one with shelving from salvaged ship masts; the living and dining areas are all designed for endless relaxation, with a large flat-screen and a surround sound system and sliding doors that open out right to the ultimate toes-in-the-sand experience.
Each of the two bedrooms has a super-king size bed, with ceiling fans, TVs, massive walk-in closets, a desk and a makeup table.
The bathrooms have double basins, plush robes and sarongs and large walk-in showers with handmade Mexican tile.
Theres even a fully-equipped laundry room with storage space.
There are even outdoor showers.
And as a guest, everything is all-inclusive, meaning you get access to all of the amenities at the resort: two restaurants, a world-class spa, a full gym and endless watersports.
But the ultimate amenity is your own private beach, a shimmering stretch of sparkling coastline that you can only find in the Grenadines, that you can only find on this rarefied corner of the 135-acre Palm Island.
For more, visit Palm Island.
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A Bucket-List Caribbean Private Island Villa (And It's All-Inclusive) - Caribbean Journal
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Caribbean Matters: Celebrating Black Caribbean Americans in the U.S. while combating xenophobia – Daily Kos
Posted: at 2:13 pm
First, lets look at some data. Pew Research Center published this report in January 2022thatlooks at an increase in immigration from African countries.
Jamaica and Haiti remain top countries of origin for Black immigrants
Though there have been some shifts in the top countries of origin for Black immigrants to the U.S., Jamaica and Haiti have been the top two countries, respectively, in both 2000 and 2019. In 2000, those two Caribbean nations accounted for almost four-in-ten (39%) Black immigrants, but in 2019, their collective share had decreased to 31%, indicating a greater diversity of Black immigrants to the U.S. Nigeria and Ethiopia were the top birthplaces for Black African immigrants to the U.S. in 2019, with roughly 390,000 and 260,000 immigrants, respectively.
The Migration Policy Institute (MPI) published this detailed report by Jane Lorenzi and Jeanne Batalova in July2022:
Approximately 4.5 million Caribbean immigrants resided in the United States in 2019, representing 10 percent of the nations 44.9 million total foreign-born population. Close to 90 percent of immigrants in the United States from the 13 Caribbean countries and 17 dependent territories come from one of four countries: Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, and Haiti.
The Caribbean is the most common region of birth for the 4.5 million Black immigrants in the United States, accounting for 46 percent of the total. Jamaica (16 percent) and Haiti (15 percent) are the two largest origin countries for Black immigrants. There have been distinct push and pull factors for nationals of the Caribbean, given that the United States previously exercised direct political control over most Caribbean nations, with the notable exception of Jamaica.
Voluntary, large-scale migration from the Caribbean to the United States began in the first half of the 20th century, following the end of the Spanish-American War, when a defeated Spain renounced its claims to Cuba and, among other acts, ceded Puerto Rico to the United States. In the early 1900s, U.S. firms employed Caribbean workers to help build the Panama Canal, and many of these migrants later settled in New York. A high demand for labor among U.S. fruit harvesting industries drew additional labor migrants, particularly to Florida. After World War II, U.S. companies heavily recruited thousands of English-speaking W2 contract workers from the Bahamas, Jamaica, and Barbados to fill critical jobs in health care and agriculture. Around the same time, political instability in Cuba, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic fueled emigration from the region. Following the 1959 Cuban Revolution, an estimated 1.4 million people fled to the United States. Whereas the first major migration of immigrants from Cuba, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and other Caribbean nations was comprised mostly of the members of the elite and skilled professionals, the subsequent flows consisted chiefly of their family members and working-class individuals.
So,Caribbean Black folks are here. Historically many Caribbean Black folks werethe ancestors of many, many Black Americanssince enslaved people caught up in the Transatlantic Triangle Trade were seasoned in the Caribbean before being sold to the United States.For example, you can take a look at the Midlo-Hall database, which documents enslaved persons brought to Louisiana during the period of 1719-1820.
However, as I mentioned in the opening of this story, there are those who are vocallyand abusivelyopposed to Black immigrants,even denying theyarereal Black Americans. I addressed thisissue in May2019whenthe group creating the most negative noise was ADOS, an acronym for "American Descendants of Slavery. You can also read a detailed takedownby Jessica Ann Mitchell Aiwuyor.
Many of the online attacks against our now-Vice PresidentKamala Harris, who is Jamaican American and Indian Americanand Blackwere generated by ADOS, which was covered in this 2019 article in Slate by Rachelle Hampton:
Malcolm Nance, a counterterrorism and intelligence consultant for the U.S. government, warned on Twitter that For 5 months a small group of black cyber security experts have been watching a bunch of black Trumpers using #ADOS & warning it was the leading edge of a racist Russian cyber attack on @KamalaHarris. Many bots. Some trolls. Indeed, theres evidence purveyors of misinformation are more than happy to use #ADOS as a weapon in their meme arsenal. On a 4chan /pol/ thread that asks for dirt on Harris, one user wrote, Highlight the fact that most Americans blacks (#ADOS) hate her from posing as one of them, when in fact shes a descendant of Caribbean slave owners and high-class street-shitters. She does not speak for African Americans. Another wrote, I have a bunch of Tw@tter accounts for the sole purpose of astroturfing reparations. It will splinter the Democrat Party. #ADOS #FuckYouPayMe. Yet another said in January, Make sure we let them know Kamala is Jamaican/Indian mix and shes not an ADOS American descendant of slaves.
Part of the ADOS movement has now morphed into Foundational Black Americans (FBA), which was founded by Tariq Nasheed, a filmmaker and author of books glorifying pimpingwho also has a very large YouTube following. IMDB has a short bio. (Im not linking to his website or video channel.)
Shannon Dawsonrecently wrote a story for NewsOneexplaining the FBA movement:
Over the last year, you may have seen the phrase Foundational Black American (FBA) tossed around the internet thanks to the Worlds #1 Race Baiter, Tariq Nasheed. In January, during a Twitter Spaces discussion, the controversial media personality sent the buzzword trending when he argued that Black Americans were the originators of the United States. Since then, the polarizing author and documentarians belief has attracted millions of supporters from the Black community, many of whom claim they too identify as a Foundational Black American. But what does the term mean exactly?
According to the Official FBA website, Foundational Black Americans are descendants of Black slaves who built the United States from scratch. Followers of the ideology, however, believe that the origins and history of Foundational Black Americans did not begin at the start of slavery in the early 1600s. They strongly believe that FBAs settled in North America in 1526, when they were allegedly brought over from the Caribbean by a colonizer named Lucas Vzquez de Aylln. [...]
FBAs dont believe in the concept of pan-Africanism. They believe they are a unique ethnic group with complex cultural and societal ideologies different from Africans and other Black immigrants. Community members often call those who do not identify with the culture non-FBAs.
This fairly innocuous piece was roundly trolled by Nasheeds followers.
Why is all of this important? As we are locked in a life and death struggle with MAGA insurrectionists and a Republican Party that has morphed into MAGA white supremacistsspewing hate at our most vulnerable citizens, many not-Black Democrats who dont regularly pay attention to Black social media may be completely unaware of the divisive forcesseeking to fracture the Black community that has been the staunchest supporter of the Democratic Party. Our Caribbean communities need more attention from the rest of us, not less. Black Lives Matter no matter where they, or their ancestors, were birthed.
I take this personally as well. Ive been attacked on social media as not-Black and told I should shut up if I am talking about Black issues. All because of the Velez in my name (my husbands surname), and because I was a member of the Young Lords Party in the past, which was engaged in major activism in the Puerto Rican community in the late 60s and early 70s.
My pinned tweet was selected for a reason:
My husband is Black. His family is Puerto Rican. Many of my religious family members and friends from across the Caribbean and from Brazil are Black.
Any group of people attempting to push an agenda of denial of our shared history and culture is dangerousand needs to be condemned. This weekly series was birthed out of what I felt was a need to introduce more readers to Caribbean culture and politics, both in the Caribbean and here in the U.S. I hope it achieves that.
Join me in the comments section below for the weekly Caribbean news roundup.I hope those of you who live in or near Caribbean communities get a chance to attend upcoming festivities.
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Two Set Pieces Caused Major Trouble For The Pirates Of The Caribbean Trilogy – /Film
Posted: at 2:13 pm
The first of these set pieces takes place on an island where a tribe of cannibals have taken the crew of the Black Pearl captive, forcing them to escape in a cage built from the bones of the locals' previous victims. It's a turn of events blending macabre subject matter with broad slapstick, a core aspect of Verbinski's work going back to his directing debut on 1997's "Mouse Hunt" (a film that, frankly, does a better job embodying Verbinski's artistic impulses than his first real breakout hit, "The Ring").
"You draw this stuff on a napkin at lunch and then you do storyboards or thumbnails and you try to explain it to the producers and the crew and they look at you like you're insane," as the director told IGN in 2006. Further complicating matters, the sequence begins with the crew of the Black Pearl dangling in one of these bone cages over a high gorge (a place where one wrong move could send them plummeting to their death).
Verbinski broke down the intricacies of planning out this set piece for IGN:
"In the bone cage, they had a scene where they were in these cages and they were on land and they escaped from the bone cages. Working with my good friend Jim Burkett, who's sort of my storyboard artist and compatriot and ally in this madness, we would spend a lot of time just thinking [things like], 'Why do they have to leave the cage? Why don't they escape and have to carry the cages with them. They can't get out.' And that's when we came up with the hanging and then swinging, and they don't get out, and they have to pick them up and run with them and they roll them."
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Two Set Pieces Caused Major Trouble For The Pirates Of The Caribbean Trilogy - /Film
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This Is The Correct Order In Which To Watch The Pirates Of The Caribbean Movies – Looper
Posted: at 2:13 pm
The initial conclusion of the "Pirates of the Caribbean" trilogy, the third film released in 2007 takes us to the end of the world, and then right over it. As our heroes attempt to rescue Jack from Davy Jones' Locker, a war breaks out between the pirates and East India Trading Company, with Davy Jones himself trapped as Lord Beckett's own personal lapdog. "At World's End" is the culmination of the last two films, with satisfying character arcs, amazing battle sequences, and an immaculate score by Hans Zimmer that'll make you feel things you didn't think you would feel watching a Disney movie about pirates. Of all the "Pirates" movies, this one is the most intense.
Although the series continues on after this, "At World's End" marks the end of the initial "Pirates" story, with many of the main cast members moving on after they stop the world from, well, ending. Even Jack Sparrow learns a thing or two from his experiences here, giving up his own dreams and supposed destiny for the sake of something he could never have: true love. This swashbuckling epic goes above and beyond, and due to its massive success there was no doubt that Disney would continue the franchise beyond Gore Verbinski's initial vision for the series. Though Verbinski would also exit, the "Pirates" world would continue, and chart new waters beyond what the original films ever promised.
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This Is The Correct Order In Which To Watch The Pirates Of The Caribbean Movies - Looper
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In 2022 Latin America and the Caribbean is E… – BNamericas English
Posted: at 2:13 pm
Eclac release
In a new edition of its flagship annual report Economic Survey of Latin America and the Caribbean, the United Nations organization underlines the challenges of reactivating investment and growth in a context of growing external and domestic restrictions.
The Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) released today its annual report Economic Survey of Latin America and the Caribbean 2022: trends and challenges of investing for a sustainable and inclusive recovery, in which it projects 2.7% average economic growth for the current year in a context of acute macroeconomic restrictions that are hurting the regions economies.
According to the report presented at a press conference held at the United Nations organizations central headquarters in Santiago, Chile, a sequence of crises has led to the scenario of low growth and accelerating inflation seen in the global economy, and this coupled with lower growth in trade, the dollars appreciation and tougher global financial conditions will negatively affect the regions countries.
In a context of multiple goals and growing restrictions, there must be a coordination of macroeconomic policies that would support the acceleration of growth, investment, and poverty and inequality reduction, while also addressing inflationary dynamics, Mario Cimoli, Acting Executive Secretary of ECLAC, stated during the launch of the Economic Survey 2022.
The document emphasizes that Latin American and Caribbean countries are facing a complex economic outlook in 2022 and in the coming years. Lower economic growth is compounded by strong inflationary pressures, little dynamism in job creation, declining investment and growing social demands. This situation has translated into major challenges for macroeconomic policy, which must strike a balance between policies that would drive the economic reactivation and policies aimed at controlling inflation and ensuring the sustainability of public finances.
In addition to the regions complex domestic scenario, there is an international scenario in which the war between the Russian Federation and Ukraine has caused growing geopolitical tensions, less vigorous global economic growth, reduced availability of food, and higher energy prices that have increased the inflationary pressures already in play due to the supply shocks prompted by the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, the report indicates.
ECLAC forecasts that South America will grow 2.6% (in comparison with 6.9% in 2021); the group made up of Central America and Mexico will expand 2.5% (in comparison with 5.7% in 2021); and the Caribbean the only subregion that will grow more than in 2021 will experience a 4.7% expansion in 2022, without including Guyana (in comparison with 4.0% a year earlier).
The Economic Survey 2022 also shows that the Ukraine conflict intensified the upward trend for commodities prices that had already emerged starting in the second half of 2020, leading some of these prices to hit historic highs. For the region on average, the effect is mixed, and a 7% decline in the terms of trade for basic products is forecast.
Inflation, meanwhile, has continued to rise, reaching a regional average of 8.4% as of June 2022, which is equivalent to more than double the average value recorded in the 2005-2019 period. At a subregional level, as of June 2022, the economies of South America had the highest level of inflation on average (8.8%), followed by the economies in the group composed of Central America and Mexico (7.5%) and those in the English-speaking Caribbean (7.3%). This has prompted central banks to raise their monetary policy rates and reduce monetary aggregates.
In addition, the deceleration in economic activity is constraining the labor market recovery, especially for women. While the male unemployment rate went from 10.4% at the end of the second quarter of 2020 to 6.9% at the end of the first quarter of 2022, marking a 3.5 percentage point drop, the female unemployment rate fell by 2.1 percentage points in the same period, going from 12.1% to 10.0%. Furthermore, at the end of the first quarter of 2022, the rate of womens labor force participation (51.4%) showed a greater lag than the mens participation rate (74.2%). This lag in womens reincorporation into the labor market is conditioned by the sluggish recovery of economic sectors in which female employment is concentrated and by the increased need for care that emerged sharply once the pandemic began.
The second section of ECLACs report stresses that beyond the dynamics of the economic cycle, low growth in investment in the last three decades has become a structural limitation on development. This means that reactivating the investment dynamic is central to achieving sustainable and inclusive growth, since investment is the bridge between the short and medium term and is essential for confronting climate change.
Between 1951 and 1979, gross fixed capital formation (investment) grew 5.9% annually on average in real terms, while between 1990 and 2021 the annual rate of average investment growth was just 2.9%. That is why ECLAC is making an urgent call to increase investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, which was positioned at the lowest levels when compared with other regions in late 2021. To achieve this, greater coordination is needed between fiscal, monetary and exchange-rate policy, and authorities must take advantage of the full set of tools at their disposal to ensure that growth and investment is not subordinated to anti-inflationary policy. In addition, macroeconomic efforts must be complemented by industrial, trade and social policies and the care economy, the document indicates.
Finally, while the report emphasizes that an important part of the financing to increase investment should come from domestic resource mobilization, international cooperation must accompany this process. For that reason, official development assistance and financing from global financial institutions and development banks must be significantly increased.
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In 2022 Latin America and the Caribbean is E... - BNamericas English
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Calls to make Notting Hill Carnival less Caribbean are as bad as attempts to shut it down – iNews
Posted: at 2:13 pm
Opinion
Assistant opinion editor
August 25, 2022 1:55 pm(Updated 3:53 pm)
After two years off, Notting Hill Carnival, the annual two-day celebration (or three, if you count Panorama, the UKs national steel pan competition, which takes place the day before) is back after a pandemic-induced break. Regular revellers like myself could not be happier. Nor could event promoters in the surrounding areas, keen to cash in on the celebratory spirit that often brings drunken punters from the streets of west London straight to their establishments. But as more of these Carnival-pegged club nights pop up, a strange trend has reared its head: questioning the relevance of carnivals cultural origins.
Though debates about what should or shouldnt be allowed to be played on the road, or in backstreet soundsystem stages, are nothing new, there seems to be some renewed confusion on social media about what the event should represent and whether its roots, the product of an amalgamation of traditional West Indian carnivals, multicultural fairs and resistance against violent racism, should take centre stage in celebrations nowadays.
Kelso Cochrane, the Antiguan carpenter murdered in Notting Hill by white racists in 1959, leading to the events that later turned into what Carnival is today, is buried mere minutes away from I live. I have visited his grave, a fading mosaic of the Antiguan flag at the top of it, several times. I will walk past the crumbling cemetery wall where his body rests on the way to carnival, the heaviness of the unsolved murder ever-present, and a few hundred yards away from where the celebration begins. Believe me, these origins are anything but dismissable.
Its also disappointing to see arguments that rather than playing soca a genre that is central to not just the parade route, but West Indian carnivals more generally other genres of black origin, such as drill, Amapiano, Afrobeats, or R&B should be played more liberally in fact, in some of those after-carnival events, many of these genres have been prioritised.
Ive seen suggestions that carnival is a Black British event, not a Caribbean British event, and should be broadened further to accommodate everyone. Except it already has. Aside from the general spirit of carnival, which encourages involvement from all, it has been considerably watered down for decades. Ahead of the last carnival before the pandemic, I wrote about how newer sound systems and sponsored stages risked erasing the cultural significance of the event, something I sincerely hope the organisers have taken into account and have worked to change.
Younger Black people who suggest its segregationist to highlight the distinctly Caribbean roots of this celebration are misinformed too. We have long had events and festivals catered towards us, each of us able to revel in the glorious blend of the genres weve all had a hand in creating. But turning Carnival into something unrecognisable, purely for the sake of pleasing those who prefer to remain ignorant about its socio-political history, is just as bad as rich, Nimby residents appealing to Conservative councillors to shut it down. Its as bad as the biased coverage Carnival has for so long been subjected to, fodder for arguments to shrink it, or further police it. Make no mistake, Notting Hill Carnivals existence isnt a given, welcomed by the authorities and those who wish to pay homage to West Indian cultures there is a constant battle to keep it going.
Personally, as someone of Antiguan descent, Carnival is one of few mainstream events in the UK where Ill hear soca, which isnt universally revered in the same way that say, Dancehall, Afrobeats or Amapiano have been in the past few decades (beyond playing the odd song, such as JW &Blazes 2010 song Palance, between fully-fledged sets of other genres.) Suggesting it is irrelevant or is worth being replaced isnt just personally upsetting, it would remove the very spirit at the heart of Carnival. There would be no JOuvert (the morning celebration in which revelers kick off carnival from 6am-9am), no masqueraders many of whom have practised routines to the very songs some are suggesting are replaceable for months. Simply put, without the music and, more generally, Caribbean cultures that make it what it is, there would be no carnival at all.
Beyond the surrounding streets of Notting Hill, I hope everyone who doesnt already understand why West Indian culture is and should always be central to this street festivity, takes note of how painful it is to see and hear the erasure of your culture in real time, with people chipping away at more aspects of its genesis when more of us should be chippin down the road to the music and cultural aspects that led to its birth.
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Calls to make Notting Hill Carnival less Caribbean are as bad as attempts to shut it down - iNews
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