Tuesday, 31 December 2024

An Appeals Court Upholds a $5 million Award in a Sexual Abuse Verdict Against President-elect Trump

An Appeals Court Upholds a $5 million Award in a Sexual Abuse Verdict Against President-elect Trump
Trump Columnist Lawsuit

NEW YORK — A federal appeals court on Monday upheld a jury’s finding in a civil case that Donald Trump sexually abused a columnist in an upscale department store dressing room in the mid-1990s.

The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals issued a written opinion upholding the $5 million award that the Manhattan jury granted to E. Jean Carroll for defamation and sexual abuse.

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The longtime magazine columnist had testified at a 2023 trial that Trump turned a friendly encounter in spring 1996 into a violent attack after they playfully entered the store’s dressing room.

Trump skipped the trial after repeatedly denying the attack ever happened. But he briefly testified at a follow-up defamation trial earlier this year that resulted in an $83.3 million award. The second trial resulted from comments then-President Trump made in 2019 after Carroll first made the accusations publicly in a memoir.

In its ruling, a three-judge panel of the appeals court rejected claims by Trump’s lawyers that trial Judge Lewis A. Kaplan had made multiple decisions that spoiled the trial, including by permitting two other women who had accused Trump of sexually abusing them to testify.

The judge also had allowed the jury to view the infamous “Access Hollywood” tape in which Trump boasted in 2005 about grabbing women’s genitals because when someone is a star, “you can do anything.”

“We conclude that Mr. Trump has not demonstrated that the district court erred in any of the challenged rulings,” the 2nd Circuit said. “Further, he has not carried his burden to show that any claimed error or combination of claimed errors affected his substantial rights as required to warrant a new trial.”

Read More: E. Jean Carroll Is on the 2024 TIME100 List

In September, both Carroll, 81, and Trump, 78, attended oral arguments by the 2nd Circuit.

Steven Cheung, a Trump spokesperson, said in a statement that Trump was elected by voters who delivered “an overwhelming mandate, and they demand an immediate end to the political weaponization of our justice system and a swift dismissal of all of the Witch Hunts, including the Democrat-funded Carroll Hoax, which will continue to be appealed.”

Roberta Kaplan, a lawyer who represented Carroll during the trial and is not related to the judge, said in a statement: “Both E. Jean Carroll and I are gratified by today’s decision. We thank the Second Circuit for its careful consideration of the parties’ arguments.”

The first jury found in May 2023 that Trump sexually abused Carroll and defamed her with comments he made in October 2022. That jury awarded Carroll $5 million.

In January, a second jury awarded Carroll an additional $83.3 million in damages for comments Trump had made about her while he was president, finding that they were defamatory. That jury had been instructed by the judge to accept the first jury’s finding that Trump had sexually abused Carroll. The appeal of that verdict has not yet been heard.

Carroll testified during both trials that her life as an Elle magazine columnist was spoiled by Trump’s public comments, which she said motivated some people to send her death threats and leave her fearful to leave the upstate New York cabin where she lives.

Trump testified for under three minutes at the second trial and was not permitted to challenge conclusions reached by the May 2023 jury. Still, he was animated in the courtroom throughout the two-week trial, and jurors could hear him grumbling about the case.

During appeals arguments in September, Trump lawyer D. John Sauer said testimony from witnesses who recalled Carroll telling them about the 1996 encounter with Trump immediately afterward was improper because the witnesses had “egregious bias” against Trump.

And the attorney said the judge also should have excluded the testimony of the two women who said Trump committed similar acts of sex abuse against them in the 1970s and in 2005. Trump has denied those allegations too.

The 2nd Circuit wrote: “In each of the three encounters, Mr. Trump engaged in an ordinary conversation with a woman he barely knew, then abruptly lunged at her in a semi-public place and proceeded to kiss and forcefully touch her without her consent. The acts are sufficiently similar to show a pattern.”

It said the “Access Hollywood” tape was “directly corroborative” of the testimony by the women of the pattern of behavior they experienced.

The Associated Press does not identify people who say they have been sexually assaulted unless they come forward publicly, as Carroll has done.



source https://time.com/7204188/appeals-court-trump-sexual-abuse-verdict/

Foreign DNA 'sneaks' past bacterial defenses, aiding antibiotic resistance

Foreign DNA 'sneaks' past bacterial defenses, aiding antibiotic resistance
A new study by Tel Aviv University reveals how bacterial defense mechanisms can be neutralized, enabling the efficient transfer of genetic material between bacteria. The researchers believe this discovery could pave the way for developing tools to address the antibiotic resistance crisis and promote more effective genetic manipulation methods for medical, industrial, and environmental purposes.

source https://phys.org/news/2024-12-foreign-dna-bacterial-defenses-aiding.html

Trump Endorses Mike Johnson to Stay on as House Speaker

Trump Endorses Mike Johnson to Stay on as House Speaker
Mike Johnson

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — President-elect Donald Trump is endorsing House Speaker Mike Johnson as he prepares to fight to keep his role leading Republicans in Congress.

Trump said Monday in a post on his social media network that Johnson “is a good, hard working, religious man” and said the Louisiana Republican “will do the right thing, and we will continue to WIN.”

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“Mike has my Complete & Total Endorsement,” Trump wrote.

Johnson’s continued leadership seemed in jeopardy after a fight over a federal funding plan put the government at risk for a pre-Christmas shutdown. Though a deal was reached, the dispute showed the limits of Johnson’s influence and exposed cracks in his party’s support.

The speaker’s first two funding plans collapsed as Trump, who does not take the oath of office until Jan. 20, interceded with calls to suspend or lift the government debt ceiling.

Read More: How a Government Shutdown Could Affect Americans

Johnson, who has worked hard to stay close to Trump, convinced the president-elect that he would meet his demands to raise the debt limit in 2025.

Trump had remained quiet about Johnson’s fate before a Jan. 3 leadership vote for over a week, even as some Republicans signaled that they may not support Johnson for the role.

Rep. Victoria Spartz, one of the Republicans who opposed Kevin McCarthy’s initial bid for the speakership, said in a Monday statement that “our next speaker must show courageous leadership to get our country back on track.”

The Indiana lawmaker went on to make a series of demands for the next leader of the GOP majority, which included major spending reform.

___

Associated Press writer Farnoush Amiri in Washington contributed to this report.



source https://time.com/7204168/trump-endorses-mike-johnson/

Monday, 30 December 2024

Fourth Palestinian Baby Freezes To Death As Families Try To Survive Winter In Gaza

Fourth Palestinian Baby Freezes To Death As Families Try To Survive Winter In Gaza
At least three other babies recently died from the cold, as displaced Palestinians huddle in flimsy tents along the war-torn, rainy and windswept coast.

source https://www.huffpost.com/entry/fourth-palestinian-baby-freezes-death-families-survive-winter-gaza-israel_n_67718be7e4b05ec488933c97

A citizen quest to find sea stars along the San Diego coast can help scientists better understand biodiversity

A citizen quest to find sea stars along the San Diego coast can help scientists better understand biodiversity
The final week of the year will bring low tides to San Diego's coastline, giving tide poolers one more chance this month to participate in a statewide quest to find sea stars—otherwise known as starfish.

source https://phys.org/news/2024-12-citizen-quest-sea-stars-san.html

Sunday, 29 December 2024

1st Test: Mohammad Abbas, Khurram Shahzad Rock South Africa At Start Of Chase

1st Test: Mohammad Abbas, Khurram Shahzad Rock South Africa At Start Of Chase
Pakistan opening bowlers Mohammad Abbas and Khurram Shahzad struck three blows late on the third afternoon as South Africa set out in pursuit of 148 runs to win the first Test.

source https://sports.ndtv.com/cricket/1st-test-mohammad-abbas-khurram-shahzad-rock-south-africa-at-start-of-chase-7352653

On Congress Attacks Over Manmohan Singh Funeral, JP Nadda's 'Super PM' Swipe

On Congress Attacks Over Manmohan Singh Funeral, JP Nadda's 'Super PM' Swipe
In a significant escalation of the row over the choice of Dr Manmohan Singh's cremation site, senior Congress leaders Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Gandhi Vadra attacked the BJP-ruled government at the...

source https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/manmohan-singh-manmohan-singh-last-rites-on-congress-attacks-over-manmohan-singh-funeral-jp-naddas-super-pm-swipe-7352519

What Critics Get Wrong About the Ivy League

What Critics Get Wrong About the Ivy League
If You Didn't Get Into an Elite Private Institution, a Public School Is the Better Investment

Barely a day passes without colleges scolded in the headlines over admissions or athletics and endowments or education and expression. Schools have become scapegoats for both good and bad reasons. Prominent commentators and populist political leaders from both the far left and far right now target higher education as a common enemy.

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In fact the current fight over the meritocracy vs charges of elitism which would not characterize other fields such as sports or entertainment have torn open a seam on the right between Vivek Ramaswamy and Elon Musk in favor of selectivity and merit on one side and Laura Loomer and Matt Goetz on the other.  Ramaswamy declared that American culture has  “venerated mediocrity over excellence” launching what is termed a “civil war” within the MAGA movement. 

Both extremes have arrived on shared areas of concern that include admissions criteria; tolerance of thought on campus; institutional voice; faculty bias in research and education; personal safety; academic integrity; donor influence; curriculum focus; government funding; financial viability, and administrative efficiency. Increasingly, universities, especially selective universities, have been labelled as elitist, self-interested, out-of-touch with societal needs, and lacking accountability.  

What is new is the convergence of a shared populist spirit of elements of the MAGA movement on the right and todays’ self-styled progressives on the left. Together, they find common cause in the skepticism of societal pillars from Wall Street financiers to college educators and politicians. These critiques have corroded public opinion on the value of U.S. higher education, just as the rest of the world treasures the real contributions to the economy, quality of life, scientific knowledge, and cultural enrichment provided by American colleges. The Edelman Trust Barometer shows a steady decline of confidence in all pillars of society from public officials and the media to clergy and colleges. At the 2024 Yale Higher Educational Leadership Summit, fully 97% of the college presidents expressed concern over the loss to public confidence in higher education. 

This summer, the Pew Foundation researchers found roughly half the American public surveyed believe it’s less important to have a four-year college degree today to obtain a well-paying job than it was 20 years ago even as facts show the opposite is true: a significant wage gap still favors those with college degrees.  Similarly, a Gallup survey this summer showed a large drop in overall US confidence in higher education from almost 60% in 2015 to almost half that. Now Americans are roughly equally divided among those who have a great deal or quite a lot of confidence (36%), some confidence (32%), or little or no confidence (32%) in higher education.  

In taking a closer look at the Gallup survey, three issues have risen to the top in the public mind: the political climate on our campuses, questions about whether a traditional liberal arts education best prepares our graduates for success in this tech-fueled world and the cost of higher education as represented by a sticker price that is rapidly approaching $100K per year.

What critics miss in the value of a liberal arts education

Increasingly, people across the political spectrum question whether a traditional liberal arts education, as delivered to most undergraduates by the Ivy and other leading institutions, is the best training for leadership in today’s workplace.  Indeed, the elite schools do not have a stranglehold on certain sectors. In a study of 628 U.S.-born tech founders from 287 different universities, 81%  did not come from Ivy-plus schools. What mattered most in explaining the success of founders was that they graduated from a college.  The success of dropouts like Microsoft’s Bill Gates, Apple’s Steve Jobs, and Facebook/Alphabet’s Marc Zuckerberg were exceptions to such findings.  

Paradoxically, the drop in American public confidence in the liberal arts comes just as the prestige of US universities around the world is at an all-time high and the number of international students studying in the US has climbed to a record 1.1 million a year. And innovation for the public good is alive and well at America’s at the leading institutions. Over a third of US research universities have venture funds spinning out anywhere from 30 to 80 new business a year employing millions of US workers and serving as a source of economic development to communities around the nation. Higher education is the most globally competitive of all US sectors. The US is home to the most top 100 universities by far (36).

Research by the National Bureau of Economic Research has shown impressive individual attainment from Ivy League schools in particular. While less than half of one percent of Americans attend the eight Ivy League colleges, Chicago, Duke, MIT, and Stanford (known as Ivy Plus schools), these universities contributed more than 10% of Fortune 500 CEOs, a quarter of U.S. Senators, half of all Rhodes scholars, and three-fourths of Supreme Court justices appointed in the last half century. Roughly 22% of all Nobel Prizes winners, selected by judges from around the world, were affiliated with Ivy Leagues schools. This scholarship has contributed mightily to the advance of science and industry. The renowned corporate research labs of General Electric (Menlo Park), AT&T (Bell Labs), Xerox (Palo Alto Research Center) have largely disappeared with diminished research even at major chemical and pharmaceutical companies. Most of the great advances in material sciences, agricultural science, drug development, public health, environmental safety, and computer science and the internet originate in the university world.

It must be noted, however, that the value of higher education should be appreciated for more than winning awards and creating wealth but also for quality of life. A decade ago, former Duke President Richard Brodhead co-chaired the Commission on the Humanities and Social Sciences for the American Academy of Arts & Sciences.  In summarizing their findings, Brodhead stated, that value of higher education is not to be measured merely by income earned by colleges graduates.

“Its value is that it supplies enrichment to personal lives, equips students to be thoughtful and constructive social contributors, and prepares them to participate fully and creatively in the dynamic, ever-changing world that awaits them after college.  It’s easy to see why people might get anxious about something so difficult to calculate, and might want a straighter line to the payoff. But the fruits of such education can only be reckoned over long time-horizons, as they enable people to rise to challenges and seize opportunities they could not foresee at first. The lives of successful people almost never involve continuing to do what they prepared for. As their lives unfold, they find that by drawing on their preparation in unexpected ways, they’re able to do things they hadn’t intended or imagined.”

Concerns about the cost of higher education

Probably no issue about American higher education has received as much attention over a sustained period of time than its cost.  And while some of the increase in the sticker price of leading universities can be explained by investments in need-based financial aid even the costs net of financial aid have risen between 1 and 2 percent above any reasonable measure of inflation for decades. Studies show levels of student debt rising at alarming rates.  And while much of the focus has been on undergraduates, levels of student loan debt among those receiving master’s degrees is a more severe issue.  Concerns about student loan debt are exacerbated by the fact that six-year graduation rates for undergraduates across all of higher education are less than 60%.  So, too many students find themselves in the worst possible situation – a boatload of debt and no degree to show for it.

In speaking about cost, the political right characterizes elite higher ed institutions as inefficient organizations choking on administrative bloat.  The political left laments their high cost saying that the sticker price alone turns off prospective students from low socio-economic backgrounds.  Both sides note the explosive growth in endowment values and want endowments to be tapped to reduce costs.

The Ivy Plus institutions counter by noting their impressive investments in financial aid, the fact that they have six-year graduation rates in excess of 95% and the inherently high cost of the bundle of educational experiences that today’s students and their families expect.  At these schools with strong endowments, roughly 50 to 70 percent has their tuition bill covered by need-based financial aid.

Indeed, the more selective schools not only offer a challenging curriculum delivered through small classes with abundant academic support, but also house and feed students, offer them primary health care, undergraduate research and entrepreneurial activities, intramural and varsity athletics, artistic and performance opportunities, study abroad and much more.  The cost of delivering all this is in excess of $100K per student per year at many institutions.   

These expenditures not only enrich the student experience but also enhance their local economies.  American universities employ over 4 million people adding $40 billion annually to the GDP and their technology transfers have contributed over $600 billion to the nation’s GOP in the last twenty years.  

Still, criticisms of the cost of American higher education have merit.  Indeed, too many institutions have lost sight of the fact that their core missions are teaching, learning and discovery and those elements of their core mission should be prioritized in their budget decisions. Administrative staffing costs have been shown to have soared disproportionately, in fact geometrically, compared to faculty staffing costs which only increased arithmetically, alongside only modest student enrollment increases. 

Academic leaders must also demand that administrative and support functions operate as efficiently as possible with new programs funded through internal reallocation.

Critics of leading institutions overstate their case

Many of these critiques are based in legitimate concerns and point to areas where the leading institutions of higher education can do better.  However, they often overstate their case and present outlier examples. 

For example, The Chronicle of Higher Education published a study countering the suggestion that liberal bias plays a meaningful role in tenure decisions.  Indeed, their study concluded that professors were more likely to be dismissed for liberal thought.

And it is incorrect to still label higher education a self-perpetuating caste system. Looking at roughly a century of Harvard data, as an example of elite universities, its student profile has shifted from 100% males to roughly 50/50; 27% of Mayflower/Social Register “Colonial” lineage to less than 6%; less than 2% underrepresented minorities to over 10% ; 0.4% Asian to 19%; 24% from elite prep schools to 4%. Plus, the report card on the impact of upward wealth mobility of these prestigious schools is much more encouraging that the critics from the left and the right acknowledge. Researchers from the National Bureau of Economic Research studied intergenerational income mobility at each college in the United States using data for over 30 million college students from 1999-2013 and found the students from low-income families and high-income families, had comparable incomes, when matched by the school they attended. Thus, the school had an uplifting impact on the wealth of low-income students.

Furthermore, this research found, “The colleges that channel the most children from low- or middle-income families to the top 1% are almost exclusively highly selective institutions, such as UC–Berkeley and the Ivy Plus colleges. No college offers an upper-tail (top 1%) success rate comparable to elite private universities – at which 13% of students from the bottom quintile reach the top 1% – while also offering high levels of access to low-income students.”  Interestingly, the critics of elite schools, indirectly but selectively cite from this research cherry picking around the upward mobility case for elite educational institutions.

Similarly looking at Yale’s current first year class, most college students benefit from some form of financial aid, thanks to the healthy endowments, 88% with zero debt and the 13% who do have debt, owe less than $15,000, hardly a crushing burden. Thanks to a half billion dollars raised from alumni during their recent capital campaign, Dartmouth leaders were able to declare that “The Class of 2028 is the most socioeconomically diverse class in Dartmouth’s history,” with roughly 20% students from low income families receiving Pell Grants, over half of the class receiving financial aid, and no parental financial contributions for families earning less than $125,000 a year roughly 22% of the class.

Despite such facts, Columnist David Brooks wrote in The Atlantic a piece entitled “How The Ivy League Broke America” where he echoes himself in a series of similar pieces he wrote in the New York Times such as one titled The Strange Failure of the American Elite and The ‘Diploma Divide’ and the 2024 Election, both which said elites were leaving others behind.  His newest piece in this month’s Atlantic concluded strangely that “a large mass of voters has shoved a big middle finger in the elites’ faces by voting for Donald Trump.” Of course, Brooks misses the irony that if this anti-Ivy League resentment drove voters, then is drove them to vote for the GOP ticket of two Ivy Leaguer grads, Donald Trump from Penn and J.D. Vance from Yale, and not the Democratic ticket of state school grads.  

Brooks joins a chorus of others who say that the meritocracy overrated. He cites Yale Law professor Daniel Markovits, the author of The Meritocracy Trap charging that applicants whose families come from the top 1 percent of wage earners were 77 times more likely to attend an Ivy League-level school than students from families making below $30,000 a year. Brooks adds that elite schools generally admit more students from the top 1 percent than the bottom 60. Then he joins Markovits in pronouncing the academic gap between the rich and the poor larger than the academic gap between white and Black students in the final days of Jim Crow.

Brooks’s remedies include circumvention of new court barriers to affirmative action diversity goals, reducing the reliance upon standardized testing, emphasizing more humanistic qualities, substituting AI for analytic rigor, improving the colleges’ marketing of their own value, and that “we should aim to shrink the cultural significance of school in American society.” Missing from this list is any concern for the spreading caution of overexercising voice under the cloak of “institutional neutrality.” These practices romanticize the actual selective practices of the University of Chicago and similar schools which purported to limit presidents from showing the same periodic moral responsibility, patriotic duties, and institutional voice of other pillars of American society. 

The risk of ignoring these critiques

Should Ivy Plus leaders even care about public support?  After all, they are highly successful, highly selective institutions that are the envy of the world.  Our answer is that these leaders should care about the erosion of public trust – a lot.  To ignore this growing public distrust is to not only invite more public shaming by government officials as we saw in the House hearings this past year but potentially court more governmental actions such as endowment taxes, bans on DEI programs at public universities and similar interventions.

Although the Ivy Plus institutions seem secure at the moment, one already sees the impacts of the loss of public trust across much of American higher education, significant reductions over the last 25 years in per-capita, inflation-adjusted state appropriations, the expansion of students wanting three-year, no-frills, degrees, employers seeking micro-credentialling rather than a bachelor’s degree, on-line course sharing among institutions to lower costs and ultimately lower enrollments. 

Certainly, higher education must address the ideological orthodoxy of political correctness which has diverted tolerance for original thought.  Towards that end, we see newly emerging efforts to promote dialogue around difficult societal issues on a number of campuses.  Similarly, universities do not do a great job with administrative efficiency with mushrooming overhead along with programs and departments that live on in perpetuity.

Higher education has long been the target of satire from the Marx Brothers to Rodney Dangerfield’s “Back to School.”  All institutions need constructive feedback to respond to changing societal needs, but the ideologically driven attacks on schools have lost their grounding, not to mention their humor, and risk promoting an age of ignorance. 



source https://time.com/7203960/what-critics-get-wrong-about-the-ivy-league/

Saturday, 28 December 2024

Manmohan Singh's Life, Work Profoundly Shaped India's Destiny: Congress

Manmohan Singh's Life, Work Profoundly Shaped India's Destiny: Congress
The Congress Working Committee (CWC) met on Friday and paid glowing tributes to former prime minister Manmohan Singh, saying he was a towering figure in India's political and economic landscape whose...

source https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/manmohan-singhs-life-work-profoundly-shaped-indias-destiny-congress-7346165

Mice now use VR headsets to help scientists study brain activity and behaviour

Mice now use VR headsets to help scientists study brain activity and behaviour
Mice are now being equipped with specially designed virtual reality headsets, allowing researchers to study brain activity in immersive environments. Developed using affordable components, the...

source https://www.gadgets360.com/science/news/mice-vr-headsets-used-to-study-brain-activity-and-behavioural-neuroscience-7342675

Friday, 27 December 2024

Manmohan Singh, 2-Time PM And Architect Of India's Economic Reforms, Dies At 92

Manmohan Singh, 2-Time PM And Architect Of India's Economic Reforms, Dies At 92
Former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh died of age-related medical conditions today, the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) in Delhi said in a statement. He was 92.

source https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/manmohan-singh-2-time-pm-and-architect-of-indias-economic-reforms-dies-at-92-7338451

Fifty years ago, Cyclone Tracy flattened Darwin—and Australia's attitude to disasters changed forever

Fifty years ago, Cyclone Tracy flattened Darwin—and Australia's attitude to disasters changed forever
Exactly 50 years ago, on Christmas Eve 1974, Cyclone Tracy struck Darwin and left a trail of devastation. It remains one of the most destructive natural events in Australia's history.

source https://phys.org/news/2024-12-fifty-years-cyclone-tracy-flattened.html

Thursday, 26 December 2024

Jaipur Tanker Crash: Change In Travel Plans Cost Woman, 20, Her Life

Jaipur Tanker Crash: Change In Travel Plans Cost Woman, 20, Her Life
When 22-year-old Vinita decided to take a bus from Udaipur instead of boarding a train to reach Jaipur, little did she know that her change in plans to reach the destination early would cost her life.

source https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/jaipur-tanker-crash-change-in-travel-plans-cost-20-year-old-woman-her-life-7331053

Repression of climate and environmental protest is intensifying across the world

Repression of climate and environmental protest is intensifying across the world
Climate and environmental protest is being criminalized and repressed around the world. The criminalization of such protests has received a lot of attention in certain countries, including the UK and Australia. But there have not been any attempts to capture the global trend—until now.

source https://phys.org/news/2024-12-repression-climate-environmental-protest-world.html

Climate, migration and conflict mix to create 'deadly' intense tropical storms like Chido

Climate, migration and conflict mix to create 'deadly' intense tropical storms like Chido
Cyclone Chido was an "intense tropical cyclone", equivalent to a category 4 hurricane in the Atlantic. It made landfall in Mayotte, a small island lying to the north-west of Madagascar on December 14, generating wind gusts approaching 155mph (250km/hr). Later on, it hit Mozambique, East Africa, with the same ferocity.

source https://phys.org/news/2024-12-climate-migration-conflict-deadly-intense.html

King Charles III Focuses Christmas Message on Healthcare Workers in Year Marked by Royal Illnesses

King Charles III Focuses Christmas Message on Healthcare Workers in Year Marked by Royal Illnesses
The British Royal Family Attend The 2024 Christmas Morning Service

King Charles III used his annual Christmas message Wednesday to hail the selflessness of those who have cared for him and the Princess of Wales this year, after both were diagnosed with cancer.

The 76-year-old monarch said he and his family are “continually” impressed by those who dedicate their lives to helping others.

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“From a personal point of view, I offer special, heartfelt thanks to the selfless doctors and nurses who this year have supported me and other members of my family through the uncertainties and anxieties of illness and have helped provide the strength, care and comfort we have needed,” he said in a prerecorded speech.

The broadcast came several hours after the monarch waved to a large crowd of onlookers who traditionally gather to see the royal family attend Christmas Day services at a church on Sandringham, the estate on the windswept North Sea coast that has served as a family retreat for generations.

The king walked with Queen Camilla as his eldest son, Prince William, Kate and their three children followed. The king’s daughter-in-law, who has slowly returned to public duties after completing chemotherapy, hugged a cancer patient after the service.

Two of Charles’ siblings, Anne, the Princess Royal, and Prince Edward, the Duke of Edinburgh, were also in the procession.

Notably absent at St. Mary Magdalene Church was Prince Andrew. The king’s 64-year-old brother has retreated further into the shadows amid news that a Chinese businessman had been barred from the U.K. because of concerns he cultivated links with Andrew on behalf of the Chinese Communist Party.

Andrew, once second in line to the British throne, has become a constant source of tabloid fodder because of his money woes and links to questionable characters, including the late American financier and convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

Even after stepping back from public duties, Andrew has continued to appear at family events and his absence from Sandringham suggests a further retreat from the public eye. The king has been under pressure to distance Andrew from the royal family to avoid further embarrassment to the monarchy.

While Andrew said he never discussed anything sensitive with the suspected Chinese spy and had ceased contact with the man as soon as concerns were raised, the scandal raises further questions about his judgment and distracts from the work of the royal family, said Ed Owens, author of “After Elizabeth: Can the Monarchy Save Itself?’’

“The reason why this is a problem for the king is simply that the king is trying to rebrand the monarchy at the moment, centering its focus around him, but also around William, Catherine, what they are trying to do,” Owens said.

“It’s been a very difficult year for the monarchy, not least because of the two cancer diagnoses. And all the positive headlines that the king has been trying to generate of late, unfortunately, are overshadowed by the behavior, the reckless behavior, of his younger brother, who once again finds himself in the headlines.”

The king’s Christmas speech is the third since he ascended the throne after Queen Elizabeth II died in September 2022, but the first since he was diagnosed with an undisclosed form of cancer in February.

The monarch’s holiday message is watched by millions of people in the U.K. and across the Commonwealth, with many households timing Christmas lunch around it.

The king’s treatment, which is believed to be ongoing, forced him to step away from public appearances for two months. He has slowly returned to public life in recent months and was in good spirits on a tour of Australia and the South Pacific in October.

A few weeks after Charles began treatment, the Princess of Wales announced her own cancer diagnosis, which sidelined her for much of the year.

In a voiceover for her annual Christmas carol service at Westminster Abbey, which was recorded this month but broadcast on Tuesday evening, Kate also reflected on the love and support that she received.

“The Christmas story encourages us to consider the experiences and feelings of others,” she said. “It also reflects our own vulnerabilities and reminds us of the importance of giving and receiving empathy, as well as just how much we need each other in spite of our differences.”

Charles spoke at the Fitzrovia Chapel in central London, which was part of the now-demolished Middlesex Hospital where his first wife, Diana, opened London’s first dedicated ward for those with AIDS.

The king had tasked the team organizing the broadcast with finding a site away from the royal estate, and one with health connections, a strong community presence and a place of solace and reflection for those with or without faith.

It’s a rare occasion when the monarch’s Christmas message is not recorded at a royal residence, notably Buckingham Palace or Windsor Castle. The last time his late mother recorded her message outside the royal estate was in 2006.

Charles also paid his respect to World War II troops who perished on the beaches of northern France as well as the few remaining veterans, many of them centenarians, who attended the 80th anniversary of the D-Day landings in Normandy in June.

He said it was an “enormous privilege” to meet “the remarkable veterans of that very special generation who gave of themselves so courageously on behalf of us all” but that the specter of war was haunting the world this Christmas.

“During previous commemorations, we were able to console ourselves with the thought that these tragic events seldom happen in the modern era,” he said. “But on this Christmas Day, we cannot help but think of those for whom the devastating effects of conflict in the Middle East, in Central Europe, in Africa and elsewhere pose a daily threat to so many people’s lives and livelihoods.”

On the domestic front, the king expressed his “deep sense of pride” for communities that came together after riots broke out in many towns and cities in the summer following a stabbing rampage at a dance class that left three girls dead and several wounded.



source https://time.com/7203885/king-charles-christmas-message-2024/

Wednesday, 25 December 2024

PM To Launch Rs 49,000-Crore Ken-Betwa River Link Project Tomorrow

PM To Launch Rs 49,000-Crore Ken-Betwa River Link Project Tomorrow
Prime Minister Narendra Modi will lay the foundation of the long-awaited Ken-Betwa river-linking project on Wednesday in Chhatarpur in Madhya Pradesh.

source https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/prime-minister-narendra-modi-to-launch-rs-49-000-crore-ken-betwa-river-link-project-in-madhya-pradesh-tomorrow-7324586

Meta’s 2025 vision: Ray-Ban Smart Glasses to get built-in display, report suggests

Meta’s 2025 vision: Ray-Ban Smart Glasses to get built-in display, report suggests
The upcoming Ray-Ban smart glasses from Meta are expected to include built-in displays, enhancing user experience with notifications and AI integration. 

source https://www.livemint.com/technology/tech-news/metas-2025-vision-ray-ban-smart-glasses-to-get-built-in-display-report-suggests-11735062393156.html

Tuesday, 24 December 2024

Decoding atmospheric effects of gravity waves with high-res climate simulations

Decoding atmospheric effects of gravity waves with high-res climate simulations
Researchers at Stanford University, the European Center for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts, or ECMWF, and Oak Ridge National Laboratory used the lab's Summit supercomputer to better understand atmospheric gravity waves, which influence significant weather patterns that are difficult to forecast.

source https://phys.org/news/2024-12-decoding-atmospheric-effects-gravity-high.html

New wildlife model captures species interactions in New York State

New wildlife model captures species interactions in New York State
Cornell ecologists and colleagues have developed a new model that captures the abundance of wildlife species in a region and offers new insights into animals' interactions with each other—information that will aid wildlife management and conservation.

source https://phys.org/news/2024-12-wildlife-captures-species-interactions-york.html

Monday, 23 December 2024

Neville Says Rashford's Career At Man United Nearing 'Inevitable Ending'

Neville Says Rashford's Career At Man United Nearing 'Inevitable Ending'
Gary Neville believes Marcus Rashford is approaching the "inevitable ending" of his Manchester United career after the forward was again left out of the matchday squad on Sunday.

source https://sports.ndtv.com/football/gary-neville-says-marcus-rashfords-career-at-manchester-united-nearing-inevitable-ending-7309129

Sunday, 22 December 2024

Good lord! Is that another spam call? Here why scammers keep getting through to you

Good lord! Is that another spam call? Here why scammers keep getting through to you
The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India plans to update spam call regulations soon due to a surge in scams. Indian SIM card users receive billions of spam calls monthly, often routed through international services to evade local regulations.

source https://www.livemint.com/technology/tech-news/good-lord-is-that-another-spam-call-here-why-scammers-keep-getting-through-to-you-11734793649225.html

'You can't hear a smile': How video visits help dads in prison stay connected with their kids

'You can't hear a smile': How video visits help dads in prison stay connected with their kids
Many Australians know December 21 as "Gravy Day." This is a reference to Paul Kelly's song and new film How to Make Gravy, where a prisoner named Joe writes a letter to his family four days before Christmas. In it Joe, missing his wife and relatives, asks, "Won't you kiss my kids on Christmas Day?".

source https://phys.org/news/2024-12-video-dads-prison-stay-kids.html

The moon might be older than scientists previously thought; a new study shines light on its history

The moon might be older than scientists previously thought; a new study shines light on its history
A physicist, a chemist and a mathematician walk into a bar. It sounds like the start of a bad joke, but in my case, it was the start of an idea that could reshape how scientists think about the history of the moon.

source https://phys.org/news/2024-12-moon-older-scientists-previously-thought.html

What 200 CEOs Told Me About Their Hopes for the Trump Administration

What 200 CEOs Told Me About Their Hopes for the Trump Administration
President-Elect Trump Speaks To The Press At Mar-A-Lago

I’ve hosted Yale CEO Summits before– but few have taken place in such fraught circumstances as our most recent 150th Yale CEO Summit this week or with such remarkable results.

The day after Luigi Mangione was indicted for murder, 200 top American CEOs came together, under heavily armed protection, in a bold statement of defiance of the populist fringes, not frightened away or intimidated for standing up for leadership and American character. They gathered at the Ziegfield Ballroom in New York, 32 steps away from where UnitedHealth CEO Brian Thompson was murdered in broad daylight by Mangione.

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Despite warnings from their boards and from their own security teams not to attend public CEO gatherings right now, they came. Not even far-left protesters chanting for their assassination outside our venue could keep these CEOs away, nor could the “wanted” posters or the “playing cards” with their faces on them circulating on social media. 

But even beyond the symbolism of CEOs coming together steps away from where Thompson was murdered, this CEO Summit took place against the backdrop of President-elect Trump’s return to office. Most CEOs of the nation’s largest companies did not support Trump’s candidacy, with only one Fortune 100 CEO having donated to Trump; nevertheless, CEOs rightly understand that the election is over—and that it is time to unify and come together, because it is in the interests of the American public as well as their own shareholders and stakeholders, to help President Trump be as successful as he can be.

Despite criticisms from the far left, CEOs, including those from positions across the ideological spectrum, view it as their patriotic duty to meet with Trump now, engage constructively, and help steer presidential policies in useful directions, especially given their own mixed reaction to some of Trump’s policy proposals. 

In particular, following a spirited discussion with including some who had just met Trump at Mar-a-Lago, 69% of these CEOs surveyed believe that Trump’s nomination of RFK Jr. to oversee Health & Human Services could pose a threat to public health and the pharmaceutical business, and expressed a desire to help inform the president-elect about how the pharma industry has improved public health and extended the average lifespan of American citizens to record levels. 

At the same time, 56% of CEOs surveyed believe that Trump’s proposed tax cut from 21% to 15% will encourage greater reshoring and domestic manufacturing activity, and 53% of CEOs surveyed expressed support for Trump’s use of tariffs as a bargaining chip. 

Paradoxically, though 53% of CEOs support Trump’s tariff threats, few CEOs are excited about the potential impact of Trump’s proposed tariffs on their own companies. Fifty-five percent of respondents answered that they are worried about the impact of Trump’s tariffs on their own company, compared to only 12% who answered that they are excited about the impact of tariffs on their company, and 34% who were indifferent. But at the same time, CEOs don’t seem to believe Trump will actually follow through on all his tariffs threats, as 64% of CEOs responded that they are not shifting supply chains yet in anticipation of any potential tariffs.

We were surprised by the number of issues which the group generally agreed on and the spirit of constructive candor and engagement embodied by the group and near-unanimous optimism for moving forward. Virtually all participants agreed on the continuing strength of the American economy, one of the best economies anyone has seen in their lifetimes—with 77% of CEOs answering that they believe America’s best days are ahead of us. They also agreed that the CEOs visiting Mar-a-Lago are being responsible in pursuing the best interests of not only their own shareholders and the nation at large.

CEOs largely did the same in 2016: though many did not support Trump in that campaign either, they were eager to help him, and the nation, as the incoming president. Many participants expressed the hope that Trump does not relapse into the divide-and-conquer bullying that drove business leaders away. The genuine leadership modeled by these CEOs, and the spirit of constructive, collaborative engagement across divisions captured at our recent Yale CEO Summit, reflects why American business leaders are still some of the most admired leaders across American society, no matter what extremist fringes may say. At a time when business leaders are increasingly under attack, CEOs, and American capitalism provide a compass of centrist, reasonable, genuine leadership, which ought to be a source of celebration and inspiration. 



source https://time.com/7203755/trump-administration-ceo-hopes/

Saturday, 21 December 2024

Avalanches, icy explosions and dunes: NASA is tracking New Year on Mars

Avalanches, icy explosions and dunes: NASA is tracking New Year on Mars
Instead of a winter wonderland, the Red Planet's northern hemisphere goes through an active—even explosive—spring thaw. While New Year's Eve is around the corner here on Earth, Mars scientists are ahead of the game: The Red Planet completed a trip around the sun on Nov. 12, 2024, prompting a few researchers to raise a toast.

source https://phys.org/news/2024-12-avalanches-icy-explosions-dunes-nasa.html

Friday, 20 December 2024

CRISPR screening method uses colored nuclei to reveal key genes

CRISPR screening method uses colored nuclei to reveal key genes
The identification of genes involved in diseases is one of the major challenges of biomedical research. Researchers at the University of Bonn and the University Hospital Bonn (UKB) have developed a method that makes their identification much easier and faster: they light up genome sequences in the cell nucleus.

source https://phys.org/news/2024-12-crispr-screening-method-nuclei-reveal.html

Thursday, 19 December 2024

Why natural disasters hit harder in rural school districts

Why natural disasters hit harder in rural school districts
A week after Hurricane Sandy flooded New York City's streets and subways in 2012, the city's schools were back in business. But schools in rural North Carolina did not reopen until almost a month after Hurricane Helene roared through in late September 2024.

source https://phys.org/news/2024-12-natural-disasters-harder-rural-school.html

Supreme Court Will Hear Arguments Over Potential U.S. TikTok Ban

Supreme Court Will Hear Arguments Over Potential U.S. TikTok Ban
Popular Apps And IT Brands Photo Illustrations

(WASHINGTON) — The Supreme Court on Wednesday said it will hear arguments next month over the constitutionality of the federal law that could ban TikTok in the United States if its Chinese parent company doesn’t sell it.

The justices will hear arguments Jan. 10 about whether the law impermissibly restricts speech in violation of the First Amendment.

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The law, enacted in April, set a Jan. 19 deadline for TikTok to be sold or else face a ban in the United States. The popular social media platform has more than 170 million users in the U.S.

It’s unclear how quickly the high court might issue a decision.

Lawyers for the company and China-based ByteDance had urged the justices to step in before Jan. 19. The high court also will hear arguments from content creators who rely on the platform for income and some TikTok users.

Read More: As a Potential TikTok Ban Looms, Creators Worry About More Than Just Their Bottom Lines

The timing of the arguments means that the outgoing Biden administration’s Justice Department will make the case in defense of the law that passed Congress with bipartisan support and was signed by Democratic President Joe Biden in April.

The incoming Republican administration might not have the same view of the law.

President-elect Donald Trump, who once supported a ban but then pledged during the campaign to “save TikTok,” has said his administration would take a look at the situation. Trump met with TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in Florida on Monday.

The companies have said that a shutdown lasting just a month would cause TikTok to lose about one-third of its daily users in the U.S. and significant advertising revenue.

The case pits free speech rights against the government’s stated aims of protecting national security, while raising novel issues about social media platforms.

A panel of federal judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit unanimously upheld the law on Dec. 6, then denied an emergency plea to delay the law’s implementation.

Without court action, the law would take effect Jan. 19 and expose app stores that offer TikTok and internet hosting services that support it to potential fines.

It would be up to the Justice Department to enforce the law, investigating possible violations and seeking sanctions. But lawyers for TikTok and ByteDance have argued that Trump’s Justice Department might pause enforcement or otherwise seek to mitigate the law’s most severe consequences. Trump takes office a day after the law is supposed to go into effect.



source https://time.com/7203069/supreme-court-hear-arguments-tiktok-ban/

What We Do and Don’t Know About the Brazen Bombing That Killed a Top Russian General in Moscow

What We Do and Don’t Know About the Brazen Bombing That Killed a Top Russian General in Moscow
Head of Russian nuclear protection forces killed in Moscow explosion

The killing of a senior Russian general in a bombing outside his apartment building in Moscow was the boldest assassination yet of a top military officer and again brought the war in Ukraine to the streets of the capital.

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Some things to know about the attack and who is suspected of being behind it:

What happened?

Lt. Gen. Igor Kirillov was killed Tuesday morning by a bomb hidden on an electric scooter parked near the entrance of his apartment block in southeastern Moscow as he left for his office. Kirillov’s assistant also died in the attack.

The bomb was triggered remotely, according to Russia’s Federal Security Service, or FSB. The explosion was caught on video from a camera mounted inside a car, showing the men walking out of the building and the fiery blast.

Who were the victims?

Kirillov, 54, was the chief of Russia’s Radiation, Biological and Chemical Protection Forces. These special troops are tasked with protecting the military from the enemy’s use of nuclear, chemical or biological weapons and ensuring operations in a contaminated environment.

He was under sanctions from several countries, including the U.K. and Canada, for his actions in Moscow’s war in Ukraine. On Monday, Ukraine’s Security Service, or SBU, opened a criminal investigation against him, accusing Kirillov of directing the use of banned chemical weapons.

Russia has denied using any chemical weapons in Ukraine and has accused Kyiv of using them.

Kirillov, who took his post in 2017, was one of the highest profile figures to level those accusations. He held numerous briefings to accuse the Ukrainian military of using toxic agents and planning to launch attacks with radioactive substances — claims Kyiv and its Western allies rejected as propaganda.

His assistant, Ilya Polikarpov, was also killed in the attack.

Who has claimed responsibility?

An SBU official said Tuesday that the agency was behind the attack. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the information, described Kirillov as a “war criminal and an entirely legitimate target.”

The SBU official provided the video of the bombing.

Who has been detained?

The FSB said Wednesday it detained a suspect, described as a citizen of the Central Asian nation of Uzbekistan who was born in 1995. The Tass and RIA-Novosti news agencies identified him as Akhmad Kurbanov.

According to the FSB, the suspect said he was recruited by Ukrainian special services. The Associated Press could not confirm the conditions under which the suspect made the statement to the security services.

The FSB said the suspect said he had been promised $100,000 and resettlement to a European Union country in exchange for killing Kirillov.

The agency said that acting on instructions from Ukraine, the suspect traveled to Moscow, where he obtained a homemade bomb, placed it on an e-scooter and parked it at the entrance to Kirillov’s apartment building.

The suspect rented a car to monitor the location and set up a camera that livestreamed the scene to his handlers in the Ukrainian city of Dnipro, detonating the bomb when Kirillov left the building, the FSB said.

The suspect faces a sentence of up to life imprisonment, the FSB said.

Russian media reports said the FSB tracked the suspect by studying video from surveillance cameras and cellphone calls.

What’s still not known?

The FSB has not said how the suspect was recruited. He was detained in a village in the Moscow region, Interior Ministry official Irina Volk told Tass.

It is not known where he is being held or when he will appear in court. That is expected in the coming days, to hear the terms of his pre-trial detention. Under Russian law, a person may only be remanded in custody for 48 hours before a court order is made.

What has Russia said about the attack?

Russian officials have described the bombing as a “terrorist act.”

The Kremlin said Wednesday it was “obvious” that Ukraine was behind Kirillov’s killing, with spokesman Dmitry Peskov saying Kyiv “does not shy away from terrorist methods.”

While President Vladimir Putin has not publicly spoken about the attack, Peskov said he expressed his condolences on Kirillov’s death.

Dmitry Medvedev, deputy head of Russia’s Security Council, described the attack as an attempt by Kyiv to distract public attention from its military failures and vowed that its “senior military-political leadership will face inevitable retribution.”

Vyacheslav Volodin, speaker of the lower house of parliament, called Kirillov “a professional military man, an intellectual, a Russian patriot.”

He “did a lot to increase the effectiveness of the radiation, chemical and biological defense forces, to ensure the security and sovereignty of our country,” Volodin said.

— Illia Novikov in Kyiv, Ukraine, contributed.



source https://time.com/7203062/igor-kirillov-russia-ukraine-bombing-explained/

Wednesday, 18 December 2024

Unlocking the brain: Peptide-guided nanoparticles deliver mRNA to neurons

Unlocking the brain: Peptide-guided nanoparticles deliver mRNA to neurons
Penn Engineers have modified lipid nanoparticles (LNPs)—the revolutionary technology behind the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines—to not only cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB) but also to target specific types of cells, including neurons. This breakthrough marks a significant step toward potential next-generation treatments for neurological diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.

source https://phys.org/news/2024-12-brain-peptide-nanoparticles-mrna-neurons.html

Tuesday, 17 December 2024

500-year simulations reveal natural drivers of North Atlantic Oscillation shift

500-year simulations reveal natural drivers of North Atlantic Oscillation shift
There are still many unknowns about the causes leading to the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) shift—a critical climate phenomenon in the Northern Hemisphere—to the east and west of Iceland. To date, some hypotheses suggest that this process known to the international scientific community might be related to the impact of greenhouse gases on the planet.

source https://phys.org/news/2024-12-year-simulations-reveal-natural-drivers.html

Monday, 16 December 2024

Storms Across U.S. Bring Heavy Snow, Dangerous Ice, and a Tornado in California

Storms Across U.S. Bring Heavy Snow, Dangerous Ice, and a Tornado in California
Severe Weather California


OMAHA, Neb. — A tornado near a mall in central California swept up cars, uprooted trees and sent several people to the hospital. In San Francisco, authorities issued the first-ever tornado warning.

Elsewhere, inclement weather plagued areas of the U.S., with dangerous conditions including heavy snow in upstate New York, a major ice storm in Midwest states and severe weather warnings around Lake Tahoe.

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The ice storm beginning Friday evening created treacherous driving conditions across Iowa and eastern Nebraska Friday and into Saturday and prompted temporary closures of Interstate 80 after numerous cars and trucks slid off the road. In upstate New York, more than 33 inches (84 centimeters) was reported near Orchard Park, which is often a landing point for lake-effect snow.

On Saturday, a tornado touched down near a shopping mall in Scotts Valley, California, about 70 miles (110 kilometers) south of San Francisco, around 1:40 p.m. The tornado overturned cars and toppled trees and utility poles, the National Weather Service said. The Scotts Valley Police Department said several people were injured and taken to hospitals.

Some trees toppled onto cars and streets and damaged roofs in San Francisco. The damage was being assessed to determine if the city was indeed hit by a tornado, which had not occurred since 2005, according to the weather service.

Roger Gass, a meteorologist in the weather service’s office in Monterey, California, said the warning of a possible tornado in San Francisco was a first for the city, noting an advanced alert did not go out before the last tornado struck nearly 20 years ago.

Severe Weather California

“I would guess there wasn’t a clear signature on radar for a warning in 2005,” said Gass, who was not there at the time.

The fast-moving storm prompted warnings for residents to take shelter, but few people have basements in the area.

“The biggest thing that we tell people in the city is to put as many walls between you and the outside as possible,” Meteorologist Dalton Behringer said.

More than a foot (30 centimeters) of snow fell at some Lake Tahoe ski resorts, and a 112-mph (181-kph) gust of wind was recorded at the Mammoth Mountain resort south of Yosemite National Park, according to the weather service’s office in Reno, Nevada. Up to 3 feet (91 centimeters) of snow was forecast for Sierra Nevada mountaintops.

The Tahoe Live music festival at Palisades Tahoe ski resort in California was expected to go ahead as planned Saturday and Sunday in spite of a winter storm warning for the area. Lil Wayne was scheduled to perform Saturday night, with Diplo as the headliner on Sunday, the festival’s website said.

A winter storm warning was set to expire at 10 p.m. Saturday, but an avalanche warning remained in effect into the following night for elevations above 8,000 feet (about 2,400 meters) around Tahoe.

Interstate 80 was closed along an 80-mile (130-kilometer) stretch from Applegate, California, to the Nevada line just west of Reno on Saturday. The California Highway Patrol reopened the road in the afternoon for passenger vehicles with chains or four-wheel drive and snow tires.

The severe weather in the Midwest resulted in at least one death. The Washington County Sheriff’s office in Nebraska said a 57-year-old woman died after she lost control of her pickup on Highway 30 near Arlington and hit an oncoming truck. The other driver sustained minor injuries.

Businesses announced plans to open late Saturday as temperatures rose high enough in the afternoon to melt the ice in most places.

“Luckily some warmer air is moving in behind this to make it temporary,” said Dave Cousins, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service’s office in Davenport, Iowa.

Tens of thousands of people in western Washington state lost electricity Saturday as the system delivered rain and gusty winds, local news outlets reported.



source https://time.com/7202343/us-weather-storms-snow-ice-california-tornado/

Sunday, 15 December 2024

U.S. Officials Have Been in Direct Contact With the Syrian Rebel Group That Ousted Assad, Says Blinken

U.S. Officials Have Been in Direct Contact With the Syrian Rebel Group That Ousted Assad, Says Blinken
Jordan US Blinken

AQABA, Jordan — U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Saturday that American officials have been in direct contact with the Syrian rebel group that spearheaded the overthrow of President Bashar Assad’s government but is designated a foreign terrorist organization by the United States and others.

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Blinken is the first U.S. official to publicly confirm contacts between the Biden administration and Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS, which led a coalition of armed opposition groups that ousted Assad from power last Sunday.

Speaking at a news conference in Aqaba, Jordan, Blinken would not discuss details of the contacts but said it was important for the U.S. to convey messages to the group about its conduct and how it intends to govern in a transition period.

“Yes, we have been in contact with HTS and with other parties,” Blinken said. He added that “our message to the Syrian people is this: We want them to succeed and we’re prepared to help them do so.”

HTS, which was once an affiliate of al-Qaida, has been designed as a foreign terrorist organization by the State Department since 2018. That designation carries with it severe sanctions, including a ban on the provision of any “material support” to the group or its members. The sanctions do not, however, legally bar U.S. officials from communicating with designated groups.

In an interview Saturday on Syrian television, the group’s leader, Ahmad al-Sharaa, formerly known as Abu Mohammed al-Golani, did not address any direct contact with the United States, but said the new authorities in Damascus, the capital, are in touch with Western embassies.

HTS has worked to establish security and start a political transition after seizing Damascus and has tried to reassure a public both stunned by Assad’s fall and concerned about extremist jihadis among the rebels. Insurgent leaders say the group has broken with its extremist past.

Al-Sharaa appeared in a video message Friday congratulating “the great Syrian people for the victory of the blessed revolution.”

U.S. officials say al-Sharaa has been making welcome comments about protecting minority and women’s rights but remain skeptical that he will follow through on them in the long run.

On Friday, the rebels and Syria’s unarmed opposition worked to safely turn over to U.S. officials an American man who had been imprisoned by Assad.

U.S. officials are continuing their search for Austin Tice, an American journalist who disappeared 12 years ago near Damascus.

“We have impressed upon everyone we’ve been in contact with the importance of helping find Austin Tice and bringing him home,” Blinken said.



source https://time.com/7202305/us-officials-in-contact-with-syrian-rebel-group-blinken/

Saturday, 14 December 2024

Genetic method leverages bacterial transfer mechanism to produce new active ingredients

Genetic method leverages bacterial transfer mechanism to produce new active ingredients
Microorganisms produce a wide variety of natural products that can be used as active ingredients to treat diseases such as infections or cancer. The blueprints for these molecules can be found in the microbes' genes, but often remain inactive under laboratory conditions.

source https://phys.org/news/2024-12-genetic-method-leverages-bacterial-mechanism.html

What to Expect at Your First Therapy Session

What to Expect at Your First Therapy Session
therapy

If you’re thinking about going to therapy for the first time, you might feel a mix of emotions: excitement to get a professional’s take on issues that are bothering you, anxiety and awkwardness about opening up.

All of those feelings are valid (which is something you’re about to start hearing a lot). “It’s natural to feel nervous—you’re challenging societal norms that encourage you to stay quiet, endure, and push through,” says Amie Grant, the owner of Take Up Space Therapy Services in Cleveland. But in therapy you can reject those expectations and honor your voice, your needs, and your truth, she says.

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Krista Jordan, a clinical psychologist in Austin, reiterates that going to therapy for the first time can feel even more stressful if you don’t know what to expect. To quell your nerves, it can be helpful to keep in mind that therapists are just people, and that as a part of their training, most have been in therapy themselves, “so we know what it’s like to sit on the couch side of the room.”

Here’s exactly what to expect at your first therapy appointment, and how to set yourself up for success.

What happens before your first appointment

Many therapists offer a 10-20 minute complimentary consultation call to see if you feel it’s a good fit before booking a formal session. If you decide to move forward, they will likely have you fill out paperwork covering insurance information, basic medical history, what you hope to achieve in therapy, and any medications you take. Some practitioners try to screen for certain conditions like depression or anxiety in advance of your first session, so you may fill out one or more of these mental-health questionnaires before your appointment, then review the results in your first session, says Jordan.

Therapy has started. Now what?

“When I’m as prepared as possible in any situation, I’m less nervous,” says Sheri Langston, a licensed professional counselor and director of Rocky Mountain Therapy Group in Denver. Therapy is no exception.

Read More: Is Intermittent Fasting Good or Bad for You?

Most appointments are between 45 and 55 minutes, though some forms of therapy may last up to two hours. All therapists conduct their sessions differently depending on factors like what kind of therapy they practice, their personality, and how they prefer to structure meetings.

But all therapy modalities share one commonality: You’ll be talking about your feelings. (No getting around that part.)

Body talk

You’ll likely sit facing your therapist, says Jordan, since therapists are trained to read facial expressions and body language. Seeing your therapist’s face and body while you talk to them can also assuage some of your fears, says Jordan. “For example, if you are worried that you are saying something that makes you look like a loser, but you see that your therapist has a warm look of compassion on their face, it can help you to believe that maybe people don’t see you as a loser,” she says. “Seeing your therapist’s reactions to what you say can actually be part of the growth process.”

However, lots of people are uncomfortable with prolonged eye contact, so know that it’s OK not to stare at the therapist every second. If your session is in-person, the therapist will often deliberately have art or knickknacks around the room that you can look at when you need a break from looking directly at them, she says.

Similarly, if you’re in a virtual therapy session, feel free to look away from the screen periodically to give yourself a break.

The one exception to these face-to-face set-ups is for psychoanalysis, which is conducted with the client lying down and looking away from the analyst, but “most therapies no longer do that arrangement,” says Jordan.

Settle in

Not sure where to sit? “If there is a sofa or cushy chair, that is for you,” Langston says. “The biggest clue is: look for the box of tissues and sit there.”

So once the session begins, should you break out a pen and notepad? Grab the tissues? Start talking or let the therapist steer the show?

Read More: 10 Things to Say When Someone Asks Why You’re Still Single

The truth is, most new therapy patients are anxious before their first session, and therapists know this and will do their best to put you at ease. “Walking into your first session—whether virtually or in person—can feel like stepping into unfamiliar territory, but know this: you belong here,” says Grant. 

She always starts sessions for new patients by explaining her approach to therapy. She also urges patients to release their pressure to perform: “You don’t need a detailed life story or perfect answers. The fact that you showed up is enough,” Grant says. And remember: “You’re in control of how much you share.”

What to talk about

Many people don’t realize that the first therapy session—often called an “intake”—isn’t about going deep, Jordan says. A good therapist will take time to get to know you, she says, and doesn’t need you to divulge all the most painful things you’ve experienced on day one. 

“Therapists are actually trained not to let you talk about all the gory details of trauma in the first session,” says Jordan. “Even if you eventually get around to talking about really difficult memories, we are trained to do it in small pieces so that you don’t fall apart and can’t function the rest of the day.”

Instead, focus on things like what’s been bothering you in the past week, stress about an upcoming event, or a work incident that rubbed you the wrong way. Jordan says you can also discuss goals that you would like to pursue, like learning to be more assertive or better at identifying your emotions.

Share your goals

It can also reduce your pre-session anxiety to have a short version of what you hope to accomplish in therapy ready, such as “I’d like to work on self-esteem” or “I want to stop repeating negative partner choices,” says Jordan. If the conversation stalls or you’re not sure what to say next, it’s OK to ask the therapist, “Can you help me understand what would be useful to talk about?” she adds.

It’s the therapist’s job to be flexible. “I’ve had clients who prefer to share as little as possible until they get to know me better,” Langston says. “Sometimes a client will say, ‘I’d rather talk about that in a later session’ or ‘I’m not ready to talk about this yet.’ Any compassionate, person-centered therapist not only understands, but will appreciate your honesty and will honor your words.”

Give yourself time

As you build a foundation with your therapist, remember that the first session (or even the first few sessions) are just as much about them getting to know you as you getting to know them and determine if they are a good fit for you.

Read More: The Surprising Benefits of Talking Out Loud to Yourself

Things might feel a little awkward during those early sessions, and that’s normal, says Grant. After introductions in an intake meeting, Grant asks about the person’s goals, challenges they’re facing, and what support looks like to them.

People shouldn’t expect to “feel better” after the initial session, Langston adds. Initial sessions are about information gathering, so expect a lot of questions as your therapist gets to know you and your needs. “All of this is to build a treatment plan that’s personalized for you,” says Langston. 

Remember to ask questions

Some therapists may devote the last few minutes of an intake session for you to ask questions, recap what you’ve discussed, and determine action plans; they may even give you a “homework” assignment to try before your next meeting. Before your session ends, Langston recommends patients ask two questions:

  1. “What are my treatment goals?” You and your therapist will together decide on the goals for therapy.
  2. “How often should we meet?” Therapists typically like to see clients at a regular cadence such as weekly or once every two weeks in order to meet treatment goals.

As for actually remembering—and putting into practice—key takeaways from your session? During therapy, some people might find it useful to jot down important advice and next steps by hand or on their phone, while others prefer to partake in the session without any note-taking (you could also ask your therapist to share their personal notes with you after your meeting).

Another option is to write down notes immediately after a session while your thoughts are fresh. Some people also like to record their therapy sessions to review later; just ask your therapist if this is okay with them.

What to do after your first session

Take a deep breath and give yourself some time to reflect after a therapy session. For those conducting their session virtually, you may want to take a walk around your block to clear your head and mark a transition between activities, rather than hopping right back into your inbox, checking the stock market, or cooking dinner.

“You don’t need to decide right away whether this therapist is ‘the one,’” says Grant. She suggests asking yourself questions like “Did I feel comfortable?” and “Could I see myself opening up to this person over time?” Still, she says, if the answer is uncertain, that’s normal, so you may have to give yourself more time or more sessions to decide.

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If you realize a therapist isn’t the right fit right away, however, Grant says you should have no qualms about not scheduling any further sessions with them. “If you feel comfortable, you can let them know directly. A simple statement like, ‘I don’t feel this is the right match for me, but I appreciate your time,’ can help you close that chapter,” she says.  

In some situations, you may feel a therapist is a good match but have feedback for them. This kind of constructive feedback can take several forms, Grant says:

  • “Can we slow down a bit next time? I need time to process.”
  • “I’d like more structure or specific tools to take away from our sessions.”
  • “I feel like we’ve been focusing on [X topic], but I want to shift toward [Y topic].”

Since your therapist is there to support you, a negative or dismissive response to you voicing your opinion may be a sign to part ways with a practitioner, says Grant.

In general, therapists have thicker skin than you might think, and all good therapists want what’s best for the patient, so they won’t take things personally if you decide to part ways.

“It’s OK to shop around for a therapist that meets your needs. Try to determine the criteria that are important to you,” says Langston. She often ends initial sessions by telling clients that if she’s not a good fit for them, they shouldn’t feel obligated to continue. “I want my clients to feel comfortable—it’s their time and their therapy,” she says. “If you are with a therapist that isn’t a good fit, it will hinder the therapeutic process.”

“There have been 50 years of research on what makes therapy work,” Jordan says. “The only thing all of these studies agree on is that you have to feel that you have a good fit with your therapist.” 



source https://time.com/7201659/what-to-expect-therapy/