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Monday, April 13, 2020

Dallas Mavericks Owner Mark Cuban Optimistic That the NBA Could Be Back In Early June

Mark Cuban

Sports enthusiasts are clamoring for some sort of return of sports—in any form. Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban feels the same and is almost certain that the National Basketball Association (NBA) can make a return by early June, according to Yahoo Sports.

The Shark Tank investor and outspoken Dallas Mavericks owner expressed his optimism in an interview with Pittsburgh radio station, 93.7 The Fan. “If things really go our way, it’s not inconceivable to me, and this is me being hopeful and not being scientific, that we could potentially play games in early June.

“I think we’re coming back. I can’t tell you exactly when, but this is purely a science and doctor’s thing. My attitude always is it’s not about if the glass is half empty or half full, it’s who’s pouring the water. In this particular case, it’s the scientists pouring the water. All I know from all the science and everything that I’m reading, I think we’re making enough advances that several of them will come through so we can start planning what a comeback would look like.

“I’m a big believer in American exceptionalism, and everything I’m starting to hear in terms of the science is coming along and the medical advances that we’re making to fight this thing makes me very positive. If I had to bet, and this is more a guess than a bet, I’d say early June is when you see teams start to take the field and maybe play games just for television.”

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver has stated on many occasions that the league will not make a return until national health officials and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) give a full clearance to resume activities. In the meantime, the NBA and National Basketball Players Association just recently agreed to extend the moratorium on transactions indefinitely.

The league has also been discussing the possibility of playing games in a “bubble” city like Las Vegas, potentially setting a two-week quarantine where teams can work out in solitary settings, then go through a two-week training camp followed by an abbreviated regular season and postseason.



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Caribbean Nations Can’t Get U.S. Medical Supplies Under Trump Policy

Caribbean

The spread of COVID-19, or the novel coronavirus, has put a strain on many countries around the world as they struggle to contain the outbreak and provide resources for their citizens. Smaller Caribbean nations are struggling to protect the lives of their citizens against the coronavirus with limited resources and their allies in the West aren’t looking to help them.

A spokesperson from U.S. Customs and Border Protection confirmed to the Miami Herald last week that the agency is working with the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to prevent distributors from sending needed personal protective equipment, or PPE, such as face masks, ventilators, and gloves, to overseas territories.

“To accomplish this, CBP will detain shipments of the PPE specified in the President’s Memorandum while FEMA determines whether to return the PPE for use within the United States; to purchase the PPE on behalf of the United States; or, allow it to be exported,” the statement read.

Three Caribbean nations —the Bahamas, Cayman Islands, and Barbados —have all reportedly had container loads of personal protective equipment purchased from U.S. vendors blocked from entering their countries by U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

The blockade was linked to President Donald Trump’s April 3 signing of the Defense Production Act. The order gives the federal government more control over the procurement of coronavirus-related supplies and it also allowed the administration to ban certain exports.

“We are talking about personal protective equipment; we’re talking about durable medical devices and gloves, gowns, ventilators as well,” Bahamas Health Minister Dr. Duane Sands told the Miami Herald. Sands continued to explain how the Bahamian government had already been fielding multiple “complaints from freight forwarders and shipping companies that they were having challenges clearing certain items.”

Barbados has a similar incident with a shipment of 20 ventilators being blocked by U.S. Customs and Border Protection. In the Cayman Islands, eight ventilators and 50,000 masks that were produced and purchased in the U.S. were removed from a Grand Cayman-bound ship in Miami.

After the ministers of nations went public, the White House issued a statement to address the accusations.

“The United States, like many other nations, is currently experiencing a high demand for ventilators, masks, gloves, and respirators that is straining available supplies and production capacity,” a senior administration official told the Herald. “President Trump has made clear that this Administration will prioritize the well-being of American citizens as we continue to take bold, decisive action to help slow the spread of the virus and save lives.”

The official also said that the administration “is working to limit the impacts of PPE domestic allocation on other nations. The United States will continue to send equipment and supplies not needed domestically to other countries, and we will do more as we are able.”



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Airlines Will Offer Fewer Choices and Charge More After Coronavirus Crisis

airlines black man removed from flight airlines

Airline executives believe when the country reopens, a drop in demand will lead to fewer flights and airlines charging more per flight.

The travel industry has been turned upside down by the coronavirus outbreak. According to CNN, Nationwide quarantine orders have all but shut down travel and domestic carriers have cut their flights by 70% to 90%.

“If the recovery is as slow as we fear, it means our airline and our workforce will have to be smaller than it is today,” said United Airlines CEO Oscar Munoz and President Scott Kirby in a message to employees last Friday.

Lawmakers passed a $50 billion aviation bailout last week that will keep airlines in business for the next six months. However, airline executives are expecting fewer flights and slumping demand, which, of course, means job cuts.

At the beginning of 2020, there were more than 750,000 jobs in the industry, but that will certainly change. Additionally, fliers will come back to a significantly different industry. One with fewer choices in airlines, flight times, and available routes and markets.

“Fewer seats flying means fewer cheap seats at the margin,” Philip Baggaley, chief credit analyst for airlines for S&P Global told CNN.

The last time the airline industry saw such a dramatic change was after the 9/11 attacks. Before that attack, there were nine major US airlines but Continental, Northwest, and US Airways all merged into the four remaining carriers, American, United, Delta, and Southwest. Those four now make up 80% of the US airline market.

Smaller companies that offer cheap fares such as Jet Blue and Spirit, will help to keep prices lower but those companies will also have significant financial setbacks due to the coronavirus outbreak.

It took the airline industry three years to bounce back after the 9/11 attacks. After the Great Recession of 2008, it took even longer. 2013 was the first year that passenger traffic reached what it was before the recession.

Even in those situations, however, people were still flying. Today, the number of passengers entering TSA screening points fell 93% between Tuesday and the last Tuesday of March in 2019.

The airline industry has taken some big blows during the outbreak. Earlier this month, the US government ordered all US airlines to pay refunds to customers whose flights were canceled due to the coronavirus outbreak. In late March, Airlines for America, the trade group representing US air companies, told the government it would need $50 billion to stay in business.



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Former NFL quarterback Tarvaris Jackson dies in car crash at 36

Tarvaris Jackson, former NFL quarterback who played for several teams over his 10-year career, died in a car crash in Alabama Sunday night.

NFL Media says the 36-year-old, who was a second-round pick out of Alabama State in 2006, played with the Minnesota Vikings, Seattle Seahawks, and Buffalo Bills. He spent most of his NFL career as a backup quarterback who made spot starts.

READ MORE: Black quarterbacks changing perceptions in NFL playoffs

Jackson was 17-17 in his 34 starts in the NFL and finished 59.6% career passes, throwing for a total of 7,263 yards and 39 touchdowns compared to 35 interceptions. He appeared in 59 games, according to NFL Media statistics.

As a member of the Vikings, Jackson, then 24, started 12 games in 2007, which resulted in an 8-4 record, which included throwing for nine touchdowns and also landing 12 interceptions.

Tarvaris Jackson theGrio.com
GLENDALE, AZ – JANUARY 01: Quarterback Tarvaris Jackson #7 of the Seattle Seahawks during the NFL game against the Arizona Cardinals at the University of Phoenix Stadium. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

Four years later, Jackson, now with the Seattle Seahawks, started 14 games and was 7-7 in the top position, throwing 14 touchdowns to 13 interceptions, according to NFL Media.

As a Seahawk, Jackson played backup to Russell Wilson from 2013 to 2015 and earned a Super Bowl ring.

Today, Wilson took to Twitter to confirm the death and honor his friend.

“TJack… you will be missed. Praying for your family…Love you man,” Wilson tweeted with the broken heart emoji.

At the time of his death, Jackson was an offensive analyst and quarterbacks coach at Tennessee State. Last year, he worked as a quality control and quarterbacks coach at his beloved alma mater, Alabama State.

As an NFLer, Jackson spent five seasons with the Minnesota Vikings and started 20 games. His best season by far, however, was a 14-game starter for the Seattle Seahawks in 2011, where he threw for 3,091 yards, including 14 touchdowns.

READ MORE: Ex-NFL star Chris Johnson accused of murder for hire, denies allegations

Jackson also spent a single year with the Buffalo Bills but never played that season.

Jackson was married to Lakitta Jackson and the couple has three children, Tarvaris, Takayla, and Tyson, according to his Tennessee State bio.

The post Former NFL quarterback Tarvaris Jackson dies in car crash at 36 appeared first on TheGrio.



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Trump retweets post calling for Dr. Anthony Fauci to be fired

President Donald Trump’s frustration with Dr. Anthony Fauci seemed to reach a boiling point Sunday night when the president, indirectly, called for Fauci’s ousting.

READ MORE: Ohio Dem says Trump should face ‘crimes against humanity’ charges

Trump retweeted a post from DeAnna Lorraine, a former Republican congressional candidate, who called for Fauci’s firing after the infectious disease expert told CNN’s State of the Union on Sunday that lives could have been saved from COVID-19 had the United States acted sooner.

“Sorry Fake News, it’s all on tape. I banned China long before people spoke up. Thank you @OANN” Trump tweeted, forwarding Lorraine’s post, which read: “Fauci is now saying that had Trump listened to the medical experts earlier he could’ve saved more lives. Fauci was telling people on February 29th that there was nothing to worry about and it posed no threat to the US at large. Time to #Fire Fauci.”

The president was in defensive mode, tweeting out this and several other messages responding to criticism on how he has handled the coronavirus pandemic. Trump pointed to how he “banned China” as an action that helped curb the devastation. He also continued to blame the news media, China, the World Health Organization, former President Barack Obama, some governors, and Democrats for the state the country is in, according to The New York Times.

CORONAVIRUS theGrio.com
SEATTLE, WA – FEBRUARY 29: Healthcare workers transport a patient on a stretcher into an ambulance at Life Care Center of Kirkland. (Photo by David Ryder/Getty Images)

The criticism that has Trump’s ire is centered on how his slow action is at least partially to blame for the quickly spreading disease that has now claimed the lives of more than 22,000 people in the United States.

Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and a member of Trump’s Coronavirus Taskforce, is said to have long frustrated Trump privately, but the president’s retweet brings this frustration to a head publicly.

In the CNN interview, Fauci said early actions would have saved lives.

“I mean, obviously, you could logically say that if you had a process that was ongoing and you started mitigation earlier, you could have saved lives,” Fauci said on CNN. “Obviously, no one is going to deny that. But what goes into those kinds of decisions is complicated. But you’re right. Obviously, if we had, right from the very beginning, shut everything down, it may have been a little bit different. But there was a lot of pushback about shutting things down.”

READ MORE: Soledad O’Brien gets real on ‘Dear Culture’ about COVID-19 misinformation

Now the president is facing advice from Fauci and other public health experts to proceed with caution about reopening the country on May 1. These experts have stated their concerns that the date may be too soon to end social distancing efforts and that this could prompt another wave of COVID-19 cases.

Meanwhile, Trump’s economic advisers are eager to restart the economy and seem to have that front and center of their thought process.

The post Trump retweets post calling for Dr. Anthony Fauci to be fired appeared first on TheGrio.



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NASA Wants to Photograph the Surface of an Exoplanet

Our galaxy is potentially full of habitable planets. A team of scientists plans to take a picture of one by turning the sun into a giant camera lens.

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Hydration Awareness: 10 Ways to Be ‘Water Wise’ (Even in the Workplace)

water hydration

Water.

We all need it—and know we need it—for optimum health and wellness, but a shocking few live daily life (and those work hours) in a properly hydrated state and certainly not with appropriate consistency. One doctor-driven report revealed that fully 75%, a staggering three-fourths majority, of Americans may suffer from chronic dehydration. It went on to underscore that, “Over time, failure to drink enough water can contribute to a wide array of medical complications, from fatigue, joint pain and weight gain to headaches, ulcers, high blood pressure and kidney disease.” Apparently, this is the tip of the proverbial dehydration-induced illness iceberg.

“During a normal day, we lose about two liters of water just through breathing, sweat and other bodily functions,” notes board-certified internist Dr. Blanca Lizaola-Mayo. “Even while asleep, we can lose over one kilogram (2.2 pounds) of water-weight not just through sweating, but respiration as well. Even air conditioning has drying effects on our body. The health implications of dehydration are vast and can range from mild to severe, including problems with the heart, blood pressure and breathing, headaches and cognitive issues like concentration … just to name a few. Those who’ve felt that ‘afternoon slump’ should know that dehydration is the No. 1 cause of daytime fatigue. And, it’s important to understand that when we first start to sense thirst, we are already close to 2% dehydrated.”

For all of its importance, proper hydration is a delicate balance to uphold. An Institute of Medicine report cited the fragility of keeping the body duly hydrated, noting, “Over the course of a few hours, body water deficits can occur due to reduced intake or increased water losses from physical activity and environmental (e.g., heat) exposure.” So, a perfectly hydrated body can tip the scales into a dehydrated state in a fairly short amount of time, whether actively (as with exercising), or passively (as with breathing).

Understanding there are commonplace facets of our collective lifestyles, both at work and at home, that put us at a higher risk of developing mild to severe dehydration, here are some insights and tips from preeminent health experts to help you stay happily hydrated:

How Much Water Do You Need?

According to the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, “Many factors impact how much water you need, including your age, gender, activity level, and overall health. For women, the amount of total water is about 11.5 cups per day and for men about 15.5 cups. These estimates, however, include fluids consumed from both foods and beverages, including water. You typically get about 20% of the water you need from the food you eat. Taking that into account, women need about nine cups of fluid per day and men about 12.5 cups in order to help replenish the amount of water that is lost.”

What Are Common Causes of Dehydration?

According to the Mayo Clinic, “Sometimes dehydration occurs for simple reasons: You don’t drink enough because you’re sick or busy, or because you lack access to safe drinking water when you’re traveling, hiking or camping.” While certainly not all-inclusive, known causes for dehydration can encompass sweating from exercise and playing a sport; air travel; traversing in overly hot, humid, cold or windy weather conditions; drinking too much coffee and other diuretic beverages; recovering from a hangover; and a litany of other relatively commonplace daily activities.

Do All Fluids Hydrate the Body?

No. The Cleveland Clinic is very clear with its advisory that “Some beverages are better than others at preventing dehydration,” and that “alcoholic and caffeinated beverages, such as coffee, teas, and colas, are not recommended for optimal hydration. These fluids tend to pull water from the body and promote dehydration. Fruit juice and fruit drinks may have too many carbohydrates, too little sodium, and may upset the stomach. Adequate hydration will keep your summer activities safer and much more enjoyable.”

What Are Some Benefits of Proper Hydration?

While the benefits of a properly hydrated body are copious, the CDC points to a few top-line health advantages, including keeping your temperature normal; lubricating and cushioning joints, protecting your spinal cord and other sensitive tissues; and getting rid of wastes through urination, perspiration and bowel movements. Healthline also offers a number of evidence-based health benefits of drinking plenty of water, which include maximizing physical performance; optimized energy levels and mood; and aiding digestion and elimination. Be mindful of water intake, however, as Dr. Lizaola-Mayo warns, “Drinking too much water or fluid can lead to hyponatremia, which causes sodium in the cells to become diluted and too low and can be dangerous—and even life-threatening—if untreated.”

What Are Signs of Early or Mild Dehydration?

The Rehydration Project, a nonprofit organization, says that “the degree of dehydration is graded according to signs and symptoms that reflect the amount of fluid lost. In the early stages of dehydration, there are no signs or symptoms. Early features are difficult to detect but include dryness of mouth and thirst. As dehydration increases, signs and symptoms develop.”

According to the organization, symptoms of early or mild dehydration include the following: flushed face; extreme thirst; consuming more than normal or the inability to drink; dry, warm skin; the inability to pass urine or reduced amounts (dark, yellow); dizziness made worse when standing; weakness; cramping in the arms and legs; crying with few or no tears; sleepiness or irritableness; sickness; headaches; dry mouth or dry tongue with thick saliva.

What Are Signs of Moderate to Severe Dehydration?

The Rehydration Project also denotes that symptoms of moderate to severe dehydration include low blood pressure; fainting; severe muscle contractions in the arms, legs, stomach, and back; convulsions; a bloated stomach; heart failure; sunken fontanelle—soft spot on an infant’s head; sunken dry eyes with few or no tears; skin loses its firmness and looks wrinkled; lack of elasticity of the skin (when a bit of skin lifted up stays folded and takes a long time to go back to its normal position); rapid and deep breathing (faster than normal); and a fast, weak pulse. They say that “In severe dehydration, these effects become more pronounced and the patient may develop evidence of hypovolemic shock, including diminished consciousness; lack of urine output; cool moist extremities; a rapid and feeble pulse (the radial pulse may be undetectable); low or undetectable blood pressure; and peripheral cyanosis. Death follows soon if rehydration is not started quickly.”

Who is at Greatest Risk of Dehydration?

No one is immune to a dehydrated condition, but certain populations are at greater risk. The Mayo Clinic indicates that these vulnerable groups include infants and children, older adults, those with chronic illnesses and people who work or exercise outside. Serious complications can ensue, which they point out can include heat injury (ranging in severity from mild cramps to heat exhaustion or potentially life-threatening heatstroke); urinary tract infections, kidney stones and even kidney failure; seizures due to electrolyte imbalance, sometimes with a loss of consciousness; and low blood volume (hypovolemic) shock. They say it’s time to call your doctor if you or a loved one “has had diarrhea for 24 hours or more; is irritable or disoriented and much sleepier or less active than usual; can’t keep down fluids; and/or has bloody or black stool.”

How Can You Be a Water-Wise Shopper?

The USDA recommends consumers shop smartly, advising us to “Use the Nutrition Facts label to choose beverages at the grocery store. The food label and ingredients list contain information about added sugars, saturated fat, sodium and calories to help you make better choices.”

There are also highly efficacious and economical dehydration avoidance and treatment innovations that can be integrated into one’s lifestyle and used on a daily basis. The experts at SOS Hydration explain that their medically-formulated drink-mix powder accelerates hydration equivalent to an I.V. drip, rehydrating the body fully three-times faster than by drinking water alone. This unique product’s heightened hydration process leverages the body’s digestive “sodium/glucose co-transport system”—an Oral Rehydration Therapy (ORT) endorsed by the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNICEF.

Can Foods Help You Stay Hydrated?

Yes, the body intakes hydration not only from water and other liquids but foodstuffs as well—some boasting as much 90% water content. According to the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, those in the 90-100% water content range include fruits like cantaloupe, strawberries and watermelon; as well as vegetables like lettuce, cabbage, celery, spinach, and cooked squash. The organization further states that options with a 70% to 89% water content include fruits like bananas, grapes, oranges, pears and pineapples; vegetables such as carrots, cooked broccoli and avocados; and dairy products like yogurt, cottage cheese and ricotta cheese. For drinks, the good folks at EatRight.org advise we focus on unsweetened beverages, like water, in order to limit calories from added sugars, and to use strategies to increase water intake—like adding a flavor enhancer. For this, a fruit-flavored rehydration accelerant like the SOS Hydration drink mix can do tasty double duty.

Can Sports Drinks Actually Undermine Hydration?

Yes. Why pay extra money for excess sugar when what you really need are electrolytes? Dr. Lizaola-Mayo says that “in truth, only a very small amount of sugar is required to help transport electrolytes and water into the cells as part of the sodium-glucose co-transport system. In fact, this system is most effective when it utilizes one molecule of sugar and one molecule of sodium in combination, which helps create the fastest and most effective way to transport water into the cells for hydration. Even water rehydration and other drinks that do actually claim to utilize the sodium-glucose co-transport system have been shown to contain excess sugar to enhance taste, apparently discounting the fact that that this added sugar commensurately increases calorie count and actually undermines cellular H2O absorption. If there is excess sugar in a drink, even one engineered as a rehydration solution, then you can trigger reverse osmosis. This process occurs when there is an incorrect balance of sugar to sodium. Sodium always follows sugar and water always follows sodium. In a drink that is correctly balanced (utilizing the sodium-glucose co-transport system) then the water and electrolytes optimally flow into the cells. In high sugar “rehydration” drinks there is too much sugar for the quantity of sodium and, as such, sodium and then water is actually leeched from the cells and passed out of the body as urine. This can actually cause dehydration—the opposite effect for a rehydration or sports beverage one has spent their hard-earned dollars to purchase.”

So whether indoors or out, active or at rest, suffering illness or perfectly healthy, one thing is clear: Keeping your water sources well at hand and ingesting with regularity (and consistency) can have a profoundly beneficial effect on your health and well-being. It’s one easy and highly accessible assist for a multitude of maladies.

 


As the Executive Editor and Producer of “The Luxe List,” Merilee Kern is an internationally-regarded brand analyst, strategist and futurist. As a wellness industry veteran and health advocate, she’s also author of the award-winning, illustrated fictional children’s book, “Making Healthy Choices – A Story to Inspire Fit, Weight-Wise Kids” (Amazon). Merilee spotlights noteworthy industry innovators, change-makers, movers and shakers: experts, brands, products, services, destinations and events.

Connect with her at www.TheLuxeList.com / Instagram www.Instagram.com/LuxeListReports / Twitter www.Twitter.com/LuxeListReports / Facebook www.Facebook.com/LuxeListReports / LinkedIN www.LinkedIn.com/in/MerileeKern.

***Some or all of the accommodations(s), experience(s), item(s) and/or service(s) detailed above may have been provided or arranged at no cost to accommodate this review, but all opinions expressed are entirely those of Merilee Kern and have not been influenced in any way.***



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Texas Nursing Home Patients with COVID-19 Given Unproven Drug

COVID-19 testing coronavirus

A nursing home in Texas has been using an unproven drug to treat people who have tested positive for COVID-19, according to NPR.

A doctor at The Resort at Texas City, a nursing home in Texas City, reportedly distributed the anti-malaria drug hydroxychloroquine to many of the elderly patients diagnosed with COVID-19. The drug, which has not been officially approved for the treatment of the coronavirus, is being used by the physician and he is tracking the outcomes in what he’s calling an “observational study.”

The drug has been mentioned several times by President Donald Trump as a game-changer, yet, the nation’s leading health experts don’t yet agree with the assessment Trump has levied about the drug in its fight against COVID-19. As reported by NPR, “Some of the nation’s most respected health officials have said there is insufficient evidence showing that the 80-year-old drug, which is typically used to stave off malaria or treat lupus and rheumatoid arthritis, is a viable treatment in battling the new virus.” In addition, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has not approved hydroxychloroquine for the treatment of COVID-19.

Robin Armstrong, a physician and the medical director of the nursing home, has made the controversial decision to administer hydroxychloroquine last week. “It’s actually going well. People are getting better,” Armstrong told NPR, stating that after just a couple of days, some of the 39 patients on the medication are showing signs of improvement.

Scientists and health officials are concerned about the drug as it is known to have serious negative health impacts. “To be clear, no one is worse than when they started,” Armstrong said emphatically. “From my perspective, it’s irresponsible to sit back and do nothing. The alternative would have been much much worse.” 

People are also concerned about the political connections Armstrong had in getting the drugs. Armstrong called Republican Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and he reached out to Texas state Sen. Bryan Hughes, also a Republican, who knew someone on the board of the New Jersey-based company Amneal Pharmaceuticals. The company, which makes and distributes the drug, has donated more than a million tablets nationwide, including to the states of Texas and Louisiana.

Armstrong has also acknowledged that some of the families were not aware their relatives were being given the drug, saying that “for the most part,” he consulted with each nursing home resident prior to giving them the tablets.



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Biden releases plan to ‘safely’ reopen country amid COVID-19

Democratic presidential hopeful Joe Biden says more of the country needs to be tested for the novel coronavirus and Americans need to continue social distancing until new cases of the potentially deadly disease are down significantly.

In a Sunday op-ed in the New York Times titled, “My Plan to Safety Reopen America,” Biden calls for “widespread, easily available and prompt testing” which not only includes the test to confirm one has COVID-19 but a second form of testing, rapid serology tests, to determine who has “already been infected with the coronavirus and has antibodies.”

READ MORE: Joe Biden proposes forgiving student loans, targets HBCU attendees in plan

“This isn’t rocket science; it’s about investment and execution. We are now several months into this crisis, and still, this administration has not squarely faced up to the ‘original sin’ in its failed response — the failure to test,” Biden wrote in the op/ed.

The former vice president released his strategy as some debate President Donald Trump’s May 1 target to end social distancing measures for some people and have them return back to work. But Biden writes that before America can “reopen more businesses and put more people back to work” some aggressive measures need to be implemented first.

For example, Biden argues that social distancing needs to continue until Trump uses “his full powers under the Defense Production Act to fight the disease with every tool at our disposal.”

SPARTANBURG, SC – FEBRUARY 28: Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden shakes hands with supporters during a campaign event at Wofford University February 28, 2020 in Spartanburg, South Carolina. South Carolinians will vote in the Democratic presidential primary tomorrow. (Photo by Sean Rayford/Getty Images)

“He needs to get the federal response organized and stop making excuses. For more Americans to go back to their jobs, the president needs to do better at his job,” Biden writes in The Times op/ed.

He also said a full plan needs to be rolled out to ensure hospitals are ready to address “flare-ups of the disease” that will likely occur after social distancing ends.

“Things will not go back to ‘normal’ right away,” Biden writes. “As public health experts have said, we should expect activity to return gradually, with sites like offices and stores reopening before arenas and theaters.”

“Public health officials will need to conduct effective disease surveillance. Hospitals need to have the staff and equipment necessary to handle any local outbreaks, and we need an improved federal system to get help to these places as needed,” Biden continues.

READ MORE: Civil rights icon Rep. John Lewis endorses Joe Biden for president

Biden said we need to think of the economic impact of COVID-19 and the health responses as one and the same. Both require an effective strategy as we await the development of a vaccine, he adds.

This strategy has so far been missing from the nation’s president, Biden adds.

“As we prepare to reopen America, we have to remember what this crisis has taught us: The administration’s failure to plan, to prepare, to honestly assess and communicate the threat to the nation led to catastrophic results. We cannot repeat those mistakes,” Biden wrote.

The post Biden releases plan to ‘safely’ reopen country amid COVID-19 appeared first on TheGrio.



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J. Lo and Diddy reunite for a danceoff on Instagram Live

On Easter, Jennifer Lopez and Sean “Diddy” Combs kept us entertained with a light-hearted dance competition, and spoke to the heroism of those on the front lines.

Since the novel coronavirus broke, there have been DJs and singers holding concerts and helping us get through social distancing. We’ve had comedians making us laugh and Andrea Bocelli performing a live stream Easter concert from the Duomo di Milano. Yesterday, Lopez and Combs, both 50, joined in on the fun, showing us their best dance moves in an Instagram Live dance-a-thon, which raised money for Direct Relief, a charity that brings critical medical equipment to poorer communities.

READ MORE: Diddy urges people not to rely on Trump: ‘He don’t give a F about us

Diddy’s dance-a-thon, which later featured Snoop Dogg, Justin Bieber, Shaq, DJ Khaled, Swizz Beatz, Kelly Rowland, Maluma, according to Billboard, brought in more than $3.4 million in donations for Direct Relief. Direct Relief is a non-profit coordinating the distribution of protective equipment (masks, gloves, and gowns,) to healthcare personnel across the country.

While the dancing and celebrity faces brought levity to those quarantined around the world due to the coronavirus, Lopez and her fiancé, Alex Rodriguez, 44, along with Combs paused for a moment to talk about those on the front line.

“Our whole life is about being committed to something, about having drive, about inspiring other people,” Lopez shares during her segment. “I can’t think of anybody right now who is doing that better than the health care workers, who are literally inspiring everybody to just think bigger. And to put yourself on the line to help others is the ultimate sacrifice.”

“It’s just a beautiful thing and it’s almost unimaginable what they are doing with their lives.” She continues. “It is hard to explain… I’m having trouble trying to find the words.”

At that moment, Puff jumped in and offered the words the triple threat entertainer was searching for, “It’s like heroic. The courage is something that I have to ask myself would I…”

Then the two, while A-Rod watched on in agreement, marveled about the conditions that these medical professionals are exposed to, even without the proper protective gear to execute their jobs safely.

“… and it’s so many health care workers who are going risking their lives, not seeing their families… they haven’t been tested… It’s like sending them out there detonating a bomb without a bomb suit.”

Lopez chimed in with disbelief, “Without no protection!”

Sean Combs Jennifer Lopez theGrio.com
LOS ANGELES, CA – NOVEMBER 22: Actress/recording artist Jennifer Lopez (L) and Sean Combs attend Jennifer Lopez’s 2015 American Music Awards After Party hosted by CÎROC with Cross Pens (Photo by Christopher Polk/Getty Images for ABA)

The two also recognized that many of the places that workers are being pulled from are areas heavily populated with Black and Brown working-class people like their hometowns, Harlem or the Bronx. Combs stressed that this is why they are donating. Direct Funds will make sure that the funds go to the inner-city communities and those most impacted on multiple levels by this pandemic.

A-Rod offered his thoughts on their roles as celebrities to bring attention to the social justice element regarding health care professionals that often gets overlooked.

“The three of us all come from New York. We come from the bottom. These people, they are the real heroes. Sometimes they get it twisted saying that athletes or entertainers [are], but they are the heroes on the frontline protecting us and doing God’s work.”

After speaking about the crisis, A-Rod and Diddy had a moment that was cool for fans to see: A-Rod told the mogul that he liked his hat. Combs was rocking a Yankees fitted, the team that the 14 times All-Star helped win The Championship in 2009. That’s when Lopez dropped a bomb on her old ex about her new love. She revealed that A-Rod is one of the biggest Bad Boy fans around.

“Puffy, Puffy… You have to know this,” Lopez says. “This guy right here is your biggest fan from the Bad Boy era. You and Mase are his heroes.”

“Every party we do, he is like put on Puffy and Mase.”

That’s when Diddy recommends that they throw on a jam from that era, selecting the “Been Around The World” Remix. Rightfully so. In the video, Lopez makes an extraordinary appearance, making Diddy dazzle as a dancer.

“Hey, I love you guys, I can’t wait until we can see each other again. May God bless y’all, and I just love you guys!” Combs said to Lopez and Rodriguez.

“Love you, buddy!” the former Yankees star shot back. Lopez also said, “We love you! We love what you’re doing, we love everybody out there. We want to send you all the love in the world, from our family to yours.”

While his children exchanged cordialities to Lopez and Rodriguez, Combs exclaimed, “I’m the luckiest man in the world.”

READ MORE: Jennifer Lopez admits she doesn’t ‘really count’ two of her previous marriages

Combs and Lopez once dated before calling it quits in 2001. Since then, they have remained friendly and even reunited in 2018 when Lopez wrapped up her All I Have Las Vegas residency.

Meanwhile, Lopez also hit up Instagram to post pictures as she celebrated Easter with her family.

“Just want to wish everybody an amazing and happy Easter. I know these are challenging times,” Lopez said in an IG video clip that showed her in a selfie and a picture of her, Rodriguez and their kids using a bunny filter.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

Happy Easter everybody!!!! 💐🌸💛💕

A post shared by Jennifer Lopez (@jlo) on

“Today is a day that we celebrate miracles,” Lopez added. “So let’s pray for our own and very near future. I love you all. Happy Easter.”

The post J. Lo and Diddy reunite for a danceoff on Instagram Live appeared first on TheGrio.



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Amid shutdowns, supply chains pivot and global demand for specialized talent intensifies

The global landscape of supply chain management has changed drastically in the past several weeks. Businesses, organizations, and people are rapidly innovating to improve supply chains and upskill and reskill the workforce and themselves to accommodate disruptions caused by the global Covid-19 health crisis. Online retailers and logistics providers are announcing vast hiring initiatives, while companies and organizations grapple with the logistics demands of supplying for vital services.

Even in the middle of these disruptions, a cohort of 383 dedicated online learners concluded nine to 18 months of learning to pass their comprehensive final exams, earning their MITx MicroMasters program credentials in supply chain management. These new credential-holders bring the total number of holders to 2,243 from 115 countries. The majority of credential-holders hail from the United States, India, Brazil, Spain, and China, some of the world’s most influential economies. While credential holders’ median age is 31, holders range in age from 21 to 74, practicing diverse business functions. They are currently employed at more than 700 companies worldwide, ranging from the largest multinational corporations to local, family-owned businesses.

Given the volatile nature of logistics during disruptions, the comprehensive theoretical and practical knowledge gained from these courses is already having an impact. “The program significantly changed my mindset to be proactive. This helped me improvise ahead of the current pandemic challenges to provide visibility across my supply chain,” says learner Mohamed El Tayeb, a demand planner in Saudi Arabia. “Technically, everything I learned in the program is coming in handy now.” Similarly, Matthias Stolz, a supply chain management project manager from Germany, claims “The MicroMasters program helped me to be able to make back-of-the-envelope calculations to quantify effects and evaluate risks and opportunities fast. This allowed me to confidently prepare decisions for the top management which have already enabled the company to respond quickly.”

Learners like El Tayeb and Stolz are leading the way on the ground, along with contributors from across the supply chain, to be cited as everyday heroes by MIT’s Center for Transportation and Logistics and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, among many others.

MIT will recognize the contributions of credential holders and program participants in a public online completion celebration on April 15 at 11 a.m. EDT. “Our goal is to pioneer supply chain digital education to shape the leaders of the future,” says program Director Eva Ponce. “We are bringing MIT education to anyone from anywhere to improve the capabilities and prospects of professionals through our massive open online courses. It is my distinct pleasure to thank the committed and passionate team responsible for the development and delivery of this program and to welcome this learner cohort to the credential-holder community, who are the future of the supply chain profession.”

As a new normal becomes apparent in the foreseeable future, experts agree that the global disruptions should serve as a wake-up call for supply chain and logistics managers. They foresee that practitioners will need an array of practical and analytical tools at their disposal to accommodate rapidly changing demands. Teaching supply chain management online is one strategy to meet this dynamic demand. The MITx MicroMasters Program in Supply Chain Management is becoming recognized as a go-to knowledge baseline for individuals and organizations to meet their global demand for talent.



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Beats Powerbeats Review: Best Workout Earbuds for iPhones

Nervous about losing an AirPod? The redesigned Powerbeats sound better, last longer, and stay on your head.

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Energy economics class inspires students to pursue clean energy careers

Jing Li, an assistant professor of applied economics in the MIT Sloan School of Management, stands at the front of the classroom and encourages her undergraduate students to dig deeper. “Why was this a good idea?” she prompts. “How did people come up with these numbers?”

It’s the second-to-last day of class, and the students in 15.0201/14.43 (Economics of Energy, Innovation, and Sustainability) are discussing their teams’ results and the logic behind the decisions they made in the Electricity Strategy Game — a main feature of this elective.

“[With] so much magic,” a student quips in response to Li’s question, to a chorus of laughter.

The real magic, they all know, is in Li’s approach to teaching: She holds her students accountable for their conclusions and throws them head-first into challenging problems to help them confidently engage with the complexities of energy economics.

“She didn’t baby us with tiny data sets. She gave us the real deal,” says Wilbur Li, a senior computer science major and mechanical engineering minor (no relation to Jing Li). He initially took the class to round out his fall semester schedule, unsure if he would keep it due to a rigorous class load. However, just a couple of weeks into the semester, he was sold on the class.

“It’s one of those classes at MIT that isn’t really a requirement for anyone, but it’s a class that only draws people who are genuinely interested in the subject area,” he says. “That made for really good discussions. You could tell that people were interested beyond an academic sense.”

15.0201/14.43, a part of MITEI’s interdisciplinary Energy Studies minor, is a relatively new course. The class, which is also offered as graduate-level course 15.020, made its debut in the spring 2019 semester and was developed to expand the energy economics offerings at MIT. Part of the motivation for creating 15.0201/14.43 stemmed from the fact that Professor Christopher Knittel’s course, 15.037/15.038 (Energy Economics and Policy), is consistently in high demand, without enough supply to accommodate interested students.

“Professor Knittel and I have positioned our two courses so that someone who wants to get a taste of energy economics could take either one and come away with a good mental map of the field, but also that someone who is very serious about a future career in energy would find it useful to take both,” says Li.

Li’s class focuses on innovation and employs environmental economics principles and business cases to explore the development and adoption of new technology, and business strategies related to sustainability.

“The class has been particularly attractive to students who are interested in the energy landscape, such as how energy markets impact and relate to local environmental issues and how to provide energy to parts of the globe that currently lack access to affordable or reliable energy,” she says. “It has also appealed to students interested in applied microeconomics.”

In addition to crunching large data sets and bringing in guest speakers, such as Paul Joskow, the Elizabeth and James Killian Professor of Economics Emeritus and chair of MIT’s Department of Economics, a major element of the class — and a runaway favorite of many of the students — is the Electricity Strategy Game. The game was created by professors Severin Borenstein and James Bushnell for the University of California at Berkley’s Haas School of Business.

The game is designed to replicate the world of deregulated wholesale electricity markets. Players are divided into firms and utilize electricity generation portfolios, based on actual portfolios of the largest generation firms in the California market, to compete in a sequence of daily electricity spot markets, in which commodities are traded for immediate delivery. Each portfolio contains differing generation technologies (thermal, nuclear, and hydro), with varying operating costs. Spot market conditions vary from hour to hour and day to day. Players must develop strategies to deploy their assets over a sequence of spot markets while accounting for the cost structure of their portfolio, varying levels of hourly electricity demand, and strategies of other players. The game is conducted in six rounds, with the second half of the game taking into account carbon permits. Winners are determined by the financial performance of their firm and an evaluation of the logic of the firm’s actions, which the teams describe in a series of memos to Li.

“I loved the Electricity Strategy Game! It was really fun to have to figure out how to predict demand and then how to price supply accordingly,” says Anupama Phatak, a junior mechanical engineering major and economics minor. “The bid for portfolios was also a really cool process. I put a lot of time and effort into understanding the game and developing a strategy, so it made the process all the more rewarding when my team won.”

Wilbur Li echoed Phatak’s enthusiasm. “My favorite part of the game was definitely the auction — it was the most exciting part,” he says. “Every single group did research on their own to figure out what sort of bidding prices they wanted for each piece of property [power plants] — and when we showed up, every single group had wildly different final prices for what we bid on the plants.”

For Isaac Perper, a senior mechanical engineering and computer science double major and economics minor, the value of the game was in getting a glimpse of how energy portfolios would play out in real-life auctions. “We all had different portfolios, so I think that was the most interesting part. We got to see differences between coal, hydro, and gas plants and the different price points at which they are profitable. I think the auction mirrored what you would expect in a real market,” he says.

Many of the students who took 14.43 (Economics of Energy, Innovation, and Sustainability) are making it their mission to apply the lessons learned from the class to their career goals. The class helped inspire Wilbur Li to pursue a career in cleantech product development, such as working on smart meters or more efficient transportation for wind turbine blades.

“A class like 14.43 definitely helps with understanding how the products that are being worked on can be scaled in terms of figuring out which players in the economy would want to pick up and utilize a product,” he says. “It has given me a deeper understanding of how technology scales on a market level, as well as how to understand and account for the target impact of those technologies.”

Phatak says that the class has made her more conscious of the adverse environmental consequences of products such as palm oil. “I now understand that even the smallest ingredient in our everyday products can have negative impacts around the world that I might not even see,” she says. Because of the topics covered in Li’s course, Phatak is now actively pursuing internships in sustainability.

Perper shared that the class opened his eyes to a lot of inefficiencies that exist in the energy market today. Indeed, he says that his life’s goal is to help to solve some of those inefficiencies. “Going into this class, I had kind of thought that we have our different electricity producers and some pollute more than others, but in terms of the actual market structure and how electricity is distributed, paid for, and expanded into developing areas, all of those things were more complicated and inefficient than I had expected,” he says. When he returns to MIT in the fall to pursue his master’s degree in computer science and electrical engineering, Perper will be thinking more about the bigger questions in terms of energy policy and technology.

Li says she hopes that students come away from 14.43 with “more questions than answers,” as well as a honed sense of which questions are worth spending time to answer. She also aims for her students to leave with the knowledge that sustainability and energy touch every organization in some way.

“Whatever kind of organization you are a part of and the role you take in that organization — investor, manager, employee, customer, voter — you can contribute to the sustainability goals of your organization with your ideas, voice, and actions,” she says.



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14 Tips for Acing Your Online Video Call Job Interview

You can still make an impression even if your F2F isn't IRL.

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French Doctors Say COVID-19 Vaccines Should Be Tested On Poor Africans

French Doctor Covid-19 africans

There outrage all across Africa after two well-respected French doctors went on a live TV show and suggested that coronavirus vaccines be tested on poor Africans.

The two doctors said during a segment broadcast on the French TV channel LCI that the testing should be done in Africa, “where there are no masks, no treatment, nor intensive care,” reported Business Insider.

One of the doctors, Jean-Paul Mira, went further and compared Africans to prostitutes who were the focus of past AIDS testing. “We tried things on prostitutes because they are highly exposed and do not protect themselves,” he said.

Of course, these suggestions were immediately called out as racist, especially by several African notables such as former Chelsea Football Club star Didier Drogba and former Barcelona striker Samuel Eto’o who tweeted their outrage at the two medics’ remarks.

Drogba, who is from Ivory Coast, tweeted: “It is totally inconceivable we keep on cautioning this. Africa isn’t a testing lab. I would like to vividly denounce those demeaning, false and most of all deeply racists words.”

Former Chelsea striker Demba Ba, who is from Senegal, tweeted, “Welcome to the West, where white people believe themselves to be so superior that racism and debility become commonplace Time to rise.”

Mira is head of the intensive-care department at the Cochin Hospital in Paris. The other doctor, Camille Locht, is the research director at the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research, known as Inserm.

“If I can be provocative,” Mira said on the TV show, “shouldn’t we do this study in Africa where there are no masks, no treatment, no intensive care? A bit like we did in some studies on AIDS. We tried things on prostitutes because they are highly exposed and do not protect themselves.”

Locht agreed. “You are right. We are actually thinking of a parallel study in Africa to use with the same kind of approach with BCG placebos,” he said, referring to vaccination against tuberculosis that Inserm says has appeared to protect children against infections, particularly respiratory ones.

“We will, in fact, think seriously about it,” he said.

Africa is the continent with the lowest number of reported COVID-19 cases, with nearly 7,500 cases and more than 320 deaths, Al Jazeera reported.

This article was written by Ann Brown for The Moguldom Nation.



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Today's Cartoon: Coronavirus Battle

A heroic effort.

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Yet Another Consequence of the Pandemic: More Plastic Waste

This new normal means mountains of single-use plastic—and few places to put it but the dump.

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The Pandemic Could Be an Opportunity to Remake Cities

Cities from Bogota to Oakland are closing streets to make room for pedestrians and bikers. Urbanists think we'd be healthier if such changes were permanent.

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Kenyan weddings, births and deaths in the age of Covid-19

Joseph Warungu looks at how the virus has changed the lives of Kenyans, from birth to death.

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Sunday, April 12, 2020

MIT Solve rises to meet health security and pandemic challenge

In the face of the Covid-19 pandemic, MIT Solve launched a new Global Challenge: How can communities around the world prepare for, detect, and respond to emerging pandemics and health security threats? Solve’s mission is to foster innovation, seeking out tech-based social entrepreneurs and helping them scale up their ideas.

The new Solve Health Security and Pandemics Challenge is designed to produce both short-term solutions to the impact of the current pandemic as well as longer-term strategies for future crises. “The reason that this pandemic is costing so many lives is that we were unprepared,” says Pooja Wagh ’06, Solve’s director of health community and results measurement. “We need stronger health care supply chains and better disease surveillance. This will happen again, and we need to be better positioned to mitigate the impact on human lives.”

MIT Solve hopes to leverage its extensive community to identify tech innovations that will make a difference. “We had a role to play because of our massive network of innovators, member organizations, MIT students and faculty, and all the people we reach through our communications,” says Wagh.

“Solve was built on the ethos that great ideas can come from anywhere,” she explains. “The idea was to democratize access to the resources we have at MIT, since a lack of resources keeps many great solutions from coming to fruition.”

There are several rounds of review in the Solve selection process, with 50 to 60 experts from both inside and outside MIT reading every application. “We draw on the experience of our community,” says Wagh. “Decision makers are a panel of judges with deep expertise in the relevant areas. For this challenge, judges will include representatives from public health agencies and corporations.”

In addition to the new health challenge, Solve issued its 2020 Global Challenges earlier this year related to jobs and entrepreneurship among marginalized populations, sustainable food systems, maternal and newborn health, and access to education for marginalized girls and women.

“We solicit applications from people all over the world,” says Wagh. “Our network of more than 150,000 people includes centers at MIT as well as 130 Solver teams and more than 120 Solve Members with a wide diversity of interests. What binds them together is their motivation to help our innovators succeed.” A small number of Solver teams are chosen and then matched with partners, including funders, who can help them make their ideas a reality.

“Given the immediacy and urgency of this crisis, we want to build a pathway for scale for all the Solver teams we select,” Wagh says. “We’ve been talking to potential partners and funders, and dozens of people have reached out to offer support for the future Solver teams that are selected. Others want to help us choose the teams. People should know that we’re looking for both applicants and supporters — there is a role for anyone who wants to engage.”

There has been an enthusiastic response to the new challenge, with applications pouring in. Individuals and groups with a tech-based solution to health security threats are invited to submit a proposal by June 18, while potential supporters of the teams chosen can investigate options for partnership with Solve.



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