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Australian Minister Wins Defamation Case Over Tweet

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The case’s outcome was not unheard-of in a country with notoriously strict defamation laws, but it was unusual that the defendant was not another politician or a high-profile journalist, said Michael Douglas, a senior lecturer in private law at the University of Western Australia.

“It’s consistent with the theme that this government is content in taking a very heavy-handed approach to online speech that it doesn’t like,” he said. He added, “Cases like these are a warning that, unless something changes, we’re going to see more and more cases like this, and every Australian should tread carefully before they do a quote retweet and call a politician a name.”

Mr. Dutton has been open about his intent to crack down on misleading or defamatory social media content. In March, he told a local radio station, “Some of these people who are trending on Twitter or have the anonymity of different Twitter accounts, they’re out there putting out all these statements and tweets that are frankly defamatory — I’m going to start to pick out some of them to sue.”

Prime Minister Scott Morrison echoed that sentiment in October, when he vowed that the government would do more to hold social media giants accountable.

“Social media has become a coward’s palace, where people can just go on there, not say who they are, destroy people’s lives and say the most foul and offensive things to people and do so with impunity,” Mr. Morrison said.

In May, John Barilaro, then the deputy premier of New South Wales, sued an Australian YouTuber, Jordan Shanks, for defamation, claiming that two videos Mr. Shanks had uploaded incorrectly suggested he was corrupt, had committed perjury and engaged in blackmail. He also said Mr. Shanks had been racist by attacking his Italian heritage, including calling him a “con man to the core, powered by spaghetti.”

Mr. Shanks’s channel, FriendlyJordies, which has 600,000 subscribers, is known for its comedy and political commentary.

Hakim Hart, Eric Ayala help Maryland rally, beat Richmond 86-80

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NASSAU, Bahamas — Hakim Hart scored 19 of his season-high 24 points in the second half, Eric Ayala added 20 points, nine rebounds and five assists, and Maryland rallied to beat Richmond 86-80 on Thursday night at the Baha Mar Hoops Bahamas Championship.

Fatts Russell had 15 points — 11 in the second half — and six assists and Qudus Wahab scored 13 points for Maryland (5-1).

Hart hit a 3-pointer, made a layup and added two free throws in an 11-1 run that trimmed Maryland’s deficit to 46-45 early in the second half and his 3-pointer with 4 minutes to play capped a 10-1 spurt that gave the Terrapins their first lead since midway through the first half at 73-72. Matt Grace answered with a basket to put the Spiders back in front but they missed their next five shots as Maryland scored seven straight points to make it 80-74 when, late in the shot clock, Russell hit a step-back 3-pointer with 1:12 left.

Grant Golden led Richmond (3-3) with 18 points, six rebounds and five assists. Nick Sherod and Jacob Gilyard scored 14 points apiece and Tyler Burton, who went into the contest averaging 19.8 points per game, added 11.

Sherod hit three 3-pointers during a 20-7 run that gave Richmond a 12-point lead before Ayala made a 3 to make it 41-32 at halftime. The Spiders, who went into the game ranked 28th nationally in 3-point field goal percentage at 40.6%, made 8 of 22 from behind the arc – including 3 of 11 after halftime.

The Terrapins made 20 of 25 from the free-throw line. Richmond hit 12 of 20.

Maryland is 27-15 all-time against the Spiders and has won 10 straight in the series.

Copyright © 2021 The Washington Times, LLC.

Inside the Beltway: Biden’s bleak Black Friday

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Well here it is Black Friday, and Americans are skittish about rising prices and buying stuff — certainly not ideal for what is supposed to be the biggest shopping day of the year. The thrill is ebbing now that the U.S. has become an inflation nation in the era of President Biden.

More than three-quarters of U.S. adults — 77% — say inflation is affecting their lives on a personal level just as the holiday season kicks in, according to a new Yahoo News/YouGov poll — and 57% blame Mr. Biden.

“Americans of all political persuasions expect prices to shoot up over the next year,” reports Terry Jones, editor of Issues & Insights, which partnered with the Tipp Poll on the matter.

The survey found that 84% of Americans — including 94% of Republicans and 81% of Democrats — agreed that prices on gasoline, food, and other household products will rise, and keep on rising.

The poll of 1,396 U.S. adults was conducted Oct. 27-29 and released Tuesday.

Pessimism increases with age, the poll found.

“For those 18-24, 71% expect higher prices next year; the 25-44 year-olds are at 78%; those aged 45-64 stand at 87%; but those 65 and overcome in at 94%,” Mr. Jones wrote.

“Is it just that the older people remember the 1970s’ traumatic inflation? Or that many if not most of them are living on fixed incomes? Are younger people marginally more optimistic because they have more years to make up for any potential income losses due to higher-than-anticipated inflation? It’s hard to say,” he continued.

“Whether inflation turns out to be a short-term blip on the long-term time horizon, consumers are getting their first taste of sustained price increases since the early 1990s. Back then, Fed rate hikes quelled nascent inflation pressures, but also pushed the economy into a recession that many believe cost President George H.W. Bush a second term in the 1992 presidential election,” Mr. Jones said.

THE COVID-19 FACTOR

COVID-19 has also had a lasting effect on the happy shopper mentality.

“Last year, during the first holiday season of the pandemic, more than 60 percent of consumers agreed that the pandemic had influenced their shopping behavior — they planned less in advance, had lower budgets, and shopped more online. This year, many U.S. consumers will continue to be more conservative with their spending post-pandemic – 78 percent said they will continue to reduce their spending even when life returns to normal,” noted the Global Black Friday Forecast, conducted by Simon-Kucher & Partners, a Boston-based global strategy and marketing consulting firm.

REPUBLICAN-LED STATES LEAD THE WAY

Newly released employment Bureau of Labor Statistics data for October reveals that those states with a Republican governor and state legislature are leading the nation in employment matters.

The data revealed that 17 of the top 20 states for jobs recovered since the coronavirus pandemic began are led by Republican governors — while 18 of the top 20 states have Republican-controlled legislatures.

It also found that 16 of the 20 states with the lowest unemployment rates are led by Republican governors while 17 of those states have Republican-controlled legislatures.

In addition, the 10 states with the lowest unemployment rates all are led by Republicans; the eight states with the highest unemployment rates are all led by Democrat governors.

The average unemployment rate for the 27 states with Republican governors is 3.9%. Democrat-led states have an average unemployment rate of 5.4%.

“It’s more evidence of what we already know: Republican policies deliver jobs and opportunity, and Democrat policies instituting mandates and reckless spending don’t work. One thing is for sure, having a Republican governor is definitely something millions of Americans can be thankful for,” said Tommy Pigott, rapid response director for the Republican National Committee.

“If you want a job, move to a Republican-led state,” he said.

WEEKEND REAL ESTATE

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FIND GRAND BOOKS HERE

Message to those seeking holiday gifts amid supply-chain problems — SeaWolf Press offers 350 classic literature titles with all their original and often incredible illustrations and cover designs.

We’re talking Jack London, Jules Verne, Charles Dickens, Mark Twain, books for children, and a number of books pertaining to Black history. Hardcover and paperback versions are available.

“These are not photocopy versions of old books but rather newly formatted editions that contain the text and illustrations from the first or early edition. Most also have the original cover from the first edition, or from beautiful paintings. The text has been properly formatted with an easy-to-read font similar to that used more than 100 years ago,” the company explains.

Titles can be found in many bookstores or on Amazon.com. Check out the website for more information and a look at these handsome editions at SeaWolfPress.com.

POLL DU JOUR

• 55% of U.S. adults disapprove of the job the U.S. Congress is doing; 70% of Republicans, 66% of independents and 34% of Democrats agree.

• 17% overall neither approve or disapprove of the job Congress is doing; 14% of Republicans, 16% of independents and 21% of Democrats agree.

• 17% overall approve of Congress’ job performance; 7% of Republicans, 9% of independents and 36% of Democrats agree.

• 11% overall are not sure how they feel about Congress; 8% of Republicans, 8% of independents and 9% of Democrats agree.

SOURCE: An Economist/YouGov poll of 1,500 U.S. adults conducted Nov. 20-23.

• Follow Jennifer Harper on Twitter @HarperBulletin.

Supply chain disruption, pandemic hit Americans at Thanksgiving table

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Thanksgiving food choices are more expensive and harder to come by this holiday due to the impact of the coronavirus pandemic and the supply chain disruption.

The American Farm Bureau Federation’s annual survey shows that turkey costs 24% more this year than in 2020. That means a 16-pound turkey costs $23.99, about $1.50 per pound.

The 36th annual survey indicates the average cost of a classic Thanksgiving dinner for 10 is $53.31 — $6.41 more than last year’s average of $46.90, a 14% increase.

“Several factors contributed to the increase in average cost of this year’s Thanksgiving dinner,” Veronica Nigh, the federation’s senior economist, said in a statement.

“These include dramatic disruptions to the U.S. economy and supply chains over the last 20 months; inflationary pressure throughout the economy; difficulty in predicting demand during the COVID-19 pandemic and high global demand for food, particularly meat,” Ms. Nigh said.

“Further, the trend of consumers cooking and eating at home more often due to the pandemic led to increased supermarket demand and higher retail food prices in 2020 and 2021, compared to pre-pandemic prices in 2019,” she said.

Additionally, hours at restaurants will vary due to complications, such as some businesses having trouble hiring enough employees, according to data from InMarket, a consumer intelligence company.

While national chain restaurants like Applebee’s, Starbucks and McDonald’s will have many sites open on Thanksgiving, USA Today reports that Chipotle, Taco Bell and Chick-fil-A will be closed.

The high price of meat, eggs and other staples has forced 75% of restaurants to make menu changes, including increasing prices, the National Restaurant Association said.

“Faced with these very challenging times, our industry is doing its level best to protect employees and customers, while restaurants are struggling to keep their doors open,” said Sean Kennedy, executive vice president of Public Affairs for the National Restaurant Association. “Taken together, these recommendations can work to help our nation’s restaurants that are being crippled as the pandemic rages on and supply chain challenges grow.”

Biden issues Thanksgiving message, visits Coast Guard

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NANTUCKET, Mass. — President Biden on Thursday wished Americans a happy and closer-to-normal Thanksgiving, the second celebrated in the shadow of the coronavirus pandemic, in remarks welcoming the resumption of holiday traditions by millions of U.S. families – including his own. 

“As we give thanks for what we have, we also keep in our hearts those who have been lost and those who have lost so much,” the president said in a videotaped greeting recorded with first lady Jill Biden at the White House before their trip to Nantucket, Massachusetts, for the holiday. 

On the island, the Bidens visited the Coast Guard station at Brant Point to meet with personnel there and virtually with U.S. service members from around the world. “I’m not joking when I say I’m thankful for these guys,” the president said when asked what he was thankful for, referring to the Coast Guard members standing ramrod straight before him on the grounds as he departed.

Reporters were kept out of the room for Biden‘s virtual remarks, apparently because of tight space in the building. Well-wishers waved and cheered as Biden‘s motorcade navigated the island’s narrow paved and cobblestone streets to and from the Coast Guard compound.

Biden, whose late son Beau was a major in the Delaware Army National Guard, said he has watched U.S. service members in action around the world, from the South China Sea and Iraq and Afghanistan to South America. He said when foreigners wonder what America is, “they don’t see us here,” meaning civilians. “They see them,” he said of members of the Coast Guard and the other branches of the U.S. military. “It makes me proud.”

From Nantucket, the Bidens also called in to the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, briefly bantering on air with NBC broadcaster Al Roker. Shut out a year ago, spectators again lined the route in Manhattan as some 8,000 participants joined the parade. Parade employees and volunteers had to be vaccinated against COVID-19 and wear masks.

The extended first family went traditional for their Thanksgiving menu: roasted turkey, stuffing using a grandmother’s recipe and other fixings. Dessert was three kinds of pie, and – in no surprise to those who followed Biden in and out of ice cream shops on the campaign trail – chocolate chip ice cream.

Biden and his wife started spending Thanksgiving in Nantucket since before they were married in 1977 because they were looking for a way out of choosing whose family to spend it with. They did not visit in 2015 following Beau’s death earlier that year from brain cancer at age 46, or in 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic put the kibosh on big family gatherings.

Biden instead dined at home in Delaware last year with just his wife, daughter Ashley and her husband. 

But this year, the president joined the millions of Americans who are celebrating the holiday with big groups of loved ones. Biden’s entire family flew up with him Tuesday night on Air Force One to resume the Thanksgiving tradition: his wife; son Hunter and his wife, Melissa and their toddler son Beau; daughter Ashley; and grandchildren Naomi, Finnegan, Maisy, Natalie and young Hunter, as well as Naomi’s fiance, Peter Neal. 

The president has credited the roll-out of COVID-19 vaccines with helping ease the return of family gatherings this holiday season, although a resurgent virus has fueled an increase in new infections in the U.S. The president and first lady both have had their full vaccine dose, and a booster.

Naomi Biden and her fiance rode bicycles along on a local path just before her grandfather’s SUV departed the secluded home where the family is staying. The sprawling compound is owned by David Rubenstein, a billionaire philanthropist and co-founder of the Carlyle Group private equity firm.

Biden‘s visit, his first as president, is markedly different from his previous holidays here when he was a U.S. senator and later vice president. Then, he might have been seen walking around downtown.

Biden lost much of his freedom to move around on his own when he became president and now travels with a large group of security personnel, White House and other officials, and journalists. His every public move is closely watched by the U.S. Secret Service and other law enforcement.

Jill Biden was heard telling the Coast Guard members she would see them again Friday night at Nantucket‘s annual Christmas tree lighting, another Biden tradition.

“We’re all going together,” she said of her family. The tree lighting ceremony is where Beau Biden proposed to his wife, Hallie, in 2001. They were wed on the island the following year. 

Biden is expected to return to the White House on Sunday.

Copyright © 2021 The Washington Times, LLC.

A worker revolution? Seismic shift in the labor market remakes the employer-employee relationship

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The labor shortage can be seen everywhere. 

It’s forcing restaurants to close, schools to cancel classes, upending airline flight schedules and fueling the supply chain breakdown with absent truck drivers.

A scarcity of workers in the U.S. in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic is causing some employers to raise wages and others to give employees a greater say in daily operations. But businesses are still struggling to retain workers, and schools nationwide are canceling classes on short notice due to a lack of staff.

Experts say this could last for years.

A record 4.4 million Americans quit their jobs in September, surpassing the previous high set in August. Dealing with the impact of the coronavirus for the past two years has prompted many older workers to opt for early retirement, while others are acquiring new skills to gain higher pay, or moving into jobs that allow them to work remotely.

Although job openings abound, there were 7.4 million people out of work in October. September’s quit rate rose to 3% from its high of 2.9% in August.

Worker burnout is rated as high in various surveys, particularly in fields such as health care that have been hit hard during the pandemic.

In short, the workforce of the so-called “Great Resignation” is undergoing widespread and rapid changes not seen in a generation or more, analysts say.

“It’s one of those occurrences in American society brought on by extraordinary events,” said Robert Bruno, director of the labor education program at the University of Illinois. “I don’t refer to it as a ‘resignation.’ It’s a refusal to accept the conditions that they have been working under.”

Republicans and many business leaders have blamed expanded unemployment benefits during the worst of the pandemic lockdowns for creating a prolonged shortage of people willing to return to work. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, California Republican, said businesses are facing the threat of closure again “primarily from a historic labor shortage, driven by Democrat policies passed earlier this year.”

Democrats reject that argument.

“What we have is a situation in which workers all across this country are saying, ‘You know what? I don’t have to work for starvation wages, I am a human being, I deserve to be treated with dignity,’” tweeted Senate Budget Committee Chairman Bernard Sanders, a democratic socialist from Vermont.

The expiration of expanded unemployment programs in September resulted in more than 8 million people no longer receiving any unemployment compensation. Another 2.7 million who receive state unemployment benefits lost the temporary $300 federal additional weekly payment.

A total of 26 states had opted out of expanded federal benefits earlier, citing concerns that the unusually high jobless payments were discouraging people from returning to work.

The hardest hit by resignations in September were the food service (863,000 workers quit) and retail industries (685,000), with quit rates of 6.6% and 4.4%, respectively. The hospitality industry lost 987,000 employees, while 589,000 workers quit in health care.

Nearly 900 school districts around the country have canceled classes abruptly in the past month, blaming staff burnout and other problems that aren’t directly related to COVID-19 outbreaks. The unscheduled days off from school are forcing some parents to scramble again to find options for caring for their children during the workday.

Amid the churn in the workforce, wages are rising, but workers are actually losing ground. Average hourly earnings are up 5.1% this year, but inflation has climbed 6.2% since last October, more than wiping out those gains.

President Biden glossed over the impact of inflation as he cited progress in the recovery.

“Things are getting better for American workers: higher wages, better benefits, more flexible schedules,” the president said.

Many people who’ve quit their jobs during the pandemic are blue-collar workers looking to switch to white-collar positions with better pay and safer working conditions, according to California-based career adviser Kapeesh Saraf.

“Through the pandemic, people have had higher savings because they weren’t spending as much money, plus all the fiscal stimulus from the government gave people some flexibility to do this,” Mr. Saraf said. “A lot of online learning companies are seeing people are looking to re-skill and try to move to white-collar jobs, where you have the ability to work remotely, have flexible hours and a lot more pay.”

The labor turmoil also is prompting employers to get more creative in their efforts to retain workers. Mercedes Austin, CEO of Mercury Mosaics, a Minneapolis-based manufacturer of handmade ceramic tiles, said she has taken steps such as involving more workers in the firm’s strategic planning team.

“I think it’s made a really big difference to have people actually see that they can be a part of building something, and they’re not just arriving as a cog in a wheel,” Ms. Austin said.

During the pandemic, the company also discontinued its in-person showroom, moving its displays of products fully to a digital show.

“I really took advice from my team on our manufacturing crew — we used to have a lot of different types of the general public coming into our space, be it for a showroom or for classes, and we basically created it into a manufacturing bubble,” she said. “People didn’t have to worry about all sorts of strangers coming in and out of the space. So we created a bubble for the team to work, and I think just them knowing they could have a say in that went a really long way.”

About 40% of her staff work remotely. While Ms. Austin said some employees have quit during the past two years, she credits the changes with enabling the company’s workforce to increase from 32 at the start of the pandemic to 53 currently.

Mr. Bruno, the labor scholar, said the resignations are taking place across all demographic groups, including people choosing to retire earlier than they had planned.

“It’s just changed the consciousness of a lot of workers in a fairly uncoordinated, unorganized way,” he said. “They have come to similar conclusions — that they have been working under sub-optimal conditions for some time. And this is an effort to reset the balance.”

Macy’s Thanksgiving parade returns, with all the trimmings

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NEW YORK (AP) — Crimped by the coronavirus pandemic last year, the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade returned Thursday in full, though with precautions.

Balloons, floats, marching bands, clowns and performers — and, of course, Santa Claus — once again began wending Thursday morning though 2 1/2 miles (4 kilometers) of Manhattan streets, instead of being confined to one block or sometimes pre-taped last year.

Spectators, shut out in 2020, lined the route again. High school and college marching bands from around the country were invited back to the lineup; most of last year’s performers were locally based to cut down on travel. The giant balloons, tethered to vehicles last year, got their costumed handlers back.

“Last year was obviously symbolic. It wasn’t everything we would have liked to see in a parade, but they kept it going,” Mayor Bill de Blasio said at a news briefing Wednesday. “This year, the parade’s back at full strength.”

“It’s going to be a great sign of our rebirth,” he added.

The Thanksgiving parade is the latest U.S. holiday event to make a comeback as vaccines, familiarity and sheer frustration made officials and some of the public more comfortable with big gatherings amid the ongoing pandemic.

Still, safety measures continued. Parade staffers and volunteers had to be vaccinated against COVID-19 and wear masks, though some singers and performers were allowed to shed them. There was no inoculation requirement for spectators, but Macy’s and the city encouraged them to cover their faces. A popular pre-parade spectacle — the inflation of the giant balloons — was limited to vaccinated viewers.

The Thanksgiving event also came days after an SUV driver plowed through a Christmas parade in suburban Milwaukee, killing six people and injuring over 60. Authorities said the driver, who has been charged with intentional homicide, was speeding away from police after a domestic dispute.

De Blasio said Wednesday there was no credible, specific threat to the Thanksgiving parade, but the New York Police Department’s security measures would be extensive, as usual.

“I’m very confident in what the NYPD has prepared to keep everyone safe,” he said.

Thousands of police officers were assigned to the parade route, from streets to rooftops. Cars were blocked from the parade route with sand-filled garbage trucks, other heavy vehicles and approximately 360,000 pounds (163,000 kilograms) of concrete barriers.

Bomb-detecting dogs, bomb squad officers, heavy-weapons teams, radiation and chemical sensors and over 300 extra cameras also were dispatched to the parade route, NYPD Chief of Counterterrorism Martine Materasso said.

Inside the barricades, the parade features about 8,000 participants, four dozen balloons of varying sizes and two dozen floats.

New balloon giants joining the lineup include the title character from the Netflix series “Ada Twist, Scientist”; the Pokémon characters Pikachu and Eevee on a sled (Pikachu has appeared before, in different form), and Grogu, aka “Baby Yoda,” from the television show “The Mandalorian.” New floats are coming from entities ranging from condiment maker Heinz to NBCUniversal’s Peacock streaming service to the Louisiana Office of Tourism.

Entertainers and celebrities include Carrie Underwood, Jon Batiste, Nelly, Kelly Rowland, Miss America Camille Schrier, the band Foreigner, and many others. Several Broadway musical casts and the Radio City Rockettes also are due to perform.

Copyright © 2021 The Washington Times, LLC.

EU regulator authorizes Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine for kids 5-11

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THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — The European Union’s drug regulator on Thursday authorized Pfizer’s coronavirus vaccine for use on children from 5 to 11 years old, clearing the way for shots to be administered to millions of elementary school pupils amid a new wave of infections sweeping across the continent.

It is the first time the European Medicines Agency has cleared a COVID-19 vaccine for use in young children.

The agency said it “recommended granting an extension of indication for the COVID-19 vaccine Comirnaty to include use in children aged 5 to 11.”

After evaluating a study of the vaccine in more than 2,000 children, the EMA estimated that the vaccine was about 90% effective in preventing symptomatic COVID-19 in young children and said the most common side effects were pain at the injection site, headaches, muscle pain and chills. The agency said the two-dose regimen should be given to children three weeks apart.

At least one country facing spiking infections didn’t wait for the EMA approval. Authorities in the Austrian capital, Vienna, already have begun vaccinating the 5 to 11 age group. Europe is currently at the epicenter of the pandemic and the World Health Organization has warned the continent could see deaths top 2 million by the spring unless urgent measures are taken.

The EMA green light for the vaccine developed by Pfizer and German company BioNTech has to be rubber-stamped by the EU’s executive branch, the European Commission, before health authorities in member states can begin administering shots.

Earlier this week, Germany’s health minister Jens Spahn said shipping of vaccines for younger children in the EU would begin on Dec. 20.

The United States signed off on Pfizer’s kids-sized shots earlier this month, followed by other countries including Canada.

Pfizer tested a dose that is a third of the amount given to adults for elementary school-age children. Even with the smaller shot, children who are 5 to 11 years old developed coronavirus-fighting antibody levels just as strong as teenagers and young adults getting the regular-strength shots, Dr. Bill Gruber, a Pfizer senior vice president, told The Associated Press in September.

But the studies done on Pfizer’s vaccine in children haven’t been big enough to detect any rare side effects from the second dose, like the chest and heart inflammation that has been seen in mostly male older teens and young adults.

American officials noted that COVID-19 has caused more deaths in children in the 5 to 11 age group than some other diseases, such as chickenpox, did before children were routinely vaccinated.

Earlier this month, the EMA said it began evaluating the use of Moderna Inc.‘s COVID-19 vaccine for children ages 6 to 11; it estimated that a decision would be made within two months.

Although children mostly only get mild symptoms of COVID-19, some public health experts believe immunizing them should be a priority to reduce the virus’ continued spread, which could theoretically lead to the emergence of a dangerous new variant.

Researchers disagree on how much kids have influenced the course of the pandemic. Early research suggested they didn’t contribute much to viral spread. But some experts say children played a significant role this year spreading contagious variants such as alpha and delta.

In a statement this week, WHO said that because children and teens tend to have milder COVID-19 disease than adults, “it is less urgent to vaccinate them than older people, those with chronic health conditions and health workers.”

It has appealed to rich countries to stop immunizing children and asked them to donate their doses immediately to poor countries who have yet to give a first vaccine dose to their health workers and vulnerable populations.

Still, WHO acknowledged that there are benefits to vaccinating children and adolescents that go beyond the immediate health benefits.

“Vaccination that decreases COVID transmission in this age group may reduce transmission from children and adolescents to older adults, and may help reduce the need for mitigation measures in schools,” WHO said.

___

Maria Cheng reported from London.

Copyright © 2021 The Washington Times, LLC.

Health, The New York Today

Space Pagans and Smartphone Witches: Where Tech Meets Mysticism

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DORTMUND, Germany — “Let’s use smartphones and tarot cards to connect to spirits,” reads the writing on the wall, illuminated in soft ultraviolet light. “Let’s manufacture D.I.Y. devices to listen to invisible worlds.”

The incantations, printed as wallpaper, are part of the French artist Lucile Olympe Haute’s “Cyberwitches Manifesto,” an installation in a show called “Technoshamanism” that is at the Hartware MedienKunstVerein in Dortmund, Germany, through March 6, 2022. The group exhibition, which brings together the work of 12 artists and collectives, explores the connections between technology and esoteric, ancestral belief systems.

In our always-online lives, the supernatural is having a high-tech moment. Spirituality is all over our feeds: The self-help guru Deepak Chopra has co-founded his own NFT platform, witches are reading tarot on TikTok, and the A.I.-driven astrology app Co-Star has been downloaded more than 20 million times.

Dr. Jeffrey A. Tolbert, an assistant professor who researches belief and digital ethnography at Penn State Harrisburg has an explanation. “Because of the globalizing potential of the internet, people have access to belief traditions that were not easily accessible to them before,” he said. In the United States, a growing number of people identify as “spiritual” but not “religious,” he noted, adding that the internet allowed those people to discover, select and combine the spiritual traditions that most appealed to them.

The curator of “Technoshamanism,” Inke Arns, said on a recent tour of the show that contemporary artists also recognized the widespread presence of esoteric spirituality in the digital space. “I was asking myself, ‘How come, in different parts of the world, there is this strange interest in not only reactivating ancestral knowledge but bringing this together with technology?’” she said.

Often, for artists, the answer comes down to anxiety about the environment, Arns said. “People realize we are in a very dire situation,” she added, “from burning coal and fossil fuels. And it’s not stopping.” Ancient belief systems that were more in tune with nature, combined with new technology, were providing a sense of hope for artists in facing the climate crisis, she said.

While technological progress is often seen as damaging to the environment, artists, Indigenous activists and hackers were trying to reclaim technology for their own, esoteric purposes, said Fabiane Borges, a Brazilian researcher and member of a network called Tecnoxamanismo. That collective organizes meetings and festivals in which participants use devices including D.I.Y.-hacked robots to connect with ancestral belief systems and the natural world.

In the Dortmund show, a sense of hope shines through in several works that imagine a future for humans beyond Earth. Fifty prints by the British artist Suzanne Treister from the series “Technoshamanic Systems: New Cosmological Models for Survival” fill one wall of the museum, dreaming spiritual possibilities for the survival of our species.

Treister’s neat, colorful works on paper feature flying saucers and stars laid out in a kabbalah tree-of-life diagram, and blueprints for imagined scientific systems and extraterrestrial architecture. As billionaires like Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos look to outer space as the next frontier for human expansion, Treister has imagined a utopian alternative: space exploration as a process in which rituals and visions play as much of a role as solar power and artificial intelligence.

Many esoteric practices connect communities to a higher power, Arns said, which is why outer space features in so many contemporary artists’ explorations of spirituality. “It’s making a link between the microcosm and macrocosm,” she added, creating “an idea of a world that doesn’t only include the Earth.”

Technologists have, of course, come up with a more digital way to enter new worlds: virtual reality. Many of V.R.’s founders were interested in psychedelic experiences, a common feature of shamanic rituals. (The recent boom in ayahuasca ceremonies, where participants drink a psychoactive brew, shows that the attraction remains strong.) Researchers at the University of Sussex, in England, even used V.R. to attempt replicating a magic mushroom hallucination.

In the “Technoshamanism” show in Dortmund, several works offer the viewer trippy visions. Morehshin Allahyari’s V.R. work “She Who Sees the Unknown” conjures a sinister female djinn; at the artist’s request, the V.R. headset is worn lying down in the darkened space so that the malevolent spirit hovers menacingly over the viewer. Another work, experienced through augmented-reality glasses, leads the viewer through a meditative ritual in a gigantic papier-mâché shrine, weaving a spiraling light path with video holograms.

Rather than inventing their own virtual spiritual sites, other artists try to uncover the lost meaning of some that already exist. Tabita Rezaire, for example, whose website describes her as “infinity incarnated into an agent of healing,” is showing a film installation exploring megalithic stone circles in Gambia and Senegal. In a film playing on a flat-screen TV laid out on the museum floor, Rezaire investigates the original purpose of the ancient sites through documentary interviews with their local guardians, as well as with astronomers and archaeologists. Drawing on numerology, astrology and traditional African understanding of the cosmos, the interviews are superimposed into hypnotic CGI visualizations of outer space.

Technology and spirituality could also come together to preserve ancient cultural practices that might otherwise be lost, Borges, the researcher, said. She recalled that, at a 2016 festival organized by her network in Bahia, Brazil, teenagers with cellphones had recorded a full-moon ritual performed by members of the Pataxó, an Indigenous community. The footage, which showed Pataxó people speaking their ancient language in a trance, was later passed to local university researchers who are at work on expanding a dictionary, Borges said.

Interactions between new tools and esoteric practices can be seen across all sorts of mystical practices, Tolbert of Penn State said. “Technology has always been a part of spirituality,” he noted, citing psychic mediums hosting their own Facebook groups and ghost hunters using electromagnetic field detectors. “Most of them don’t see it, I think, as presenting any kind of a conflict,” he added.

Perhaps, then, as the “Cyberwitches Manifesto” suggests, there is more common ground than might be expected between the hackers and the witches, the programmers and the psychics. As Tolbert put it: “What is technology, if not a way for an individual person to uncover answers?”

Six players score in Capitals’ win over Montreal

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On Thanksgiving Eve, the Washington Capitals gobbled up some goals in a 6-3 win over Montreal

Six different Washington players scored, while seven Capitals also recorded an assist in the home victory Wednesday. Nic Dowd, John Carlson, Michael Sgarbossa, Evgeny Kuznetsov, Tom Wilson and Dmitry Orlov each scored one goal to improve the Capitals‘ record to 12-3-5.

Alex Ovechkin, Connor McMichael, Nick Jensen, Dowd, Kuznetsov, Carlson and Orlov all tallied assists in the blowout win. Ovechkin led the team with three helpers, the 36-year-old’s first three-assist game since Feb. 15, 2018, and the 16th such performance of his career. 

“I think he always gets a lot of attention when he has the puck,” said Orlov about Ovechkin’s passing. “And people think he’s going to take a shot…but the other guy is open and he makes a nice pass.”

Dowd, Carlson and Sgarbossa each scored in the first quarter to give Washington an early 3-0 lead.

Dowd’s goal came immediately after the Capitals killed a Montreal power play. Dowd evaded a Habs defender, went behind the cage and squeezed a backhand between goalie Jake Allen and the post for his second score of the season. 

Carlson’s score was on Washington’s first power play of the game. His one-timer off a Kuznetsov pass deflected off a Montreal defender and into the top-left corner of the cage. Sgarbossa, meanwhile, was then credited with a goal — the first of his brief Washington career — after a failed Habs attempt to clear the puck went off the fourth-line center and into the net. Sgarbossa, playing in his first game this season, was recalled from Hershey on Wednesday. 

“They were really good,” said Washington coach Peter Laviolette about his fourth line, all three of whom spent time in Hershey earlier this season. “They were smart, they worked really hard. I think they complemented each other really well. They had played with each other down in Hershey. Beck [Malenstyn] provided some physicality, [Sgarbossa] did a really good job in the middle of the ice and [Brett] Leason has been solid for us.”

If Dowd’s first-quarter score was the best goal of the game, Carlson’s second-quarter assist was the best pass of the night. Carlson went back for a one-timer off an Ovechkin pass, but instead of firing the slapshot, he sent a lukewarm pass to a wide-open Kuznetsov on the far post for an easy goal.

Wilson then scored Washington’s fifth goal early in the third period, firing a shot off a no-look pass from Ovechkin for his seventh score of the season. 

“It was a really nice goal,” Laviolette said. “When you’re sitting at that score [4-2] you know that next goal is a big goal. It’s either going to make it exciting, or it’s going to push it out of reach.”

Ovechkin also racked up secondary assists on both Carlson’s and Kuznetsov’s goals. He now has 18 assists on the season — by far the most in his career through 20 games — and is the same total he had in 45 games last season. 

“I think just based on the fact that the puck is on his stick you have to assume he’s shooting the puck,” Laviolette said. “That was a really good play by him, unselfish play, the right play.”

The 17-year veteran was second in the NHL in points with 33 as of the conclusion of Washington’s game. (Edmonton’s Connor McDavid had 32 points before the Oilers’ game at 10 p.m. Wednesday.) The point total is also the most in Capitals history through the team’s first 20 games. 

Orlov then capped off Washington’s scoring with his third goal of the season. 

All three of Montreal’s goals came at the end of each period — Jake Evans late in the first period, Cole Caufield at the end of the second and Artturi Lehkonen with about a minute remaining in the game.

Ilya Samsonov earned the win in the crease to improve his record to 7-0-1. Samsonov entered the game on a two-game shutout streak. Evans’ goal was the first the third-year goalie had allowed in over 170 minutes. 

Washington is back at Capital One Arena Friday against the Florida Panthers, the overall league leader in the standings, with 31 points. Wednesday’s victory gave the Capitals 29 points, tied for first in the Metropolitan Division with Carolina, though the Hurricanes had three games in hand as they dropped the puck late Wednesday night for a west-coast game against the Seattle Kraken.

NOTES: Montreal fell to 5-14-2 with the loss. … T.J. Oshie, who spent three weeks on IR earlier this season, is eligible to return Sunday against Carolina. … Defenseman Justin Schultz was injured in the first period Wednesday and did not return. Laviolette didn’t have an update on his status after the game. … Left wing Conor Sheary (upper body) missed his second straight game.