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Entertainment

Assessment: The Brooklyn Academy Dips a Toe Again in With Dwell Skating

It was strange enough to see a performance in person. Try to be in a park at dusk and sit on the same stage as the performers: a sheet of ice. The public’s ice rink section was covered, but despite the mild April night, a fresh breeze was still blowing around your ankles.

On Tuesday, the Brooklyn Academy of Music presented their first live performance in more than a year with Le Patin Libre (“Free Skate” in French), a contemporary Montreal skating company. The performance at the lakeside LeFrak Center in Prospect Park even brought out Mayor Bill de Blasio, who said in a pre-performance speech, “When the cultural community comes back, all things are possible.”

That’s probably because culture is usually one of the last things to come back, but well – it’s been a long year. It was nice to see bodies moving in space. And skating is something bigger than a blade and a body: it’s the idea to fly, to fly, to resist gravity. By nature, skating is an uplifting act and art.

Due to its personal rarity, this show, a mixture of skating and dancing, had a lot to offer – maybe too much. Not every show is going to deliver transcendence, although after so much time performing live there is an expectation, good or bad; “Influences” weren’t particularly bad, but hardly euphoric.

As for the performance itself? It was fine up to a point – this ensemble, founded in 2005 by Alexandre Hamel and other skaters, has set itself the goal of making skating more inclusive and celebrating aspects that are unrelated to scoring competitions do have. (Even so, the crowd was happiest to applaud the tricks.) I love skating, especially when it’s otherworldly and hypnotic; But the Le Patin Libre program was full of starts and stops. The electronic score sometimes sounded like a thin drum machine.

“Influences” was the title of the program as well as a work from 2014 that filled the second half of the evening, often in an obvious way to examine the subject of the individual vis-à-vis the group. Vignettes focused on bullying, or the playful tension between rivals. This stand-alone work had a quality that was both expansive and predictable, as the skaters took turns at certain moments. Taylor Dilley gives his skating a sense of weight and control in the martial arts as he curled up in deep, low turns and hooked one leg behind the other. Samory Ba, tall and lanky, possessed an elegant, unmanned daring.

All performers, including Pascale Jodoin and Jasmin Boivin – the composer and musical director of the group – are credited with the choreography, some of which could have been better served by a stronger point of view. This company is big at gliding, and that’s powerful: that’s what figure skating is all about. Yet even when skating phrases reflected the intricate footwork of the dance in an interesting way, the choreography repeated itself.

And all night there were moments of stomping and knocking with skaters treating the ice like a dance floor. it doesn’t always look as innovative as it needs to feel. In a way, the short introductory pieces – no titles were given – were more succinct in how they showed the tight quality of the group. Exciting moments of bird watching, in which skaters move like a flock of birds or a school of fish, showed the momentum: deep edges, river and that gliding again.

In the last brief piece of work, Jodoin, the only woman and one of the directors of the group, led the others in a back and forth pattern that snaked gently across the expanse of ice. Eventually their space narrowed as the skaters – their arms swayed, their blades moving briskly – wound in and out of a narrow figure eight. The lights dimmed as their blades continued to scratch; Now in silhouette, the skaters rode their bodies with a powerful, muscular ease. It was nice to see, but somehow even better to feel: even though they were wearing masks, you could feel that these bodies were breathing as one.

Free skating

Until April 11th at the LeFrak Center in Lakeside, Prospect Park, Brooklyn; bam.org/influences.

Categories
Health

California’s Cal State and UC to require Covid vaccinations for fall semester

Students on the UC Berkeley campus on March 4, 2020 in Berkeley, California.

Gabrielle Lurie | San Francisco Chronicle | Hearst Newspapers via Getty Images

California State University and the University of California announced Thursday that all students, staff and faculties who want to be on campus must be vaccinated against Covid.

California’s two university systems are the largest of the dozen higher education institutions that require vaccinations for the fall semester. More than 1 million students and employees are affected by the decision. Students and staff can request exemptions for medical or religious reasons, as would be the case with other mandatory vaccines.

“Together, the CSU and UC enroll and employ more than 1 million students and employees on 33 major university campuses. This is the most comprehensive and rigorous university plan for COVID-19 vaccines in the country,” said Cal State Chancellor Joseph I. Castro .

Universities were reluctant to make the decision beforehand due to legal issues surrounding the requirement of vaccines that have not been fully approved by the Food and Drug Administration. Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines are sold under emergency clearance, but the companies expect FDA approval by fall.

Both universities plan to work mostly personally for the semester.

Vaccines are “a key step people can take to protect themselves, their friends and family, and our campus communities, while helping end the pandemic,” said UC President Michael V. Drake, a medical doctor.

Some health experts believe that the need for vaccinations for colleges and universities will help stop the spread of Covid among young people who are increasingly at risk for serious illnesses due to variants that mutate and spread rapidly.

California recorded nearly 2,000 new cases of Covid-19 on Wednesday, and a “double mutant” variant of Covid was recently discovered in the state. The state plans to reopen stores by June 15 while maintaining a mask mandate. Almost half of the adults in the state have received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine.

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Business

To Be Tracked or Not? Apple Is Now Giving Us the Selection.

Given a choice, would any of us want to be followed online to see more relevant digital ads?

We’ll find out in a moment.

On Monday, Apple plans to release iOS 14.5, one of the most anticipated software updates for iPhones and iPads in years. It includes a new privacy tool called App Tracking Transparency that gives us more control over how our data is shared.

Here’s how it works: when an app wants to track our activities in order to share information with third parties such as advertisers, a window will appear on our Apple device asking for our permission. If we say no, the app will have to stop monitoring and sharing our data.

A pop-up window might sound like a little design tweak, but it has caused an uproar in the online advertising industry. Above all, Facebook has gone on the warpath. Last year the social network launched a website and ran full-page ads in newspapers denouncing Apple’s privacy policy as harmful to small businesses.

A big motivator, of course, was that the privacy settings could affect Facebook’s own business. If we don’t let Facebook follow us, it will be more difficult for the company to see what we are shopping for or what we are doing in other apps, making it more difficult for brands to target us with ads (Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook) Executive, has denied his company’s business is being affected by Apple’s policies.)

“This is a big step in the right direction, if only because it makes Facebook work up a sweat,” said Gennie Gebhart, director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights nonprofit.

But she added, “A big question is, will it work?”

Ms. Gebhart and other privacy professionals said Apple’s new feature may not be enough to end dodgy tracking on iPhones. It could just make developers and ad tech firms find loopholes so they can keep tracking people in different ways, she and others said.

I’ve been testing early versions of iOS 14.5 for about two months to get used to the new privacy controls and other new features. Few developers have tested the pop-up with the public, so my understanding of how well the privacy feature works has been limited.

However, I’ve found that iOS 14.5 has other important new features as well. One of them is the ability to use Siri to work with a music player other than Apple Music like Spotify. That’s a big deal: in the past, you could only ask Siri to play songs through Apple Music, so the voice assistant wasn’t that useful for those who preferred other music services.

Here’s what you need to know about Apple’s new software:

It’s important to understand how tracking works in apps.

For example, let’s say you’re using a shopping app looking for a blender. You look at a Brand X mixer and close the app. Later on, ads for this mixer will be shown on other mobile apps like Facebook and Instagram.

Here’s what happened: The shopping app hired an ad tech company to embed trackers into the app. These trackers checked information on your device to identify you. If you’ve opened other apps that work with the same ad tech company, those apps were able to identify you and serve you ads for Brand X’s mixer.

With Apple’s new data protection feature, you can decide if this should happen. Now when you open some apps, a pop-up window will appear: “Allow [App Name] to track your activity across other companies’ apps and websites? “You can choose between ‘Don’t track the app’ or ‘Allow’.

Let us help you protect your digital life

If we select “Don’t Track App”, two things happen. The first is that Apple is preventing the app from using an Apple device identifier, a random sequence of letters and numbers assigned to our iPhones that is used to track our activity across apps and websites. The second is that we are telling the app developer that, by and large, we do not want our information to be tracked and in any way shared with anyone.

That seems easy. But # 2 is where things get a little complicated too.

Ad tech companies already have many ways to follow us beyond Apple’s device identifier. For example, advertisers can use a method called fingerprinting. This involves looking at seemingly innocuous features of your device – like screen resolution, operating system version and model – and combining them to determine your identity and track you across different apps.

According to data protection researchers, it is difficult for Apple to block all tracking and fingerprints taking place on iPhones. This would require knowing or predicting any new tracking method that an ad tech company is developing.

“From a tech point of view, there’s not much you can do” to stop such tracking, said Mike Audi, founder of Tiki, an app that lets you see what other apps are doing with your data.

However, the change in data protection is still significant, as we are expressly asked for consent. If we tell apps that we don’t want to be tracked and continue to do so, Apple can ban the perpetrators from the App Store.

The pop-up window also makes it easier for people to discover privacy controls, said Stephanie Nguyen, a researcher who has studied user experience design and privacy. In the past, iPhone owners could prevent advertisers from tracking them, but the tools to do that were buried in settings that most people didn’t look at.

“The option was available before, but really, wasn’t it?” Ms. Nguyen said. “It’s a big change – making it visible.”

Starting this week, all apps with tracking behavior must include the App Tracking Transparency pop-up in their next software updates. That means we’ll likely see a small number of apps asking for permission to track us initially, with the number increasing over time as more apps are updated.

Apple’s new software also includes two other interesting new features: the ability to play audio with Siri using a third-party app like Spotify, and the option to quickly unlock an iPhone while wearing a mask.

For many, these will feel long overdue. Siri has generally only worked with Apple Music for music playback since 2015. This is annoying and inconvenient for those who want to use the voice assistant to play songs with other music apps. The change comes because the antitrust investigation decides whether Apple suppresses competition by giving preference to its own apps.

You don’t need to change any settings for Siri to work with other audio services. If you usually listen to music using a third-party app like Spotify, over time Siri will simply find that you prefer that app and act accordingly. (Audio app developers need to program their apps to support Siri. If they haven’t already, this won’t work.) So if you always use Spotify to play music, you can say, “Hey Siri, play the Beatles ”to play a Beatles playlist on Spotify.

The other new feature helps in solving a pandemic problem. For more than a year now, wearing a mask has been especially annoying for owners of newer iPhones with face scanners to unlock the device. That’s because the iPhone camera couldn’t see our covered cups. Apple’s iOS 14.5 finally offers a mechanism to unlock the phone while in a masked state, although it does require wearing an Apple Watch.

Here’s how it works: when you scan your face and the phone finds that it can’t recognize you because your mouth and nose are blocked, it will check that your Apple Watch is unlocked and nearby. The Apple Watch practically acts as proof that you are the one trying to unlock your phone.

For this to work, update the software on your iPhone and Apple Watch and open the Settings app on your iPhone. Scroll down to “Face ID & Passcode”. Go to “Unlock with Apple Watch” in this menu and enable the option to unlock with your Apple Watch if the image scanner detects your face with a mask.

The next time you’re at the grocery store and look at your phone, your watch will vibrate once and unlock your phone. Sweet relief.

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Politics

Black Democrats, Conflicted on a Voting Rights Push, Concern It’s Too Late

To Jackson’s close-knit constituency, whose members consider themselves torchbearers in the form of Mr. Figgers and Mr. Evers, all of this is evidence of the continued absence of urgency.

“If the people who were most affected were whites, the Democrats would have done something about it a long time ago,” said Rukia Lumumba, executive director of the People’s Advocacy Institute in Jackson. Her brother is the Mayor of Jackson and her late father also played that role. “They thought, ‘Oh, this is just the South,’ and not that what we saw here was going to the rest of the country.”

Mr Holder, who now leads a group focused on redistribution and access to ballot papers, said he would encourage senators to eliminate the filibuster in order to pass the For the People Act if necessary. His group and partners plan to spend $ 30 million to introduce the legislation to voters in states with key senators, including Arizona, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia.

“The missions are the condition of our democracy,” said Holder. “This is more than a partisan who wins and who loses?” Game. If we are unsuccessful in HR 1 or HR 4, I am really concerned that our democracy will be fundamentally and irreparably damaged. “

He added: “We will still hold elections every two or four years, but they could become almost meaningless.”

Mr. Holder was also something of a suffrage ambassador among the Democrats: last month, he was brought in on a virtual call to the Black Caucus of Congress because some of the older members of the caucus had deep reservations about the For the People, according to those involved with the Planning the call, there is a rare gap between the democratic leadership and the group that is often referred to as “the conscience of Congress”.

In fact, Rep. Thompson was the only Democrat who voted against the bill in the House of Representatives and reversed his stance as a former co-sponsor. In the weeks since then, Mr Thompson has turned down several requests from the New York Times to explain his vote or respond to voters who say it goes against the Southern Democrats’ rich history of defending black voting rights.

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Business

UAE may keep on UK’s journey purple listing indefinitely, stoking confusion

Dubai is known for its modern architecture, including the Burj Khalifa, which is almost twice as tall as the Empire State Building at 2,700 feet.

Fraser Hall | The image database | Getty Images

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – The United Arab Emirates’ potentially indeterminate status on the UK’s “Red List” for travel has created anger and confusion, made more uncertain by recent statements from the UK government.

UK Transport Secretary Grant Shapps pointed out that due to its status as an international transport hub, the UAE could remain on the UK red list despite falling infection trends and the world’s second fastest vaccination campaign.

“We are not restricting the UAE due to the coronavirus level in the UAE,” Shapps said at an aviation event on Wednesday. “The problem is that of transit.”

The comments were sharply criticized by Emirates President Tim Clark: “It makes no sense to keep us on the ‘Red List’ for transit reasons, as (passengers) can easily pass through other hubs,” he said at a recent online event. “It puts our operations in the UK at risk for Emirates. It’s a shame if they keep us on the red list.”

Inclusion on the UK Red List comes at a high price and has real ramifications for the 120,000 Britons living in the Gulf State and their families. Anyone entering the UK from a Red List country must be quarantined in a government approved hotel and pay their own room and board expenses for 10 days at a cost of £ 1,750 (US $ 2,428) per person.

“When someone asks me about my home, I cry,” said a British national who works in Dubai and has not seen her family in the UK since mid-2020.

“The ambiguity is unbearable,” said the source, who asked not to be identified due to job restrictions. “It is much easier to find and maintain a balance in your life when you have a plan in place. Changing positions in the UK makes this impossible and is so detrimental to people’s wellbeing.”

People are waiting for their turn to be vaccinated against the coronavirus on February 3, 2021 at a vaccination center at the Dubai International Financial Center in the Gulf emirate of Dubai. The UAE has administered more than a quarter of at least three million doses to its population.

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The UK’s red list, banning air travel or imposing costly quarantine on arrival, currently lists 40 high-risk countries considered too dangerous to travel, including India, where new infections have skyrocketed to over 300,000 cases per day are.

The UAE remains on the list, although infection rates drop to around 2,000 cases per day. Abu Dhabi has now put Great Britain on its own “green” list of travel destinations.

CNBC has asked the UK’s Foreign Commonwealth Office for comment.

Growing support

A petition to remove the UAE from the UK Red List had received over 8,500 signatures on April 26, amid growing frustration over travel restrictions and quarantine costs on one of the world’s busiest air routes.

“I want the government to remove the United Arab Emirates (UAE) from the red list by the summer so that travelers can visit the safe country without being quarantined in a hotel on their return,” wrote petitioner Mikael Aziz.

The UK government must respond if the petition receives 10,000 or more signatures.

“You need to rethink Dubai’s red list. Most of the UK citizens who work there are fully vaccinated and should be allowed to travel to the UK. You could have a PCR test before and when you arrive.” Twitter user @ DawnWilson2606 tweeted to British Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

Any decision to remove the UAE from the Red List is made even more difficult by the different restrictions between Abu Dhabi and Dubai. The UAE’s most populous emirates have enforced separate access, travel, testing, and quarantine rules since the pandemic began – despite being less than a two-hour drive away from each other.

Removal of the red list “as soon as it is feasible”

Amid criticism and confusion over recent travel restrictions, there are indications that the 10 million desert sheikh dome, which is predominantly overseas, could still be removed from the red list.

“We are working very closely with the UAE authorities to ensure that we can remove the UAE from the red list as soon as possible,” said Simon Penney, British Consul General in Dubai and Trade Commissioner in the Middle East. Penney’s comments came on April 21st, the same day as Shapp’s suggestion that the UAE could remain on the red list.

The UK government is expected to review its ban on non-essential international travel from May 17th. However, it is unclear which targets will receive approval.

Commuters cross London Bridge at sunrise on March 1, 2021 in London, England.

Hollie Adams | Getty Images

“It is too early today to say which countries are on the green list and which are not, and we have to wait until early May before we have any further clarification,” said Penney during an interview with a radio station in Dubai

“The decisions made are driven by data and science. The keys to this are the launch of the vaccine, the number of daily cases and the prevalence of harmful variants,” he added.

The UK Foreign Office said it “advises against all travel across the UAE based on the current COVID-19 risk assessment. The UAE outperforms most of the developed world in vaccine adoption by almost 40% of the population are fully vaccinated.

“Visitors who have been to the United Arab Emirates or have traveled through the United Arab Emirates in the past 10 days are not allowed in,” said an April 25 report.

“A travel corridor worth reopening”

“The positions of the countries on each other’s lists need not be reciprocal,” Rob Willock, director of the Economist Corporate Network advisory service, told CNBC on Sunday.

“Given that the UAE and the UK are second and third in the global vaccination league, and more than half of their populations have had at least one vaccine, one would imagine this is a travel corridor well worth it to be reopened. “

The UK, one of Dubai’s biggest tourist sources and a key itinerary for Emirates, removed the United Arab Emirates from its “safe travel corridor” in January as falls in Dubai skyrocketed after an influx of British travelers in November and December.

The UAE reported just over 2,000 new infections on Saturday. The country has so far given 9.9 million doses of vaccine.

US travel warnings

It is not just Britain that is holding back on opening up. The US added more than 100 countries to its Level 4: Do Not Travel list last week, including Israel and the United Arab Emirates.

“Things change, and they will change over time,” IATA director general Willie Walsh told CNBC when asked if the State Department misunderstood the advice.

Certain countries on the American list also have their own restrictions on travel by foreigners, while others allow entry by air with proof of vaccination and a negative Covid test or other criteria.

“We’re not suggesting that you lift all restrictions now,” said Walsh. “We urge governments to come up with a plan that will give an indication of when they believe international air travel will start and how international air travel should work when things start moving again.”

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Health

Do We Nonetheless Must Hold Carrying Masks Open air?

If you stop having a long conversation with someone who isn’t vaccinated, masks are recommended. Even outdoors, the longer and closer you stand, the greater the risk of breathing someone else’s air. One of the few documented cases of outdoor transmission occurred at the start of the pandemic in China, when a 27-year-old man stopped to chat outside with a friend who had just returned from Wuhan, where the virus originated. Seven days later, he had his first symptoms of Covid-19.

Updated

April 25, 2021, 5:06 p.m. ET

And masks are still recommended if you are in a crowd outside. Standing shoulder to shoulder with strangers during an outdoor concert or protest can increase the risk, especially for the unvaccinated.

Recently, when she was hiking without a mask, Dr. Marr, she still tried to keep her distance from large groups when the path was crowded.

“When I passed a solo hiker it was none of my business,” said Dr. Marr. “But when I passed a group of 10 hikers in a row, I continued to step off the path. The risk is still small, but at some point there could be enough people for the risk to be felt. “

Take your dog for a walk, ride a bike, hike a trail, or have a picnic with members of your household or vaccinated friends. These are activities where the risk of virus exposure is negligible. In such situations, you can have a mask in your pocket in case you find yourself in a crowd or need to go into the house.

“I think it’s a little too much to ask people to put the mask on when they’re walking, jogging, or biking,” said Dr. Muge Cevik, Clinical Lecturer in Infectious Diseases and Medical Virology at the University of St Andrews School of Medicine in Scotland, where outdoor masking was never required. “We are at a different stage of the pandemic. I think outside masks shouldn’t have been required at all. Infection and transmission do not take place here. “

“Let me run, maskless. Mask in your pocket, “tweeted Dr. Nahid Bhadelia, an infectious disease physician and medical director of the Department of Specific Pathogens at Boston Medical Center. “Given the conservative opinion I’ve had all year, this should show how low the risk of transmission outdoors is in general with contact for short periods of time – and even lower after vaccination. Keep the masks with you when you are stationary in a crowd and going inside. “

To understand how low the risk of transmission is outdoors, researchers in Italy used mathematical models to calculate the time it would take a person to get infected outdoors in Milan. They envisioned a bleak scenario in which 10 percent of the population were infected with the coronavirus. Their calculations showed that it takes an average of 31.5 days of continuous outdoor exposure for a person avoiding the crowds to inhale a dose of virus sufficient to transmit an infection.

“The result is that this risk in the outside air is negligible if crowds and direct human contact are avoided,” said Daniele Contini, lead author of the study and aerosol scientist at the Institute of Atmospheric Sciences and Climate in Lecce, Italy.

Even with more infectious virus variants floating around, the physics of virus transmission in the open air has not changed and the risk of infection in the open air is still low, according to virus experts. Pay attention to the infection rates in your community. As the number of cases increases, the risk of encountering an infected person increases.

Dr. Cevik notes that outdoor masking debates and articles with photos of crowded beaches during the pandemic have created the false impression that parks and beaches are unsafe and distracted by the much higher risks of indoor transmission. Often times, it is the indoor activities associated with outdoor fun – like traveling without a mask on a subway or a car for hiking, or visiting a pub after a beach break – that pose the greatest risk. “People grill outside, but then they spend time inside chatting in the kitchen,” said Dr. Cevik.

The more people vaccinated, the easier it becomes to make decisions about whether to be maskless outdoors. While no vaccine offers 100 percent protection, the breakthrough infection rate has been exceptionally low. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently reported just 5,800 breakthrough infection cases in 75 million people vaccinated. And the CDC has said vaccinated friends and family members can safely spend time together without masks.

But it’s okay to keep wearing your mask outdoors if you prefer. After a year of pandemic precautions, people can find it difficult to adjust to less restrictive behaviors. Sarit A. Golub, professor of psychology at Hunter College, City University of New York, said it was important that both the media and public health officials share the reasons people can change certain behaviors, such as masking outdoors.

“In the months ahead, ‘normal life’ will be safer, but I worry that some people may not be willing or able to relax pandemic restrictions in any meaningful way,” said Dr. Golub. “I worry that people have internalized the fear messages without understanding the reasons for certain behavioral recommendations, and therefore the reasons they can be changed if circumstances change.”

Gregg Gonsalves, assistant professor of epidemiology at the Yale School of Public Health, said he recently dated a group of parents, including many vaccinated doctors, who met in a New Haven park to mark a child’s first birthday to celebrate. “We’re all just standing around, all masked, and then we’d be like, ‘When can we be outside and take our masks off?'” Said Dr. Gonsalves. “If people are vaccinated and you’re outdoors, masks are probably unnecessary at this point.”

But Dr. Gonsalves said he understands why some people may not be willing to give up their masks outdoors. “Some of that is Covid Hangover,” he said. “We were so traumatized by all of this. I think we need to have a little compassion for the people who are having trouble letting go. “

Illustrations by Eden Weingart

Categories
World News

India stories document new Covid circumstances for fifth straight day

Medical staff in PSA caring for a person at the Covid-19 Temporary Care Center attached to LNJP Hospital at Shehnai Banquet Hall on April 23, 2021 in New Delhi, India.

Raj K Raj | Hindustan Times | Getty Images

India reported a record number of Covid-19 cases for the fifth consecutive year on Monday, while the official death toll also rose.

Official data showed that 352,991 new cases were reported within 24 hours as the total number of infections exceeded 17 million.

At least 2,812 people died, bringing the death toll to over 195,000 – media reports suggest the official death rate is likely undercounted.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has been criticized for gathering large crowds for religious festivals and election campaigns in different parts of the country this year. Before the second wave, India had an average of around 10,000 new cases per day.

In April alone, the South Asian nation reported more than 5 million new cases, marginalizing the country’s health system.

Hospitals run out of beds and are also turning away from seriously ill patients. There is a serious shortage of oxygen supply, partly due to an uneven distribution between states. This has resulted in the deaths of many Covid-19 patients as the government strives to ensure supplies to the worst hit states by road, rail and air.

“It put a heavy strain on healthcare infrastructure, supplies and oxygen, as the amount of materials needed was four times what it was in the first wave,” Naresh Trehan, chairman of Medanta Hospital, told CNBC Street Signs Asia on Monday .

“We are actually having trouble coping with all of this,” he said. Additional measures are being taken to create more beds and to stimulate the production of more personal protective equipment and medicines. India’s “weak point”, however, is the lack of medical oxygen.

International answer

The international community responded with a promise to send urgently needed aid to India.

The United States will send raw materials necessary for India to advance AstraZeneca’s local manufacturing of the vaccine, as well as therapeutics, rapid diagnostic test kits, ventilators and protective equipment. It will also deploy a team of public health advisors from the Center for Disease Control and USAID to India.

This came after the UK, France and Germany pledged aid over the weekend. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on Twitter that the European Union is “pooling resources to respond quickly to India’s request for assistance through the EU Civil Protection Mechanism”.

Last week, China’s Foreign Ministry said Beijing was “in communication” with New Delhi and “ready to provide assistance and assistance as India needs it.”

Singapore state investor Temasek said Sunday it has partnered with Air India and Amazon India to ventilate medical devices like oxygen concentrators and ventilators from the city-state. Medical supplies have been sent to the financial capital, Mumbai, in Maharashtra, and the eastern state of West Bengal, where more and more cases are occurring.

Big tech companies like Microsoft and Google have also publicly pledged to help.

Medical workers chat among themselves at a quarantine center for patients infected with Covid-19 coronavirus in a banquet room that was being converted into an isolation center on April 15, 2021 in New Delhi, India, to treat the rising cases of infection.

Anindito Mukherjee | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Local answer

Corporate India has also stepped up its efforts to help the country secure medical supplies to relieve the burden on the health infrastructure.

Indian media reported that billionaire Mukesh Ambanis Reliance Industries will produce over 700 tons of medical-grade oxygen daily in one of its oil refineries. It is to be given free of charge to the worst affected countries.

The Tata Group announced last week that it would import 24 cryogenic containers, which are also reportedly in short supply, to carry liquid oxygen. In the meantime, Jindal Steel and Power have announced that they will supply hospitals in dire need of it with 500 tons of liquid oxygen.

Indian social media users have also taken to the platforms to coordinate availability and access to medical care, oxygen bottles and other forms of assistance.

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Business

Is an Activist’s Dear Home Information? Fb Alone Decides.

The Post’s editors wrote that Facebook and other social media companies “claim to be” neutral “and that they are not making editorial decisions to ward off cynical regulations or legal responsibilities that jeopardize their profits. But they act as publishers – only very bad ones. “

Updated

April 25, 2021, 5:35 p.m. ET

Of course you need one to know one. The Post, always a mix of strong local news, big gossip and conservative politics, is currently bidding for the title of the worst newspaper in America. It has published a number of scary stories about Covid vaccines, the culmination of which was a headline linking vaccines to herpes, part of a broader effort to expand its digital reach. Great stuff if your looking for traffic in anti-vax telegram groups. The piece about the Black Lives Matter activist that blocked Facebook was pretty weak too. Without evidence, she assumed that her fortune had gone bad and mostly just scoffed at how “the self-described Marxist bought a house for $ 1.4 million last month.”

But then you probably hated a story about someone you didn’t like buying an expensive house. For example, when Lachlan Murdoch, the co-chair of the Post’s parent company, bought the most expensive house in Los Angeles, it received wide and occasionally derisive coverage. Maybe Mr. Murdoch didn’t know he could have the stories deleted from Facebook.

Facebook does not maintain a central register of news articles being deleted for these reasons, although the service also blocked a Daily Mail article about the Black Lives Matter activist’s real estate. And it doesn’t keep track of how many news articles it blocked, though it regularly deletes offensive posts from individuals, including photos of the home of Fox News star Tucker Carlson, a Facebook employee said.

The conflict between Facebook and The Post really showed – and what surprised me – that the platform doesn’t postpone news organizations at all when it comes to judging news. A decision by the Post or the New York Times that someone’s personal assets are current will not affect the company’s opaque enforcement mechanisms. Nor did Facebook’s attorney say that there is a nebulous and reasonable human judgment that the country has found nervous over the past year, and that a black activist’s concern for her own safety was warranted. (The activist did not respond to my request, but mentioned in an Instagram post the coverage of her personal finances “doxxing” and a “tactic of terror”.)

The whole point of the Facebook bureaucracy is to replace human judgment with some kind of strict corporate law. “The policy in this case prioritizes security and privacy, and that enforcement shows how difficult these tradeoffs can be,” said Tucker Bounds, vice president of communications for the company. “To understand if our guidelines are in place, we refer the guidelines to the Oversight Board.”

The board is a promising type of supercourt that has not yet established a meaningful policy. So this rule could change at some point. (Let your stories be erased while you can!)

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Politics

Biden pressured to launch political appointees’ ethics agreements

U.S. President Joe Biden speaks on April 21, 2021 in the South Court Auditorium of the Eisenhower Executive Office Building in Washington, DC, on the COVID-19 response and vaccination status.

Alex Wong | Getty Images

Several watchdog and activist groups are pressuring President Joe Biden to publicly publish ethics agreements signed by political officials in his administration that are not subject to Senate endorsement.

In a letter to Biden sent exclusively to CNBC on Thursday, over a dozen organizations asked the administration to publish the agreements reached by its political advisers and others.

The groups sent the letter the day after CNBC reported that Jeff Ricchetti, the brother of Steve Ricchetti, White House adviser in Biden, hired the White House on behalf of health companies this year.

These political officers are not required to make their ethics agreements public. This may also include references to rejection of certain political matters that may affect previous customers or business relationships.

“You have an opportunity to remedy this lack of transparency immediately by demanding that every White House employee, in addition to other high-level political figures across the executive branch, agree to have their ethical documents made public. We, the undersigned, demand On you to make this commitment immediately, “the letter said.

Groups that have signed the letter include the Revolving Door Project, the Government Accountability Project, and the Jacobs Institute of Women’s Health.

The letter comes after several reports that show that many of Biden’s non-Senate advisors have been paid millions in their previous jobs and that some have connections with Wall Street and Big Tech.

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Health

5 issues to know earlier than the inventory market opens Friday, April 23

Here are the top news, trends, and analysis that investors need to get their trading day started:

1. Stocks expected to bounce back after Biden capital gains hit Wall Street

Trader on the New York Stock Exchange.

Source: NYSEa

2. Bitcoin and other cryptos are sinking, saving US $ 200 billion from the world market

A visual representation of the cryptocurrency Bitcoin on November 21, 2020 in London, England.

Jordan Mansfield | Getty Images

Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies plummeted Friday as concerns over Biden’s raising U.S. capital gains taxes on the rich sparked a sell-off. Bitcoin, which hit an all-time high of $ 65,000 on April 14, fell 6.5% to below $ 50,000. That’s a 23% drop in just over a week. The crypto market value, half of which is Bitcoin, fell $ 200 billion in one day. Bitcoin fell below $ 1 trillion when the global crypto universe slipped below $ 2 trillion, according to price tracking website CoinMarketCap.

3. Intel shares fall as sales, earnings slightly year over year

Pat Gelsinger, CEO of Intel, speaks in a photo taken as CEO of VMware on March 9, 2017 in Santa Monica, California.

Patrick T. Fallon | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Intel posted essentially flat first-quarter sales and a decline in earnings in its first earnings report late Thursday under new CEO Pat Gelsinger. Dow shares were down more than 2% in premarket trading, despite Intel’s earnings and sales per share beating estimates. Gelsinger, who took over the company in February, announced a plan earlier this month to invest $ 20 billion in new microchip manufacturing facilities. The Dow components American Express and Honeywell delivered quarterly results on Friday morning. Amex beat slightly in profit but missed out on sales. The shares fell nearly 4%. Honeywell hit on both, though its stock was also lower.

4. The CDC is considering two more cases while the advisory panel on the paused J&J vaccine meets

Johnson & Johnson’s Janssen COVID-19 vaccine will be stored in Chicago, Illinois for use with United Airlines employees at the United Clinic at O’Hare International Airport on March 9, 2021.

Scott Olson | Getty Images

The CDC Vaccination Advisory Board will meet on Friday to clarify whether to lift the hiatus on Johnson & Johnson’s one-shot Covid vaccine. In addition to six women who had rare but severe blood clotting problems after receiving the vaccine, the CDC is investigating two other possible cases: a deceased woman from Oregon and a hospitalized woman from Texas. Of the original six, one died and one became seriously ill. According to CDC data, over 8 million people in the US have received the J&J vaccine

5. SpaceX launches its third crew in less than a year and flies a reused rocket

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying the astronauts from the Crew 2 mission will launch on April 23, 2021 at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida from Launch Complex 39A.

Gregg Newton | AFP | Getty Images

SpaceX launched four astronauts from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Friday morning using a recycled rocket and capsule. It is the third crewed flight in less than a year for Elon Musk’s privately owned space company. The astronauts from the US, Japan and France were scheduled to arrive at the International Space Station early Saturday after a 23-hour journey in the same capsule used by the SpaceX debut crew last May.

– Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this story. Follow all market action like a pro on CNBC Pro. With CNBC’s coronavirus coverage, you’ll get the latest information on the pandemic.