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Politics

Biden to faucet Nicholas Burns ambassador to China, Rahm Emanuel to Japan

Nicholas Burns

Scott Mlyn | CNBC

WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden announced on Friday his intention to appoint a career diplomat and former US ambassador to NATO, Nicholas Burns, as his ambassador to China.

The president also announced that Rahm Emanuel, the former two-term mayor of Chicago, will be nominated as his ambassador to Japan.

Both announcements have been eagerly awaited, and once officially nominated, both Burns and Emanuel are expected to be ratified by the Senate.

Burns is one of America’s most skilled and respected diplomats, serving both Republicans and Democrats for more than 25 years. He was ambassador to Greece in the Clinton administration, ambassador to NATO in the George W. Bush administration and from 2005 to 2008 undersecretary of state for political affairs.

With the Biden administration making economic and geopolitical competition with China the cornerstone of its broader foreign policy, Burns would be the spearhead as ambassador.

He would likely undertake the double duty of implementing policies deeply unpopular with his Chinese hosts while maintaining a warm working relationship.

The White House has signaled that it will seek a relationship with Beijing that, in some ways, reflects Washington’s strategy towards the Kremlin.

While Russia and the United States are adversaries on almost all fronts, senior diplomats in both countries maintain specific areas of cooperation on issues where cooperation is in their mutual interest, such as nuclear arms control.

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Such a model could be applied to US-China relations, with collaboration on issues such as North Korea and climate change.

In contrast to Burns, Emanuel is neither a professional diplomat nor a Japan expert.

As former White House Chief of Staff to then President Barack Obama and previously an Illinois Congressman, Emanuel has close ties with several of the top figures in the Biden White House, including current White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain.

However, within the broader Democratic Party, Emanuel is a polarizing figure.

As a centrist on issues such as immigration and health care, Emanuel has drawn the wrath of progressives in Congress since the early days of the Obama administration.

But it was his time as Mayor of Chicago that nearly ruined any chance Emanuel had to join the Biden administration.

As mayor, Emanuel has been heavily criticized for refusing to post police dashcam footage for more than a year after the 2014 shooting of Laquan McDonald, a black teenager who was shot 16 times by a police officer who alleged , McDonald pounced on him.

The footage of that shooting showed that McDonald was actually turned away by the policeman when the policeman shot him. McDonald collapsed on the first shot, but the officer didn’t stop; he fired another 15 shots at McDonald while the teenager was on the ground.

Emanuel claimed he never saw the video, which clearly showed the Chicago police’s version of the events was a lie.

Emails later revealed that Emanuel’s closest mayor’s aide knew early on that the police story did not match the footage.

Emanuel’s nomination as Biden’s ambassador to Japan is a blow to the progressives who fought against him.

But as with any ambassador, it is Emanuel’s personal friendship with Biden and other senior White House officials that is most important to the Japanese government.

In this regard, Tokyo is no different from any other foreign capital: a US ambassador is only as good as the time it takes to get the president on the phone.

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Health

Exoskeleton Fits: A New System to Assist You Stroll and Run Higher

Lower body exoskeletons and exo-suits are already being used in some rehabilitation facilities and laboratories to improve walking ability in stroke patients, elderly and young people with cerebral palsy or other disabilities. But perhaps the most compelling and annoying science today is about exoskeletons for the rest of us, including young and healthy people. In this research area, scientists are developing exoskeletons to reduce the energy costs of running and walking, and to make these activities less tiring, more physiologically efficient, and possibly more enjoyable.

So far, the first results seem promising. In a series of studies conducted at Stanford University’s Biomechatronics Lab last year (and funded in part by Nike, Inc.), researchers found that college students were able to run about 15 percent more efficiently than normal on a treadmill when they wore a customizable prototype version of a lower leg exoskeleton. These exoskeletons feature a motorized, lightweight frame that straps around the runners’ shins and ankles and a carbon fiber rod that is inserted into the soles of the shoes. Together, these elements reduce the amount of force that runners’ leg muscles need to use to move them forward. The authors of the study estimate that we could run at least 10 percent faster on real paths and trails with the devices than on our own.

A slightly optimized device also increased the speed of young people walking, according to a separate experiment by the Stanford Laboratory published in April. In this study, students walked about 40 percent faster on average when wearing a powered exoskeleton prototype, while burning about 2 percent less energy.

In essence, exoskeleton technology could be thought of as “analogous to e-bikes,” but for walking, not pedaling, said Steven Collins, professor of mechanical engineering at Stanford and senior author of the new studies. By reducing the amount of exercise, the powered machines could theoretically encourage us to move around more, perhaps commuting on foot, hanging out or dropping by with naturally faster spouses or friends, and reaching places that might otherwise seem dauntingly hilly or far away.

They might even allow our muscles to power our cell phones, according to one of the more surprising new exoskeleton studies. In this experiment, published in Science in May, healthy young volunteers from Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario wore an exoskeleton that contained a backpack with a small generator attached to cables that ran to their ankles.

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Health

Scott Gottlieb says vaccinated individuals cannot ‘throw warning to the wind’

Dr. Scott Gottlieb on Friday urged fellow vaccinated Americans to be on guard about the Covid delta variant, telling CNBC its highly transmissible nature cannot be ignored even by people who have immunity protection.

“The original premise around the vaccines — that they reduce the risk of serious disease and hospitalization — is still intact,” the former Food and Drug Administration commissioner said on “Squawk Box.” “We still see in the data that the vast majority of people who are getting in trouble with Covid are people who are unvaccinated.”

However, Gottlieb, who serves on the board of Covid vaccine maker Pfizer, said the risk to vaccinated people is not zero.

“People who are vaccinated in a setting of this epidemic surge, especially if they’re in places where there’s a high prevalence of infection, need to take appropriate precautions,” he said. “You can’t just throw caution to the wind. You can still become a vehicle for spread in your community.”

The seven-day average of daily new coronavirus cases in the U.S. is 141,060, according to a CNBC analysis of Johns Hopkins University data. That’s up 14% from a week ago. Cases are increasing by more than 5% in 42 states plus Washington, D.C.

Gottlieb’s comments Friday came in response to a question about three vaccinated U.S. senators — Roger Wicker, Angus King, and John Hickenlooper — who announced a day earlier they had tested positive for Covid.

“I think there’s now a recognition that this delta is sufficiently contagious that it can pierce the protections offered by the vaccine, particularly if you were vaccinated a while ago and have declining immunity, as these senators probably did because they were vaccinated a long time ago,” said Gottlieb, who led the FDA from 2017 to 2019.

While some scientists disagree with U.S. health officials’ recent decision to authorize Covid booster shots beginning next month, Gottlieb said he believes the delta variant’s transmissibility supports the idea of delivering third doses to Americans. Noting his role on Pfizer’s board, Gottlieb said he’s studied the data that shows declining immunity protection over time.

“It happens to be the case that we vaccinated some of our most vulnerable older individuals in our society last December and January, particularly nursing homes,” Gottlieb said. “I think the prudent thing to do would be to get additional immunity in that population, especially considering the fact we’re dealing with a much more contagious variant.”

Disclosure: Scott Gottlieb is a CNBC contributor and is a member of the boards of Pfizer, genetic testing start-up Tempus, health-care tech company Aetion Inc. and biotech company Illumina. He also serves as co-chair of Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings’ and Royal Caribbean’s “Healthy Sail Panel.”

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Politics

Biden’s Immigration Insurance policies Face Contemporary Judicial Setbacks

WASHINGTON – The Justice Department on Friday called on the Supreme Court to halt a judge’s order to restart a Trump-era program that was causing migrants crossing the southern border to seek asylum to await their cases in Mexico , often in life-threatening situations.

The move came in response to one of two court rulings this week that marked a backlash in President Biden’s efforts to reverse his predecessor’s tough immigration policies.

On Thursday, a federal appeals court in Texas dismissed an attempt by the Biden administration to halt a court order reinstating the controversial migrant protection protocols program, also known as “Remain in Mexico” asylum policy, underway during the Trump administration. The order should take effect on Saturday.

And in a separate case, a federal judge in Texas temporarily blocked the Biden administration’s short-term strategy of limiting arrests of undocumented immigrants by prioritizing those who most threatened national and public security. A Justice Department spokeswoman said the agency is reviewing Judge Drew B. Tipton’s 160-page verdict of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas and lawyers are considering next steps.

Taken together, the trials threaten two of the Biden government’s earliest efforts to reshape the country’s immigration system. Another blow came in July when a federal judge ruled that an Obama-era program protecting hundreds of thousands of undocumented young adults from deportation was illegal.

The judges’ decisions and the administration’s appeal to the Supreme Court on Friday, emphasized the role of the courts as the primary venue for shaping polarizing immigration policy, one legal challenge after another – a strategy that immigration advocates have refined during the Trump administration.

“Those who oppose the Biden government’s immigration agenda take every opportunity to ask political questions and have them answered in favorable courts,” said Tom K. Wong, director of the US Immigration Policy Center at the University of California, San Diego said.

The order for the Biden administration to restore Trump policies that forced asylum seekers to wait in Mexico while their cases were being handled in the United States came from Judge Matthew J. Kacsmaryk of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas.

He and Judge Tipton were both appointed by President Donald J. Trump. Of the three judges on the Fifth District Court of Appeal who on Thursday denied the government’s motion to stop the “stay in Mexico” ruling, two were appointed by Trump; the third was appointed by President George W. Bush.

On appeal to the Supreme Court, government attorneys said the reintroduction of asylum policy on Saturday was “almost impossible” and would cause “irreparable harm”. Critics said it would place asylum seekers in dangerous gathering environments at a time when the highly contagious Delta variant fueled a surge in coronavirus cases.

It was initially unclear what exactly the order would set in motion on Saturday or whether Mexico would allow the program to resume.

The program was also litigated during the Trump administration.

“You will likely see opponents of the Biden administration’s future policies using the courts to hold back progress, which only adds to the importance of Congressional action,” Wong said.

The most recent example is efforts to prevent the administration from prioritizing undocumented immigrants to be arrested.

In February, the Biden administration issued its preliminary arrest priorities for immigration and customs enforcement, a marked departure from the Trump administration’s policy of arresting undocumented immigrants for any immigration violations. The Biden team ordered ICE officials to give priority to the arrest of undocumented persons who pose a risk to national and public security, as well as those who recently illegally crossed the border. The Obama administration has similar enforcement priorities.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton celebrated the injunction on the priorities of Mr. Biden’s arrest, calling it “another Texas win over Biden.”

Texas is a party in both cases and this year has borne the brunt of the unusually high number of illegal border crossings, with many migrant families and children from Central America arriving in the state’s Rio Grande Valley and overwhelming border officials. The state has taken several measures to challenge the immigration policies of the Biden government; Earlier this summer, Republican Governor Greg Abbott ordered state law enforcement agencies to arrest migrants for trespassing in an attempt to tackle illegal immigration – because, he said, the Biden administration did not.

Alejandro N. Mayorkas, the Secretary of Homeland Security, has been working to outline permanent arrest priorities for ICE that would replace the tentative ones currently under attack. It was not immediately clear whether the judge’s ruling would apply to the administration’s final arrest priorities.

If the Biden government cannot continue with its immigration arrest strategy, the postponement will likely continue to weigh on an immigration detention system that is already near full. ICE arrests have so far decreased by more than half this year compared to the same period in 2020, according to immigration statistics, in part due to pandemic-related rules to limit the number of people in meeting places and temporary arrest priorities.

Mr. Wong said that even if Republicans were to challenge arrest priorities, it would not change the reality that there was not enough room.

“And so the policy of ‘enforcement en masse’ does not take into account finite resources,” he said, “including limited detention capacities.”

The government is also waiting for a judge to rule on a lawsuit that would prevent them from continuing a public health rule that the Trump administration put in place at the start of the pandemic to help many asylum-seeking families arriving at the border to refuse. Immigration advocates filed the lawsuit last year, when Vice President Kamala Harris, then a Senator from California and a presidential candidate, argued against the rule.

The plaintiffs’ attorneys hoped to reach an agreement with the Biden administration. But discussions collapsed last month when the White House decided not to lift the health rule anytime soon due to the overwhelming number of migrants arriving at the southern border and the risk of further Covid-19 infections.

If the courts ultimately order the administration to repeal the public health rule, it will expand the federal government’s enforcement capabilities even further.

Charlie Savage contributed to the coverage.

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World News

Biden’s Inaccurate Claims in Defending Afghanistan Withdrawal

In his remarks on Friday, President Biden promised to evacuate all Americans from Afghanistan and defended his administration from criticism of the withdrawal.

But in the process, he made several misleading or false claims about the withdrawal and evacuation that went chaotic as Americans and tens of thousands of Afghan allies attempted to flee through the airport in Kabul.

Here’s a factual check of what the president said.

What Mr Biden said

“I have seen no doubt about our credibility from our allies around the world.”

This is misleading. While the leaders of the United States allied countries are reluctant to publicly criticize the withdrawal, some members of their governments have not minced words when they question American leadership and credibility.

In Germany, the chairman of the parliament’s foreign affairs committee described the withdrawal as “a serious and far-reaching misjudgment by the current government” and said it had “fundamentally damaged the political and moral credibility of the West”. Armin Laschet, the chairman of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Conservative Party and a candidate for her successor, called it the “greatest debacle” NATO has ever experienced. According to German media reports, Ms. Merkel also criticized it privately.

In the UK, the withdrawal has cast doubt on the United States’ reliability as an ally among some officials. Tom Tugendhat, a Conservative MP and chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee, described it as the “greatest foreign policy disaster” since the Suez Crisis of 1956, we are defending our interests. “

Latvia’s Defense Minister Artis Pabriks said the withdrawal had caused “chaos” and showed that the West was “weaker worldwide”.

What Mr Biden said

“What is our current interest in Afghanistan, where Al-Qaeda is gone? We made a specific trip to Afghanistan to get rid of Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan and also to get Osama bin Laden, and we did. “

Not correct. Al-Qaeda’s presence in Afghanistan has certainly diminished since the invasion of the United States, but Mr Biden is wrong in saying the terrorist group is no longer in the country.

A UN Security Council report published in June estimates that al-Qaeda is still present in at least 15 of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces. The Defense Ministry’s inspector general said in a report released on Wednesday that “the Taliban are maintaining their relations with al-Qaeda and providing a safe haven for the terrorist group in Afghanistan.”

Updated

Aug 20, 2021, 6:21 p.m. ET

After Mr Biden spoke, Pentagon spokesman John F. Kirby confirmed at a press conference that al-Qaeda was present in Afghanistan.

What Mr Biden said

“We have no indication that they – in Kabul – could not get through the airport. We made an agreement with the Taliban. So far they have let her through. It’s in their best interest that they get through. So we are not aware of any circumstance in which American citizens with an American passport try to get to the airport. “

This is misleading. Reports from Afghanistan contradict this statement, and other government officials have been more cautious in describing the conditions for American citizens traveling to the airport.

Understanding the Taliban takeover in Afghanistan

Map 1 of 5

Who are the Taliban? The Taliban emerged in 1994 amid the unrest following the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan in 1989. They used brutal public punishments, including flogging, amputation and mass executions, to enforce their rules. Here is more about their genesis and track record as rulers.

Who are the Taliban leaders? These are the top leaders of the Taliban, men who for years have been on the run, in hiding, in prison and dodged American drones. Little is known about them or how they plan to rule, including whether they will be as tolerant as they say they are.

What is happening to the women of Afghanistan? When the Taliban was last in power, they banned women and girls from most jobs or from going to school. Afghan women have gained a lot since the Taliban was overthrown, but now they fear that they are losing ground. Taliban officials are trying to reassure women that things will be different, but there are indications that they have begun to reintroduce the old order in at least some areas.

The US embassy in Kabul on Wednesday sent a security alert warning American citizens, legal residents and their families that the “United States government cannot provide a safe passage to Hamid Karzai International Airport.”

When asked about Mr. Biden’s allegation that no Americans were denied access to the airport, State Department spokesman Ned Price said in a news conference Friday that the department received “only a small number of reports from American citizens, that their access has been hindered in any way, that they have encountered any kind of hardship or resistance in order to get to the airport. “

Pentagon spokesman Mr Kirby also said at the press conference that he was aware of “sporadic reports of some Americans unable to pass the checkpoints” but that they “by and large” got through could.

Politico reported that Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III told Congress on Friday that some Americans who tried to leave Afghanistan had been harassed and beaten by Taliban fighters.

An unnamed American residing in Afghanistan told ABC News that he had seen people with US passports banned from passing through Taliban checkpoints. Clarissa Ward, a CNN reporter in Kabul, said after Mr Biden’s remarks that she was having trouble getting to the airport.

“The work of getting to this airport is like a Rubik’s Cube,” Ms. Ward said on CNN Friday. “Anyone who says any American can come in here is – yes, I mean, technically it is possible. But it’s extremely difficult and it’s dangerous. “

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Entertainment

A Celebrated Afghan College Fears the Taliban Will Cease the Music

For more than a decade, the Afghanistan National Institute of Music has stood as a symbol of the country’s changing identity. The school trained hundreds of young artists, many of them orphans and street hawkers, in artistic traditions that were once forbidden by the Taliban. It formed an all-female orchestra that performed widely in Afghanistan and abroad.

But in recent days, as the Taliban have been consolidating control over Afghanistan again, the school’s future has come into doubt.

In interviews, several students and teachers said they feared the Taliban, who have a history of attacking the school’s leaders, would seek to punish people affiliated with the school as well as their families. Some said they worried the school will be shut down and they will not be allowed to play again. Several female students said they had been staying inside their homes since the capital was seized on Sunday

“It’s a nightmare,” Ahmad Naser Sarmast, the head of the school, said in a telephone interview from Melbourne, Australia, where he arrived last month for medical treatment.

The Taliban banned most forms of music when they previously ruled Afghanistan, from 1996 to 2001. This time, they have promised a more tolerant approach, vowing not to carry out reprisals against their former enemies and saying that women will be allowed to work and study “within the bounds of Islamic law.”

But the Taliban’s history of violence toward artists and its general intolerance for music without religious meaning has sowed doubts among many performers.

“My concern is that the people of Afghanistan will be deprived of their music,” Mr. Sarmast said. “There will be an attempt to silence the nation.”

In 2010, Mr. Sarmast, an Afghan music scholar who was trained in Australia and plays trumpet and piano, opened the school, which has more than 400 students and staff members, with the support of the American-backed government. It was a rarity: a coeducational institution devoted to teaching music from both Afghanistan and the West.

The school’s musicians were invited to perform on many of the world’s most renowned stages, including Carnegie Hall. They played Western classical music as well as traditional Afghan music and instruments, like the rubab, which resembles the lute and is one of the national instruments of Afghanistan.

The school placed special emphasis on supporting young women, who make up a third of the student body. The school’s all-female orchestra, Zohra, founded in 2015, earned wide acclaim. Many were the first women in their families to receive formal training. In a symbol of its modern ways, head scarves for girls at the school’s campus in Kabul were optional.

Updated 

Aug. 20, 2021, 5:22 p.m. ET

The school’s habit of challenging tradition made it a target. In 2014, Mr. Sarmast was injured by a Taliban suicide bomber who infiltrated a school play. The Taliban tried to attack the school again in the years that followed, but their attempts were thwarted, Mr. Sarmast said.

Now, female students say they are concerned about a return to a repressive past, when the Taliban eliminated schooling for girls and barred women from leaving home without male guardians.

Several female students — who were granted anonymity because they feared retaliation — said that it felt like their dreams to become professional musicians could disintegrate. They worried they might not be able to play music again in their lives, even as a hobby.

In recent weeks, as the Taliban swept through the country, the school’s network of overseas supporters tried to help by raising money to improve security on campus, including by installing an armed gate and walls.

But it’s now unclear if the school will even be permitted to operate under the Taliban. It is also increasingly difficult for citizens of Afghanistan to leave the country. Airport entrances have been chaotic and often impassable scenes for days, even for people with travel documentation. The Taliban control the streets, and though they say they are breaking up crowds at the airport to keep order, there are widespread reports that they are turning people away by force if they try to leave the country.

The State Department said in a statement that it was working to get American citizens, as well as locally employed staff and vulnerable Afghans, out of the country, though crowding at the airport had made it more difficult. The department said it was prioritizing Afghan women and girls, human rights defenders and journalists, among others.

“This effort is of utmost importance to the U.S. government,” the statement said.

In the 1990s, the Taliban permitted religious singing but banned other forms of music because they were seen as distractions to Islamic studies and could encourage impure behavior. Taliban officials destroyed instruments and smashed cassette tapes.

Understand the Taliban Takeover in Afghanistan

Card 1 of 5

Who are the Taliban? The Taliban arose in 1994 amid the turmoil that came after the withdrawal of Soviet forces from Afghanistan in 1989. They used brutal public punishments, including floggings, amputations and mass executions, to enforce their rules. Here’s more on their origin story and their record as rulers.

Who are the Taliban leaders? These are the top leaders of the Taliban, men who have spent years on the run, in hiding, in jail and dodging American drones. Little is known about them or how they plan to govern, including whether they will be as tolerant as they claim to be.

What happens to the women of Afghanistan? The last time the Taliban were in power, they barred women and girls from taking most jobs or going to school. Afghan women have made many gains since the Taliban were toppled, but now they fear that ground may be lost. Taliban officials are trying to reassure women that things will be different, but there are signs that, at least in some areas, they have begun to reimpose the old order.

William Maley, an emeritus professor at Australian National University who has studied Afghanistan, said he was troubled by reports that the Taliban had recently sought to limit the spread of popular music in some parts of the country.

“The Taliban in the 1990s were extremely hostile to any form of music other than religious chants, and people had to hide their instruments and play music secretively,” Professor Maley said. “I would not be optimistic.”

Amid the chaos in Kabul, students, teachers and alumni of the school have exchanged frantic messages on chat groups. They have lamented the fact that they might need to hide their instruments or leave them in the care of others if they try to flee.

William Harvey, who taught violin and conducted the orchestra at the school from 2010 to 2014, said he felt despair thinking his former students might be in peril for pursuing their passion. Still, he said the school is an inspiration for artists and audiences around the world.

“It is to those students, then, that we owe a tremendous responsibility,” said Mr. Harvey, now the concertmaster of the Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional in Mexico. “They must live to lift their voices again another day.”

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Health

Maker of Speedy Covid Assessments Informed Manufacturing unit to Destroy Stock

Aly Morici, Abbott’s director of public affairs, rose to the challenge in the US, saying in an email that “it is difficult to scale to a dime, but we’re doing it again”. She admitted that “there will be some delivery bottlenecks in the coming weeks”.

Abbott invited workers back to the Maine facility this month to meet what a letter described as “unexpected production needs”. However, it is unclear how many employees will be returning. They would forego weeks of non-work remuneration, as provided for in their severance payments, with only a two-week “thank you” salary extension and no guarantee that their job would last.

The company wasn’t in that position in early 2020. In anticipation of fast, reliable testing that did not require specialized equipment, Abbott assembled a team of approximately 100 scientists, supply chain experts, and engineers to develop BinaxNOW in a highly compressed timeframe. The company took risks, imported expensive equipment, and opened two US factories. “Everyone’s been working non-stop,” said Mr. Ford. “That’s what Abbott was built for, in the end.”

The test strip, which is similar to the one on a stretch stick, is less sensitive than the PCR, but provides instant results so a company or school can react immediately.

The FDA granted BinaxNOW emergency approval last August. A day later, the U.S. government announced it would buy 150 million of the tests for $ 760 million – $ 5 per test plus shipping – to be used in facilities such as nursing homes and schools.

Washington’s Friendship Public Charter School received 20,000 government-purchased BinaxNOW tests for free as part of a pilot program supported by the Rockefeller Foundation. Patricia A. Brantley, the school’s general manager, said 70 percent of students’ parents chose to have them wiped once a week. “Testing is still an important part of the strategy to not only reopen schools but keep them open,” said Ms. Brantley.

Northwestern University also introduced BinaxNOW early on and tested the students twice a week. The university was running up to 5,000 rapid tests a day, according to Luke Figora, vice president of operations at the school.

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Politics

Capitol Hill bomb menace defendant Floyd Ray Roseberry in courtroom

A man named Floyd Ray Roseberry, who claims to be in his truck with explosives, speaks during a Facebook livestream in a still from a video that was captured in Washington on August 19, 2021.

Social media | via Reuters

The North Carolina man, who announced he had a bomb in his truck parked on Capitol Hill, was charged Friday on threats with the use of a weapon of mass destruction and attempted use of an explosive device.

The man, Floyd Ray Roseberry, was arrested without bail pending a medical examination of the defendant at a hearing in the US District Court in Washington, DC.

Judge Zia Faruqui ordered the assessment after Roseberry said it was difficult to understand the trial as he had been denied blood pressure medication and “my mental medicine” since he was handed over to police on Thursday.

“My memory is not that good, sir,” said Roseberry via audio link during the remote performance.

“We don’t need to be eye to eye,” Roseberry said at one point, referring to the lack of physical presence or video. “I can tell by your voice that you are a good man … I am ready to do whatever is asked.”

Roseberry, who said he was 51 years old despite authorities said he was 49, was appointed federal defender by Faruqui.

He’s next on trial on Wednesday. Roseberry faces the highest possible life imprisonment if convicted of weapons of mass destruction.

Prosecutors said they would ask Faruqui to hold him pending trial without bail.

Roseberry’s threat resulted in the evacuation of buildings including the Supreme Court, the Library of Congress, the Cannon House office building and the offices of the Republican National Committee.

Roseberry parked a pickup truck on a sidewalk in front of the library Thursday morning.

He then told police officers that he had a bomb inside, which set off an hour-long stalemate that resulted in him surrendering peacefully.

Floyd Ray Roseberry sits in his pickup truck in a standoff with the Capitol Police outside the Library of Congress in Washington DC on August 19, 2021

Photo: Sydney Bobb

Before giving up, the Grover, North Carolina man posted videos of his truck on Facebook speaking directly to President Joe Biden, whose resignation he called for when he called for a revolution.

He also called for US air strikes on the Taliban in Afghanistan.

Roseberry claimed in a video that he had a barrel of gunpowder and more than two pounds of the explosive tannerite in the truck. He also suggested that there were four more bombs in the DC area.

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Health

Filipino-American faculty college students’ psychological well being suffered throughout Covid

When Covid-19 cases soared nationwide during the first few months of the pandemic, Amelia Catacutan said that her mental health was at an “all-time low.”

Catacutan, a Filipino-American college student entering her sophomore year at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said it was hard to cope with the social isolation, virtual learning environment and anxiety over her family’s well-being plus the rise in anti-Asian hate during the pandemic.

As she adapted to this new reality, Catacutan said she felt like she was being crushed by more and more stress and anxiety piling on top of her, making it difficult to express her emotions and go about her daily life.

Amelia Catacunan, a sophomore at the University of Wisconsin-Madison

Source: Ciboney Reglos

Catacutan was not alone in experiencing mental health struggles. Nearly half (46%) of Asian-Americans reported anxiety during the pandemic and 15% reported depressive symptoms, according to a Stop AAPI Hate survey.

But another survey conducted by the UC Davis Bulosan Center for Filipino Studies during the first half of 2020 indicates that the pandemic may have had a higher impact on the mental health of Filipino-Americans in particular.

The Filipinx Count Survey found that 81% of Filipino-Americans reported anxiety during the pandemic and 73% experienced depression.

For Filipino-American college students, there were a lot of factors that took a toll on their mental health.

 “The pandemic was just a recipe for disaster for so many Filipino-American students,” said Christine Catipon, a licensed clinical psychologist in Los Angeles, who works with college students. “They had to balance family duties and working on top of a more rigorous learning environment, like every student did, but also had stressors like moving back into a multigenerational household with intergenerational conflict, cultural pressures, fears about their family’s well-being as health workers and more,” Catipon said.

Family members on the front lines

Catipon said many of her clients had heightened anxiety about family members who were health-care or essential workers during the pandemic. She noted that they had a “constant fear” of those front-line family members contracting the virus.

This was true for Catacutan. She said one of the major sources of her mental health struggles during the pandemic was having parents who worked as health-care workers in the Covid units of their respective hospitals.

Filipinos make up a large portion of the health-care industry in the U.S., with 4% of registered nurses nationwide being Filipino, according to a 2020 report from National Nurses United. During the pandemic, nearly 32% of registered nurses in the nation who have died of Covid-19 and related complications were Filipino, the report said.

More from College Voices:
College graduates are struggling to make up for the ‘lost year’ created by the coronavirus pandemic
Why Black and Latinx women are more likely to struggle with impostor syndrome—and how to overcome it
Women in STEM: 3 Challenges we face ̶ and how to overcome them

Catacutan said this disproportionate impact of the pandemic on Filipino health workers brought her a substantial amount of stress and anxiety. With her parents working on the frontline, she said she worried tirelessly about their safety, was left to take over household responsibilities and even decided to quit her part-time job at a local restaurant.

“I had to put a lot of things on hold, like my job, just to make sure that I wasn’t risking their safety even more and that I could take care of the house,” Catacutan said.

But Catacutan said her decision to quit her part-time job was also due to heightened anxiety over the rise in hate towards Asian-Americans and Pacific Islanders, or AAPI, during the pandemic.

Racism targeting Asian-Americans is nothing new in the U.S. There were actually federal policies that barred immigration from Asia until 1965. But inflammatory political rhetoric about the coronavirus, such as the term “China virus,” prompted a surge in hate crimes against AAPI during the pandemic, according to Stop AAPI Hate.

For example, Anti-Asian hate crimes in 16 of America’s largest cities increased by nearly 150% in 2020, according to data collected by the Center for the Study of Hate & Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino. The data also indicated that the first spike occurred in March and April, the outset of the Covid pandemic when the harmful rhetoric first proliferated.

Catacutan said the rise in AAPI hate stoked anxiety about her own safety, which played a role in her decision to quit her part-time job.

“I had people who refused to touch me when I worked because they were scared that I carried the virus. It was really hurtful and felt really, really othering,” Catacutan said. “I ended up quitting, partly because the industry was a bit slow, but also because I was starting to receive racial remarks. I didn’t feel safe.”

The stress of moving back home

Catipon, who works with college students, noted that many of her Filipino-American clients experienced a decline in their mental health after moving back home with their family during the pandemic.

Catipon said when students go home, they may encounter intergenerational conflict with their immigrant parents, which refers to a disparity in values between different generations.

For example, some Filipino immigrant parents may have differing beliefs about racial issues, an over-emphasis on academics, or may be prone to unsolicited comments about their child’s appearance and life, she said.

This was the case for Carolene Ulep, a rising fifth year at Texas Tech University, who said her mental health worsened after sheltering at home with her family during the pandemic.

Ulep pointed to “toxic” Filipino family dynamics, recounting a time when her dad made unsolicited comments about her appearance. While Ulep said her dad did not intend to hurt her, she said his comments stuck with her long after.

“When he makes those kinds of comments, or when my mom makes comments about things I should be doing when I already have so much on my plate, I start thinking that I can do so much more. But in reality, I can’t,” Ulep said. “So, it’s difficult because I feel pressure to please my parents about these things, but at the same time, I know it’s my life.”

Carolene Ulep, a fifth year student at Texas Tech University

Source: Ashley Parker

Ulep added that Filipino family dynamics also include showing the utmost respect to elders, which leaves her unable to correct her parents when they make hurtful comments.

Roy Taggueg, the author of the Filipinx Count Survey and a Ph.D. student at UC Davis, also underscored the academic pressures that Filipino-American college students face when they move back home, and how it impacts their mental health.

“The pandemic puts students under really intense scrutiny of their parents when it comes to school since many had to go back home,” Taggueg said. “Students get stressed trying to meet their parents’ expectations to do well, and it goes back to the whole idea of ‘utang na loob.’”

“Utang na loob” is a Filipino cultural value that translates to “debt of gratitude.” Taggueg said it describes when Filipinos feel a sense of debt towards their family members who have made sacrifices for them, such as bringing them to the U.S. from the Philippines, raising them and supporting them throughout their lives.

Catacutan said she felt this pressure to excel academically and to “make her parents proud.” She said it caused her to push herself to the extreme when it came to school and increased her mental stress as a result.

“My parents are both immigrants and they both came here from the bottom up. A big part of the pressure comes from feeling so grateful for them so that you feel like you have to spend all of your time accomplishing just so you can pay them back for everything – all the opportunities that they gave you,” Catacutan said.

“And it’s a constant drive from both them and myself to keep going and going. And I never really learned how to take a break, I just get too busy trying to attain the most,” Catacutan continued.

“Sometimes we think that’s what’s healthy for us and it’s not at all.”

No social outlet

Catacutan also said the pandemic left her with “no outlets” to relieve the heightened mental stress from school, pointing to the lack of social interaction.

This was a trend that Catipon, who works with college students, noticed among her own Filipino-American clients. She said for many students, socializing and spending time with peers served as a “respite” from stressors in their lives.

When pandemic shutdowns across the nation cut off the social lives of students, Catipon said their mental health issues were amplified and they were left with no way to cope with new stressors from the pandemic, such as the rise in AAPI hate and fears about their health-care worker parents contracting the virus.

This was true for Jolene Soriano, a rising junior at the University of Michigan, who said social isolation led to a decline in her mental health.

“The pandemic forced me to be in my room alone with my own thoughts a lot,” Soriano said. “I found that to be a very scary thing, because a lot of thoughts were not the greatest and the pandemic really brought out my feelings about the stressful things in my life.”

Jolene Soriano, a junior at the University of Michigan

Source: Kristina Mallabo

“There were plenty of moments during my second semester where I was so overwhelmed with everything,” Soriano continued. “Sometimes I would set off into a crying fit, or I’d start hyperventilating, and then it would feel like a downward spiral.”

Like Soriano, Ulep said her mental health reached a “low point” during pandemic shutdowns that left her unable to socialize with her peers.

She said social isolation led to loneliness and a significant loss in motivation, which became detrimental to her academic performance.

“I was so used to seeing my classmates and friends during school. Being in lockdown just made me really, really sad and unmotivated,” Ulep said. “I just had no sense of responsibility and I didn’t try my best or get the best grades.”

Prioritizing mental health

While Soriano’s mental health undoubtedly took a hit during the pandemic, she said she now feels “more in tune with it” as she prepares to return to in-person classes in the fall.

“As opposed to just ignoring the problems like I did before, the pandemic has forced me to really look at and prioritize my mental health,” Soriano said. “And as we go back to some sense of normalcy, I’m definitely more aware of it, and trying to make sure I’m taking care of myself in that regard.”

This represents the broader change that Taggueg said needs to occur within the Filipino-American diaspora.

Taggueg said many Filipino-Americans and Filpinos still don’t regard mental health as an issue.

“We have been categorized to be a quote-unquote ‘perfect’ migrant in the U.S. that doesn’t cause problems, that adapts to hardships and does what’s needed because we want to work hard,” Taggueg said.

“That outlook has been shaped by the history of colonialism in the Philippines and has been used by generations of Filipinos to make sense of the world. And when it comes to mental health, it doesn’t fit into that world,” he continued.

However, Taggueg said organizations like the Bulosan Center are making progress in researching and raising awareness about mental health issues among Filipino-Americans.

Resources to help

There are several resources available for Filipino-Americans struggling with their mental health, including the Asian American Psychological Association’s Division on Filipinx Americans. The organization promotes awareness of Filipino-American mental health and provides services such as therapy referrals.

The Filipino Mental Health Initiative of San Francisco is another resource that provides services for Filipino-Americans and aims to destigmatize mental health issues. While they are based in Northern California, they provide resources such as a free suicide hotline with trained and experienced counselors, in-person or virtual wellness workshops and “Mental Health First Aid” training in English and Tagalog, the national language of the Philippines.

Catipon recommended that college students of all backgrounds who are struggling with their mental health utilize the resources available on college campuses, such as counseling centers.

For those who are apprehensive about seeking counseling or therapy, Catipon encouraged attending workshops or peer mentoring groups within their local community.

Catacunan said that she is hoping to re-establish her “boundaries surrounding school” and focus on balancing her wants and needs.

“As stressful as school and navigating my professional life is, it isn’t everything. I want to reinvigorate my love for myself, my hobbies and the people and places around me,” Catacunan said, adding that it is important for college students to prioritize their mental health.

“There’s a reason students are considered ‘part-time’ or ‘full-time’ — being a student is a physically, mentally and emotionally draining job and sometimes we gloss over the fact that we are doing our best, especially in this altered society,” Catacunan said.

“You know your needs better than anyone else and listening to them is so important for your well-being,” she continued. “People tend to think of mental health as being one big entity when the reality is that it isn’t. It’s a multitude of little things that we neglect and that truly add up. So it’s important to take things step by step in order to thrive in the stressful conditions of academia.”

CNBC’s “College Voices″ is a series written by CNBC interns from universities across the country about getting their college education, managing their own money and launching their careers during these extraordinary times. Annika Kim Constantino is a senior at the University of California, Berkeley, studying media studies, music and journalism. She is an intern on CNBC’s politics desk. Her mentor is Dawn Kopecki. The series is edited by Cindy Perman.

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World News

Dow bounces greater than 200 factors on Friday, however nonetheless heads for dropping week

Major U.S. stock averages rebounded Friday while markets remained on track for a losing week driven by fears of the Federal Reserve pulling back its stimulus.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained about 220 points, or 0.6%. The S&P 500 added 0.6%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite rose 0.7%.

Technology stocks traded in the green Friday, providing the market with support. Microsoft, Cisco and Salesforce were among the biggest gainers in the Dow as investors snapped up tech stocks amid concerns about slowing economic recovery. Chip stocks rose, with Nvidia among the Nasdaq’s top winners.

Tesla shares inched higher after Elon Musk’s electric car maker had an AI day, where it unveiled a new custom chip and plans to build a humanoid robot. The stock is down more than 5% this week as investors worried about growth in China, one of the electric vehicle maker’s key markets.

This week, WTI crude oil has tumbled more than 8%, taking energy stocks with it. Diamondback Energy and Valero Energy are down roughly 10% and 9%, respectively, on the week.

All three major stock indexes are on track to close the week lower. The S&P 500 is down 0.8% for the week, while the Dow is off 1.1% and the Nasdaq Composite is 1.2% lower.

Minutes from the Fed’s July meeting released this week showed the central bank is willing to start reducing its monthly asset purchases this year. Investors sold equities and commodities this week and bought bonds on fears the move by the Fed may upend a global economy already under stress by the delta variant.

“With Fed tapering coming while delta variant keeps spreading, the transition away from liquidity/policy regime to more mid-cycle markets means we may experience a bumpier ride ahead,” Barclays equity strategists said in a note. “Market narrative may thus turn more cautious, as concerns about peaking growth rates, Delta variant and policy mistake may prove headwinds, at a time where seasonality and technicals are unfavourable.”

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—CNBC’s Pippa Stevens contributed reporting.