Hubble Telescope Retrospective 30-Years in Orbit

Hubble Telescope Retrospective 30-Years in Orbit

The Covid-19 pandemic has brought many nations to their knees. In its short tenure, it has killed hundreds of thousands of people, has halted the world economy, and has even made its way into the locked doors of millions of quarantined homes, wreaking havoc on mental health. No matter where you are in the world, the fear of the virus is real, and it is affecting how we go about our daily lives. People who aren’t normally used to worrying about their mental health are experiencing the effects of isolation, social distancing, quarantine, and the changing laws that force us to wear face masks and distance ourselves from others.

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Chile Strives for Economic Justice

EL BOSQUE, Chile - Chilean protests have been going on since 2019 and have headed on into 2020. Protesters in the streets chant, "Chile is waking up," but Chile's centrist right government has made some concessions. They now say that they want to raise the minimum wage from $396 to $460, presented by President Sebastian Pinera. However, the secretary-general and leaders of Chile's Senate and House wanted to persuade him to throw out that bill and focus instead on the government's total structural reform. It is hard to foresee precisely which direction the country will progress forward with so many different viewpoints. With December 8, 2019's non-binding consultation showing that 92.4% voters want a new constitution and 73.1% want an all-citizen convention, voters are making voices heard loudly and adamantly. Violence between police and protesters has led to 11 deaths and thousands thrown in jail

These clashes have been the government having to declare a "State of Emergency" as businesses are looted, and buses are burned. It would seem the people are staging their own unique drama as the world watches. With the country calling for curfew in major cities such as Santiago, the government is having to act strictly with shows of military force. The last time such force was used was at the Pinochet rule's close in the 1990s. The recent novel Coronavirus issue may be causing more issues in Chile. The people of Chilies are on edge over the food shortages that came about during lock down due to the Coronavirus. It seems that the government used water cannon and tear gas to quell a protest in a poverty-stricken area, El Bosque, Chile. 

The government is not getting in line with the overall message of equal treatment for all Chileans regardless of economic status. Though the government said in a statement that they distributed over 2,000 aid packages, still the entire needs of the country and El Bosque could not be met. The mayor of the district in El Bosque, Sadi Melo, declared the situation "very complex" due to the clearly seen "hunger and lack of work." What other tolls has Coronavirus taken? Since being ordered to stay at home, it looks like some are going hungry. President Pinera said that aid would go mainly to "the most vulnerable families." Following that comment Felipe Guevera, the governor of the metropolitan area, tweeted in Spanish about the ongoing crisis: "I understand the deep anguish of millions of Chileans, thousands are starving." While making these comments, Guevera subsequently dismissed the disputed comments he had made about the protests in a televised broadcast. The civil unrest witnessed in Chile can be seen in various Latin American countries, such as Colombia, where people have begun draping red cloths out-of-doors to signal hunger. 

The protests in Chile have been happening since the government announced it would raise metro fares in 2019. Let us hope the government can come to terms with the people's wants and needs before unforgivable violence occurs again. While the protests first started due to the raised metro fares, there were other issues at stakes, such as the high costs of health care, unequal handling of Chile's peoples, and unsatisfactory financing of education

There was trouble brewing in Chiles' waters for a while before Santiago's metro fares resulted in protests. Besides calling necessary attention to Chiles' problems, another good thing that has come out of the protests is incredible street art. Graphic artist Oscar Nunez, who has played a lead role in protests since they began, goes by the name Mr. Owl. Mr. Owl's art moves violence aside and allows for a peaceful conversation to occur between onlookers. Says Nunez, "I started using the imagery of a military police officer in a peaceful yoga pose. It is ironic and fresh, but my favorite part is that other graffiti artists have put their own touches to that image," he says. It seems many long-awaited and much-needed changes and beauty will come out of the pain of Chile and their sometimes peaceful, sometimes violent clashes. Hopefully, the future holds the changes they the people wish to see.

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Parking Crunch Affects Aircraft Fleet Health

UNITED STATES – Since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, the airline industry has suffered near-crippling financial losses with declines in bookings, and quarantines. The travel industry as a whole has realized an 80% estimated losses in global revenue compared to last year, largely a consequence of reduced tourism. Globally, there are an estimated 16,000 planes that have been grounded. Though some airlines have repurposed passenger planes to transport cargo to stave off bankruptcy, well over half of the entire world’s air fleet remains grounded due to COVID-19 and bans/fear of travel.

Airbus A340-313X [CC-CQE] & Douglas MD-83 ‘N619SC,’ Photo by Alan Wilson

Kevin Micheals, Managing Director of AeroDynamic Advisory: Aerospace Consulting, stated that “it is somewhere around 60 percent of the aircraft fleet that is currently sitting idle. Though we’ve had aircraft storage facilities spanning across the globe for decades, what’s unique in this event is the sudden mass of parking.”

Paul Oliver, the Vice President of customer service at Airbus, noted in an interview with CNBC that air fleet “customers have come to us and said ‘look, were parking hundreds of aircraft per day! And logistically, it is quite complex.’ This is a particularly difficult time, and we’ve created a particular application that allows them to park the aircraft virtually.”

With over 11,000 planes in operation, in addition to logistics issues, there is also a pressing health concern. In the case of the aviation industry, it is the health of the fleet during the global downturn. To address this, Airbus launched a new aviation open data platform in collaboration with Palantir Technologies. Because of Airbus’ massive industrial footprint, Palantir was able to leverage historical data and analytics necessary to build the app.

Thus, Skywise, a technology platform that would be beneficial to all major aviation players, was created. The tool is essential for customers that require immediate insight at an “aircraft, fleet, company, and global level.” This app enables carriers to improve their operational performance through predictive and preventative methods to determine the health of their fleets. Now, more than ever, this tool is invaluable to airlines that have had planes grounded for an extended period. The app collects various data from sensors and systems to assist in proactive maintenance detection. It also helps with the logistics of everyday travel operations, such as the launch of a new feature that enables carriers to locate parking for their fleets or individual planes.

Parking aviation carriers can be more complicated than what it feels like landing as a passenger. To a passenger, we are happy when we land, eager as we taxi to the gate, impatient to deplane, but not once do we think about what happens afterward. For instance, how does one park a plane?  Numerous factors come into play when a decision is made to park a plane and have it sit out of service for an extended period, chief among them, maintenance of the craft.

Like cars, airplanes engines must be started when in storage, and this requires engineers and maintenance crews to exercise the batteries, turbines, check electronic systems, sanitize the plane, perform bodywork or interior cabin repairs, etc. Proximity to airplane hangers is also a vital consideration. Skywise keeps track of all of this. But, not many airlines were prepared for an economic event that would necessitate the grounding of a significant part of, if not entirely, the fleet of their planes.

The pandemic caused unprecedented disruption to the travel industry, and it seems that airlines did factor in this potentiality and, therefore, seemingly did not prepare for long-term storage needs. As any frequent traveler can tell you, airlines are highly motivated to board passengers and depart as quickly as possible, because parking, especially at European hubs, can run about $285 per hour. In the wake of massive disruption to the industry, airlines have had to become extremely creative about parking.

Arid environments are best suited for plane storage since high humidity can have adverse effects on engines and airframes.  In Europe, airports are “temporarily decommissioning runways” to be used by airlines to park planes. In the United States, Roswell International Air Center, which is in New Mexico, is “in the process of adding 300 more acres of asphalt parking space to its existing 4,000-acre footprint -- enough space to accommodate up to 800 airliners.” (Source: CNN)

In Australia, the Asia Pacific Aircraft Storage (APAS) company, founded by Tom Vincent, former Deutsche Bank Vice President, and research analyst, provides storage for short, medium, and long-term needs. Vincent’s entrepreneurial foray, in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, seems eerily prescient. Located in Alice Springs, Northern Territory, Australia, Vincent says, “The climatic conditions are ideal for aircraft asset value preservation, with extremely low humidity.”

According to Time, two-thirds of the world’s airlines are grounded.  But with the coronavirus continuing to run amuck, many countries are having to delay or scale back opening. Even after countries fully open, there is no guarantee that airlines will be operating at full capacity utilizing their entire fleets. Until travel returns to pre-pandemic levels, planes will be in storage for the foreseeable future. Skywise can help airlines ensure that their fleets are ready to meet the demand as the world adjusts to living in a post-COVID-19 world, and passengers can be assured that the planes they are flying on have been optimally maintained and are flight-worthy.

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COVID-19 Inequities, is Universal Basic Income the Answer?

UNITED STATES - As the pandemic continues globally, parts of the U.S. are re-opening despite the real risks of surging infections and deaths due to COVID-19. While the one-time stimulus check of the CARES Act kept landlords and bill collectors temporarily at bay, it has been widely considered as “not enough,” with recent polling indicating that 82% of Americans would prefer the stimulus checks to be re-occurring monthly.

Time Money Puppet, Photo by Thomas Skirde

This recent shift in opinion shows that Americans are beginning to show a clear preference for a Universal Basic Income (UBI) solution. UBI is a guaranteed income provided by a government entity on a reoccurring basis that is additional to the current entitlement programs such as social security, disability, and welfare benefits.

There are clear trends that show why this shift in opinion on UBI is shifting. While facilities, workplaces, and government services previously closed or partially shut down due to social distancing requirements begin to reopen slowly, but this will not alleviate the pain felt by the most economically vulnerable. Increased under-employment and unemployment continues despite the end of lockdown. Those fortunate to still be in the labor force are not making enough money to repay loans from predatory lenders or credit card companies to survive.

The number of people negatively affected by the COVID-19 pandemic suffering from food and housing insecurity is drawing increased comparisons to the Great Depression, demonstrating that more progress needs to be made to avoid further adverse economic consequences. Furthermore, an estimated 27 million people lost their health insurance as of May 2, 2020. In all of this bad news, there is evidence of an "inevitable" second wave of infections and further lockdowns in the upcoming fall and winter seasons.

Social distancing requirements over an extended period, as well as the unanticipated financial repercussions of the pandemic itself, might also make a policy like UBI more attractive to the public. The promised money granted to citizens through UBI programs could act as an additional incentive for people to wear masks and social distance to prevent the resurgence of infections and deaths. At the moment in states like Mississippi, California, and Texas have witnessed rates of disease and hospitalizations continue to rise.

Even states considered to have handled the pandemic "successfully" are proceeding forward with caution in the hope that a vaccine may be developed before the fall when flu season begins. In the meantime, multiple states are adopting requirements to guide phased reopening of non-essential business sectors.

Universal Basic Income could also help workers with expenses during the transition back into the workforce, particularly in the capacity of remote work or even becoming entrepreneurs. Investment remains a prohibitive hurdle for startups, and the UBI may mitigate this barrier. Entrepreneurs and small business owners are the engines of the American economy, by enabling people to afford the costs for technology, broadband access, office equipment, and resources and other upfront costs, while guaranteeing dependable income.

This surety of regular, guaranteed income can lead to increased credit scores that will enable people to access to loans and other financial instruments. This will help more people realize the American dream, not through a handout, but as a stepping stone to upward mobility. But, most importantly, in this era of disease and pandemic, as the Trump administration continues the dismantling of the Affordable Care Act and contraction of Medicaid, UBI could become the difference between life and death, between going hungry or buying food, between purchasing medicine or going without taking it.

In any case, the COVID-19 pandemic is proving to be a transformative event in the global economy, one that is causing a definite shift in public awareness and preferences. The acceptance of Universal Basic Income in the form of monthly payments without any preconditions is not that different from the initial CARES Act, which, if extended, would serve as a precursor model. Both would have the potential to jumpstart the economy while undergirding the most vulnerable populations until a vaccine for COVID-19 is successfully developed and deployed on a national scale. Until then, as the U.S. economy recovers, the government must focus on a long-term economic strategy that will address the unique demands of the ongoing pandemic and its effects on private budgetary security.

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Artificial Intelligence Advances the Battle Against COVID-19

Many countries have put their best ideas and creations to the test prevention measure to halt the spread of COVID-19, specifically in the realm of technology. Artificial Intelligence and robots are leading the way in countries putting new tech to new tests. The company “PUDU” allowed China to do trial runs on robots, that could deliver food to patients and other citizens in Wuhan during the rigorous quarantine period earlier in 2020.

Source: Pixabay

Source: Pixabay

BlueOcean robotics also sent a hoard of "UVD Robots" there, which CEO Claus Risager said, "use advanced algorithms and specialized sensors to cover all surfaces with the right amount of (virus killing) light. With this data, users can see exactly which rooms have been cleared of bacteria and viruses." These robots can complete their jobs in as little as 10-15 minutes, including their ability to reach places some humans previously couldn't. These robots are more effective in the prevention of the Coronavirus spread. First, they reduce the risk of a person becoming exposed to the virus while disinfecting an area, and they have a higher success rate in successfully decontaminating every surface and crevice of these high-risk areas.

Hong Kong has even hired these similar types of robots to assist in keeping the Hong Kong Mass Transit Rail System. Vaporizing hydrogen peroxide robots are cleaning trains and specific areas where citizens could most likely become infected due to exposure to asymptomatic carriers, or contaminated metal and plastic surfaces on which the virus can survive for several hours if not days.

Network Communication programs are using technology like "Telegram" and "Facebook" to provide an open forum for ideas to flow from engineers and other professionals using their skills to help healthcare workers see assistance in loads of accessing ventilators and masks. In fact, low efficient technology has appeared to be highly volatile in allowing virtually any and everyone to help. Face masks that have been produced locally with the help of clothing designers. These masks are distributed with a simple "Do It Yourself" instructions on social media, and even groups have dedicated their clothing manufacturing skills to gather and mass-produce masks for local hospitals.

Engineering groups have also been able to take part in helping healthcare professionals by using 3-D printing to design respirators and ventilators. A group in Spain recently assembled an open-source respirator proto-type. An Irish open-source hardware project has also produced a prototype ventilator using three-dimensional primed materials and readily available inexpensive parts. Facebook's spin attraction propelled these projects in seven days to reach more than 300 engineers, medical professionals, and researchers.

Artificial Intelligence has proven to be very useful in detection and issuance. BlueDot, a Canadian startup, has produced Artificial Intelligence that analyzes governments and news reports, along with social media, to assist in tracking infectious at blazing speed. BlueDot had already shown its ability to process information and make appropriate claims, when on January 25th this year, it issued a warning beating the Center for Disease Control and the World Health Organization. It takes into account every possible outcome, from air travel, populations in distinct areas, climate, mosquitos, demographics, and a countries inherent ability to respond, are all included in assisting the A.I. comprehend where it will spread along with its impact.

Jack Maas of Alibaba, is also developing artificial intelligence diagnostic systems that process C.T. scans with 96% accuracy. We also see that this machine can also ease the time of reading this information, dropping dramatically from fifteen minutes to twenty seconds.

COVID-19 has had no problem showing its tenacity, but so have countries across the globe like Hong Kong and Spain, for example, using both high and low efficient technologies from robots to masks. Medical professionals, engineers, and researchers are now working in a way that no longer has any boundaries, while still practicing "Social Distancing." Thanks to technology and global participation in fighting COVID-19, we can use these innovations for future developments in society and hopefully be better equipped to prevent another mass spread, as large as the one we are witnessing now with the Coronavirus.

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Covid-19 Wreaks Havoc on Mental Health and Suicide Rate

Seated, Watercolor, Image by Layers/211

Seated, Watercolor, Image by Layers/211

UNITED STATES - The Covid-19 pandemic has brought many nations to their knees. In its short tenure, it has killed hundreds of thousands of people, has halted the world economy, and has even made its way into the locked doors of millions of quarantined homes, wreaking havoc on the mental health. No matter where you are in the world, the fear of the virus is real, and it is affecting how we go about our daily lives. People who aren’t generally used to worrying about their mental health are experiencing the effects of isolation, social distancing, quarantine, and the changing laws that force us to wear face masks and distance ourselves from others. 

Many who are struggling with social distancing and the new laws which were enacted to provide safety when interacting with other people are struggling with a lack of a basic human need—human contact. Unfortunately, the international laws that have been put in place are, in some cases, are almost as deadly as the virus itself. In 2016 the World Health Organization estimated that close to 800,000 people around the world commit suicide every day, and many sources predict that the suicide rate will rise amidst this global pandemic.

People question why multiple sources predict that there will be an increase in suicides this year during the pandemic than what is usually reported? The simple answer is this: we are living in a time when it is scary to go to the grocery store or spend time with our friends and family. Going to work or leaving our houses poses risks to those we love as Covid-19 continues to spread, having yet to hit its peak in most countries. The truth of the matter is we are cut off from the very things that help us cope with the hardships of everyday life—other people. Humans rely on each other to get through life’s difficulties, and yet, we are dealing with a pandemic that forces us to separate to manage the virus. 

Thus, the question remains, what can we do to help those struggling with their mental health during this uncertain time? For many, this would be an opportune time to seek counseling, but health care has been significantly impacted by our ability to go out and meet with doctors and therapists. Since the medical system is overwhelmingly and rightfully so, focused on helping those afflicted with Coronavirus, mental health professionals are finding new and creative ways to support their patients. They have encouraged clients to maintain their counseling sessions using tools like Teladoc and Doxy.me to help them process their emotions. These virtual sessions help patients steer clear of the types of crises for which intervention would be mandatory. In this “new normal,” healthcare providers are using virtual counseling to deter people from engaging in harmful behavior or suicidal ideations, which would result in mandatory commitment.

Companies like HearMe also fill the gap by providing users with someone to act as a “listening ear” to whom they can talk and vent about the impact of the virus. Whether quarantined alone or with family, sometimes people need a stranger to talk to whom they feel will not judge them. This app service is one of the many approaches people are using to keep people in touch and alleviate some of the stress that comes with being isolated from those we love. Becoming a listener for one of these apps has various requirements, and are generally not considered therapy, but it does require a level of patience and empathy. What is most important is that people keep an open mind and listen to the person on the other end of the phone. 

Though there are no firm statistics on the success of these apps since their popularity and growth have increased with the global shelter-in-place edicts. However, anecdotally people claim that it has saved lives and help those who are struggling. Hopefully, it is an easily accessible tool for someone on the brink of self-harm or suicide. In the U.S., the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is the first-line defense in the fight against this scourge. But, in this era of the virus, any tool or resource which is readily available may be the difference between life and death. If you are struggling to find things to do during your time in isolation, or miss connecting with other people, consider downloading positive affirmation, motivational, or listening/talk therapy apps. Though we have no affiliation with HearMe, it is one of many such services that can help people through these troubling times.

Connecting you with people around the world who are struggling during this time of uncertainty, can help bring perspective to your difficulties. In this new world in which we find ourselves, we have to rethink all aspects of our daily lives radically. We must re-engineer how we establish meaningful connections; in a sense, technology is helping to expand our “village,” our interior landscapes and external borders. We are no longer defined by national boundaries, travel restrictions, or tribalism. We are free to interact with others who are struggling with social distancing measures just as we are, and in so doing, it enables us to reconnect with our shared humanity. 

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Governors Hide COVID-19 Testing Kits from Feds

N95 Mask, Photo by Michael Swan

N95 Mask, Photo by Michael Swan

UNITED STATES, Maryland - The COVID-19 epidemic has many people feeling confused and overwhelmed, and the government's handling of the situation is not assuring. While the state governors try unsuccessfully to procure medication, often by negotiating directly with overseas manufacturers, American citizens pin their hopes the latest snake-oil promises. Amid this pandemic, it is ludicrous that toilet paper and meat have become iconic symptoms of scarcity. 

It is into this miasma of uncertainty, the ideas which arose from the first constitution and the "Articles of Confederacy" have reasserted into the national discourse. The lines of demarcation between the federal and state governments have increasingly become amplified, with each fighting about the right way to proceed in keeping the nation's people and economy safe. 

Many speculate that it is due to the economy's current state, that the president's administration is too focused on reopening America to the public and less concerned with the public's health. According to BBC News, investors are worried about the negative impact the Coronavirus pandemic on the nation's economic growth. More than 30 million people are seeking work, and unemployment hit a record high since the start of the lockdown, oil prices have crashed to a 21- year low and U.S. oil prices have turned negative for the first time.

Though all of these are genuinely frightening, experts are still reluctant to "reopen" America. Why? Because people will die. Many Americans have started to think of this as having to pick a side between saving their fellow Americans' lives and saving the country's economy. Several experts, however, feel that it is imperative for both that we keep strict lockdown orders—others state that reopening should be a slow process with mass testing to keep everyone safe. Testing has been minimal, however. Many people who exhibit symptoms are routinely denied testing until their symptoms are dire due to the lack of supplies. 

It is because of this lack that Republican Governor of Maryland Larry Hogan, who has recently secured 100,000 COVID-19 tests from South Korea, has deployed the national guard and the state police to protects these tests which he has stored at an undisclosed location. Though to some, this may sound like extreme caution bordering on paranoia; Governor Hogan cites the recent seizure of N95 masks in Massachusetts as justification.  

Earlier this year, Governor Charlie Baker, of the State of Massachusetts spent approximately three million dollars on N95 masks for care workers and first responders. The federal government unexpectedly seized these at the port of New York, and this was the first sign that something was amiss. In fact, according to USA TODAY, MarketwatchEMS1, and WLRNthe federal government had also seized millions of masks ordered by Delaware and Florida.

After losing the first shipment, Governor Charlie Baker bought more masks, which he arranged to have flown them directly into the State of Massachusetts, using the New England Patriots' private plane. While in Maryland, Governor Hogan is still putting together a plan on how to use his new kits best. He announced in a press conference that the kits would be distributed to nursing homes and assisted-living areas and other Virus "hot spots," including an outbreak in a poultry plant on the Eastern Shore. 

Once these hotspots have been taken care of, the governor hopes to start then testing about 10,000 people per day to safely and responsibly end the strict quarantine orders.  

Two private labs have been contracted to support Maryland's state lab with processing the test swabs from the kits once they reach prearranged distribution centers. Because of the seizures, and the ubiquitous unavailability of test kits, hoarding has come under some scrutiny. Some people question why the governor is hoarding the kits with armed guards, and others yet are perplexed as to why he felt the need to purchase the tests internationally. However, FEMA, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, also bought millions of dollars of tests from two South Korean companies. 

According to the Washington Post, U.S. manufacturers have been able to produce and ship tests by the millions. However, some government officials admit that there have been shortages in the supplies necessary to perform the tests, like cotton swabs, which Eric Blank, the Association of Public Health Laboratories' Chief Program Officer, refutes.

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Africans in China and Covid-19

CHINA - Africans are not strangers to discrimination, scarred by the long history of the slave trade, colonial rule, and now technological dominance, the peoples of the Continent have yet to realize independence fully. The stigma of racism remains a pressing reality for many Africans in the United States, Europe, and, most recently, China. Many Western countries have a bias about Africans. They are often regarded as uncivilized, ignorant, and unhygienic, particularly those seeking asylum as refugees. These stereotypes are dangerous, but also belie the truth that many Africans are successful business people and entrepreneurs. In 2018, six of the world’s fastest-growing nations were in Africa.

Ever since the first cases of the  COVID-19 virus were reported to World Health Organization (WHO) in December 2019, Wuhan, the capital city of the Hubei province located in the central region of China, has become synonymous with the plague which purportedly originated in its “wet markets.” During the first few months of 2020, as worldwide infections and deaths increased, massive efforts to stop the spread of the novel Coronavirus resulted in aggressive quarantines.

These measures have brought most countries to the brink of economic collapse and triggered a desire to scapegoat. The lockdown is detrimental to global trade and development. Adding racial discrimination, violence, and detention will only make matters worse. During the best of times, racism is a scourge deeply rooted and often denied. But, when societies face undue stress, underlying currents of xenophobia can manifest. The latest target of this blame game is the People’s Republic of China.

Unfortunately, in response to this, it appears that some have tried to shift blame to an immigrant community. It has been reported that in Guangzhou, the fifth largest city in China, some of the people have sought to blame Africans for the current outbreak.

Nicknamed ‘Little Africa,’ the prosperous southern city of Guangzhou, is home to Asia’s largest African migrant population, who come to China chasing business opportunities, reputable universities, and low living costs. Although there are no precise figures, more than 15,000 Africans, mainly from Egypt, Mali, the DRC, and Nigeria, are estimated to live in the bustling city, which forms part of the Pearl Delta Region – the largest urban area in the world in terms of size and population. More than half a million travel here each year to buy every imaginable ‘Made in China’ product, from air conditioners to fake Nike sneakers, and send them back to Africa. (Source: New Internationalist)

China has long been perceived as a homogeneous nation, but until recently, it was a relatively hidden fact that there are African citizens and permanent residents. Currently, China produces one-third of global manufacturing. Through a sheer economic will, low overhead, China’s model of state capitalism has positioned it as a formidable trading partner. It has become the primary source for both developed and emerging economies nations from which to purchase low-cost goods and technology solutions. The existing supply chain disruption has revealed the level to which China has become an indispensable player in facilitating the delivery of goods and services worldwide.

African countries have increasingly become dependent on China for investments in infrastructure, consumer goods, and even clothing. Hence, the migration of Africans to China is expected. The majority are there on business, and while some travel there on student visas courtesy of Chinese government scholarships. One can hope that with these economic relationships, Africans would be welcomed in China; unfortunately, that is not the case. Following the outbreaks, there have been reports and videos showing the maltreatment of foreigners, especially black people, in China.

The Chinese authorities have even started seizing travel documents like passports and other forms of the federal ID. Chinese landlords have evicted legal residents leaving them homeless. Some restaurants have posters saying, “Africans are not welcomed.” In a video shared on Instagram, two Black men perceived to be Africans are seen being beaten.  In an interview, a Ugandan student described her treatment and the situation in general as “inhumane.”

Though myths of Africans being immune to the virus have persisted, even though it has been proven that COVID-19 afflicts people irrespective of race, religion, or status. The Chinese believe they were able to defeat the first wave of the COVID-19 outbreak. With the reemergence of the virus and the likelihood of a second wave of the pandemic, some people have begun to falsely assert that foreigners, mostly Africans, are the source.

One might wonder: what the leaders of African Governments have done in response to the maltreatment of their citizens? In April, a group of African Ambassadors gathered to draft a statement requesting the cessation of the embarrassment and forceful quarantining of their citizens. To many, this seems at best, an inept and empty request that lacks enforceability due to their economic obligations. Countries like Angola, Ethiopia, Kenya, Nigeria, and Ghana are in serious debt to China

Though these leaders may not be in the position to do more than ask abeyance, inherent in their requests is the fact that xenophobia is unacceptable. Also, the acknowledgment that if we are to survive and possibly defeat Covid-19, we must do so as a collective. In the words of Tedros Adhanom, the WHO Chief, “we should not politicize the virus” instead of working together to defeat it as it.

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Quarantine Protests Go Worldwide

UNITED STATES - Many Americans look on in horror and disappointment as lock-down protesters take to the streets of California, North Carolina, Michigan, and Ohio. These, mostly, right-wing Americans march to end the lockdown enforced to combat the current Corona Virus epidemic. Their platform is simple. They believe that the lockdown infringes on their rights to work, congregate at church, hair and nail salons, and schools.

This “cabin fever” as President Trump put it, has many politicians and health-care professionals scared, and angry. Many doctors, nurses, and other healthcare workers took to the streets to counter these anti-quarantine protests, by donning their scrubs and white coats to confront protesters and on some occasions bar them from continuing their march.

To some Americans, these protests seem like a phenomenon occurring only in their countries. This could not be further from the truth. Though international quarantine protests have not been covered by the media in the US; they are becoming more and more prevalent.

Anti-quarantine protesters have popped up in Canada, France, and Germany. These international protesters have similar oppositions to their American counterparts. They too feel that the counter-measures taken to flatten the curve are putting their countries’ economies at risk. The protesters do not focus on the need to quarantine to save lives by slowing the virus and giving healthcare officials the time and resources necessary to combat the disease. Instead, they take to the streets to fight for small business owners, and their jobs and in some instances their need for a haircut.

Some of the protesters’ claims do focus on saving human lives. Their fight for victims of domestic abuse, for example, can be said to focus on the well-being of others. However, Though the rise in domestic violence is more than devastating the number of lives that would be endangered if the quarantine was to end at this moment in time far exceeds the number of lives endangered by continuing it.

Protests in Canada have so far, been peaceful. This cannot be said for some of the European protests.  Protests in Paris have escalated to full scale riots. The lockdown has really intensified France’s economic inequalities.  The violence has been amplified in the past week as the protests gain traction and find their way into Parisian suburbs. Conflicts with police have escalated, trash cans and cars have been set on fire and just last week an elementary school was set on fire.

On the Polish-German border, hundreds of people protested against a Covid-19 lockdown last Friday night. Poland closed its borders for a mandatory two weeks due to the Corona Virus outbreak. Approximately 300 citizens that live in Poland but work in Germany are protesting their inability to leave their homes to go back to work. German citizens joined them in the protests though the two groups were separated by a fence to prevent people from crossing the border.

Approximately 20,000 Poles work in Germany and around 10,500 of them cross the Polish-German Border daily. Protesters are afraid that their jobs will not be waiting for them when the quarantine is finally lifted.

The Corona Virus crisis has brought virtually the entire world to its knees and it’s easy to believe that Americans are the only people reacting adversely to the quarantine efforts. It’s important to note however that these sentiments are felt worldwide. Many feel trapped in their homes, with no money, having just lost their jobs. They have no idea what the future holds. What we must keep in mind is that these measures ensure the safety of most people. While some are protesting that the quarantine may be worst than the disease, we must remember that, as Governor Andrew Cuomo stated, “the disease is death”.

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