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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: marcher who wrote (175247)7/22/2021 3:59:05 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217591
 
Re <<supplement to mr. chen's japan book...>>

I thought about the Japanese politeness, and we certainly got a whole lot of Japanese friends and neighbours, I thought about the famous Japan school bullying protocol, and panty-sniffing culture past time techinasia.com / sofiagray.com / gaming.ebaumsworld.com , I must conclude there are always exception in every society. I love Japanese food, very well done - flawless.

Today, just now, something pop up, and just now, on the homepage of Bloomberg. One can count on Japanese officials to say what they truly feel, given the ruling political party's wartime DNA.



bloomberg.com

Tokyo Olympics Fires Ceremony Director Over 1998 Holocaust Joke
Isabel Reynolds
22 July 2021, 12:03 GMT+8
The Tokyo Olympics faced the latest in a series of PR disasters when they were forced to fire the director of the opening ceremony a day before it takes place, after a decades-old video emerged of him joking about the Holocaust.



Source: Tokyo 2020/AP Photo

The scandal is the latest blow in the run-up to the games, which are taking place under unprecedented circumstances, mostly without spectators and against the wishes of much of the Japanese public as virus cases rise in the capital.

“We have discovered that Kentaro Kobayashi in the past made fun of a painful part of history, so he has today been removed from his post,” Olympics chief Seiko Hashimoto told reporters Thursday. “We apologize deeply for the trouble and worry caused.”

A video shared on social media showed Kobayashi, when he was working as a comedian years ago, joking about the Holocaust as part of a skit. The Mainichi newspaper said the video dated to 1998. The Simon Wiesenthal Center issued a statement condemning his remarks as “malicious.”

“Any association of this person to the Tokyo Olympics would insult the memory of six million Jews,” it cited the center’s Associate Dean, Rabbi Abraham Cooper as saying.

With the director out at the last moment, Hashimoto said it was unclear how the opening ceremony would be handled on Friday. Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga is scheduled to be at the event, alongside U.S. First Lady Jill Biden, and French President Emmanuel Macron.

The latest debacle comes just days after a composer whose music was set to be used at the opening ceremony resigned following the emergence of past interviews in which he had talked about tormenting disabled classmates while at school.

Tokyo Olympics Chief Mori Steps Down After Sexist Comments

Tokyo 2020’s branding as the “diversity” Olympics has been called into question several times. Hashimoto herself was appointed as head of the organizing committee after her predecessor, former Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori, stepped down after making discriminatory remarks about women earlier this year.

A public opinion survey by Japanese broadcaster JNN on July 3-4 found 35% of respondents were in favor of a spectator-less Olympics, while 26% wanted to allow some fans, and 34% wanted to cancel the games or postpone them again.

Tokyo Olympics Covid Cases Hit 71 as Opening Ceremony Nears

The event is being held as Tokyo braces for what experts say may be the worst wave of Covid-19 infections so far.

— With assistance by Shiho Takezawa, and Yuki Furukawa

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.
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To: marcher who wrote (175247)7/22/2021 5:08:40 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
marcher

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217591
 
something ...

and something else ... Message 33407791 ... experts at work for a very long time, since before the get-go

In any case, first from National Geo

nationalgeographic.com

This globetrotting doctor saves lives by diving headfirst into hot zones

When a virus strikes, epidemiologist Michael Callahan always seems to be in the thick of it. That's exactly how he likes it.

In early January, when the first hazy reports of the new coronavirus outbreak were emerging from Wuhan, China, one American doctor had already been taking notes. Michael Callahan, an infectious disease expert, was working with Chinese colleagues on a longstanding avian flu collaboration in November when they mentioned the appearance of a strange new virus. Soon, he was jetting off to Singapore to see patients there who presented with symptoms of the same mysterious germ.

Name a major disease outbreak anywhere in the world in the last 20 years—SARS, Ebola, Zika—and chances are Callahan, 57, was there (in his biocontainment suit, of course). A stint working in a refugee camp in the Democratic Republic of the Congo during the 1990s convinced him to pursue work as a frontline infectious disease doctor. Since then, he has worked in remote Ebola clinics in Africa, helped retrain Russian bioweapons experts as infectious disease researchers, and led multimillion-dollar Department of Defense programs looking for ways to predict and preempt emerging diseases. ( Find out more about how pandemics change us in National Geographicmagazine.)

After Singapore, Callahan flew to Washington, D.C., where he briefed U.S. government officials on where the disease might occur next. By then, two cruise ships were stranded at sea with cases of coronavirus on board. Since Callahan was one of the few American doctors who’d seen the disease, the Department of Human and Health Services asked him to help evacuate American passengers from the Diamond Princess, off Yokohama, Japan, and the Grand Princess, off the coast of California.

Those missions completed, he returned to Boston—where he’s at based at Massachusetts General Hospital—and New York to help launch clinical trials and attend to Mass General’s own COVID-19 patients. “It’s an arms race between death and a cure,” he says. “Either the virus wins or our immune systems win.”

National Geographic caught up with Callahan while he was taking a break at his home in Boulder, Colorado. The following interview has been edited for length and clarity.

How did your background as a climbing bum at Yosemite prepare you for a life in infectious diseases?I worked my way through college [at the University of Massachusetts Amherst] as a paramedic and got involved with mountain rescues, where I learned how to make the call when lives are at risk during emergencies. During medical school [at the University of Alabama], my interest shifted toward disaster operations overseas. I realized that it wasn’t the earthquake or tsunami that’s killing everybody, but it’s the malaria, the dengue, and waterborne diseases that come afterward. Infectious disease is a slow-rolling disaster. And it goes on forever.

Did you ever expect to see a pandemic like COVID-19 in your lifetime?During planning exercises [at the Department of Health and Human Services] for outbreaks, we considered worst-case scenarios, but we always thought they were hypothetical. We were also certain that the next pandemic would be flu, even after the SARS outbreaks in 2002 and 2003. That was a bad virus, but it wasn’t that infectious. It goes to show how much humility you have to have.

What makes this new coronavirus so hard to fight?Its magnificent infectivity. It sits there like a little silent smart bomb in your community, and then it finds a vulnerable person and just takes them out. I like to say the new coronavirus is all iceberg, no ice. It’s all beneath the surface of the water. We’re just mopping up the top of this thing right now.

How is this crisis changing the rules of medicine?We have the most affluent, resource-rich medical system on the planet, but none of that richness is really helping us because our patients are dying at the same rates as they do in much less well-resourced nation. Our best weapon is knowledge.

Have you ever contracted an infectious disease in the field?I consider it a professional failing to get infected. I’m supposed to be the best example. When we brought the disaster team [composed of doctors, nurse practitioners, nurses, and pharmacists sent by the DHHS] to the Diamond Princess cruise ship in Japan, they had never set foot in a hot zone in their entire life. These are earthquake people, hurricane people. They are learning new skills and we tell them the most important thing is to slow down if they are nervous or uncertain. If they get infected, the failure is on us, not them.

What keeps you returning to hot zones?The last Americans to leave a hostile nation are doctors and nurses. We have a defective gene that makes us go to these outbreaks and put ourselves in harm’s way, because we are troubled by the inequality of health care access. During medical school, I volunteered at the Goma refugee camp on Congo’s border with Rwanda. I was back home when the genocide happened, but I became driven by the unfairness of it all. By going to these remote places and teaching one physician how to do something, I realized, I could affect a thousand lives and create lasting changes in a village or a community.

How do you think the coronavirus crisis will end?The only way out of it is that everybody becomes immune because they’ve either got the infection or they got vaccinated. If I had to put my money down, one of the vaccines on the immediate horizon will give us transient immunity, and if it holds for four to six months, we’ll break the pandemic cycle. Then, we’ll do it again with another, better vaccine. So, we’ll live through it. We’re not going to knock it out of the park with the first vaccines.

Do you feel like there has been too much emphasis placed on the vaccine?When you are faced with a mass casualty infection, there’s a priority list. First, protect the vulnerable. Second, break contagion. Third, treat the sick. And number four is make a vaccine, because it takes the longest and is the highest risk. But we haven’t broken contagion, quite obviously. And we’re not investing enough in coronavirus therapies. Developing a vaccine requires understanding the response of the human immune system to a virus we’ve never seen before. I would rather take the virus into the lab, and punch it out with a bunch of direct-acting antiviral drugs.

How can we prevent a pandemic like this from happening again?Infectious disease outbreaks are becoming bigger, faster, and more frequent. Every Ebola outbreak [in Africa], people race to the capital cities, where there are direct flights to Europe and India and China. That means these diseases are instantly international, and we need to set aside politics and work together to fight them.