Archive for April, 2022

Iran interested in playing friendly with Senegal – Tehran Times

TEHRAN President of Senegalese football federation Augustin Senghor has revealed that the Iranian team have shown interest in playing a friendly match with the Lions of Teranga.

Iran technical director Hamid Estili has previously said Iran will play four friendly matches in their training camp in Doha, Qatar in June.

Iran have been drawn in Group B along with England, the U.S. and the winners of the European play-offs between Scotland, Ukraine and Wales in the 2022 FIFA World Cup.

The football federation secretary general Hassan Kamranifar has said that Iran will play New Zealand behind closed doors.

Argentina and Brazil will play a friendly in Doha and they will most likely play Iran. We are also going to arrange a friendly match with Canada, he said.

Now, a Senegalese site has reported that Iran has shown interest in playing a friendly match with the African powerhouse.

At least 10 teams have approached Senegalese football federation so far and have expressed their desire to play friendly matches with the Lions, Senghor told wiwsport.com.

According to him, Iran and Uruguay are among the teams who are interested in playing friendlies with Senegal.

Senegal, headed by Aliou Ciss, are pitted against Qatar, Ecuador, and the Netherlands in Group A of the 2022 World Cup.

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Iran interested in playing friendly with Senegal - Tehran Times

Turkish envoy attracts attention with veiled criticism of Iran in article for Israeli think tank – Arab News

ANKARA: An article by Turkeys Ambassador to Washington for Tel Aviv Universitys Dayan Center for Strategic Studies journal Turkeyscope, has raised questions about the state of Turkeys relations with Iran.

Apart from seeking cooperation between Turkey and Israel in fields of security and energy, Hasan Murat Mercan noted that the two states are under threat from similar regional malign actors, without mentioning Iran.

The article didnt go unnoticed by the Iranian media. The London-based TV station Iran International commenting on the article: Ankaras envoy to Washington has called for Israeli-Turkish cooperation in countering regional threats, in a possible hint at Iran, amid improving bilateral ties.

The ambassador also underlined the need for cooperation against terrorism.

Turkish-Israeli interaction offers more than a conventional regional partnership in the face of malign actors and trends. Conventional partnerships are for a particular issue, be it against a threat or for an objective. Conventional partnerships have expiration dates. Turkey and Israel, on the other hand, share a common neighborhood, heritage, and not least, a common future, he said in his article, which was entitled Turkey and Israel: Optimism must prevail.

The ambassador continued: Dealing with malign actors and their activities throughout our region is a particular area for enhanced coordination. The Turkish-Israeli partnership would be effective to further curb destabilizing moves in the broader Middle East and North Africa.

Israel and Turkey have always shared concerns over Iranian influence in Syria, with Irans proxies, including Hezbollah and Shiite militias, threatening Turkish interests.

Ambassador Mercan, a figure close to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and a founding member of the ruling Justice and Development Party, called for re-designing Turkish-Israeli relations toward mutual trust.

Turkish and Israeli geostrategic interests dictate a close and multi-layered partnership. There is no room for complacency for both countries when it comes to: (i) managing regional dynamics that contain, inter alia, (a)symmetrical security threats and challenges, (ii) the need to further secure and diversify energy supply routes, and (iii) promoting inter-cultural synergy as a bulwark against Islamophobia and Anti-Semitism and all sorts of hate crimes.

It is not the first time that Mercan has underlined Turkeys concerns about the Iranian threat to the regions security.

In a speech to Haaretz in 2008 as president of the Turkish parliaments Foreign Affairs Committee, Mercan said a nuclear-armed Iran would pose a threat to Turkey.

As part of bilateral moves to mend ties, Israeli President Isaac Herzog met Erdogan last month in Ankara. Erdogan recently said that Turkey and Israel can cooperate to carry Israeli natural gas to Europe.

While there are fluctuations in Turkey-Iran relations, these countries know how to keep the relationship in certain contours, Gallia Lindenstrauss, a senior research fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies in Israel, told Arab News.

There is, however, Turkish frustration from the growing competition between the two in northern Iraq, as well as the continuing competition in Syria, she added.

Several acts of espionage by Iranian agents against Israelis and Iranian dissidents on Turkish soil were recently revealed and thwarted by Turkish intelligence agencies.

Since last year, Turkish security forces increased their operations against the Iranian espionage network in the country.

After detaining Iranian spies over a plot to kidnap a former Iranian soldier last October, other spies were also arrested in February before they carried out a plan to kill Turkish-Israeli businessman Yair Galler.

On the energy front, Iran also halted gas flow to Turkey for 10 days in January.

Lindenstrauss said that cases such as the revelation of Iranian spies and the temporary halt of gas supply in the winter also increase tensions.

Also, one cannot overlook the fact that Turkey is getting closer to the Arab Gulf states mostly out of economic necessity which also makes it less tolerant of Iranian attempts to increase its regional influence, she said.

Despite being part of the Syria-focused Astana peace talks with Iran and Russia, Ankara mostly shares a common perception with Gulf countries of Iran as a threat.

However, Soner Cagaptay, director of the Turkish program at the Washington Institute, said that Turkey has always separated its relations with Iran from its rapprochement process with Israel.

Turkey has had competitive relations with Iran in the region. They see each other as two large former imperial but currently hegemonic powers that have the right to shape regional developments, he told Arab News.

Throughout history, both countries avoided direct clashes despite coming very close to conflict in Syria with Turkish troops on one hand and Hezbollah and Iranian proxies on the other coming at close fire range.

According to Cagaptay, the normalization of ties between Turkey and Israel will first include energy cooperation.

The US government has repeatedly suggested the establishment of alternative pipelines from Israel to Greece passing through Turkey amid sanctions on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine that threaten severe shortages across Europe.

At this stage, Turkey and Israel have similar objectives in Syria. They both have right of passage agreements, which allow Israel to strike Hezbollah and Turkey to strike the Kurdistan Workers Party, he said.

In the meantime, Turkish state-run media channel TRT World recently published an article about whether the Ukraine fallout may lead to Iran gaining the upper hand over Russia in Syria.

Tehran is trying to take advantage of the Ukraine crisis and strengthen its own position in the Syrian arena. Soon after Russia attacked Ukraine in late February, Iran and the Syrian regime increased their strategic engagement by increasing military diplomacy, the article said. At the same time, pro-Iranian fighters are working on relocating to different parts of Syria.

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Turkish envoy attracts attention with veiled criticism of Iran in article for Israeli think tank - Arab News

GHS Index: Iran ranks 90th in dealing with pandemics – Tehran Times

TEHRAN The 2021 Global Health Security Index, which measures the capacities of 195 countries to prepare for epidemics and pandemics, has ranked Iran 90th in the world.

The GHS Index is the first comprehensive assessment and benchmarking of health security and related capabilities across the 195 countries across six categories and 37 indicators.

The Index is a project of the Nuclear Threat Initiative (NTI) and the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security and was developed with Economist Impact, which aims to spur measurable changes in national health security and improve the international capability to address one of the worlds most omnipresent risks: infectious disease outbreaks that can lead to international epidemics and pandemic

Although many countries were able to quickly develop capacities to address COVID-19, all countries remain dangerously unprepared for meeting future epidemic and pandemic threats, potentially more devastating than COVID-19.

The results of the 2021 Index show that even as many countries proved they could ramp up new capacities during the emergencyincluding setting up labs and creating cohorts of contact tracers to follow the spread of COVID-19some responses were crippled by long-unaddressed weaknesses, such as lack of healthcare surge capacity and critical medical supplies.

Iran ranks 90th out of 195 countries with a score of 36.5 out of 100.

In this report, there are data and research-based on 6 categories of prevention, diagnosis, and reporting rapid response, health systems, commitments to improve financial capacity and global norms, and high-risk and risky environment.

In the Prevention index, Iran ranks 46th with a score of 28.4 out of 100 on the global average.

In the Health Systems index, the country gained a score of 39.4 and is ranked 70th among countries in the world with a score of 31.5.

In the Commitments to Improve Financial Capacity and Global Norms index, Iran is ranked 185 with a global average score of 47.8 and an overall score of 27.1.

In general, the first country in this index is the United States and the last is Somalia.

FB/MG

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GHS Index: Iran ranks 90th in dealing with pandemics - Tehran Times

How did the Rays run out of starting pitching after four games? – Tampa Bay Times

ST. PETERSBURG First sign that a season might be running into unexpected difficulties?

You find yourself missing Michael Wacha.

Seriously, the Rays did not even make it through the first turn of the rotation without adding the dreaded TBD next to the probable pitchers section for future games.

This isnt a crisis, but it is a reminder of just how ephemeral a teams pennant hopes can be. Starting pitching is actually a strength in Tampa Bay, and yet its already being tested in mid-April.

Shane Baz had minor elbow surgery before the season began, Ryan Yarbrough tweaked a groin muscle before his first start and Luis Patino had an oblique strain before finishing his first inning on Monday night. Next up? Rookies, relievers and rehabs.

Oh, Ill wager the Rays get through this unfortunate stretch. Even if they dont have many options beyond Tommy Romero for starting pitchers on the 40-man roster in Durham, theyve got the possibility of stretching out Josh Fleming and Jalen Beeks for bulk duty behind openers.

But for all their planning, all their precautions, all their depth, starting pitching is the one thing that can derail Tampa Bays postseason hopes quicker than anything else.

We know that because its what cost them last year in the playoffs.

Losing Tyler Glasnow at midseason was a blow that Tampa Bay absorbed through the 2021 regular season but could not survive in the American League Division Series against Boston.

With Glasnow gone and Wacha and Chris Archer turning into duds, the Rays were basically depending on a three-man rotation through the first four games. And those three pitchers had a combined 38 major-league starts between them.

Not so shockingly, they also had a 9.90 ERA in their 10 innings against the Red Sox in the ALDS.

Of course, were a long, long way from the 2022 postseason. Yarbroughs injury isnt considered that serious, and he could be back in the rotation by the end of next week.

But the Patino situation is concerning for a couple of reasons.

No. 1, the Rays were raving about Patinos growth in the first days of spring training. Still just 22 years old, there are people in the organization who believe his ceiling is higher than Shane McClanahans. So, yeah, thats a tough loss in the first week of the regular season.

No. 2, an oblique strain can be a nasty injury for a pitcher. Cardinals starter Jack Flaherty hurt his oblique last May, missed more than two months, came back for two starts and went down with a shoulder injury. Flaherty said this spring that the oblique caused him to change his mechanics, which led to the shoulder problem that still has him on the injured list in 2022.

Blue Jays reliever Julian Merryweather and Cubs reliever Rowan Wick both missed most of the 2021 season after having setbacks with oblique injuries.

The point is that the Rays are not likely to rush Patino back, which means an uncomfortable situation could get dire quickly if there are additional injuries in the rotation.

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For as much depth as the Rays have in their minor-league system, theyre growing a little thin with starting pitching. Go back to their Baseball America rankings from 2019, and the organizations top pitching prospects are either rehabbing (Baz, Brendan McKay and Colin Poche) or have been traded (Matthew Liberatore, Brent Honeywell and Joe Ryan).

McClanahan is the lone prospect from three years ago to have a spot in the current rotation.

That doesnt mean the cupboard is bare. Taj Bradley and Seth Johnson are both top prospects in the system, but neither has much experience above Class A and have not yet been added to the 40-man roster.

And none of this should be construed as a shortcoming on the Rays part. They may be a little thin at Triple-A, but thats because they dealt Liberatore for Randy Arozarena and Ryan for Nelson Cruz. Essentially, they used their pitching strength to supplement the offense each of the past two years.

Consequently, the Rays find themselves in a similar situation as some other contenders early this season. The White Sox, Mets and Cardinals are all dealing with starting pitcher shortages of one type or another.

So how serious is the situation?

Tampa Bay has been either first or second in the American League in ERA in each of the past three seasons, and I wouldnt be surprised if theyre near the top again in September.

But if you see another pitcher squatting on the mound in pain, you could be longing for the days of Wacha and Archer. Well, maybe not Archer.

John Romano can be reached at jromano@tampabay.com. Follow @romano_tbtimes.

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How did the Rays run out of starting pitching after four games? - Tampa Bay Times

The Physics of Consciousness: There IS Such a Thing? – Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence

Yes. Jordan Peterson talks to Roger Penrose about that:

Dr. Peterson recently traveled to the UK for a series of lectures at the highly esteemed Universities of Oxford and Cambridge. This conversation was recorded during that period with Sir Roger Penrose, a British mathematical physicist who was awarded the 2020 Nobel Prize in Physics for discovering that black hole formation is a robust predictor of Einsteins general relativity. Moderated by Dr. Stephen Blackwood.

___________ Chapters ___________ [0:00]

Intro [1:00] Is Consciousness Computational?

[3:20] Turing Machines

[6:30] Determinism & the Arrow of Time

[12:15] Consciousness & Reductionism

[17:30] Emergent Randomness & Evolution

[23:00] The Tiling Problem, Computation, & AI

[29:30] Escher, Brains, Bach

[39:00] Pattern Recognition & Intuition

[45:30] Mathematical Representations & the Physical World

[54:00] Collapsing Schrodingers Equation

[1:00:00] Consciousness-Independent Reality

[1:07:00] Black Holes & Time Horizons

[1:15:00] Einsteins Biggest Mistake

[1:27:00] Meaning & Consciousness

[1:39:00] Hawking Spots: Potential

You may also wish to read: What would head or partial brain transplants do to consciousness? Researchers had some success swapping rodent heads (though theres a catch) but no luck with monkeys. And then animal lovers weighed in About partial brain transplants, Michael Egnor asks, if he received bits of brain from many sources, would there be a neighborhood in my skull? A townhall?

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The Physics of Consciousness: There IS Such a Thing? - Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence