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Republican-controlled Arizona House votes to ban critical race theory in schools – KTAR.com

PHOENIX (AP) Arizonas Republican-controlled House of Representatives voted Thursday to put limits on teaching race and gender in schools, part of the GOPs nationwide push to block diversity instruction theyve termed critical race theory.

The measure is the latest front in the ever-evolving debate over how to teach U.S. history and reckon with racism in the nations past and present.

The measure would ban instruction that promotes or advocates for any form of blame or judgment on the basis of race, ethnicity or sex. It seeks to outlaw a list of concepts, including that a person should feel discomfort, guilt, anguish or any other form of psychological distress because of their race, ethnicity or sex.

House Republicans voted along party lines to send the measure to the Senate. Democrats said the measure would chill discussions about history and contemporary event s in the classroom because teachers will fear losing their jobs if they broach the subject of race.

To love America is to learn all about their history both good and bad, said Rep. Sarah Liguori, a Phoenix Democrat. And if we sense our history and ignore todays challenges, we will never live up to the ideals of liberty and justice for all.

Critical race theory was until recently an obscure field of study, largely in law schools, about systemic racism. Republicans have weaponized the term ahead of the midterm elections as a catch-all for teachings about race, diversity, bias and privilege that they say fall outside the charge for public schools.

Lessons related to race and diversity have been on the rise alongside a broader acknowledgment that racial injustice didnt end in America with the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Those efforts have spurred a backlash, particularly among Republican voters.

Disregarding parent concerns about what our children are learning is not going to work, said Rep. Michelle Udall, a Republican from Mesa who sponsored the bill.

Republicans included a ban on critical race theory in the state budget last year, but it was among many new policies later thrown out by the Arizona Supreme Court. The justices found the Legislatures practice of stuffing the budget with unrelated provisions was unconstitutional.

When the measure was considered in the House Education Committee on Wednesday, several GOP lawmakers were appalled to hear a parents description of a Bingo game encouraging middle school students to consider how their race, family support, income and other factors could give them a leg up against peers who face discrimination, a turbulent home life or trouble getting to school.

My personal life should not be subject to a bingo game, said Rep. Teresa Martinez, a Republican from Casa Grande. The school has no right to ask if you have one parent, two parents, a gay parent, a brown parent, and are you white.

Rep. Mitzi Epstein said some aspects of history, such as slavery and the Holocaust, are indeed shameful, and she worries the legislation would restrict teachers from saying so.

To teach these things without blame or judgment would be wrong, Epstein said.

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Republican-controlled Arizona House votes to ban critical race theory in schools - KTAR.com

Crypto, NFTs, Web3: People Hate the Future of the Internet – The Atlantic

On the subway this morning, I looked up and saw an ad for a new cryptocurrency. More specifically, I looked up at a bright-red rectangle behind large white font reading: Its never too late to be early.

Were in the midst of a speculation boom that has been variously compared to the Beanie Babies craze, the dot-com bubble, and tulip mania. A year ago, the average person might never have heard the term Web3. Now we all have to watch as Paris Hilton beholds a cartoon-monkey NFT (non-fungible token) that Jimmy Fallon spent $216,000 on, then remarks, I love the captain hat. Stories about this new vision for the internet appear in the tech and business sections of national newspapers more or less every single day, generally with the caveat that a lot of people sincerely believe Web3 to be a Ponzi scheme, a grift, a multilevel-marketing arrangement, and a scam.

This assessment has its own, swiftly growing army of adherents. Web3 is a Ponzi scheme has circulated as a meme, in widely cited manifestos, and in viral blog posts. Maybe soon it will be a political slogan. (Those who have a specific disdain for NFTs have already taken up the nickname right-clickers.) Likening Web3 to a Ponzi scheme is useful because, unlike Web3 itself, a Ponzi scheme is easy to grasp: We all know whats wrong with scams, and we understand that Ponzi schemes are bad. We may not get what people mean when they talk about the blockchain, but we do get the sense that were supposed to be their marks, and that were under pressure to join them or die.

Whether that rhetoric is fairwhether Web3 is literally a scamdepends on which piece of a broad ecosystem of new technologies you happen to be talking about. (Clearly scams abound; the Federal Trade Commission has gone so far as to officially announce that scams abound.) At its most basic, Web3 imagines a massive shift away from the habit of accessing the web via centralized platforms such as Facebook and Google, and toward a norm of communicating, storing information, and making payments through a supposedly incorruptible, uneditable, fail-proof system. This would conceivably give the average person greater control over their personal data and the consequences of their interactions, but for various reasons it has so far been a bit of a farce.

The term itselfWeb3was first used by Gavin Wood, the co-founder of the popular Ethereum blockchain, in 2014, in an essay now referred to as seminal and classic by crypto enthusiasts. The vitriol that can erupt anytime his neologism is mentionedthe fuel that often takes these conversations from zero to 100comes from the creeping feeling that Wood and others vision of the future is inevitable, that Web3 will come about in spite of anybodys reservations, however much it seems to be a scam. The frenzy of speculation is being met with a counter-frenzy of resentment.

The people who say that Web3 is a scam have other issues with the whole idea. In fact, they hate it for a new reason every day. Im not exaggerating: They hate it.

When the Associated Press announced last month that it would sell some of its photographs as NFTs, the decision was described as spineless, amoral, and the news organization was told to eat shit. (Dwayne Desaulniers, who is leading the AP project, told me that he spent eight hours combing through the Twitter responses. The volume, I was surprised at, he said.) In the fall, when the NFL star Aaron Rodgers said that he would take part of his salary in bitcoin, he was blasted for participating in what some said amounted to an endorsement of money laundering. When the fan token platform Socios got involved in British Premier League soccer, Crystal Palace fans showed up to a game with a banner reading, MORALLY BANKRUPT PARASITES SOCIOS NOT WELCOME. On Twitter, the anti-Web3 crowd has lately been circulating a digital poster in the style of 19th-century newspaper advertisements, with NFTs Fucking Suck and Open Your Eyes, Shit-for-Brains headlining in ornate script.

A person investing in crypto or a shared future on the blockchain is said to hate Earth and support the hyperfinancialization of all human existence. Or theyre a greedy doofus who deserves to waste millions of dollars on digital monkey portraits while Marc Andreessen gets richer, if not an embarrassing freak who is really just looking for cover to debate age-of-consent laws. But the simple insistence that Web3 is a scamno more, no lessremains the most consistent critique. After Kim Kardashian was sued for promoting a dubious cryptocurrency-investment opportunity on her Instagram, Ben McKenzie, an early-2000s teen-soap star (is this odd?), wrote an essay for Slate with the journalist Jacob Silverman lambasting Kardashian and arguing that celebrities who promote crypto might as well be pushing payday loans or seating their audience at a rigged blackjack table. Sounds bad.

The anger at Web3 carries echoes of the fury over the subprime-mortgage meltdown almost 15 years ago. The gross behavior that event exposed and the government bailouts that came after helped motivate the early embrace of bitcoin, which was compellingly described as a financial system based on proof, rather than the sort of trust that had just gotten the world into a huge mess. Now, ironically, the same historical event serves as the grounds for Web3 backlash. I have seen one fools-gold rush from up close in the lead-up to the 2008 financial crisis, Michael Hsu, a bank regulator in the U.S. Treasury Department, said in a September speech to the Blockchain Association. It feels like we may be on the cusp of another with cryptocurrencies.

Last year, when a bunch of Reddit users spent weeks juicing GameStop stock just to mess with everyoneand when the New York Young Republican Club responded by staging a baffling reoccupation of Wall Streetthey were thinking back to the 2008 crisis. (The bailouts were still a plot point, Paige K. Bradley argued in a report for Artforum. People are pissed off.) So too are Web3 resisters in the highly active Reddit forums r/CryptoReality and r/Buttcoin. In the latter, crypto enthusiasts are stereotyped and mocked as the millennial male versions of MLM huns hawking diet shakes on Facebook and parodied in posts with titles like Are we living in the future? (Bought snacks with $USD). But they are also framed as the villainous engineers of a portended collapse who are shoving us all into a future that is really history repeating itself.

An r/Buttcoin moderator, who asked to remain anonymous for fear of harassment and doxing, admitted that swapping bit for butt is juvenile, but told me I could not possibly know how annoying it is when crypto bros spam Reddit with their links and say that anybody who disagrees with them is a fool. (The longest-running bit in the r/Buttcoin forum is commenting this is good for bitcoin underneath any piece of crypto-related news that should ostensibly be disillusioning, in imitation of the crypto bros unflagging faith.) The moderator also said the forum serves as a public archive of the crypto bros predatory behavior.

Its not a question of if the market is going to collapse; it will collapse, he said. And when that happens, theres going to be a lot of people that are going to pretend they were victims. And theres a large group of us that feel we cant let them get away with that. There shouldnt be any bailouts for these people.

The pandemic changed the way Americans think about scams. A few years ago, when Donald Trump was in office and the Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes was awaiting trial, grifting seemed to be the default mode of conduct in a society built on self-interest. The New Yorker writer Jia Tolentino described it in her 2019 best seller, Trick Mirror: Reflections on Self Delusion, as the definitive millennial ethos.

We were tickled by scams, found ourselves begrudgingly awed by them, and indulged a morbid curiosity in their inner workings. But somehow, the relentless misery and staggeringly unequal outcomes of the past two years have brought an unexpected correction to this mindset. A new exasperation has taken hold around the billionaires, out-of-touch celebrities, and dubiously talented influencers who couldnt find it in themselves to act in good taste while others were suffering, and who were insulated from the worst of the pandemic by the money that kept rolling in. Calls rang out for crackdowns on all the liars, hypocrites, and opportunists exploiting desperation.

Read: How the pandemic stoked a backlash to multilevel marketing

The most online stretch in human history surely played a role in this reversal. On social networks, anti-scamming movements have escalated through likes and shares as quickly as the scammy movements themselves. Anti-scammers appear motivated by frustration with the way things workand with the fact that they had no say in their arrangement. Likewise, with Web3, the anger seems to come from the knowledge that regular people may be unable to excuse themselves from the possibly tragic ramifications of a movement they neither pursued nor supported. If its just a dot-com bubble, it sucks for the people who invested, Hilary Allen, a law professor at American University, recently told Vox. But if its [like] 2008, then were all screwed, even those of us who arent investing, and thats not fair.

When I spoke with Wood, the co-founder of Ethereum, and asked him whether he was surprised by the recent pushback against Web3, he seemed unfazed. People are just afraid of change, he said, and thats okay, because, as with any major societal shift, Web3 will be brought about in waves. First theres the builders, he said, the people who are building the next generation of stuff. Then theres a broader group of influential people who think quite deeply about how it is that theyre living their lives. If this second group buys into a coherent argument as to why the major societal shift is to their benefit, they will largely drag along the rest of the population.

The being dragged along is what people really, really resent. And that resentment is becoming a force of its own.

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Crypto, NFTs, Web3: People Hate the Future of the Internet - The Atlantic

3 Amazing Stocks That Are 60% Off Their Highs – Motley Fool

The mini-crash of January has given investors the opportunity to buy some amazing healthcare companies at a discount. First we're going to take a look at Doximity(NYSE:DOCS), a telehealth powerhouse that is almost 60% off its highs. Next up is Novocure (NASDAQ:NVCR), a cancer specialist that has dropped 70% from its high point last year. And finally we're going across the pond to visit Affimed (NASDAQ:AFMD), a cancer drugmaker whose stock has dropped 65% from 2021.

These three biotech stocks have been slammed hard. But the biotech industry is often volatile, and you can find some exciting (and sometimes highly rewarding) opportunities when the market turns negative. Here is why we recommend Doximity, Novocure, and Affimed.

Image source: Getty Images.

Taylor Carmichael (Doximity): It's no secret that virtual internet stocks like Doximity, Teladoc Health, and Zoom Videoall zoomed higher when the pandemic caused a massive quarantine, only to crash when the market decided the lockdown might be over soon. This is a mistake, however. While Zoom's revenue growth has slowed dramatically, Doximity and Teladoc are still seeing a remarkable jump in sales. That's because the telehealth revolution is just getting started, and these two companies are leading the way.

In my opinion, Doximity is a stronger buy, because it's already achieved profitability (and then some). The telehealth giant has 36% profit margins and 76% revenue growth. The business is fantastic right now. And I see Doximity as a safer pick, because it's got a diversified business across the telehealth spectrum.

Doximity is a networking portal for the healthcare industry -- it's social networking for doctors. Eighty percent of U.S. physicians are on the platform, and 90% of medical students. Thanks to the network effect, nobody can compete with Doximity. All the doctors go to Doximity because that's where all the doctors already are. And this powerful advantage gives the company multiple ways to make money.

One major part of Doximity's business is its status as the major internet marketing platform for drug companies that want to target doctors. Another one is a job-seeking site for healthcare professionals looking to find a new job. And finally, Doximity rolled out a telehealth solution at the beginning of the pandemic, so that doctors and their patients could visit remotely.

This is a fantastic business. Why is the stock down so much? Mr. Market has just shredded the multiple, that's all. Take a look at this company, the price is right.

Patrick Bafuma (Novocure): While projecting anemic sales growth of just 8% for the full year of 2021, Novocure has taken a much-needed breather, pulling back 70% from its all-time highs in June 2021. Despite the sell-off, the maker of cancer-fighting wearable Optune has still returned over 900% in the last five years. This absolutely smashes the S&P 500, which has just about doubled during the same timeframe.

Continued prosperity may be ahead too. This $7.7 billion oncology company is expecting final data from its phase 3 pivotal LUNAR trial looking at Optune in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Novocure believes there are approximately 46,000 NSCLC patients in the U.S. who could benefit from its therapy. That number is more than four times its current lone addressable market for glioblastoma, a certain type of brain cancer. It was just back in April that the company reported it would wrap up the LUNAR trial earlier than expected. Not to mention an independent data-monitoring committee suggested it was possibly unethical for patients to continue to be randomized to the control arm. With many believing positive data were ahead for such a large addressable market, the stock surged 40% in a single trading session on the news.

Novocure is inching toward profitability, losing just under $32 million through the first three quarters of 2021 while accumulating $401.8 million in revenue. Likewise, it has impressive 79% gross margins and $938 million in cash as of the end of 2021. With positive NSCLC news seemingly inevitable this year, it seems likely the company may be profitable within the next few years. And with multiple other late-stage clinical trials for Optune underway, the market has unfairly discounted this emerging oncology company.

George Budwell(Affimed): Shares of the German cancer immunotherapy company Affimed are currently off of their 52-week high by a whopping 65%. Normally, that kind of sharp drop in a developmental-stage biotech's share price would be accompanied by a major clinical or regulatory setback. Oddly, though, the exact opposite is true in regards to Affimed's novel anti-cancer platform. Late last year, the German biotech actually reported stellar early/mid-stage trial results for its lead product candidate AFM13, when used in combination with natural killer cells. This potent combo therapy produced a 100% objective response rate in a small cohort of heavily pre-treated patients with recurrent or refractory CD30-positive lymphomas.

This first indication, if approved, is thought to be worth upwards of $600 million in sales at its peak. Even so, Affimed's market cap is a mere $442 million at the time of this writing -- implying that this steep drawdown in the company's share price over the past few weeks is way overdone at this point. Keeping with this theme, Affimed also has trials underway for a host of other high-value indications, including Hodgkin lymphoma and a basket of solid tumors. Some of these indications, in fact, have blockbuster sales potential (greater than $1 billion in sales). Viewed in this light, Affimed's stock appears to be grossly undervalued right now.

Apart from its enormous organic growth prospects, Affimed also stands out as a potential buyout target. After all, Affimed already has a close working relationship with cancer behemoth Roche. For those who don't follow biotechs all that closely, Roche is one of the most aggressive big pharmas when it comes to buying novel therapeutic platforms. So, if Affimed's anti-cancer platform continues to hit the mark in the clinic, it wouldn't be particularly surprising if Roche eventually made an offer to buy its partner.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the official recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium advisory service. Were motley! Questioning an investing thesis -- even one of our own -- helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer.

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3 Amazing Stocks That Are 60% Off Their Highs - Motley Fool

How do you get 5000 email subscribers? Gain Clarity on how to achieve this. – Digital Journal

An updated report about the List Launch Pro webinar, teaching internet marketers how to grow their business by building strong email lists, has been released.

South Penrith, Australia February 3, 2022

Internet marketing is a very competitive niche that relies heavily on having a strong email list. The updated report on the List Launch Pro program explains that this training provides step-by-step coaching from expert internet marketers.

More information is available at https://www.penrithwebsiteservices.com/list-launch-pro-review

You will now have access to secrets that successful online marketers use to grow their businesses. You will gain the clarity and confidence needed to run a successful online business that depends largely on a strong email list.

Email is an important part of the modern persons daily life. According to the Radicati Group, about 3.6 billion people worldwide use email, which is mostly business-related. In addition, Hubspot reports that 99% of consumers check their email every day and prefer to receive updates this way. Unlike social media messages, which can get lost in feeds, emails go directly to individuals, so are much more effective at getting information in front of customers.

The List Launch Pro 7-part video training program focuses on how you can generate its first 5,000 email subscribers.

This training program gives you the opportunity to watch over the shoulder to learn how experts Winter Vee and Tim Tarango, two of the worlds best online business consultants, generated over 1.3 million email subscribers.

List Launch Pro includes an automated system with pre-built lead capture pages and video sales letters that do the work for the business owner. It works 24/7, collecting leads and sending emails with the business owners links, resulting in a strong customer base.

A custom dashboard is provided to List Launch Pro participants that gives the ability to track all leads, clicks, and opt-ins. There is also a Referral Partner Database that includes partners to collaborate with in order to help you build an email list faster.

Many online marketers spend a lot of time on different strategies to gain leads. With List Launch Pro, however, most of the work is done already for you. Each facet of growing an email list has step-by-step instructional videos to make the whole process easy to follow.

This beginner-friendly course requires no technical knowledge. This unique marketing solution works for all online marketers who want to get their brand promoted to potential customers.

Interested parties can get more information at https://www.penrithwebsiteservices.com/list-launch-pro-review

Contact Info:Name: Marguerite PocknellEmail: Send EmailOrganization: Penrith Website ServicesAddress: 93 Tukara Road, South Penrith, New South Wales 2750, AustraliaWebsite: https://www.penrithwebsiteservices.com/list-launch-pro-review/

Release ID: 89062339

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Aquafeed Additives Market Future Scope Analysis & Forecast To 2030 | Top Players: Aker Biomarine, Calanus As, Nutriad Inc. – Digital Journal

Aquafeed AdditivesMarket: Overview

The aquafeed additives market has been expected to experience noticeable growth opportunities in the forthcoming years. The market growth has been possible with the rising consumption of processed dairy, poultry, and aqua products. In addition to this, increasing demand for quality meat as well as meat by-products has been projected to put a significant impact on the growth avenues in the global market.

The sudden outbreak of different diseases in the livestock has been estimated to increase the concern related to meat safety and quality and this factor is likely to fuel the use of these animal feed additives in the global market. Further, vitamins are used at an increased rate as additives in animal feed formulations. Although, these vitamins are present naturally in different feeds the additional supplements are infused with these in order to provide optimal nutrition. Thus, owing to these factors, there has been a noteworthy increase in the demand opportunities in the global market in the forthcoming years.

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Aquafeed AdditivesMarket: Key Trends

Minerals, fish bones, vitamins, fish oil, corn protein, and soybean cake are some raw materials that are used in order to manufacture aquafeed additives. Soybean serves as an important source of amino acid and protein for livestock as well as human beings. It is commonly used to provide a well-balanced amino acid to these individuals. Furthermore, the consumer inclination for these nutritive and healthy products has been estimated to drive the requirement for soybean cakes and this factor further stimulates the production of aquafeed in the global market.

In recent years, there has been a noteworthy increase in the consumption of protein-rich food because of growing consumer awareness related to food with increased nutritive value. Thus, owing to this factor, the aquafeed additives market has been expected to grow at a substantial speed in the forthcoming years.

The rising consumption of high protein sourced food from the animal has been predicted to drive the demand for fish food and this factor is likely to drive the growth avenues in the global market.

Aquafeed AdditivesMarket: Competitive Dynamics and Key Developments

The nature of the aquafeed additives market has been competitive with the presence of some prominent players across the world. These market players have been putting constant efforts by adopting innumerable strategies to bring growth prospects in the global market during the forecast period. Some of the significant growth strategies include development as well as the launching of different technologically advanced products, portfolio diversion, mergers and acquisitions, expansion of different networks for distribution, and expansion of footprints of the organization.

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The key players in theaquafeed additives marketare:

Aquafeed AdditivesMarket: Regional Assessment

The aquafeed additives market has been segmented into Asia Pacific, North America, Central & South America, Europe, and the Middle East & Africa. The Central & South America region has been estimated to hold a dominating share in the market revenue across the globe. This market dominance has been possible with favorable climate conditions. Furthermore, the availability of the locally produced fish feed that has been made from some basic raw materials, for example, fish meal and fish oil are also estimated to fuel the growth avenues in the global market. Furthermore, the presence of large-scale manufacturers in the region is also projected to fuel expansion opportunities in the following years. In addition to this, the region also serves as one of the prominent producers and consumers of seafood. Thus, owing to these factors, the aquafeed additives market has been likely to grow at a substantial speed in the forthcoming years.

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Aquafeed Additives Market Future Scope Analysis & Forecast To 2030 | Top Players: Aker Biomarine, Calanus As, Nutriad Inc. - Digital Journal