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LucidLink, AJA, and Telestream Simplify Workflows for Media & Entertainment Companies to Work from Anywhere, in Tandem – PR Newswire

Provides Direct Access to Data, Media Professionals can Work on High Resolution and High Bit Rate Media Files Over the Internet

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 1, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- LucidLink, a global leader in remote collaboration software for creative teams, announced with AJA Video Systemsand Telestreamthe fastest way to access, organize and view data in one easy workflow. LucidLink Filespaces, an award-winning SaaS-based solution, provides rapid access to data through AJA Diskover Media Edition in conjunction with Telestream GLIM and the Vantage platform. LucidLink serves as a central hub uniting what is typically two disparate systems creating seamless workflows never before feasible for media professionals.

"We are excited to be showing this powerful solution for media professionals at IBC 2022," said Rupert Watson, LucidLink's Director of Alliances and Channels, EMEA. "Pulling together the innovative technologies from AJA, Telestream, and LucidLink into one workflow brings new capabilities for creative teams. Now teams can work in tandem on the same project, giving them the power to truly collaborate and create in real-time, no matter where they are based."

LucidLink, AJA, and Telestream Simplify Workflows for Media & Entertainment Companies to Work from Anywhere, in Tandem

One workflow from three powerful solutionsThe companies have come together to build a powerful solution for media professionals: LucidLink's centralized data repository provides immediate data access combined with AJA Diskover Media Edition, which helps catalog and find the right file while customers use Telestream GLIM to review the data and Vantage for transcoding. The combination offers great speed; LucidLink allows remote workers all over the globe to share and access data with speeds that are normally only reserved for high-speed on-prem storage. AJA Diskover Media Edition on top of LucidLink allows organizations to very rapidly index extremely large file systems stored via LucidLink and gives users visibility to the data no matter where they are located, but without the security risks associated with full, potentially destructive access to the data.

Simply put, these combined technologies allow media professionals to access, organize and view data in one easy workflow.

"The media and entertainment industry is bottlenecked with unwieldy data management across production and post, while remote workflows present additional challenges for managing file locations and metadata on the cloud. AJA Diskover Media Edition removes the hurdles associated with data management, helping industry professionals work more efficiently and make more informed data decisions. Our partnership with LucidLink further simplifies navigating cloud storage, enabling remote teams to collaborate seamlessly via a streamlined workflow akin to using on-premises storage. By pairing Diskover Media Edition with LucidLink, users can move immediately from viewing media and metadata to further production of assets with tools like Telestream's Vantage package," said Nick Rashby, President, AJA Video Systems.

LucidLink Filespaces: The future of cloud storage streaming for teamsLucidLink Filespaces provides an infinitely scalable, centralized repository of data in the cloud that can be immediately accessed from anywhere. LucidLink works on any major operating system. The client can install it on any server, laptop, or workstation and mount as a local volume. As a mount point on a server, LucidLink provides a standard directory structure and instant access to data for all these various services that have never been able to integrate seamlessly. LucidLink enables AJA's Diskover and Telestreams GLIM and Vantage servers, located in different parts of the world, to easily access data and work in concert with each other.

Telestream GLIMhelps creative professionals quickly preview high-quality media files with color accuracy via any web browser without generating a proxy file. With direct access to and the ability to launch the player in AJA Diskover Media Edition, professionals can easily view and validate files located on-premises or in cloud storage as indexed by Diskover Media Edition as associated metadata. All files are shown with SCTE-35 markers, waveform view, and audio metering to ensure compliance standards on-the-fly, for any user, in any location.

Access to Telestream's powerful Vantage platformvia AJA Diskover Media Edition v2.0 gives remote workers access to centralized tools for generating proxy files or transcoding media assets for delivery. Users can now select files and send them to an on-premises or cloud-based Telestream Vantage system to create proxies or transcode the assets, regardless of user, file, or Vantage system location. Coupled with AJA Diskover Media Edition's global index, the plug-in accelerates workflows by eliminating roundtripping between applications and streamlining files.

LucidLink will be at IBC 2022 (Hall 7, Booth B06). For more information or to schedule a briefing with LucidLink at IBC 2022, please contact Clare Plaisted at [emailprotected].

About LucidLinkLucidLink offers an innovative cloud-native file service designed specifically for extensive data access over distance. LucidLink Filespaces provides best-in-class security and high-performance scalability to run file-based workloads on object storage for maximum efficiency and productivity. The service is compatible with Microsoft Azure Blob and any Amazon S3 compatible object storage provider that utilizes the cloud, on-prem, or hybrid storage. It supports all major operating systems, including Linux, Windows, and macOS. Investors include Baseline Ventures, Headline, Adobe, Bright Cap Ventures, Bain Capital Ventures, S28 Capital, and Fathom Capital. LucidLink is privately held and headquartered in San Francisco, California, with offices in Bulgaria, Europe, and Australia.

About AJA Video Systems, Inc.Since 1993, AJA Video has been a leading manufacturer of video interface technologies, converters, digital video recording solutions, and professional cameras, bringing high-quality, cost-effective products to the professional, broadcast, and post-production markets. AJA products are designed and manufactured at our facilities in Grass Valley, California, and sold through an extensive sales channel of resellers and systems integrators around the world. For further information, please see our website at http://www.aja.com.

About AJA Diskover Media EditionAJA Diskover Media Edition is a powerful and essential tool for M&E organizations in the remote work era and for navigating the explosion of data creation that is industry-wide. Creative facilities are dealing with a mix of on-prem storage, cloud storage, long term archival storage, and everyone is working in different locations around the globe yet the need for rapid access to data and media assets still exists. AJA Diskover Media Edition provides organizations with these abilities and much more. For more details, visit: http://www.aja.com/products/aja-diskover-media-edition.

For more information about LucidLink, please contact [emailprotected]. Follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn and visit us at http://www.lucidlink.com.

Contact:Julie O'GradyLucidLink[emailprotected]+1 (650) 269-9989

SOURCE LucidLink

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LucidLink, AJA, and Telestream Simplify Workflows for Media & Entertainment Companies to Work from Anywhere, in Tandem - PR Newswire

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Teradata takes on cloud-native rivals with data lakes, MLOps – The Register

Teradata has launched analytics and data lake platforms as it strives to steal the march on so-call cloud-native enterprise data warehouse companies.

With ClearScape Analytics, the data warehousing stalwart has launched 50 new in-database time series and ML functions designed to support end-to-end machine learning pipelines.

The company has also embraced cloud-based data lakes, with a product VantageCloud Lake. Its cloud data warehouse platform, Teradata Vantage, has also been renamed VantageCloud Enterprise.

The last few years have seen a confluence of companies around the lakehouse concept. Despite the dubious moniker, it represents a trend in trying to bring together data warehouse workloads repeated analytics on structured data with data lakes, and semi-structured data repositories for more exploratory analyses.

They still have their work cut out for them embracing developers

From the data lake side, Databricks has announced Databricks SQL Serverless, designed to improve query performance and concurrency of BI and analytics workloads on its data lake. Cloudera similarly promises analytics and data exploration in a single platform.

On the data warehouse side, Snowflake has promoted its usefulness as a data lake with support for Python and unstructured data.

Teradata did make an earlier approach to supporting data lakes with the ability to run Hadoop in its on-prem analytics platform Astor.

With VantageCloud Lake, Teradata promises centralized object storage (AWS S3 initially) offering open data formats, structured and unstructured data and flexible schema.

Teradata previously supported S3 and other cloud storage options since the launch of its cloud-based Vantage platform, but Hillary Ashton, chief product officer at Teradata, told The Register its analytics and data management were now more optimized for S3.

"We support read and write and Enterprise Edition with object store, but it was really optimized for EBS block storage for low latency workloads. With [the new data lake] we have optimized for object storage. That seems subtle, but it's actually a very significant difference. That object store is the primary location for data in the lake edition and it's an auxiliary location in enterprise (data warehouse).

"To say it's optimized for object storage now means that we brought the intelligence of our indexing, and our workload management and brought it down into object storage, which differentiates us from just a typical read, write and to move into object store, and really allows us to bring the IP that we've developed over the years in terms of massive parallel processing and improvements in access time into object store," Ashton said.

In its analytics environment, Teradata has introduced more support for management of the machine learning pipeline. So called Model Ops, the system automates the process of picking the most effective champion and challenger model on a given data set.

"Model Ops allows you to manage that process in an automated fashion so that you can constantly be running champion challenger modeling at scale, which means that you're going to get to better analytic outcomes faster," Ashton said.

While this replicates some of the functionality of H2O.ai, Teradata also partners with the ML specialist. "If you've chosen H2O.ai, you can build your models there and then you can import them directly into Teradata Vantage," she said.

Analyst Tony Baer, principal at dbInsight, noted Teradata had developed its own technology instead of adopting open source table formats such as Iceberg (used by Cloudera) or Delta, used by Databricks.

"Given Teradata's longtime positioning for extreme, complex analytics, going to the data lake is a natural move. They are still doing so on their own terms as their data lake table format is not using Iceberg or Delta open source. But never say never there," he said.

Teradata's cloud strategy is an effort to grab some market and customer attention from so-called cloud-native data warehouse systems such as Snowflake, AWS Redshift, Google's BigQuery and Microsoft Azure's Synapse. But it might struggle convincing younger developers to use it given its long history of on-prem systems, Baer said.

"The cloud gives Teradata a chance to expand their footprints with existing customers to take on more discretionary workloads, but they still have their work cut out for them embracing developers, most of whom probably don't know Teradata or view it as 'their father's platform'," he said.

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Do this if you don’t want to lose the files stored in the cloud – Gearrice

In the cloud we can store all kinds of documents and files. Many of them may be important, so losing them could be a serious problem. But of course, in the end we depend on a service that we are using. It is not as if we had a physical hard drive, of our own, where we are going to be able to control what happens.

The first reason is that the platform stops working. This does not usually happen overnight, but it can happen that you are using a secondary service, which does not have many users, and it closes. Maybe they warn you with a certain amount of time but you dont realize it because you dont use it frequently and when you want to access you find that no longer exists.

If you use stable platforms, such as Google Drive, OneDrive or Dropbox, this will not happen. Not in the short term at least. But it can happen if you use other less popular and more unstable services.

Another thing to keep in mind is that you can lose your cloud files if they expire. There are many services that allow you to store content but up to a certain time. Once that time has passed, they are automatically deleted by the platform and we can no longer access them.

Is this common? Well, it depends on the service. Once again, it is important to use secure cloud storage platforms to avoid these problems. Always check if the files are going to expire after a while or if they are going to remain there until you decide to delete them manually.

You cannot rule out that there is a computer attack. A hacker could exploit some vulnerability on the storage platform you are using and remove all user files. That could cause big losses, logically, but it is a possibility that is always there.

For this reason, it is advisable to make backup copies, at least of the most important files that may be irreparable. Only in this way will you always be protected and you will not run any risk in the event that any cloud service you use may be the victim of a cyber attack.

That attack may not be directed against the platform itself, but against your account. Could steal your password and access everything you have stored. That, inevitably, is going to put all the content at risk and they could delete it without you being able to do anything to prevent that from happening.

To avoid these it is essential to protect the account. Always use passwords that are strong and complex, keep computers up to date and with a good antivirus, as well as enable two-factor authentication whenever possible and create that extra layer of protection against account theft.

But of course, human error can also be the cause of files to be deleted on the cloud. Maybe you have a folder with important documents and, by mistake, you hit delete. In that case the files would be deleted and would no longer be available on that platform, so it would be the same as if you erase a hard drive.

Now, sometimes these platforms have a trash can, similar to the one in Windows, so you can go there and restore deleted files. However, it is not something that is always available and therefore you must be careful when you are going to delete a file and not make a mistake.

In short, for these reasons you could lose the files you have stored in the cloud. It is important that you take certain precautionary measures so as not to have problems and thus always keep the documents safe, without losing them and that being a major problem.

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Wasabi Technologies Adds to Leadership Team in Japan and Australia to Support the Demand for Hot Cloud Storage Across Asia-Pacific – Sports Video…

Wasabi Technologies, the hot cloud storage company, has expanded its leadership bench in the Asia Pacific region with the additions of Aki Wakimoto and Andrew Sandes as Country Managers for Japan and Australia respectively. Wakimoto and Sandes will drive customer and partner growth as Wasabi continues its full-scale APAC expansion to meet the demand for high-performance, affordable cloud storage in this digital-first region.

Wasabi has undertaken an expansive rollout to support the region with cloud storage that is 1/5th the cost of hyperscalers, with no fees for egress or API requests and no vendor lock-in. Businesses are able to securely and affordably store all of their data and access it the moment they need it without complex pricing tiers. The executive hires of Wakimoto and Sandes follow the opening of four storage regions Tokyo, Osaka, Sydney, and most recently Singapore and the appointment of long-time APAC industry veteran Michael King to Vice President, General Manager of APAC in May 2022.

APAC is quickly becoming one of Wasabis most important markets, and we are strategically building our operations to support the incredible opportunities in both Japan and Australia, said King. I have witnessed firsthand how successful Aki and Andrew have been in their markets, building optimized channels of distribution and driving customer success. They will take us to the next level.

As Country Manager for Japan, Wakimoto will spearhead Wasabis growth strategy in the country, working closely with King to build Wasabis go-to-market team, drive value for channel partners and customers, and help deliver storage solutions that maximize the ROI of data across organizations. Wakimoto brings over 20 years of experience in the Japanese IT industry to her new role at Wasabi. Previously she served as President and Representative Director of SolarWinds Japan where she grew the companys customer and channel business, and implemented a comprehensive IT Operations Management (ITOM) product portfolio to support the digital transformation of Japanese enterprises. She has also held a number of impactful sales and operations roles with CA Technologies, Citrix Systems, and Adobe Systems and was also President of Pulse Secure Japan.

Sandes holds over 20 years of experience across Oceania, Japan and the wider Asia Pacific region, helping customers solve their biggest problems using leading technologies like cloud storage. Prior to Wasabi, Sandes served as Country Manager for Australia and New Zealand at Empflifi and was previously GM Asia Pacific at Lithium Technologies (now Khoros) working with large enterprises across the region to provide solutions to high scale online and social customer service challenges. Prior to Lithium, Sandes spent five years working in corporate advisory, executing cross border mergers and acquisitions, and capital raising transactions in the technology, media, and telecommunications sectors. He has also held several sales and business development roles across the technology sector in APAC. With Wasabi, Sandes will focus on go-to-market strategies with Australian partners, build a team to support Wasabis channel, and evangelize the value proposition of cloud storage to customers in the country who are dealing with concerns like ransomware, data sovereignty, and unpredictable costs of hyperscale storage providers.

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Title: What Is Cloud-Based Healthcare? – HealthLeaders Media

Providers needed a better way to integrate their clinical and non-clinical information to understand their patients needs and preferences. Without it, clinicians risk losing patients whose expectations around access and communication have risen dramatically. According toNCR Health, 80% of patients would switch providers for convenience factors alone.

What is cloud-based healthcare?

A cloud solution for healthcare solves many common challenges and helps providers focus on what matters most: the patient.

The cloud acts as a place where you can securely store your data and access it from anywhere. Non-cloud storage solutions keep information on a physical hard drive or internal server. The cloud, however, allows data to live on a global network ofsecure data centers.

The cloud can easily connect to the EHR or any other system of record through an API, allowing organizations to centralize data and take advantage of app libraries.

Healthcare organizations use the cloud for connecting, storing, and maintaining traditional personal health information such as blood test results, as well as other consumer data like contact preferences. All information is accessed securely from a single console across the organization. EHRs arent replaced; they become an integral part of the cloud system.

The cloud can easily connect to the EHR or any other system of record through an API (application programming interface), allowing organizations to centralize data and take advantage of app libraries like AppExchange. App libraries providetailored solutionsto help solve different healthcare business needs, like verifying patient medical insurance. An API can take data from a contact center, marketing database, or any other system and bring all the information together in one place.

On the back end, the cloud provider maintains the software and develops enhancements, so healthcare IT professionals dont have to worry about facilitating updates. This frees them to customize the platform to meet the unique needs of their business.

How can a cloud solution improve the work of healthcare organizations?

Providers have many sources of information that create data silos. The time wasted searching multiple systems and the lost opportunity to draw insights from data frustrates both employees and patients. Heres how cloud-based healthcare alleviates the burden for everyone:

Streamline operations

Teams can access all the data they need from a single program or app, instead of switching between systems, and they can see everything at an aggregate level. This makes it easier to quickly answer patient questions, manage preferences, and turn insights into actions.

Organizations can also use automation to handle time-consuming tasks. Consider a patient who needs to schedule a knee replacement. Instead of the appointment desk scanning their calendar manually for an available slot, the cloud can automatically suggest possible times via the channel of their choice. The system can also deliver a series of emails with important information from pre-visit instruction to post-visit health tips.

Personalize patient care

With a single source of truth for data, care coordinators can access a complete view of a patients health. The coordinator can easily view the treatment history, social determinants of health, recent tests and procedures, and the extended care team. They can also access questions the patient may have submitted through a portal.

At the same time, intelligence can analyze data to help providers stratify risk, ensuring those most in need are not overlooked. This frees clinicians to focus on interacting with the patient instead of devoting time to record-keeping in the EHR.

Engage anywhere

The cloud enables clinicians and other care providers to access patient information even outside the office.

For example, a physician who is at home, at another facility, or away at a conference can still access patient information from a single dashboard. Or, when patients need to see a provider but time constraints, weather conditions, or lack of transportation make it challenging, they can opt for a virtual appointment instead. Ultimately, patients have more options to engage with their providers, and providers have more access to their patients. This connectivity helps reduce time to care and improve patient outcomes.

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Dutch government finally allowed to use public cloud – ComputerWeekly.com

The public cloud market has seen huge developments over the past decade, with the Covid pandemic being an important accelerator. Cloud services have become more reliable, and are currently used by large numbers of citizens and businesses. The security of public cloud services has increased, and the large-scale deployment of updates and patches makes it far easier than before to fix errors in software. For these reasons, it was due time to revise the National Cloud Policy 2011.

The new policy allows Dutch government departments to use public cloud services. Public cloud services offer an appealing perspective for the development of a more innovative, transparent, flexible and efficient digital government,State secretary for digitisationAlexandra van Huffelen wrote to the Dutch Lower House. Low initial costs and pay-per-use make the public cloud a transparent solution.

Moreover, the risks are now more manageable than before, due to large investments by public cloud providers in securing their services. This is much more than the government is willing or able to invest in information security itself.

Hence, the road to public clouds is finally free for Dutch public services, albeit under strict conditions.

Conditions for use incorporate, for example, the processing of personal data. Public clouds will not be allowed for use for basic registry, nor for the storage and processing of special personal data. All storage and processing of personal data has to comply with the General Data Protection Regulation.

Furthermore, civil servants are not allowed to store state secrets in any public cloud. Neither are they supposed to use cloud services from countries with an active cyber programme that is aimed against Dutch interests. Every Dutch government department itself is responsible for assessing and monitoring any relevant risk of using a public cloud service. The Dutch Ministry of Defence still remains excluded from the new policy, and will not be allowed to use public cloud services.

Even though Van Huffelen is rather positive regarding the new national cloud policy, she is aware that risks remain even indirectly. For example, should a US cloud services provider be acquired by a Chinese state-owned enterprise, the use of that particular public cloud would no longer be permitted by Dutch public services.

All departments formulate their own cloud policy and strategy, based on the new National Cloud Policy. Those bodies of the government that do not form part of the civil service are requested to follow this advice. In addition, departments are required to incorporate an exit strategy in their contracts with public cloud providers to make sure that, in case of the acquisition example above, they are assured of immediate cancellation of the service. This exit strategy should also indicate how the data will be returned and destroyed on the side of the provider.

The digital world is not without risks, said Van Huffelen. Not even if we had a fully self-managed cloud.

According to the Dutch Central Bureau of Statistics, in 2020, 53% of Dutch businesses used the cloud, of which 39% used a public cloud.

Van Huffelen wrote in her letter that those businesses are also demanding a high degree of security and privacy. The Dutch central bank (DNB) has pioneered in managing cloud risks in the financial sector.

Today, 49% of Dutch banks use the cloud, of which 38% use a public cloud. Almost 60% of healthcare organisations in the Netherlands use a private cloud, and 43% of them also use a public cloud.

Moreover, research shows that over 50% of government organisations worldwide use office applications from the cloud. These numbers were an important accelerator to revise the Dutch National Cloud Policy of 2011.

Van Huffelen plans to start evaluating the new Cloud Policy from 2023.

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Chris Pines Dont Worry Darling Character Is Based on Jordan Peterson, a Hero to the Incel Community – AOL

Olivia Wilde has cited films such as Inception and The Truman Show as inspiration for her psychological thriller Dont Worry Darling, but a far more unexpected source of inspiration is the incel community. Wilde told fellow actor-turned-director Maggie Gyllenhaal during a conversation for Interview Magazine that Chris Pines character was inspired by Jordan Peterson, the Canadian author and media personality described by Wilde as this pseudo-intellectual hero to the incel community.

Pine stars in Dont Worry Darling as Frank, the founder of a utopian 1950s community in the desert known as the Victory Project. Wildes film, written by her Booksmart collaborator Katie Silberman, centers on Florence Pughs Alice, a Victory Project housewife who discovers her idyllic community is harboring dark secrets. Trailers for Dont Worry Darling have positioned Pines Frank as the films antagonist.

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[Incels are] basically disenfranchised, mostly white men, who believe they are entitled to sex from women, Wilde explained to Gyllenhaal after noting Pines character is inspired by Peterson. And they believe that society has now robbed them that the idea of feminism is working against nature, and that we must be put back into the correct place.

Theyre actually succeeding in many different ways, Wilde continued about the incel community. But this guy Jordan Peterson is someone that legitimizes certain aspects of their movement because hes a former professor, hes an author, he wears a suit, so they feel like this is a real philosophy that should be taken seriously.

In her Variety cover story, Wilde said she did a deep dive on the disenfranchised world of white men on the internet before filming started and even logged onto 4chan. I have a sick fascination with cults, Wilde said.

Wilde had nothing but praise for Chris Pine in her conversation with Gyllenhaal. The director said Pine gave all of himself to the character despite the role being just a supporting one. Wilde added, Chris, who Ive known for, like, 20 years, probably agreed to do the movie at first as a favor to an old buddy, and then he really took it and ran with it.

Dont Worry Darling is world premiering Sept. 5 at the Venice Film Festival and will open in theaters Sept. 23 from Warner Bros.

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On Religion: Theres that ancient question again where is Heaven? – Ukiah Daily Journal

When cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin returned to Earth in 1961, after the first manned spaceflight, Soviet leaders claimed he said: I went up to space, but I didnt encounter God.

Venturing into similar territory, superstar atheist Sam Harris rocked cyberspace during a recent Triggernometry YouTube appearance in which he discussed Donald Trump, faith elements in wokeness and the flocks of Americans who insist on believing in heaven.

Political Twitter screamed when he said there was a left-wing conspiracy to deny the presidency to Donald Trump. Absolutely, but I think it was warranted.

But comedians Konstantin Kisin and Francis Foster pushed back, asking if Harris was justifying moral relativism. Perhaps todays truth wars, the Triggernometry team suggested, were linked to a famous G.K. Chesterton quip: When men choose not to believe in God, they do not thereafter believe in nothing, they then become capable of believing in anything.

During the ensuing discussion, Harris offered another viral sound bite: Where is heaven, exactly, given that we have multiple telescopes up there beaming back tens of billions of years worth of information? Yet millions of Americans still embrace the supernatural claims of an ancient faith, including that Jesus will return to raise the living and the dead.

Youd be surprised at the number of percent of sober, non-Bible-thumping people who would say yes to that question, he said. They might be Christian, they might be, listen, I love the Bible. It gives me a great moral framework. It gives my kids a great moral framework. This is the tradition Im identified with. This is all super important to me but thats kind of as far as it goes. Right? Like, Im not going to make magical claims about flying saviors who are literally going to come down from heaven.

While the Twitter masses raged, the French-Canadian iconographer and writer Jonathan Pageau recorded a video essay on his YouTube channel about why materialists and religious believers keep debating the meaning of terms such as heaven and earth.

This is a core biblical topic, since the first verse of Genesis states: In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Thus, the Harris heaven sound bite led Pageau to tweet: Woah, this is one of the most embarrassing things that I have heard in a while.

After all, even the most fervent materialist can learn to step back into an ancient cosmology and grasp that these categories heaven and earth are universal, they are in every culture, said Pageau, who is best known for his online dialogues with author Jordan Peterson, professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Toronto.

Concepts of the visible and invisible are central to religious discussions of light, wind, breath, spirit, purpose, beauty, art and speech, as well as images of believers making spiritual quests via ladders, trees or mountains. Humans experience the world with their senses, and these perceptions lead to spiritual questions, insights and truths, said Pageau.

Consider, for example, Dantes use of planets in The Divine Comedy as a symbolic pathway to encountering God. You can think: Oh, my goodness. What a silly way of thinking. Right? To take Sams position, did the satellites up there did they get in the way of Dante? Did he knock himself on the satellites while he was going up the spheres?

The Bible describes angels with wings, and God is often depicted in physical terms having feet, arms and hands, as well as a heart and mind. But no one is claiming that God is a big physical being in the sky that has these attributes, said Pageau.

I will admit that in a world of satellites and a world of spaceships, quasars and whatever, this can be difficult. Jesus is not hanging up there in the atmosphere. Hes not having to watch out for the satellites that are coming by you know maybe chatting with people at the space station, the iconographer explained.

God is, obviously, not a king sitting on a throne in the atmosphere throwing lightning bolts. But understanding what a king is might be one of the best ways to understand how the authority of God works.

Understanding what heaven is is the best way to understand the manner in which the invisible moves the visible.

Terry Mattingly leads GetReligion.org and lives in Oak Ridge, Tenn. He is a senior fellow at the Overby Center at the University of Mississippi.

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On Religion: Theres that ancient question again where is Heaven? - Ukiah Daily Journal

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The majority of Utah health teachers want help teaching sexuality and mental health – KUER 90.1

Utah health teachers say they want help teaching human sexuality.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a report in August based on 2020 surveys of lead health education teachers and middle and high school principals about school health policies and practices.

Michael Friedrichs, Utahs coordinator for the 2020 CDC survey, said they had a lower response rate than usual since educators were busy dealing with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, but the data is similar to previous years.

While the CDC report with national data was only just released, Utah-specific data was available to education and health officials last year. The CDC report says 72.1% of Utah lead health educators wanted to receive professional development on human sexuality, compared to 64.3% of health teachers surveyed nationally.

According to data provided by Friedrichs, 80.5% of high school lead health education teachers and 66.9% of middle school lead health education teachers said they would like to receive professional development on human sexuality. Other subjects teachers wanted help with included suicide prevention and mental health.

Jodi Parker, the health education specialist at the Utah State Board of Education, said she took the data and partnered with the University of Utah to create a series of webinars to educate health teachers on things like sexual harassment, cancer screenings and contraceptives. The goal was to provide teachers with up-to-date, medically accurate information.

Webinars were released in chunks starting October 2021 and the final one May 2022. We do have plans for a few more, Parker said.

Parker thinks one reason health educators wanted professional development is because the Utah Board of Education updated the states sexual education standards in 2019, the year before the survey was conducted.

Jenne Hamlin, a health teacher at West High School, has heard about the videos, but she hasnt watched them.

I have been teaching health for 24 years so I am pretty comfortable, Hamlin said.

Hamlin said she does attend conferences put on by the Utah State Board of Education and SHAPE Utah to stay up-to-date on health education, and whether she watches the webinars depends on how much time she has.

If I have a lot of extra assignments with the school (like sports or such), time becomes a premium commodity!

Cedar Valley High School health teacher Jordan Peterson said the subject matter is comfortable for him, too. Petersons undergraduate degree is in health education, so he knows what he is legally allowed to teach in Utah, but thinks more training could be helpful for teachers on how to teach sensitive subjects, especially ones that could be construed as political.

Its more application-based training on how can I better navigate these difficult conversations in an equitable way, without getting myself into trouble with parents just because they disagree, he said.

Hamlin thinks a lot of health teachers probably agree with that sentiment, that they understand the material but arent always sure how to teach more sensitive issues.

Being at West, I am comfortable working with a very diverse student population, Hamlin said. But it never hurts to get others views on the tough [or] sensitive topics.

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The West Can’t Even Understand Why Russia Sees It As A Threat – The Federalist

The eruption of war in Ukraine this year disrupted what President George Bush Sr. once called the new world order of the post-Soviet world, potentially realigning the globes geopolitical tectonic plates.

The conflict, in tandem with heightened stress about Taiwan, has aligned Russia and China more closely and highlights the so-called BRICS axis (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) as a potential alternative to the global West of the European Union, North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Japan, and ANZUS. This not only probably reflects resentment against alleged Western hubris and neocolonialism, but also highlights a deep fault line between two civilizational zones that cut across Ukraine.

That fault line becomes visible in comparing the now-secular just war tradition of the West and the necessary war tradition of still-overtly Christian polities of the East.

The exiled Russian philosopher Ivan Ilyin, the prime 20th-century articulator of the necessary war tradition, is sometimes called Russian President Vladimir Putins favorite philosopher. Putin has distributed copies of Ilyins books to officials across the Russian Federation.

A renowned Hegelian scholar and pioneer of Russian philosophy of law from before the Revolution, Ilyin in the 1920s became the unofficial philosopher of General Wrangels White Army movement against Communist totalitarianism and genocide. Ilyin has been unfairly labeled fascist by some Antifa historians, a claim that has been refuted by scholarship, his clear disavowal of Nazism, and the Gestapo targeting him in exile.

But the doctrine of the necessary war goes back all the way back to Byzantine times in Orthodox Christian social teaching. It involved a denial of any war being just.

St. Basil the Great, for example, wrote that it was best for a soldier who killed an enemy to be excommunicated for three years, even if he had killed legally in a right cause defending Christendom. The Byzantine princess Anna Comnena wrote in amazement of Latin-Norman ecclesiastical leaders arriving in the Near East armed as Crusaders when Byzantine bishops and clergy were forbidden from wielding arms.

Indeed, the Crusader war culture of the West left deeply negative memories in Orthodox Christian historiography. Western Crusaders were seen as having pillaged Constantinople in the Fourth Crusade, dealing a long-term fatal blow to the Christian Empire. Northern Crusades wreaked havoc on Slavic Christian realms.

In a 2003 study of Ilyins necessary war doctrine, University of Ottawa Prof. Paul Robinson contrasted the just war doctrine of the West with key aspects of necessary war, as found in Ilyins 1925 bookOn the Resistance to Evil by Force. Ilyin argued against Tolstoyan pacifism, which he said among pre-revolutionary Russian elites helped pave the way for the Communist takeover with its ensuing mass murders and cultural genocides.

For a war to be necessary, according to Ilyin: There must be real evil, not only suffering, but evil human will expressed in external deeds; such externalized evil human will must be recognized on a deep level as a prerequisite for fighting it; those fighting it need a genuine love of good and a repentant attitude in realizing the sinfulness of war on all sides; and its fighters need a strong will that is not indifferent to evil.

Force also becomes necessary only when other measures such as psychological coercion fail. (The latter point doesnt mean that force is a last resort, as in Western just war doctrine, only that it becomes needed after any alternative deemed practical is exhausted.)

Russian necessary war doctrine parallels Dostoevskys philosophy of a common guilt for sin, which needs to be claimed through repentance and cannot be resolved simply through abstract legal views and processes. In that sense, there is larger complicity for the parricide of Fyodor Karamazov, for example.

To Ilyin, likewise, the spiritual causes of evil must be recognized within human souls. Fighting the external manifestations while leaving the roots intact will not lead to success, and there are unintended consequences and collateral damage in addressing merely the external. God and faith are integral factors in calculating a necessary war and repenting for it.

All of this paradoxically makes for an approach to war that is perhaps both more extremely skeptical and more likely in select cases. In any case, it literally leaves no justification for the Ukraine war from the standpoint of justice, even if deemed necessary.

To Russian leaders, necessity in Ukraine seemed driven by an urgency to prevent or defuse the embedding of anti-Russian ideology militarily and culturally in what they see as a historic heartland of Russian community, ancient Kievan-Rus. But that necessity is illegible to Western elites because it involves no justification in Western intellectual terms, and because the Wests secular perspective today is fundamentally different from what Ilyin saw as the essential element of faith in addressing necessary war.

That Western pan-sexualism, for example, would be seen as effectively a national security threat due to its perceived impact on family structure and faith is inconceivable to Western leaders. For most of them, its promotion has become an explicit national security goal. In turn, this is inconceivable to Russian leaders.

The allegedly anti-Christian bias of the European Union and NATOs woke-ism, the West pressing into the Russian sphere of influence after its support for overturning the Ukrainian government in 2014, a melding of secularized state and business interests in globalization that Russian leaders perceive as akin to the neopagan corporate statism of Nazism these all describe for Kremlin leaders a claimed necessity to intervene militarily.

Psychologist Jordan Peterson pointed outthere is no basis for psychological trust between Russia and the West today, because of what he terms the civil war culturally fragmenting the West and making it an impossible partner in negotiating a crisis. How, Peterson asked, could someone in another culture more traditional in view of sex and ethno-nationalism feel he could trust a United States where it is not clear that there is currently any coherent national identity nor normative cultural ethics?

Peterson gave as an example the spectacle this spring of congressional hearings in which the fractious question What is a woman? was unanswerable for a U.S. Supreme Court nominee, to the applause of many American elites. Given American elites overthrow of Founding Fathers, ideals, and documents, as well as family life and faith, where is the ethical North Star guiding American policy and trustworthiness abroad? It seems merely to be an assertion of a will to power in the name of a culturally revolutionary ideology.

Many suggest that if Donald Trump had been president, the Ukraine invasion would not have occurred. Thats not because he is a paragon of virtue, but because the power drive for expansion of the West in Ukraine would have been lessened in hisrealpolitik, and the nature of American leadership more legible to Putin.

In all this, cancel culture in American elite institutions has not served the United States well abroad. Chinas recent analogy between U.S. policy on Taiwan and the strangling of George Floyd marked Beijing weaponizing American ideological rhetoric against itself. It was in line with how Chinese and Russian leaders (and many average people around the world) view American culture as collapsing in weakness. This is also signified by the derogatory Chinese termbaizuo,for crazy left white people.

Of course, Chinas use of Floyd was tactical at best, given Beijings atrocious record of dealing with minorities, let alone its lack of purging Mao as arguably the uber-mass murderer of the last century. Regardless, however, the concept of just war in a postmodern West must navigate the deconstruction of terms amid the loss of religious underpinning.

Robinson notes that, by contrast with the Russian view of necessary war, the Western just war theory requires:

Does the seemingly arbitrary Western tendency toward labeling some wars as just crusades enable both self-righteousness and a more impersonal and abstract sense of war (fighting Russia to the last Ukrainian through technological and financial aid)? Does it lead to hubris in intervening in Russias home neighborhood and risking huge casualties for others and nuclear confrontation?

Going back to the roots of theological difference between the West and East in old Christendom, the West tends to blame alleged Caesaro-Papism in the East for Russian brutal bellicosity. But the West has had its own problems with weaponizing a meld of ideology and culture historically.

The way the West obliviously pushed out the boundaries of NATO physically, and of its global consumer Metaverse culturally and economically, can easily hide righteous disdain for other civilizational zones, at the Wests peril. As Henry Kissinger suggestedin a recent Wall Street Journal interview(paraphrased by the reporter), Americans tend to view negotiations in missionary rather than psychological terms, seeking to convert or condemn their interlocutors rather than to penetrate their thinking.

Educational psychologist Jean Piaget wrote that appreciating others differing views is basic to healthy cognitive development. But the West at large today seems to do better in the rhetoric of diversity than at engaging with actual diverse perspectives.

Protestant states during the Reformation placed their churches under the control of state leaders as a precursor to the heyday of European imperialism. The melding of secular transcendent and corporate ideologies in modern globalization is viewed as neocolonialism in many countries still.

Peter the Greats Westernizing reforms included using Protestant state models for church-state relations, which placed the Russian Orthodox Churchs organization administratively under the monarch. But the Orthodox ideal remained a Byzantine symphonia of church and state, a balance but not a merger of the two, in which an influential monastic presence played a key balancing role. This was symbolized by the double-headed eagle rather than the single-headed eagle of the American state.

Ironically given the Ukraine war, the necessary war doctrine seemed formed to deflect the kind of self-righteous crusades that bedeviled Western colonial and neocolonial powers. If no war is just, then all wars demand penitence.

All of this is not in any way to justify the war in Ukraine. In fact, as noted, necessary war doctrine on its own terms doesnt seek to justify war in any sense of justice, given the cost to even one innocent human being, let alone the many being killed in Ukraine.

But from the Russian perspective of necessity, however much that can be disputed, this war seems perceived as just that: a Hail Mary pass against a neocolonial West messing with a historical heartland, militarily and culturally. The West sees its contravening intervention as a just war, today an extension of the role of social justice warriors at home, part of an ongoing campaign against a culturally repressive remnant of a different civilizational zone, which Mitt Romney famously termed our greatest geopolitical enemy (despite China).

Unlike Islamic civilization, Russia seems too familiar and too close to ignore. Unfortunately, that apparent familiarity bred a misunderstanding of civilizational differences. Meanwhile, the big practical problem that Kissinger has pointed out remains: This other is locked and loaded with nuclear weapons. Lord, have mercy!

Dr. Paul Kentigern Siewers is associate professor of English at Bucknell University and was the 2018-2019 William E. Simon visiting fellow in religion and public life at the James Madison Program, Princeton University. He is also an ordained deacon and warden at St. John of Shanghai and San Francisco Russian Orthodox Mission Church in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. He teaches and writes on Christian literature and ideas of nature, and on literary resistance to totalitarianism. His views are his own.

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The West Can't Even Understand Why Russia Sees It As A Threat - The Federalist

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