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Prayers, amulets and spells to ward off plagues

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Prayers, amulets and spells to ward off plagues The sages of Safed created amulets, the Jews of Italy wrote prayers and other Jews warned of less conventional plagues.
; Reported by Jerusalem Post 14 hours ago.

Italy’s coronavirus lockdown puts restaurants out of business

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As the lockdown in Italy enters its sixth week, some restaurants and bars are already going out of business. Reported by BBC News 9 hours ago.

'I'm Baffled': How U.S. Coronavirus Testing Still Lags Behind

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'I'm Baffled': How U.S. Coronavirus Testing Still Lags Behind Watch VideoThe U.S. is not testing as many people per thousand as countries like Italy, South Korea and Canada, according to an Oxford University group. And experts warn the country needs more robust testing and tracing infrastructure before reopening the economy. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation's leading infectious disease doctor, told The Associated Press, "We're not there yet." 

Nonetheless, President Trump is considering loosening guidelines to encourage business in some states to resume with some degree of normalcy. Newsy talked to experts and a test manufacturer about what the country needs to properly test and trace the coronavirus in the U.S. Reported by Newsy 23 hours ago.

Big media companies see boost in audience, but it may not last

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The more people stay home to avoid the coronavirus pandemic, the more they find themselves glued to their screens.

In South Korea, as the number of cases grew, television watching shot up 17%, according to Nielsen. Last month in Italy, the size of the TV audience increased by 6.5%, with a 12% rise in hard-hit Lombardy.

In the Seattle area, total television use increased 22% on March 11, compared with the week before, according to Nielsen. In New York that same day, as more people started working from home, use went up 8%. (Total use, as defined by Nielsen, includes live television, on-demand viewing, streaming and gaming.)

But for media companies, the benefit of having a bigger-than-usual audience may be short-lived, because the outbreak threatens to undercut the very structure of their business. With businesses laying off workers and analysts warning of a recession as global economies slow, a significant number of viewers may decide in the coming months to break away from cable or cut back on streaming subscriptions.

The gain in audience size “will be replaced pretty quickly by the necessity of reducing monthly bills, when people will have to deal with the financial impacts of a recession,” said Craig Moffett, a co-founder of research firm MoffettNathanson. “Cord cutting will accelerate with a vengeance.”

The Walt Disney Co., ViacomCBS and other media giants face a pivotal moment as the delicate balance that protects their business — live content tied to high-cost subscriptions — erodes even faster. It started with the sudden disappearance of a dependable asset: sports programming.

Live sports coverage generates billions of advertising dollars and fuels television subscriptions — a combination that delivers fat profits. But leagues have canceled or postponed their seasons, NCAA’s March tournament... Reported by SFGate 1 day ago.

Coronabonds: Backdoor To Collective Debt? – Analysis

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To combat the economic crisis in Europe that will inevitably follow the current COVID-19 crisis, Italy, France and others demand collective Eurozone debt. A non-starter for some of their neighbours – and rightly so.

By Dr. Frederick Kliem*

The debate about debt pooling among the Eurozone has haunted the single currency ever since it was first conceived. In 1998, German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, a champion of the Euro, promised a sceptical German public that a common currency would not lead to German liabilities for other economies’ sovereign debt.

But as the COVID-19 crisis hits, some southern European governments demand precisely such trans-national liabilities. The Euro was always a political rather than an economic project, and as such, it always had two major flaws.

*The Euro’s Birth Defect*

Firstly, the Eurozone is monetary without fiscal union. Monetary policy for the Eurozone is set by the European Central Bank (ECB), while economic and fiscal policy is set on the national level.

Such disunion is not sustainable in the long-term without endless redistribution of wealth. This is particularly true if the difference in economic performance and fiscal discipline is as great as that in the Eurozone.

Although a clear ruleset and monitoring mechanism exists to maintain the stability of the Euro exists, called the Stability and Growth Pact (SGP), those rules are regularly broken by most members (including Germany). And even the most rigorous of European Union (EU) rules, such as its competition law and part of the SGP, were jettisoned immediately as COVID-19 hit Europe.

Secondly, the Eurozone is an exclusive club within the EU. Not all EU members use the Euro, creating a two-tier organisation, and Eurozone members recurrently hold EU processes hostage to their monetary quarrels.

*From “Eurobonds” to “Coronabonds”*

During the Eurozone debt crisis, highly indebted EU countries demanded “solidarity” in the form of collectivising all Eurozone sovereign debt by issuing so-called Eurobonds. Quite rightly, Germany and other fiscally conservative Eurozone members responded with a clear “Nein”, no chance.

The idea behind Eurobonds is quite simple: All Eurozone countries pool their debt and raise bonds on the markets to borrow at much lower rates than highly indebted individual countries could do unilaterally. The entire Eurozone, therefore, guarantees all Eurozone debt. This was supposed to stabilise the sovereign debt spiral in countries such as Portugal and Greece.

The catch for fiscally more disciplined countries is that they would be liable should other governments default on their debt and would have to pick up the bill should others go bankrupt.

Wisely, Eurobonds were rejected then, and monies from the European Stability Mechanism (ESM), the specifically created bailout mechanism, were used instead – with severe austerity strings attached so that fiscally unsound countries would get excessive national spending in order and debt under control.

*Eurobonds 2.0*

Make no mistake, the sovereign debt crisis never went away entirely and is about to return with a vengeance. Unfortunately, COVID-19 has hit Italy, the Eurozone’s third-largest economy, particularly hard. Italy’s sovereign debt already is at a staggering 135% of GDP, and if Italy struggles, the entire Eurozone struggles. The Euro and banking crisis could return more severe than ever before.

On the back of COVID-19, Italy and others raise the issue of Eurobonds once again, only for them to be dubbed Coronabonds. Despite high moral pressure on less indebted countries to accept liability, governments must stand firm and refute any such attempt.

Undoubtedly, the Eurozone will have to dig deep to bail out the post-COVID-19 economy if they want to save the Euro (and there is no doubt on that front). But Coronabonds are not necessary.

*Alternative Ways Out of the Crisis*

Europe’s financial systems are currently in much better shape than their healthcare systems. Italian and Spanish government debt is high but stable, and bond yields have come down to acceptable levels since 2015, and neither currently have disruptive financial problems. Especially in times of “bearish” stock-markets, government bonds are in demand.

The only sound argument in favour of Eurozone bonds is forcing ever deeper European integration, and COVID-19 must not be misused to push such integration through the backdoor. The rise of populist parties was fed by the Eurozone crisis, and Eurobonds will add substantial momentum to those movements in net-contributor countries like Germany and the Netherlands.

Moreover, it is unforeseeable how these countries themselves will weather the storm, and how much debt they will have to raise to stabilise their own economies. In Germany, additional COVID-19 spending is some 40% of its entire annual budget; wholly credit-financed and jettisoning Berlin’s sacred “Black-Zero”, its balanced budget.

There is no question that financial help for the Eurozone will come in huge quantity; the only question is by what instruments. Indeed, after several rounds of negotiations, Eurobond-sceptic governments initially prevailed as EU ministers agreed on an EU COVID-19 bailout package, including ESM credits but not Coronabonds.

Rome refuses to permanently accept that compromise for now, and fiercely rejects accepting the substantial ESM creditline rightfully available to Italy under the agreement. Although this time ESM-bailouts are unconditional, Rome prefers not to be seen as accepting favours, further contributing to the already strong anti-EU sentiment in the country.

So far, EU northerners are resisting debt collectivisation, and one can only hope that their resolve lasts. With Coronabonds the cure is worse than the disease. Contagious Eurozone debt-spirals are not unlikely, and the lasting consequences of a collective debt precedent are unpredictable, including a substantial increase in support for populist parties.

*Dr. Frederick Kliem is a Visiting Fellow at the Centre for Multilateralism Studies (CMS) of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore. This is part of a series.

The post Coronabonds: Backdoor To Collective Debt? – Analysis appeared first on Eurasia Review. Reported by Eurasia Review 23 hours ago.

Manchester United's Jesse Lingard texted me, reveals Playboy model Laura Bragato

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Manchester United's Jesse Lingard texted me, reveals Playboy model Laura Bragato Manchester United midfielder Jesse Lingard is in lockdown in the UK due to the Coronavirus but that hasn't stopped him from keeping in touch with Playboy model, Laura Bragato (right). Italian Laura told British tabloid, The Daily Star that Jesse has been texting her while in self-isolation. "I spoke to Jesse yesterday, and he is staying home like the rest of us. He is safe. In Italy here we are all in lockdown, it's been one month and I hope everything is going to start again here. When it's over, I can't wait to travel. I want to spend my summer in Spain and London" Laura said on Tuesday.*Jesse Lingard*

Laura became famous in 2018, when she claimed that her 'lucky' behind would help Italy beat England in the FIFA World Cup. The match ended 1-1 but her pre-match comments, hoping for Jesse to score, saw her earn lakhs of online fans instantly.

*Catch up on all the latest sports news and updates here. **Also download the new mid-day Android and iOS apps to get latest updates. *

*Mid-Day is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel (@middayinfomedialtd) and stay updated with the latest news* Reported by Mid-Day 23 hours ago.

Europe virus outbreak: Wary steps taken to ease lockdown rules

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Austria, Spain and Italy lift some movement restrictions but UK to review its curbs as has many unreported deaths. Reported by Al Jazeera 19 hours ago.

Would you give up health or location data to return to work?

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Cameron Karosis usually strives to protect his personal information. But a scary bout of COVID-19 that began last month with headaches and fevers, progressed to breathing problems and led to a hospital visit has now left him eager to disclose as much as possible to help halt the virus’ spread.

Karosis has already shared personal details with Massachusetts health investigators. And if he was asked to comply with a disease-tracking phone app that monitored his whereabouts but didn’t publicly reveal his name and Cambridge street address, he said he’d do that, too.

“I’m sick and I’m under a quarantine -- hold me accountable for it,” the 27-year-old software salesman said. “You have the potential to kill other people.”

As countries around the world edge toward ending lockdowns and restarting their economies and societies, citizens are being more closely monitored, in nations rich and poor, authoritarian and free.

New systems to track who is infected and who isn’t, and where they’ve been, have been created or extended in China, South Korea and Singapore. And a range of other surveillance systems – some utilizing GPS location data, some gathering medical data – have been debated or piloted in Israel, Germany, the U.K., Italy and elsewhere.

The challenge: achieving the tricky balance between limiting the spread of disease and allowing people freedom to move outside their homes.

Whether the prospect on the table is “immunity passports” or cellphone-based tracking apps, the aim is to protect public health. But experts say it’s also important to avoid a slippery-slope scenario where data collected to minimize the spread of disease is stored indefinitely, available without limits to law enforcement or susceptible to hackers.

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.. Reported by SeattlePI.com 18 hours ago.

SKorea voting precautions highlight challenges of reopening

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SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea's parliamentary elections went ahead Wednesday under the supervision of masked poll workers armed with thermometers and sanitizing spray, highlighting that even as the coronavirus pandemic eases, health precautions will still be needed if countries move forward with plans to scale back social distancing guidelines.

When and how to reopen battered economies has been a matter of intense debate, especially in the United States, where governors have begun sketching out plans to do so in a slow and methodical process to prevent the coronavirus from rebounding. President Donald Trump has repeatedly expressed his desire to see the U.S. reopened for business quickly, though on Tuesday he appeared to back off his claim of absolute authority to determine when that happens.

In Italy, Spain and other places around Europe where infections and deaths have begun stabilizing, the process is already underway, with certain businesses and industries allowed to start back up. In South Korea, authorities resisted calls to postpone Wednesday's vote and instead drew up a deliberate set of preventive measures to reduce risks of the virus being transmitted.

Tape or stickers marked a meter (3 feet) of social distancing space from nearby streets to ballot booths. Poll workers checked the temperatures of arrivals and whisked anyone with a fever or not wearing a mask to separate areas to vote, sanitizing the facilities after they did. Voters who passed the fever screening got sanitizing gel and disposable plastic gloves before entering booths to cast their ballots.

The government also mapped out a voting process for citizens quarantined in their homes.

“I was worried about the coronavirus,” Seoul resident Chung Eun-young said. “They checked my temperature and handed me gloves, but it wasn’t as... Reported by SeattlePI.com 18 hours ago.

Italy Consumer Price Index (EU Norm) (YoY) meets expectations (0.1%) in March

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Read more on https://www.fxstreet.com Reported by FXstreet.com 18 hours ago.

Italy Consumer Price Index (EU Norm) (MoM) in line with expectations (2.2%) in March

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Read more on https://www.fxstreet.com Reported by FXstreet.com 18 hours ago.

Italy Consumer Price Index (MoM) meets expectations (0.1%) in March

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Read more on https://www.fxstreet.com Reported by FXstreet.com 18 hours ago.

Italy Consumer Price Index (YoY) meets forecasts (0.1%) in March

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Read more on https://www.fxstreet.com Reported by FXstreet.com 18 hours ago.

B-town buzz: Giorgia Andriani is safe at Bandra; Rhea Chakraborty's short film, Boom Boom, releases online

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B-town buzz: Giorgia Andriani is safe at Bandra; Rhea Chakraborty's short film, Boom Boom, releases online Giorgia Andriani's home country, Italy, is reeling under the impact of the virus. Arbaaz Khan's special friend is 'safe and secure' at her Bandra home encouraging people to take the necessary precautions and practice social distancing. Andriani, who is set to make her Bollywood debut with the Shreyas Talpade-starrer Welcome to Bajrangpur, has been brushing up on her Hindi and spending time with pet dog, Hugo. She has also done an item number in Sridevi Bungalow, which stars Khan and wink girl, Priya Prakash Varrier.

*Short take*

Last seen in Jalebi (2018), Rhea Chakraborty's short film, Boom Boom, releases online today. "It's a funny take about a couple's awkwardness on their wedding night," she says. It is part of Zee5's short film festival. Of late, Chakraborty has been more in the news for her relationship with Sushant Singh Rajput. Though the two have been holidaying, partying and gymming together for a while, they have yet to admit to the relationship. 

*Ooh la la*

Bappi Lahiri is finding joy in gardening. The veteran composer-singer is tending to his Juhu home garden, which is currently blooming with pink bougainvillaea. The current break from shows has given him a chance to pursue his hobby. Don't miss the king of bling's gold cap. 

*Catch up on all the latest entertainment news and gossip here. **Also, download the new mid-day Android and iOS apps. *

*Mid-Day is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel (@middayinfomedialtd) and stay updated with the latest news* Reported by Mid-Day 17 hours ago.

Bank of Italy warns virus crisis may tip some smaller banks over the edge

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Italian banks have a solid liquidity and capital position to face the coronavirus crisis but some smaller lenders may not be able to sustain its impact, the central bank warned on Wednesday. Reported by Reuters India 17 hours ago.

From the archive: Ferrari vs Mercedes

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Mercedes made the 300 SL, dominated 1952 then dipped, having "proved its superiority". Ferrari wasn't happy

With no Formula 1 battles between Sebastian Vettel and Lewis Hamilton looking likely for the forseeable future, we'll take you back to a vintage war between Ferrari and Mercedes – a war of words.

The Silver Arrows of Mercedes had dominated grand prix racing through the 1930s with the backing of the German government and legendary team manager Alfred Neubauer.

This era was, of course, abruptly ended by the outbreak of the Second World War, and it was not until 1951 that Daimler-Benz decided the famous three-pointed star could make its competitive return.

It decided to do so in the burgeoning sports car category, so set about designing a bespoke creation take on the dominant force that Ferrari of Italy had become in its absence.

Just a year later, the 300 SL (codenamed the W194) emerged. A shapely coupé, it was built around a superlight aluminium tubular spaceframe, offsetting the relative power defecit of its 3.0-litre straight six engine. This was borrowed from the 300 luxury saloon, but a range of upgrades boosted it from around 150bhp to some 175bhp.

Also playing key parts in the design were all-round independent suspension and a strong focus on aerodynamics – unlike Ferrari, whose founder would famously say in 1960: "Aerodynamics are for people who can't build engines". 

With old Alfred back at the helm, W194 steadily proved itself through 1952, coming second in Italy's legendary Mille Miglia road rally, taking a one-two at the 24 Hours of Le Mans, winning the Bern race and beating all comers in the Eifelrennen at the Nürburgring. 

Most famously, Karl Kling took victory in the most terrifying race of them all, the Carrera Panamericana in Mexico – even despite co-driver Hans Klenk being knocked unconscious by a vulture that shattered the windscreen at 120mph.

Point proven, Mercedes "proposed to abstain from giving further proof of its superiority in 1953," as Autocar put it. "Jolly decent of them too!"

"However, that slight touch of bombast seems to have touched off an Italian ammunition dump," we continued, "for it is now reported from Rome that the Ferrari firm, together with the official team of drivers, Alberto Ascari, Giuseppe Farina and Luigi Villoresi, have issued an open challenge to Mercedes and their drivers to compete in one or two races this year and prove their superiority. The choice of races is left to the German team. Well, Herr Neubauer?"

Two weeks later came the response from Stuttgart. "It said quite simply that Ferrari had had plenty of chances to beat them in last year's races! It also said that Mercedes had made up their minds not to race this year, that it would take them six months to get the cars and the organisation ready again, and that they were not proposing to go to all that trouble just for a challenge from Ferrari."

Naturally, this stoked the competitive nature of Enzo, who wrote in a letter to the Italian press that "he was pleased to hear that Mercedes would be ready to meet his team in six months' time, and he looked forward to August in consequence.

"As for last year, he pointed out that at Bern there were was no official Ferrari team, in the Mille Miglia a Ferrari finished first and in Mexico a Ferrari had led the race almost all the way, dropping out only on the last day and allowing Mercedes to win!"

Mercedes retorted that they were simply not interested – and "remarked in passing that in their view, motor sport consisted of record-breaking and of racing, not of light-hearted challenges to duels."

And so Ferrari was left to clean up in 1953, with its 340 MM and 375 MM pairing snatching the World Sportscar Championship title from the Jaguar C-Type across an incredible seven-race calendar.

Mercedes, though, had not given up racing but was instead putting all its efforts into a debut entry into the new Formula 1 championship.

Ferrari had no real rival in the series in 1952 and 1953, sweeping to both titles through the efforts of Ascari.

Despite winning the first two races of the 1954 season for Maserati, the legendary Juan Manuel Fangio jumped ship when Mercedes arrived with its new W196. That was an inspired decision, as he went on to win four more racrs and take the title.

Alongside Kling and new signing Stirling Moss for 1955, he won four of the six races, coming second to Moss at Silverstone (supposedly allowing the youngster to win his home race) and retiring from pole with transmission trouble in Monaco, handing Ferrari its sole garland of the season.

Wonder how that went down at Maranello...

*READ MORE*

*From the archive, 1907: Britain breaks the 24-hour record*

*From the archive, 1986: Ultima first drive*

*From the archive, 1955: Mercedes-Benz 300 SL road test* Reported by Autocar 17 hours ago.

Woodward contacted with offer to bring prolific Italy striker to Man Utd in cut-price deal

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United have been contacted by intermediaries representing a free-scoring Italy striker to see if they'd like to buy him, it's claimed.

The post Woodward contacted with offer to bring prolific Italy striker to Man Utd in cut-price deal appeared first on teamtalk.com. Reported by Team Talk 17 hours ago.

UniCredit to support its suppliers by providing faster payments

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UniCredit is to support its suppliers in Italy by accelerating how quickly they get paid, executing... Reported by Finextra 16 hours ago.

EU to unveil virus exit plan, hoping to avoid more chaos

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BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union moved Wednesday to head off a chaotic and potentially disastrous easing of restrictions that are limiting the spread of the coronavirus, warning its 27 nations to move very cautiously as they return to normal life and base their actions on scientific advice.

With Austria, the Czech Republic and Denmark already lifting some lockdown measures, the EU’s executive arm, the European Commission, was rushing out its roadmap for members of the world’s biggest trade bloc to coordinate an exit from the lockdowns, which they expect should take several months.

Some 80,000 people have now died in Europe from the disease — about two-thirds of the global toll — according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control. The commission said those scientists should be relied upon to guide national exit strategies in the weeks and months to come.

Brussels is deeply concerned about the damage that could be done if each EU nation charts its own course, given the panic that reined after the pandemic first spread in Italy, with unannounced border closures that sparked massive traffic jams and export bans that deprived hard-hit countries of medical equipment.

And the EU is very much split in its approach. France this week renewed its locksown until May 11, and Belgium appears headed in a similar direction. Spain also recently renewed its state of emergency for the second time for an additional two weeks.

In a draft of its roadmap, seen by The Associated Press, the EU commission says easing restrictions will “unavoidably lead to a corresponding increase in new cases.” It warns that this should only happen when the spread of the disease has dropped for some time and when hospitals can cope with more patients.

While the commission, which proposes EU laws and ensures that they are... Reported by SeattlePI.com 16 hours ago.

A Son Grapples With Guilt: Did He Give His Father the Coronavirus?

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Gianni Zampino was caring for his elderly father, Antonio, in Turin, Italy, when they both contracted the virus. Only Gianni survived. Reported by NYTimes.com 16 hours ago.
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