Monday, November 15, 2021

FOR YOUR INTEREST: Watch on-demand programming on today’s most pressing issues

Join us from home to engage in live conversations about the future of our communities and democracy.


KNIGHT AND DPLA
Addressing health misinformation through community   

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Knight and the Digital Public Library of America (DPLA) host a special gathering of library, civic and philanthropic leaders for an important and timely discussion about health misinformation. U.S. Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy leads a discussion on community-based solutions for addressing health misinformation. 
 
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CURATED BY MARY ANNE FRANKS AND ERIC GOLDMAN
Lessons from the First Internet Ages
 
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Thirty years after the creation of the first web page, is the internet living up to its promise of connecting people to information and each other? Lessons from the First Internet Ages, a virtual symposium, explores and evaluates what key figures in the development of the internet and online communities have learned from their experiences. 
 
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IN PARTNERSHIP WITH THE FINANCIAL TIMES
The continued fight for diversity and equality in asset management
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Pressure from clients and colleagues continues to mount on asset managers, pushing them to make further strides in ensuring that their leadership teams and workforce are more diverse. What structural changes and initiatives should the industry incorporate to accelerate change and address ethnic and gender underrepresentation? How can asset managers integrate diversity into the core of their business models in order to achieve superior operating performance? What strategies are leaders implementing to ensure diversity and equality are embedded into the heart of the recruitment process? How can asset managers ensure that they foster and truly build a culture of inclusivity? 

Featuring
Jose Minaya, CEO, Nuveen
Rupal Bhansali, CIO of International & Global Equities, Ariel Investments
Seema Hingorani, Managing Director, Morgan Stanley Investment Management 
Juan J. Martinez, Vice President/Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, Knight Foundation 


Moderator
Danielle Verbrigghe, Managing Editor, FundFire

 
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DEMOCRACY DIES IN THE DARKNESS: NY Times Investigative Report. . .Open Accounting Special Ops Unit Task Force 9

THE HAZY AFTERMATH
Although it was admitted later, "The military is now acknowledging the strikes for the first time — after the Times reached out — claiming they took the lives of 80 people. The Pentagon said the bombs killed 16 fighters and four civilians; as for the other 60 who perished, it was “not clear that they were civilians, in part because women and children in the Islamic State sometimes took up arms.”

U.S. Military Reportedly Concealed Syria Airstrike That Killed Dozens Of Civilians

Topline

"The U.S. Department of Defense tried to conceal a 2019 airstrike during the campaign against the Islamic State in Syria that resulted in one of the largest civilian death tolls in the war, an incident that some within the military believed was a possible war crime, according to a New York Times investigation.

The Times found that airstrikes were called in near Baghuz — the site of the last Islamic State stronghold in Syria — on March 18, 2019, by special operations unit Task Force 9, that staff at the Combined Air Operations Center in Qatar watching via drone believed had hit a crowd of women and children.

The bombing was flagged by an Air Force lawyer as a potential war crime, who then reported it to his chain of command, but it did not set off a thorough, independent investigation, the Times says.

U.S. Central Command acknowledged to the Times that 80 people were killed in the airstrikes, but said that it had only identified four civilians that were killed alongside 16 Islamic state fighters, while the other 60 killed, which included women and children, may not have been civilians.

According to the Times, Air Force lawyer Lt. Col. Dean Korsak pressed for an investigation of the events, eventually submitting a letter to the Senate Armed Services Committee saying senior ranking military officials “intentionally and systematically circumvented the deliberate strike process” and were “clearly seeking to cover up the incidents.” 

Some officials overseeing the air campaign against Islamic State believed that Task Force 9 had repeatedly claimed false pretexts to order airstrikes that were not given the normal vetting to prevent civilian deaths, according to the Times.

Gene Tate, a former evaluator in the DoD inspector general’s office, told the Times that he was forced out of his job after he complained that the office was not adequately investigating the incident."

ROLLING STONE

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Smoke after the shelling of the Islamic State’s last holdout of Baghuz by Kurdish-led forces backed by U.S. warplanes in March 2019.   Getty Images

U.S. Military Buried Syria Airstrike That Killed a Crowd of Women and Children, Report

The military ignored calls for an independent investigation from an Air Force lawyer who believed the bombing may have constituted a war crime, according to a report by ‘The New York Times’

    U.S. Military Buried Syria Airstrike That Killed a Crowd of Women and Children, Report

IT HAPPENED! Elon Musk JUST OFFICIALLY REVEALED Insane New Super Heavy!

IT HAPPENED! Elon Musk FINALLY Reveals New 4680 Battery!

Tesla Phone Model Pi Will DESTROY the INDUSTRY 🔥🔥🔥

Blastoff! SpaceX launches 53 Starlink satellites, nails landing

**** [LIVE] Coronavirus Pandemic: Real Time Dashboard, World Maps, Charts, News ****

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