From 099b11280c7d52c930cf0479ad63355d5afe069e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Navan Chauhan Date: Fri, 11 Dec 2020 19:50:52 +0530 Subject: [PATCH] added for 11th --- archive-covid-19/11 December, 2020.html | 224 +++++++++++++ archive-daily-dose/11 December, 2020.html | 391 ++++++++++++++++++++++ index.html | 4 +- 3 files changed, 617 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) create mode 100644 archive-covid-19/11 December, 2020.html create mode 100644 archive-daily-dose/11 December, 2020.html diff --git a/archive-covid-19/11 December, 2020.html b/archive-covid-19/11 December, 2020.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ddb8112 --- /dev/null +++ b/archive-covid-19/11 December, 2020.html @@ -0,0 +1,224 @@ + + + + + + 11 December, 2020 + + +Covid-19 Sentry + +

Covid-19 Sentry

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Contents

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From Preprints

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From Clinical Trials

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From PubMed

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From Patent Search

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Daily-Dose

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Contents

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From New Yorker

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From Vox

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+Other polls have similarly found that canceling some student debt is a moderately popular idea, and it’s pretty well liked among much of the Democratic base — Black voters and middle-class professionals — who helped hand Biden the election. +

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+If Democrats do go ahead with student debt forgiveness via executive order, they could pair it with an action that would benefit non-college-educated people, such as requiring federal contractors to pay a $15 minimum wage. That would benefit millions of workers. And it’s not clear how many people — other than those it directly impacts — will notice the effects of student debt cancellation. +

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+Proponents of forgiveness say they hope that by taking one big Democratic ask off the table, they can open the door to making progress on other issues related to the affordability of higher education, namely ones that would require congressional action. +

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+“Everybody advocating for student debt cancellation also thinks we should fix the [cost] problem,” said Suzanne Kahn, director of education, jobs, and worker power at the Roosevelt Institute and an advocate for complete cancellation of federal student debt. “The order of the conversation we’re having is a direct result of Covid and the fact that this is a simulative action that Biden can take without Congress.” +

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+The debate over student debt isn’t going away. Neither is the problem that got us here in the first place. +

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+One reason student debt is now at the forefront of the political conversation is that years of activism helped put it there. Another reason is that it’s a prevalent issue in so many people’s lives. +

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+Some 45 million Americans have student debt. And while households with graduate degrees are the ones with the most education debt, the problem affects people of all races, across incomes and education levels. In fact, some of those in the worst situation when it comes to their student debt are people who started college but didn’t finish. They often struggle to pay off their debt in part because they aren’t getting the income benefit that often comes with a college degree. +

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+“We have lured people into high-cost colleges by offering these student loans … and maybe we should recognize that and at least cancel some of the pain that we have encouraged people to take on,” said Bob Shireman, director of higher education excellence and a senior fellow at the Century Foundation. +

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+Regardless of whether Biden ultimately decides to cancel debt on his own, the problem of the price of higher education and how it’s financed is not going away. Indeed, if he were to cancel all debt tomorrow, there would still be millions of students across the country incurring new debt unless the entire system is overhauled. +

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+“We need a Congress that’s willing to have that conversation,” Shireman said. “We cannot address the broader affordability questions, the broader affordability problem, without Congress and the administration working together.” +

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From The Hindu: Sports

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From The Hindu: National News

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From BBC: Europe

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From Ars Technica

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From Jokes Subreddit

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