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China’s backlash against Little Mermaid exposes Hollywood bind – Al Jazeera English

  1. China’s backlash against Little Mermaid exposes Hollywood bind Al Jazeera English
  2. ‘The Little Mermaid’ Tanks In China and South Korea Box Office Amid Racist Backlash | THR News The Hollywood Reporter
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  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Chinese Protests Put Xi Jinping in a Bind

President

Xi Jinping

faces a difficult choice between loosening China’s zero-tolerance Covid-19 policy or doubling down on restrictions that have locked down neighborhoods and stifled the country’s economy over the past three years.

Neither option is a good one for a regime focused on stability. Stock markets around the globe declined Monday as protests in China fueled worries among investors about the outlook for the world’s second-largest economy.

“Xi’s leadership is in a bind,” said

Yuen Yuen Ang,

a political scientist focused on China at the University of Michigan. “If they compromise and relax zero-Covid, they fear it will encourage mass protests. If they repress more, it will create wider and deeper grievances.”

Protesters across China have directly challenged the authority of the Chinese leader and the Communist Party in scenes unthinkable just a month ago, when Mr. Xi secured a third term in power.

In Shanghai over the weekend, protesters used call-and-response chanting to demand political change. In Beijing, crowds shouted “Freedom.” In other large cities, demonstrators marched holding blank sheets of paper—a swipe at government censorship.

China experts say the protests are unlikely to translate into a leadership change, in the near term at least. But Beijing’s dilemma is a tough one. It could lift restrictions and risk a large and potentially deadly wave of Covid infections that could undermine its credibility. Or it could crack down on the demonstrators and stick with a strict pandemic strategy that large parts of the population are clearly fed up with.

All three benchmark U.S. stock indexes closed more than 1% lower on Monday as investors worried that the protests would lead to more market volatility.

Widespread and public outpourings of political grievance have been extremely rare in a country where people have long consented to obey party authorities—as long as they deliver prosperity and allow citizens relative freedom in their personal lives.

People sang slogans and chanted for political change on a street in Shanghai on Sunday.



Photo:

hector retamal/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

Police cars were parked on a Shanghai street on Monday, a day after rare demonstrations were held.



Photo:

hector retamal/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

The protests put in stark relief the fraying of that social contract, showing that the climbing economic and social costs of China’s zero-Covid policies—coupled with an increasingly authoritarian regime’s zero-tolerance for dissent—have driven many to a kind of breaking point.

Demonstrations aren’t unusual in China, but they are largely over local grievances such as unpaid wages, land disputes or pollution. Since the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989, the party has made it a priority to prevent nationwide protests of a political nature.

The current wave of unrest started last week in the remote northwestern region of Xinjiang after 10 people died in a fire. Residents contended that Covid restrictions were partly to blame for delaying rescuers and contributing to the death toll. Officials said some barriers had to be moved but attributed the delay to parked cars in the way.

In the days since, the anger has spread across China. On Monday, authorities moved broadly to prevent any new protests, including dozens of uniformed and undercover police swarming the area around a highway bridge in Beijing where a lone protester hung a banner denouncing Mr. Xi in October. On Sunday, protesters had chanted lines from the banners.

In a rare show of defiance, crowds in China gathered for the third night as protests against Covid restrictions spread to Beijing, Shanghai and other cities. People held blank sheets of paper, symbolizing censorship, and demanded the Chinese president step down. Photo: Kevin Frayer/Getty Images

The unrest also underlined how anger about the Covid restrictions has united people from a range of social backgrounds—from migrant workers assembling iPhones in central China and residents of the remote region of Xinjiang to college students and middle-class urbanites in the nation’s biggest cities.

“The mass protests represent the biggest political crisis for Xi,” said

Minxin Pei,

editor of quarterly academic journal China Leadership Monitor. “It’s the first time in recent decades that protesters from a broad coalition of social groups have mounted a direct challenge to both the top leader himself and the party.”

Students staged a small protest Sunday at Tsinghua University in Beijing.



Photo:

Associated Press

Sudden reopening could lead to millions of intensive-care admissions in a country with fewer than four ICU beds per 100,000 people, and where many elderly still haven’t been fully vaccinated, according to public-health experts and official data. In addition, such a compromise would send a signal to the general public that mass protests are an effective means to win change, not something the government would want to encourage.

On the other hand, sticking to the zero-Covid policy could stir up even greater public resentment toward the leadership, with hard-to-gauge consequences.

The University of Michigan’s Ms. Ang and others say that the protests are unlikely to lead to any radical policy shift. Rather, one likely outcome is a mixture of selective relaxation of controls and harsh retaliation against select protesters.

Protesters and police stood on a street in Beijing on Monday.



Photo:

Kevin Frayer/Getty Images

“The danger is that if the leadership responds with repression, that could take China down a vicious cycle of control, leading to more grievances, to more control,” Ms. Ang said.

China’s Covid struggle underscores the limits of a political system where a lack of public debate has made it hard to adjust policies as other countries have done.

Many public-health experts say Beijing has missed the window to put in place a gradual exit plan out of zero-Covid. For the past three years, the government has spent significant resources on building ever more quarantine facilities and expanding mass-testing capabilities, while China’s progress on developing more effective vaccines has been slow.

Partly thanks to Beijing’s early successes at stemming infections, the Chinese population has developed little natural immunity. It only has access to homegrown vaccines that are less effective than some of the global alternatives.

A neighborhood in Beijing where access is restricted because of Covid regulations.



Photo:

Ng Han Guan/Associated Press

Notably, negotiations between China and the European Union over mRNA vaccine imports from the bloc fell through nearly two years ago, according to people familiar with the matter, after Beijing insisted that Europe recognize Chinese vaccines.

Beijing has also resisted approving any large-scale adoption of the mRNA vaccine co-developed by

Pfizer Inc.

and

BioNTech SE,

a decision healthcare and foreign-policy experts attribute partly to China’s strained relations with the U.S.

Mr. Xi and the party have faced public anger before, most notably during the early days of the pandemic when emotions swelled with the death from the virus of

Li Wenliang,

a young doctor in the city of Wuhan who was punished for trying to raise an early alarm. Ultimately, much of the nation’s anger then was directed at local authorities.

In the years since, Mr. Xi has identified himself closely with the zero-Covid strategy. That is now turning him into the natural target of protesters’ fury and has also made it nearly impossible to shift course without diminishing his standing. Notably, a People’s Daily article on Sunday continued to stress the importance of unwaveringly sticking to the existing Covid-control policy.

A Covid testing station in Shanghai on Monday. The government has built quarantine facilities and expanded mass-testing capabilities, while its development of more-effective Covid vaccines has been slow.



Photo:

Bloomberg News

As repeated lockdowns kept businesses closed and pushed up unemployment, some hoped there would be a shift away from the zero-Covid strategy once an October party conclave that handed Mr. Xi another five-year term was over.

As long as the top leader felt politically secure enough, those people argued, he would want to adjust the policy to help the economy—which still matters to the leadership despite its increased emphasis on ideology and party control.

Businesses and investors alike cheered when Beijing earlier this month unveiled plans to “optimize and adjust” the Covid policy, including shortened quarantine restrictions. Many market analysts viewed the step as the beginning of a gradual exit from zero-Covid.

However, as Covid cases surged again along with the colder season, local officials across the country reimposed strict restrictions for fear of putting their jobs in jeopardy. Keeping Covid under control has remained the overarching political priority for localities that are also struggling to reboot economic activity.

The contrast of China’s continued Covid lockdowns as the rest of the world has moved on became more obvious over the past week as many Chinese soccer fans have seen TV images of thousands of maskless spectators cheering in stadiums during the World Cup in Qatar.

Then came the deadly fire in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, where residents had struggled with lockdowns of more than 100 days, prompting protesters across the country to defy the risks of expressing dissent to seek change.

People lighted candles on Sunday in Beijing for victims of a deadly fire in the northwestern city of Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang.



Photo:

Bloomberg News

Write to Lingling Wei at Lingling.Wei@wsj.com

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McConnell’s shift on debt ceiling fight puts GOP in a bind

During a private 90-minute meeting on Thursday evening, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas sharply disagreed with McConnell’s strategy — and insisted he would force a 60-vote threshold on the GOP leader’s plan to avoid a debt default until early December. That means 10 Republicans would be forced to break a GOP-led filibuster in order to allow the debt ceiling increase to move ahead.

A number of GOP senators, such as fellow conservative Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, made the case that the McConnell deal — while far from ideal — should be allowed to pass with just 51 votes, allowing Democrats to vote for it and Republicans to vote against it. But Cruz — along with his two allies, Sens. Mike Lee of Utah and Rand Paul of Kentucky, who were not at the meeting — showed no signs of relenting.

The divisions over strategy and policy undercut the GOP leader’s long-prized effort to maintain unity amid high-profile fights with Democrats. And it comes as Republicans are openly questioning his move, which he has privately defended as necessary to ensure that Democrats don’t take steps to weaken the Senate’s filibuster rules that give power to the minority party to scuttle the majority’s agenda.

Sen. John Kennedy of Louisiana said he was “very disappointed” by McConnell’s decision to allow Democrats to pursue a short-term debt ceiling hike under normal procedures. Cruz called the strategy a “serious mistake” and said he thinks “Democratic threats to destroy the filibuster caused him to give in.” And Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina complained that “we had a plan and he threw it over.”

“Why the hell would I make it easier for them to raise the debt ceiling through regular order?” Graham added in a statement.

McConnell has defended his approach both in public settings and behind closed doors, signaling to members that the future of the Senate rules may have been at stake.

One Republican senator defended McConnell, saying that “you would have to ask McConnell more about the conversations he had with (moderate Democratic Sens.) Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema. I just believe in his estimation, it is about saving the institution of the Senate.”

McConnell has also argued that helping Democrats punt the debt ceiling crisis now undermines Democrats’ argument that they don’t have enough time to use the complex budgetary process known as reconciliation to lift the nation’s borrowing limit. And McConnell also pointed out that, as part of the deal, Democrats have to name a fixed dollar amount to which to raise the debt ceiling — and they will have to own that number.

But not everyone in his conference is in agreement. And the palpable angst among Republicans is now throwing into question whether a debt-ceiling increase can quickly pass the chamber. At issue is rounding up 10 Republicans to allow the debt limit vote to proceed, though Democrats would still have to raise the ceiling on their own. GOP leaders had wanted their members to allow a quick up-or-down vote, but some Republicans had signaled they would object in order to force the 60-vote threshold.

Emerging from the closed-door, 90-minute meeting Thursday evening, GOP senators said it’s still unclear if there will be 10 senators to break a filibuster on the short-term debt ceiling hike. The procedural vote is scheduled for later Thursday evening.

“There are disagreements within the conference, which is not surprising,” Cruz said leaving the meeting. “Two days ago Republicans were unified. We were all on the same page. … Schumer was on the verge of surrendering. And, unfortunately, the deal that was put on the table was a lifeline for Schumer, and I disagree with that decision.”

GOP leaders continue to insist they will find a way forward.

“In the end we’ll be there, but it’s going to be a painful birthing process,” said Sen. John Thune of South Dakota, the Senate GOP whip.

Inside McConnell’s shift

McConnell for months had been warning Democrats that they will need to go it alone on a debt ceiling hike. That’s why it caught some GOP members by surprise on Wednesday when the Kentucky Republican announced that he was going to offer Democrats a short-term off ramp to the fiscal crisis.

One member described it as “whiplash,” while an aide confided that the discussion in the closed-door conference was a bit “rowdy.”

“Some think that by having this delay, it’s a sign of weakness,” said Sen. Mike Braun of Indiana. “I don’t think so.”

One reason for McConnell’s shift in thinking, according to multiple lawmakers: preserving the filibuster. With Republicans insisting that Democrats raise the debt ceiling on their own through reconciliation, and Democrats refusing to go that route, there were serious conversations inside the Democratic caucus this week about creating a carve-out to get around the filibuster in order to deal with the debt ceiling.

McConnell said during a closed-door lunch this week he was concerned about the pressure on Manchin and Sinema to change the Senate rules, according to sources, even as they showed no signs of budging.

“Let’s save the institution of the Senate, and let’s not test Joe Manchin’s resolve,” said Sen. Kevin Cramer of North Dakota, describing the thinking inside the Senate GOP.

McConnell’s reversal has reverberated beyond the Senate Republican conference.

Conservative Rep. Chip Roy of Texas, a former Cruz staffer, blasted McConnell on Twitter and accused Republicans of folding because they didn’t want to miss a fundraiser being hosted by the Senate GOP’s campaign arm next week.

And former President Donald Trump, who has made bashing McConnell a regular habit, also accused the GOP leader of caving.

“Looks like Mitch McConnell is folding to the Democrats, again,” Trump said in a statement. “He’s got all of the cards with the debt ceiling, it’s time to play the hand. Don’t let them destroy our Country!”

Other Republicans, however, came to McConnell’s defense, pointing out he was consistent in not wanting to let the nation to default on its debts and arguing Democrats will still have to address the debt ceiling — as well as government funding — in December, a messy scenario right before the holidays.

Cramer called the deal floated by McConnell an “elegant solution.” But he also acknowledged that some of his Republican colleagues didn’t share that view.

“It’s been a lot more fun to watch Democrat-on-Democrat than it is to participate in Republican-on-Republican,” Cramer said.

Jessica Dean and Ted Barrett contributed to this report.

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The Closest Related Virus to SARS-CoV-2 Has Just Been Discovered, And It’s in Bats

Researchers have discovered coronaviruses lurking in Laotian bats that appear to be the closest known relatives to SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, found to date, according to news reports.

 

In a new study, researchers from the Pasteur Institute in France and the University of Laos captured 645 bats from limestone caves in northern Laos and screened them for viruses related to SARS-CoV-2. They found three viruses – which they dubbed BANAL-52, BANAL-103 and BANAL-236 – that infected horseshoe bats and shared more than 95 percent of their overall genome with SARS-CoV-2.

One of the viruses, BANAL-52, was 96.8 percent identical to SARS-CoV-2, according to Nature News. That makes BANAL-52 more genetically similar to SARS-CoV-2 than any other known virus.

Previously, the closest known relative to SARS-CoV-2 was RaTG13, which was found in horseshoe bats in 2013 and shares 96.1 percent of its genome with SARS-CoV-2, Nature News reported.

Related: 7 facts about the origin of the novel coronavirus

What’s more, all three of the newly discovered viruses are more similar to SARS-CoV-2 in a key part of their genome – called the receptor binding domain (RBD) – than other known viruses.

The RBD is the part of the virus that allows it to bind to host cells. With SARS-CoV-2, the RBD binds to a receptor known as ACE2 on human cells, and the virus uses this receptor as a gateway into cells.

 

Critically, the new study found that BANAL-52, BANAL-103 and BANAL-236 can bind to ACE2 and use it to enter human cells. So far, other candidates proposed as ancestors of SARS-CoV-2 found in bats, including RaTG13, haven’t been able to do this, the researchers said.

The three viruses could bind to ACE2 about as well as early strains of SARS-CoV-2 found in Wuhan, they said.

The findings, which were posted to the preprint server Research Square on Septembe 17, add to the evidence that SARS-CoV-2 had a natural origin, rather than escaping from a lab.

The results show “that sequences very close to those of the early strains of SARS-CoV-2… exist in nature,” the researchers wrote in their paper, which has yet to be peer-reviewed.

“The receptor binding domain of SARS-CoV-2 looked unusual when it was first discovered because there were so few viruses to compare it to,” Edward Holmes, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Sydney, who wasn’t involved in the research, told Bloomberg.

“Now that we are sampling more from nature, we are starting to find these closely related bits of gene sequence,” Holmes said.

 

The authors say their findings support the hypothesis that SARS-CoV-2 resulted from a recombination of viral sequences existing in horseshoe bats.

Still, even though the newly discovered viruses are closely related to SARS-CoV-2, all three viruses lack a sequence for what is known as the “furin cleavage site,” which is seen in SARS-CoV-2 and aids the virus’s entry into cells, according to Nature News. This means that in order to better understand the origins of SARS-CoV-2 further research is needed to show how and when the furin site was introduced.

The findings are currently being considered for publication in a Nature journal, Bloomberg reported.

Related content:

Coronavirus variants: Here’s how the mutants stack up

11 (sometimes) deadly diseases that hopped across species

14 coronavirus myths busted by science

This article was originally published by Live Science. Read the original article here.

 

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Here’s How Kids Are Using Soft Drinks to Fake Positive Results on COVID-19 Tests

Children are always going to find cunning ways to bunk off school, and the latest trick is to fake a positive COVID-19 lateral flow test (LFT) using soft drinks.

So how are fruit juices, cola, and devious kids fooling the tests, and is there a way to tell a fake positive result from a real one? I’ve tried to find out.

 

First, I thought it best to check the claims, so I cracked open bottles of cola and orange juice, then deposited a few drops directly onto LFTs. Sure enough, a few minutes later, two lines appeared on each test, supposedly indicating the presence of the virus that causes COVID-19.

It’s worth understanding how the tests work. If you open up an LFT device, you’ll find a strip of paper-like material, called nitrocellulose, and a small red pad, hidden under the plastic casing below the T-line.

Absorbed to the red pad are antibodies that bind to the COVID-19 virus. They are also attached to gold nanoparticles (tiny particles of gold actually appear red), which allow us to see where the antibodies are on the device.

When you do a test, you mix your sample with a liquid buffer solution, ensuring the sample stays at an optimum pH, before dripping it on the strip.

Two COVID-19 at-home tests show fake positives due to cola and orange juice. (Mark Lorch)

The fluid wicks up the nitrocellulose strip and picks up the gold and antibodies. The latter also bind to the virus, if present. Further up the strip, next to the T (for test), are more antibodies that bind the virus.

But these antibodies are not free to move – they are stuck to the nitrocellulose. As the red smear of gold-labeled antibodies passes this second set of antibodies, these also grab hold of the virus.

 

The virus is then bound to both sets of antibodies – leaving everything, including the gold, immobilized on a line next to the T on the device, indicating a positive test.

Gold antibodies that haven’t bound to the virus carry on up the strip where they meet a third set of antibodies, not designed to pick up COVID-19, stuck at the C (for control) line. These trap the remaining gold particles, without having to do so via the virus.

This final line is used to indicate the test has worked.

Acid test

So how can a soft drink cause the appearance of a red T line?

One possibility is that the drinks contain something that the antibodies recognize and bind to, just as they do to the virus. But this is rather unlikely. The reason antibodies are used in tests like these is that they are incredibly fussy about what they bind to.

There’s all sorts of stuff in the snot and saliva collected by the swabs you take from the nose and mouth, and the antibodies totally ignore this mess of protein, other viruses, and remains of your breakfast. So they aren’t going to react to the ingredients of a soft drink.

 

A much more likely explanation is that something in the drinks is affecting the function of the antibodies. A range of fluids, from fruit juice to cola, have been used to fool the tests, but they all have one thing in common – they are highly acidic.

The citric acid in orange juice, phosphoric acid in cola and malic acid in apple juice give these beverages a pH between 2.5 and 4. These are pretty harsh conditions for antibodies, which have evolved to work largely within the bloodstream, with its almost neutral pH of about 7.4.

Maintaining an ideal pH for the antibodies is key to the correct function of the test, and that’s the job of the liquid buffer solution that you mix your sample with, provided with the test.

The critical role of the buffer is highlighted by the fact that if you mix cola with the buffer – as shown in this debunking of an Austrian politician’s claim that mass testing is worthless – then the LFTs behave exactly as you’d expect: negative for COVID-19.

So without the buffer, the antibodies in the test are fully exposed to the acidic pH of the beverages. And this has a dramatic effect on their structure and function.

 

Antibodies are proteins, which are comprised of amino acid building blocks, attached together to form long, linear chains. These chains fold up into very specific structures. Even a small change to the chains can dramatically impact a protein’s function.

These structures are maintained by a network of many thousands of interactions between the various parts of the protein. For example, negatively charged parts of a protein will be attracted to positively charged areas.

But in acidic conditions, the protein becomes increasingly positively charged. As a result, many of the interactions that hold the protein together are disrupted, the delicate structure of the protein is affected and it no longer functions correctly. In this case, the antibodies’ sensitivity to the virus is lost.

Given this, you might expect that the acidic drinks would result in completely blank tests. But denatured proteins are sticky beasts. All of those perfectly evolved interactions that would normally hold the protein together are now orphaned and looking for something to bind to.

So a likely explanation is that the immobilized antibodies at the T-line stick directly to the gold particles as they pass by, producing the notorious cola-induced false-positive result.

Is there then a way to spot a fake positive test? The antibodies (like most proteins) are capable of refolding and regaining their function when they are returned to more favorable conditions.

(Mark Lorch)

Above: A COVID-19 test with a fake positive caused by cola and a COVID-19 test that used cola after it was washed with a buffer. 

So I tried washing a test that had been dripped with cola with buffer solution, and sure enough, the immobilized antibodies at the T-line regained normal function and released the gold particles, revealing the true negative result on the test.

Children, I applaud your ingenuity, but now that I’ve found a way to uncover your trickery I suggest you use your cunning to devise a set of experiments and test my hypothesis. Then we can publish your results in a peer-reviewed journal.

Mark Lorch, Professor of Science Communication and Chemistry, University of Hull.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 

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