Hello new followers! Can I introduce you to some of @RSF_inter’s other priority cases? They all deserve much more attention and support! Thread.

#DaphneCaruanaGalizia was a courageous Maltese journalist assassinated by a car bomb near her home in October 2017. More than three years on, there’s still been no justice for Daphne or the extensive corruption she had uncovered. Some background here: https://t.co/7DjOZPpV3n
We are working to support her family’s campaign for #JusticeforDaphne. Follow @daphnefdtn, her sons @mcaruanagalizia, @acaruanagalizia & @pcaruanagalizia, her sisters @Corinne_Vella & @MandyMallia, and her niece @meg_mallia. @TheShiftNews is also an excellent resource.
For the best overview, listen to #DaphneCaruanaGalizia’s son @pcaruanagalizia’s incredibly moving podcast, My Mother’s Murder. https://t.co/PG6DLcwm6L
Christopher Allen was a 26 year-old freelance journalist, and dual US/UK national, who was killed covering the civil conflict in South Sudan in August 2017. More than three years on, there’s still been no investigation and no justice. https://t.co/tR5pQTSaeN
Read this powerful recent Washington Post op-ed by Chris’ parents Joyce Krajian and John Allen, and follow his cousin @jeremybliss, who is very active in the campaign for #JusticeforChris.

https://t.co/ole070CubC
The amazing @mariaressa is the founder and CEO of @rapplerdotcom and is facing unbelievable pressure - and a possible lifetime in prison - in the Philippines.

https://t.co/nU85CsH9JZ
.@RSF_inter, @ICFJ and @pressfreedom launched the #HoldTheLine coalition in support of @mariaressa and independent media in the Philippines. Sign and share our petition calling for all charges against her and @rapplerdotcom to be dropped! https://t.co/5a3q15c4Lt
34 journalists remain unjustly jailed in Saudi Arabia, and we campaign for their immediate release. We also campaign for justice for Saudi columnist Jamal Khashoggi, who was murdered and dismembered in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in October 2008. https://t.co/L1LMDJMC7r
.@RSF_inter’s own correspondent in Algeria, journalist Khaled Drareni, is serving a three-year prison sentence on ludicrous charges. Support the international #WeAreKhaled solidarity committee! https://t.co/NyPcflOVSm
.@RSF_inter’s Turkey representative, my wonderful colleague @ErolOnderoglu, is facing a possible 14 years in prison. Help us #SupportErol as he returns to court on 3 February. https://t.co/dWcIRdJCa4
These are just a few of our campaigns - but we fight for press freedom everywhere it is under attack. Check out our website for a look at the alarming global situation for safety of journalists and press freedom.

https://t.co/Z0llBdme2z

More from Society

So, as the #MegaMillions jackpot reaches a record $1.6B and #Powerball reaches $620M, here's my advice about how to spend the money in a way that will truly set you, your children and their kids up for life.

Ready?

Create a private foundation and give it all away. 1/

Let's stipulate first that lottery winners often have a hard time. Being publicly identified makes you a target for "friends" and "family" who want your money, as well as for non-family grifters and con men. 2/

The stress can be damaging, even deadly, and Uncle Sam takes his huge cut. Plus, having a big pool of disposable income can be irresistible to people not accustomed to managing wealth.
https://t.co/fiHsuJyZwz 3/

Meanwhile, the private foundation is as close as we come to Downton Abbey and the landed aristocracy in this country. It's a largely untaxed pot of money that grows significantly over time, and those who control them tend to entrench their own privileges and those of their kin. 4

Here's how it works for a big lotto winner:

1. Win the prize.
2. Announce that you are donating it to the YOUR NAME HERE Family Foundation.
3. Receive massive plaudits in the press. You will be a folk hero for this decision.
4. Appoint only trusted friends/family to board. 5/
Brief thread to debunk the repeated claims we hear about transmission not happening 'within school walls', infection in school children being 'a reflection of infection from the community', and 'primary school children less likely to get infected and contribute to transmission'.

I've heard a lot of scientists claim these three - including most recently the chief advisor to the CDC, where the claim that most transmission doesn't happen within the walls of schools. There is strong evidence to rebut this claim. Let's look at


Let's look at the trends of infection in different age groups in England first- as reported by the ONS. Being a random survey of infection in the community, this doesn't suffer from the biases of symptom-based testing, particularly important in children who are often asymptomatic

A few things to note:
1. The infection rates among primary & secondary school children closely follow school openings, closures & levels of attendance. E.g. We see a dip in infections following Oct half-term, followed by a rise after school reopening.


We see steep drops in both primary & secondary school groups after end of term (18th December), but these drops plateau out in primary school children, where attendance has been >20% after re-opening in January (by contrast with 2ndary schools where this is ~5%).

You May Also Like