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因向美军供应AR设备,微软股票被加拿大银行抛售- CFi CN 中财网
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因向美军供应AR设备,微软股票被加拿大银行抛售
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Asian American artists, now activists, push back against hate
From left: Tomie Arai, ManSee Kong and Betty Yu, founders of the Chinatown Art Brigade, an activist group, in New York, April 8, 2021. Newly spurred to action to combat bias, Asian American artists generate subway posters, leverage social media and stage Zoom webinars. Jingyu Lin/The New York Times.
by Aruna DSouza
(NYT NEWS SERVICE)
.- Early in the pandemic, word started to travel among Asian American artists: Racist attacks were on the rise. Jamie Chan told a fellow artist, Kenneth Tam, about getting kicked out of an Uber pool ride by the driver who noticed her sniffling. Anicka Yi, an artist based in New York, called Christine Y. Kim, a curator at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, to talk about being spit at on a Manhattan street; Kim, in turn, recounted being accosted in a Whole Foods parking lot.
Could we save lives by assigning each American a place in line for vaccines? Aleszu Bajak, USA TODAY © Illustration: Emily Nizzi, USA TODAY Network, and Getty Images An 80s-style computer browser window displays a file being transferred with the words Accessing medical files beneath it.
Imagine a formula that could score each American’s unique risk of dying of COVID-19. People’s odds would determine their exact number in line for a vaccine.
The algorithm would take into account your age, your race, your full medical history and every one of your health insurance claims. It would marry that information with data about vaccine inventories and health care locations. You’d get an email, a text, or a phone call the week before your vaccine appointment telling you where and when to show up. If you turned down the shot, the next in line would take your spot.
Could we save lives by assigning each American a place in line for vaccines?
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