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Ross Brawn, F1’s managing director of motorsport, says that the Haas F1 Team’s controversial model “must be maintained” in the future.

Haas entered Formula 1 in 2016 with a pioneering low-cost business model built on a close technical partnership with Ferrari.

However, the partnership generated controversy among the sport’s mid-field teams which frowned upon the far-reaching collaboration between Haas and Ferrari, with outfits such as Racing Point and Renault disputing the US squad’s legitimacy as a bona fide F1 constructor.

    Worried Renault fears Haas precedent has ‘changed F1 forever’

Speaking to Sky F1’s Martin Brundle, Brawn believes the format exploited should be retained in the future, albeit with a few regulation tweaks.

“The Haas model is interesting and it has been very successful,” said the F1 boss.

“It’s something we have to maintain for the future, for a small team to come in and be pretty respectable.

“There’s some trimming we need to do about what they’ve been able to do.”

Brawn admitted that Haas simply took a concept that was legally written into the rules and leveraged on it.

“All credit to them, they took a model that was there which nobody had exploited as much as they did, and it’s a great story,” he added.

“The fans like seeing Haas up there beating up some of the big teams.

“We are finding the best solution where we have the right balance of manufacturers, the teams like Renault, McLaren and Williams that they can hold their place, but give that opportunity for Haas.”

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A coalition of cyber activists and advocacy groups from 42 countries on Monday released a letter defending encryption and calling on governments to end efforts at undermining such digital privacy tools.

“Encryption tools, technologies, and services are essential to protect against harm and to shield our digital infrastructure and personal communications from unauthorized access,” reads the letter, a project of digital rights group Access Now and signed by organizations such as the ACLU, Amnesty International, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Fight for the Future, Human Rights Watch, and La Quadrature du Net, among nearly 200 others.

“As we move toward connecting the next billion users, restrictions on encryption in any country will likely have global impact,” the letter continues. “Encryption and other anonymizing tools and technologies enable lawyers, journalists, whistleblowers, and organizers to communicate freely across borders and to work to better their communities. It also assures users of the integrity of their data and authenticates individuals to companies, governments, and one another.”

U.S. officials have increasingly urged tech companies to create “backdoors” to encrypted communications as an aid to law enforcement investigating alleged terrorist activity. But many of those companies’ high-profile executives, such as Apple’s Tim Cook, have resisted the call, warning that reducing encryption safeguards threatens users’ safety online by making them vulnerable to third-party hackers.

And human rights leaders, such as United Nations special rapporteur for freedom of expression David Kaye, who also signed the letter, have said that privacy is a human right.

“Encryption and anonymity, and the security concepts behind them, provide the privacy and security necessary for the exercise of the right to freedom of opinion and expression in the digital age,” Kaye said in a press release accompanying the letter.

Last week, top U.S. officials met with tech leaders in a private summit in San Jose, California, with news reports circulating copies of a vague agenda for the meeting that read in part, “How can we make it harder for terrorists to use the internet to mobilize, facilitate, and operationalize attacks, and make it easier for law enforcement and the intelligence community to identify terrorist operatives and prevent attacks?”

At least one executive told the Guardian that White House chief of staff Denis McDonough issued invitations to discuss terrorism, making the surprise focus on encryption feel like a “bait and switch.”

As Guardian columnist and Freedom of the Press co-founder Trevor Timm explained at the time, “Despite the huge security benefits to encryption and the fact that it has not played a significant role in any of the recent terrorist attacks, the FBI has been on a warpath to get tech companies to stop using end-to-end encryption in some of their communications tools, essentially asking tech giants to give the government a ‘backdoor’ to make sure there is not any communication platform that they cannot spy on.”

Timm is also a signatory to the letter. As its list of international backers reflects, the push for backdoors to encryption is growing throughout the world.

In November, just days after the attacks in Paris which killed 130 people, French President François Hollande announced that he would propose a bill to extend the country’s state of emergency by three months and make changes to the French Constitution that would strip citizenship of convicted terrorists, increase surveillance, and employ “more sophisticated methods” to curb the weapons trade.

That announcement was met with skepticism and warnings from digital rights groups who said reflexive nationalism and reduction of civil liberties “is not only irreverent, it also [puts] us and many others in a difficult position,” as the German organization Digitalcourage put it. “Grief and anger are understandable emotions. But they must not be abused.”

Monday’s letter concluded, “Strong encryption and the secure tools and systems that rely on it are critical to improving cybersecurity, fostering the digital economy, and protecting users. Our continued ability to leverage the internet for global growth and prosperity and as a tool for organizers and activists requires the ability and the right to communicate privately and securely through trustworthy networks.”

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Shanghai to kickstart global F1 Festival campaign

November 16, 2019 | News | No Comments

Shanghai will host the first F1 Festival of the 2019 season next week, in the build-up to the Chinese Grand Prix, the 1000th race of the F1 World Championship.

Formula 1 will leverage on the success of last year’s festival events and bring the sport to the streets of Shanghai, Chicago, Los Angeles and to a yet to be named city in Brazil.

Next week’s Heineken F1 Festival will be open to the public and take place in downtown Shanghai on April 12-13, with festivities including a celebration of the China Grand Prix as the 1000th race in the history of the F1 world championship.

    Renault show-run at Disneyland to launch build-up to French GP

The event will also feature an array of music acts and exciting entertainment, followed by the F1 Live car run on April 13 in which will take part Renault development driver and Chinese rising star Guanyu Zhou.

The 19-year-old – onboard Renault’s E-20 machine – will become the first Chinese driver to power down the roads of Shanghai in an F1 car.

“I’m very excited to drive the Renault F1 Team E20 Formula 1 car in Shanghai, my hometown,” said Zhou.

“It’s really an amazing opportunity for me. The city centre, which is already a busy place, will be blocked off for this demonstration run and that will be an incredible sight.

“To be part of that is going to be really special.”

Formula 1 will issue in due course the key dates for its Chicago, Los Angeles and Brazilian festivals.

“Following the huge success last season, we are thrilled to announce all four F1 Festivals for 2019,” said F1 commercial boss Sean Bratches.

“We are committed to enhancing fan experience of F1 and continue to explore new ways of exposing fans to the sport.

“We believe it’s vital to take F1 into the cities so that fans can immerse themselves in the race day atmosphere.

“By announcing three new festival locations we hope fans around the world are excited to see what F1 Festivals have to offer and we are thrilled to be returning to China for the F1 Heineken Shanghai Festival to celebrate our 1000th Grand Prix.”

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McLaren boss Zak Brown says it would be “optimistic” for the Woking-based outfit to expect itself to be able to fight wheel-to-wheel with Red Bull Racing on a regular basis this year, as was the case in Bahrain.

McLaren’s 2019 contender is clearly a step up from its 2018 car as Carlos Sainz and Lando Norris’ performances have demonstrated since the season got underway.

Sainz qualified seventh at Sakhir and was challenging Red Bull’s Verstappen for fourth when the pair made contact, forcing the Spaniard to pit.

    Norris adamant McLaren is finally ‘on the way up’

Despite McLaren’s ability to challenge a front-running rival in Bahrain, Brown isn’t expecting his team to regularly tackle Red Bull this season.

“I think that will probably be optimistic,” he told Motorsport.com.

“I was pleasantly surprised we were as close to them at the weekend. But I think we still feel there is a big gap to the top three, and I don’t think this weekend changes our views.”

Norris’ impressive P6 finish in Bahrain, where the 19-year-old rookie secured his maiden points, was another indication of his team’s form.

But Brown is also cautious about the prospect of McLaren consistently winning the ‘best of the rest’ battle this year given the performance volatility that characterizes F1’s mid-field.

“We definitely feel we had a made a step but it is close in the midfield,” he added. “There is just nothing between fourth and ninth.

“I still think there will be weekends where we are the fourth/fifth quickest team and other weekends where we are eighth/ninth quickest team.

“So far we have been near the fourth/fifth in qualifying and race pace, but I think it will be track specific.

“You need the team to execute well but on the drivers we are really pleased with how Carlos and Lando are on it.

“If you look at some of the other teams, some of them have a divide between their drivers, so when it is such a close race everything is going to count.

“I am really pleased we have the two drivers we have, because that can make a difference in the team championship.

“So for us it’s just head down and we’ve got to keep working hard because it is a development war.”

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“And so this is Christmas, and what have you done?” That’s the question which John Lennon puts to us in his famous Christmas song. In the chorus, he gets right to the point, to the heart of Christmas: “War is over, if you want it.”

For some, that might seem like a leap of faith, but I think John Lennon’s theology was better than most. If you want to celebrate Christmas, he says, work for the end of war and the culture of war. Spend your life pursuing a new culture of peace for everyone.

Christmas celebrates the birth of the most active person of nonviolence in the history of the world, as Gandhi once described Jesus. In the Gospel account of Jesus’ birth to homeless refugees, angels announce to poor shepherds the coming of peace on earth. He grew up to become a great peacemaker, a nonviolent activist who denounced war and systemic injustice and offered the gift of peace to everyone near and far.

The life of Jesus is a record of pure, radical nonviolence, like Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr. In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus taught the methodology and vision of nonviolence–“Offer no violent resistance to one who does evil,” “Love your enemies,” “Hunger and thirst for justice,” “Blessed are the peacemakers.” He formed a community of nonviolent resisters and organized a grassroots movement of nonviolence to disarm everyone. He led his campaign of nonviolence from the countryside to Jerusalem where he engaged in dramatic nonviolent civil disobedience and was immediately arrested and killed. But he lived on in the community and the movement, and that creative nonviolence continues today.

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To claim the name of Christian is to be a practitioner of Gospel nonviolence. To celebrate the birth of the nonviolent Jesus is to do our part in his ongoing grassroots movement of nonviolence to welcome the gift of peace on earth. “War is over,” Jesus announced. “Peace is yours, if you want it. Get involved and join the movement of nonviolence.”

To be a Christian is to renounce every trace of violence and carry on Jesus’ grassroots movement of Gospel nonviolence. It is to see life through the eyes of peace, and the nonviolent struggle for peace on earth. It means renouncing our own violence and our complicity in the culture of violence. We get rid of our guns, stop supporting the military, serve the poor, welcome the refugee, advocate for justice, and work for disarmament. It means upholding a whole new vision of shared humanity, a whole new world of nonviolence.

What’s so interesting is that more than a hundred years ago, Gandhi discovered that every religion is rooted in nonviolence. He realized that nonviolence lay at the heart of Hinduism. With his friend Abdul Gaffer Khan, he learned that nonviolence was central to Islam. His Jewish friends taught him that shalom/nonviolence was key to Judaism. Buddhism, he saw, places nonviolence in the air we breathe. And he began reading the Sermon on the Mount every day and found there what he considered the best blueprint of nonviolence ever written.

We all need to rediscover the nonviolence at the heart of every spiritual tradition. That will help us discern the prejudice and false claims we hear these days. It will also help us pursue a new culture of interfaith nonviolence.

But Christians first and foremost need to rediscover their nonviolence. We have not just ignored the nonviolence of Jesus; we have outright rejected it and mocked it. In its place, we have created cults of violence that have nothing to do with the nonviolent Jesus. In the name of the false gods of war, we justify violence, hatred, corporate greed, racism, guns, warfare and environmental destruction.

Each year, Christmas invites Christians to reject violence and war, to break with the betrayal of past Christian history, and to start over again on the journey of nonviolence in the footsteps of the nonviolent Jesus.

Christmas is a celebration of nonviolence, pure and simple. It invites us to repent of violence and choose once again Jesus’ way of nonviolence. It summons us to name warfare as obsolete and get on with the work of practicing nonviolence in our personal lives; joining the global grassroots movement of nonviolence for disarmament and justice; and institutionalizing nonviolent conflict resolution.

Christmas calls us to a high ideal: the abolition of war itself, and along with it, the abolition of poverty, corporate greed, racism, executions, empire, fascism, nuclear weapons, and environmental destruction. This goal is achievable, if we want it.

That’s the message of Christmas. Peace is ours, if we want it. John Lennon was right. So were Gandhi and Dr. King. We, too, can side with the voices and visionaries of peace and do our part to hasten the abolition of war and injustice and the coming of a new world of nonviolence.

That’s a goal, a vision, a way of life worth celebrating.

His other books include: Thomas Merton, Peacemaker; Living Peace: A Spirituality of Contemplation and Action; Jesus the Rebel: Bearer of God’s Peace and Justice; Transfiguration: A Meditation on Transforming Ourselves and Our World, and his autobiography, A Persistent Peace: One Man’s Struggle for a Nonviolent World.

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Judges Andrew Adams, Sabrina Bell and Bradley Jacobs were censured by the Indiana Supreme Court for their roles in a brawl outside a White Castle in May.

Back in May, three Indiana judges got into a fight. It was the crescendo of an incident brimming with colorful details: a gaggle of judges drinking the night before a judicial conference, a failed attempt to visit a strip club called the Red Garter, a brawl in the parking lot of an Indianapolis White Castle.

The altercation apparently started sometime after 3 a.m., when one of the judges, Sabrina Bell, raised a middle finger at two men yelling from a passing SUV, and ended after one of those men shot two of the judges.

In between, the three judges took a number of actions that “discredited the entire Indiana judiciary,” according to an opinion posted by the Indiana Supreme Court this week, suspending the judges.

The court found that the three — Andrew Adams, Bradley Jacobs and Sabrina Bell — had “engaged in judicial misconduct by appearing in public in an intoxicated state and behaving in an injudicious manner and by becoming involved in a verbal altercation.” Adams and Jacobs engaged in further judicial misconduct “by becoming involved in a physical altercation for which Judge Adams was criminally charged and convicted.”

The document lays out the events as soberly as possible, but the details remain spicy:

The three had ended up at a White Castle after trying to go to a strip club at 3 a.m. and finding it closed. A fourth judge went into the White Castle, while Bell, Adams and Jacobs stood outside.

Two men in the passing vehicle, Alfredo Vazquez and Brandon Kaiser, parked their car after the gesture from Bell.

Bell and Vazquez traded further insults. A physical altercation ensued among the four men, with Adams and Vazquez allegedly hitting and kicking each other as Jacobs and Kaiser wrestled on the ground. Kaiser then allegedly pulled a gun and shot Adams once in the stomach and Jacobs twice in the chest.

Adams and Jacobs were both seriously wounded and required emergency surgeries; Jacobs was hospitalized for two weeks.

Bell tried to stop the fighting by pounding on the door of White Castle for help and calling 911 once shots were fired.

While at the scene, Bell was recorded on video telling police detectives something akin to “I feel like this is all my fault,” though the opinion notes that Bell “was intoxicated enough that she lacks any memory of the incident.”

Kaiser, who allegedly shot Adams and Jacobs, has been charged with 14 crimes related to the brawl, including four charges of felony aggravated battery, according to Indiana court records.

The court suspended both Jacobs and Bell for 30 days without pay. Adams, who pleaded guilty in September to one count of misdemeanor battery, is suspended for 60 days without pay. He was sentenced to 365 days in jail but was required to serve only two.

In the White Castle incident, the court said, the three judges “gravely undermined public trust in the dignity and decency of Indiana’s judiciary.”

The court says its penalties are designed “not primarily to punish a judge, but rather to preserve the integrity of and public confidence in the judicial system” and, when necessary, to remove those who are unfit.

Neoliberalism Resurgent in Argentina

November 16, 2019 | News | No Comments

The election of businessman Mauricio Macri to the presidency in Argentina signals a rightward turn in the country and, perhaps, in South America more generally. Macri, the candidate of the right-wing Compromiso para el cambio (Commitment to Change) party, defeated Buenos Aires province governor Daniel Scioli (the Peronist party candidate) in November’s runoff election, by less than 3% of the vote. Macri is the wealthy scion of an Italian immigrant family that made its money on the basis of government contracts. He went on to work for the family business and later, defying his father’s wishes, became president of the popular professional soccer club Boca Juniors. In 2003, he won election as mayor of the capital city of Buenos Aires—the springboard for his eventual election to the presidency. This is a momentous change in Argentina’s history, since it is the first time that a right-wing party has won the presidency by electoral means. In the past, conservatives had only gained power through military coups or by disguising neoliberal policies under more progressive electoral promises and the mantle of a left-of-center party—as in Carlos Menem’s Peronist government in the 1990s.

What’s in Store

Macri’s economic team includes among its most prominent members Alfonso Prat-Gay, an ex-president of the country’s Central Bank who also worked for JPMorgan Chase. He will be the next finance minister. Federico Sturzenegger, secretary of economic policy in the Economics Ministry under infamous finance minister Domingo Cavallo—author of the main economic policies of the 1990s—is likely to be the next Central Bank president. In other words, the economic team clearly signals a return to the market-friendly policies of the 1990s. This is also true on the foreign policy front, were Macri has already announced that he intends to use the so-called “democratic clause” of the Common Market of the South (Mercosur), the regional trade agreement, to exclude Venezuela for alleged violations of democratic norms. (Macri has backed off that plan since the victory of the right-wing coalition in Venezuela’s recent parliamentary elections.) He has also signaled a closer alignment with the United States.

The economic program of the new administration is quite clear, even though Macri tried to hide his economic advisors before the election, to reduce the impact of their unpopular views at the polls. They will unify the foreign exchange market, in which there is currently a large gap between the official and black-market exchange rates. This implies a “maxi-devaluation” of the peso, from around nine to about 15 pesos to the dollar (assuming that the current black market level is their desired nominal exchange rate). The effects of a depreciation of this magnitude will be massive.

In contrast to previous devaluations—most recently in 2002, after more than ten years of a fixed one-to-one peso-to-dollar exchange rate under Cavallo’s so-called “Convertibility Plan”—this one is not caused by an external crisis. While it is true that Argentina’s current account balance is negative, and that its reserves are relatively low, there is no significant danger that Argentina will default on its external debt now.

The current account deficit is not big, by historical standards or in comparison to other countries in the region, and international reserves can cover the country’s immediate obligations. Besides, under current conditions, with low international interest rates, it would be relatively easy to attract capital flows with higher interest rates, and borrow in international markets. (That would certainly be easier if Argentina could finalize an agreement with the so-called “vulture funds,” the holdout bondholders that did not agree to the rescheduling of debt after the last default.) And, if anything, Macri’s (unnecessary) promise to give in to all the vulture funds’ demands and rapprochement with the United States and International Monetary Fund (IMF) would resolve any short-run problems in financing the current account deficit.

The Target Is the Working Class

The question, then, is why the Macri government would promote a huge depreciation of the currency with no clear external crisis on the horizon. The notion that the depreciation would solve the current account deficits is fraught with problems. Not only is the external situation not dire—so depreciation would be a “solution” to a non-existent problem—but there is also no evidence that exports will boom after a depreciation. Exports respond more to the growth of the global economy than to a change in relative prices. So for example, China will not demand significantly more soybeans from Argentina, as a result of lower prices, if the Chinese economy is not growing faster.

Actually, the only significant way in which the depreciation will reduce the external problems of Argentina is by causing a recession. Depreciations tend to reduce real wages, since the increase in the price of imported goods leads to inflation, which is not fully recovered by workers. As a result, consumption declines, with a negative impact on economic growth. Macri and his economic team have been very explicit about the need for a huge devaluation and the closing of the gap between the official and the black-market (or “blue,” as it is known in Argentina) exchange rate. This has already triggered an inflationary surge, as noted by the outgoing Economics Minister Axel Kiciloff.

The reason for the devaluation is precisely to cause inflation and a recession, both of which would weaken working-class bargaining power and, as a result, lead to lower real wages. And that is the ultimate goal of the new Macri administration. He has explicitly said so, in one of the videos that his campaign tried to suppress. The video shows him suggesting that the way out of the problems of the 1990s—when devaluation was not an option due to the Convertibility Plan—was to reduce real wages to increase external competitiveness. The maxi-devaluation of the peso will most likely be accompanied by a “fiscal adjustment plan” or, simply put, austerity. This would push the economy further into recession, reducing the bargaining power of workers even more.

The Politics of Crisis

Some skeptics suggest that Macri cannot pursue the classic IMF economic package of devaluation and fiscal adjustment, since that would bring about both inflation and recession, a politically explosive combination. However, the administration will deflect political problems caused by the economic crisis that these policies will trigger by suggesting that both inflation and the recession are the results of the negative legacy of twelve years of “populism” under the previous two administrations. In fact, Macri is already doing this, with intensive media support, suggesting that the inflation since the announcement of the depreciation is just a correction to its true level. One can easily see how higher unemployment would be justified in the same fashion, as an adjustment to the true and sustainable level.

In other words, the Macri government will cause a crisis that does not exist right now—though the economic situation may be difficult and growth in the last three years has not been not high—but blame the effects of its neoliberal policies on the previous government. The idea would most likely be to weather a political storm over the next couple of years and then—after resolving the issues with the vulture funds and normalizing relations with IMF—start borrowing abroad again. That would help promote growth again in time for a re-election campaign in 2019. Growth would be also facilitated by the fact that the economy would be coming out of a crisis, with real wages considerably lower and the working class well-disciplined.

Also, Macri will reduce or eliminate export taxes on grain and soybeans (known as retenciones, or “retentions”), strengthening the position of the ruling elites. The reorientation of the economy toward primary-goods (agricultural and mineral) production, along with a larger role for finance, has been the strategy of the Argentine elites since the last military dictatorship. That is why there is such continuity between the economic plans of José Martínez de Hoz under the military dictatorship of the late 1970s and the early 1980s, Domingo Cavallo under Menem in the 1990s, and (one should expect) Adolfo Prat-Gay under Macri in the coming years.

The initial recession and cuts in retenciones would significantly reduce government revenue and most likely lead to larger fiscal deficits. Hence, austerity will actually worsen the fiscal balance, contrary to what the Macri and his advisors suggest. The key is to remember that austerity policies are not designed to reduce fiscal deficits, even if that is offered up as a rationalization; they are a political instrument for disciplining labor.

In fact, the coming larger fiscal deficits will most likely be used to try to cut social welfare expenditures, which increased significantly during the administration of the outgoing president Cristina Fernández and her predecessor (and husband) Néstor Kirchner. It would not be surprising if Macri tries to privatize social security once again, something that Menem accomplished in the 1990s, and which had to be reversed in the 2000s as a result of the private system’s complete failure to provide a decent retirement for seniors.

The Same River Twice?

But if the Macri administration is a throwback to the neoliberal era of Menem, it is important to remember that the current historical context is very different. Back in the 1990s, the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of the Soviet Union gave the neoliberal policies of the infamous Washington Consensus a status of unquestionable truth. Supposedly, ideology had vanished and history had come to an end. No alternative was politically possible. Since then, the 2008 global Great Recession has shown the world the perils of unfettered capitalism, and even if the “Keynesian moment” was brief and austerity policies have reasserted themselves, at least it is widely understood that the “free market” is no solution for the problems of development in a globalized economy.

The socioeconomic situation in Argentina is also very different. Back then, the economy was coming out of two bouts of hyperinflation, a whole decade of very low growth with very high unemployment levels and very low real wages, two decades of social conflict with a considerably weakening of the trade unions, several military coups, and an unresolved human-rights crisis from the last dictatorship. Now, the economy has grown at a healthy pace over the last decade, though with slower growth over the last three years. Unemployment remains at relatively low levels, and though inflation is relatively high, real wages have still grown significantly over the decade, with a considerable reduction of inequality.

Further, not has only the reorganization of the economy strengthened the working class, but civil society has managed to bring violators of human rights to justice, and finally come to terms with the nefarious legacy of the dictatorship, something unique in the region. The new government does not control congress, and the election was close, signaling a divided country. In short, society is more organized and better prepared to face the onslaught of neoliberal policies this time around.

Matías Vernengo is a professor of economics at Bucknell University and visiting professor of economic development at Universidad Nacional de San Martín (UNSAM).

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Oscar-winning actress Brie Larson is seemingly on top of the world.

On Saturday at Comic-Con, the 26-year-old Room actress landed a major gig and was confirmed to portray Captain Marvel in Marvel Studio’s first female-driven flick, set to drop in 2019. And while her talents are for sure what has scored her one major role after the next, Larson is making sure to thank her fans along the way.

The new redhead took to Instagram Tuesday morning to not just share a gorgeous image of herself cozying up on the couch, but also voice her appreciation of her followers and dismiss any hateful naysayers.

“Woke up this morning thinking about the tidal wave of support I got this weekend,” she wrote in her caption, moving on to explain why being herself whole-heartedly can oftentimes be frightening. “We should all have the freedom to be our authentic selves without fear or judgment. It’s scary to chip away at all the hardness we coat ourselves with to protect that perfect little being inside. Yeah, people can be mean, but they can also be so many other wonderful things too.”

Larson also welcomed her new followers and teased about upcoming takeovers that she’s planning for her account. The post comes just a few days after she also used the social media platform to share an epic throwback image next to which she dishes on all things self confidence. “I worried I was too fat, too ugly, too depressingly banal to be honored,” she wrote of the moment in which the image was captured. “But today I see this moment and feel only love for myself.”

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Now that’s a total 180.

Purple might just be the perfect color for the Queen of England. After all, it is the color of royalty and Queen Elizabeth is pretty much as royal as it gets.

Queen Elizabeth and Prince Charles looked as though they thoroughly enjoyed themselves at the annual Braemar Gathering, a day-long festival founded by the Braemar Royal Highland Charity, the oldest surviving Friendly Society in England.

The gathering is held every year on the first Saturday in September and attracts Brits from all over the country, thanks to the various fun events played throughout the day, including tug of war, multiple relay races, a children’s sack race, and even dancing.

Queen Elizabeth and Prince Charles make an appearance at the event every year, one that is considered “world famous for its friendship and hospitality.” Prince Charles fit right in wearing his signature kilt, and was clearly enjoying the lovely day outdoors with his mother.

RELATED: 8 Times Queen Elizabeth and Kate Middleton Posed the Same Way

Prince William and Duchess Kate have also been busy fulfilling their royal duties, making the rounds in Cornwall and other British coastal regions, and are set to head to Canada later this month.

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After their emotional debut performance of their new Orlando tragedy-inspired song, “Love Make the World Go Round,” on The Today Show this week, Jennifer Lopez and Lin-Manuel Miranda took their poignant hit to late night TV with a performance on The Tonight Show on Tuesday.

Teaming up with Tonight Show house band The Roots in a mostly dark studio, Lopez looked incredible in a long cape that looked like it was made of stained glass. Every download of the song on iTunes raises funds for the Hispanic Federation’s Proyecto Somos Orlando initiative, which will “address the long-term needs for mental health services that are culturally competent and bilingual.”

On The Today Show, Lopez said of the song, “When everything happened in Orlando, I kind of heard it in a different way,. The world needs this right now. The world really needs the message of love being the answer. And that’s what really matters and that’s what really makes the world go round.”

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RELATED: Jennifer Lopez Takes Her Twins to Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Last Hamilton Show

The song was made available for download July 8 on iTunes. Miranda, who just wrapped up his amazing starring run in his hit Broadway show, Hamilton, tweeted about the performance showing a picture of the two. He wrote, “J.Lo. The Roots. Yours truly. Tonight.”

Watch the epic performance in the clip above.