Winning big at casinos is something everyone dreams of, but it’s important to understand that luck plays a major role in it. If it was easy to win big, we would all be rich, and casinos would not exist.
On the surface, all casino games may seem the same, but that’s not the case. To win big at casinos, you need to understand that not all games offer the same chances of winning.
Thankfully, we have compiled a list of ways to win lots of money at online casinos without having to spend hours inside a casino. Check them out below.
7 Ways To Improve Your Chances Of Winning In The Casino
For a long time, casinos have been a center of thrill and amusement for those who want to test their luck and earn some cash. Although gambling always carries a certain level of risk, some tactics and methods could improve your odds of winning in a casino.
Before diving into any casino game, take the time to understand the rules and mechanics thoroughly. Whether it’s blackjack, poker, roulette, or slots, knowing the ins and outs of the game will give you a better grasp of the odds and potential outcomes.
2. Manage Your Bankroll
One of the most crucial aspects of successful gambling is effective bankroll management. Set a budget for your gambling session and stick to it. Avoid chasing losses by betting more than you can afford to lose. Responsible bankroll management is key to prolonging your gaming experience and increasing your chances of walking away with some winnings.
3. Choose Games Wisely
Not all casino games offer the same odds of winning. Some games have a higher house edge than others, meaning the casino has a greater advantage. Generally, games like blackjack, baccarat, and certain types of poker offer better odds for players compared to games like slots or keno. Focus your attention on games where your skills and strategy can make a difference.
4. Practice Makes Perfect
Many US-based online casino sites offer free play or demo modes where you can practice and familiarize yourself with the games without risking any real money. Take advantage of these opportunities to hone your skills and develop winning strategies before playing with real cash.
5. Take Advantage of Bonuses and Promotions
In 2024, casinos continue to offer various bonuses and promotions to attract and retain players. These may include welcome bonuses, free spins, cashback offers, and loyalty programs. Take the time to explore different casinos and their promotions to maximize your potential winnings.
6. Know When to Walk Away
It’s essential to know when to call it quits, whether you’re winning or losing. Set win and loss limits for yourself before you start playing, and stick to them. If you’ve reached your predetermined win limit, consider cashing out and enjoying your winnings. Likewise, if you’ve hit your loss limit, it’s time to walk away and live to play another day.
7. Avoid Chasing Losses
One of the biggest mistakes that gamblers make is chasing losses in hopes of recouping their money. This often leads to even greater losses and can spiral out of control. Instead of chasing losses, stick to your predetermined budget and accept that losses are part of the gambling experience.
5 Game Strategy Tips
Given below are the best strategies and tips to win casino:
1. Find The Best Rules
It’s possible to have different rules for identical games such as blackjack. For example, one game might use 2 decks while another uses 6. Some games may allow you to split aces, while others don’t. Similarly, some casinos allow you to double down on any two cards, while others don’t.
It’s important to note that each rule can have an impact on the casino’s edge on the game. Therefore, we recommend you become strategic in the games you choose to play. This means learning the different rules that casinos use and how they affect the game’s odds.
2. Learn The Optimal Time To Play Video Poker
Video poker is a game where it’s possible to make a small profit per hand if you play at the right time. This usually means when the progressive jackpot is large enough. Huck Seed, a professional poker player, is an example of someone who did this successfully. He was able to earn over $3 per hand and eventually won a jackpot of $670,000. However, learning how to do this requires a lot of math and is beyond the scope of this article. If you are able to learn this skill, you can give yourself an advantage over the casino.
3. Learn Basic Game Strategy
It’s important to note that the following information applies to certain games such as blackjack, video poker, baccarat, 3-card poker, casino hold’em poker, and others.
Simply by learning the best plays to make and when to make them, you can often reduce the house edge by more than 50%.
Basic strategy can be easily found online, and some casinos even sell strategy cards for games like blackjack, although the casino still maintains a small edge even when you use them.
By utilizing these strategies, you can take pride in knowing that you won’t simply be giving your money to the casino. Instead, they will have to work for it.
4. Learn Advanced Strategy
Some games have advanced strategies that players can learn to gain an advantage. For instance, counting cards is an advanced strategy for blackjack. When you learn how to count cards correctly, you can alter the house edge in your favor, giving you a 1-2% advantage over the casino. Although not illegal, casinos frown upon this practice and may ask you to leave if caught. Therefore, it is recommended that you use this strategy at your own risk.
5. Avoid House Games
One way to increase your chances of winning in a casino is to avoid playing their most popular games such as slots, keno, video poker, blackjack, and more. Instead, consider playing poker. Although there are fees you need to pay to play, there’s no house edge. The only edge is the one you have against other players, which means anyone can learn how to play and get better at it. Another option is to learn how to bet on sports profitably. Although the sportsbook has an edge, you can still overcome it by doing some research online and in forums to find advanced betting strategies.
Final Thoughts: Smartest Strategies to Maximize Your Winning
In conclusion, winning money at the casino in 2024 requires a combination of skill, strategy, and discipline.
By understanding the games, managing your bankroll effectively, and making informed decisions, you can increase your chances of success while gambling responsibly. Remember to stay sober, set limits for yourself, and seek help if gambling becomes a problem.
With the right approach, you can enjoy the excitement of the casino while maximizing your potential winnings.
A word best-describing intent to destroy a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group now swerves its definition to attack the victim. The Genocide Convention has an explicit legal definition for that word with means to issue arrest warrants for initiators of acts depicted by that definition. When the word genocide spins through partisanship, it erodes warrants of humanitarian law.
Genocide is a word that emerged from true horror far too shocking for even a sane mind to handle. Are we forgetting Kristallnacht and its aftermath of Nazi gassing, burning, and starving millions of Jews, Blacks, Gays, people with disabilities, and non-Aryans? We must have, for we use a word meant to tell a story that never should be voiced lightly, and yet now we do. What happened in Armenia in 1915, Europe for seven years after 1938, or Cambodia for four years after 1975? Those atrocities are too painful to imagine from mere words written or spoken in any language. World memories soften with time. Let us never forget.
All wars have costs; they are always ugly, complex, and unpredictably dangerous. Unlike wars in the eras of muskets and swords, we don’t walk away and sleep off the biased emotions behind internecine wars of modern artillery that cause massive destruction to life and infrastructure. These days, wars are not fought as in the past by infantry with bayonets or by duelling soldiers on what was long ago called battlefields, but rather by satellite information and AI assistance that can pinpoint enemy positions hundreds of miles away. Distance battles have been an “ambition of war tacticians ever since the second century BC when (myth or not) Archimedes used bronze reflecting mirrors to concentrate the sun’s rays to set ablaze Roman warships in the battle of Syracuse.”1
In the past century, more than 50 percent of war-related deaths were of civilians. Indiscriminate casualties expanded in WWI due to new incendiary technologies on the battlefield. By WWII, battles were fought by air with bombs released high above their targets. The blanket bombings of Dresden, Darmstadt, and Hamburg left 77,000 civilians dead. Warfare changes dramatically when an assailant can attack a victim from such a distance that faces cannot be distinguished as belonging to humans.
When targets become dots either seen from afar or not seen at all, moral qualms enter the picture. Of course, the warning model remains the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Nine years later, Roger Robb, Council for the Atomic Energy Commission, interviewed J. Robert Oppenheimer.2 This excerpt is about those dot targets:
Robb: You knew, did you not, that the dropping of that atomic bomb on the target you had selected will kill or injure thousands of civilians, is that correct?
Oppenheimer: Not as many as turned out.
Robb: How many were killed or injured?
Oppenheimer: 70,000.
Robb: Did you have moral scruples about that?
Oppenheimer: Terrible ones.
One problem is that we now accept murky sociopolitical influence over moral prudence that supports the factual record of history when rational people excuse brutality in warfare. These days, too many of us follow wars in real time with wholly accepted misinformation wrapped in outrageous rhetoric shared through social media or amplified ideological partisanships. Some reasonable people follow the boosted outrage from self-interest group propaganda when they have lost their grip on sifting facts from heaps of information and disinformation drivel. They follow their minions who, as Carol Christ, Chancellor of the University of California, Berkeley, put it, “feel that they have an ownership stake, and should be able to have a major voice.”3 The difference now is that anyone listening to the megaphone shrieks of those touting self-serving interests hopes to join an interest group without a strong understanding of why. A long time ago, I was one of them. As a graduate student, I would follow student bandwagons protesting the Vietnam War, being influenced more by the enthusiasms of better-informed placarding friends than by my reasoning. Along the long path of my life, I participated in many protests, some with a genuine conviction of taking a stand favouring humanitarian righteousness. But how much information did I truly have? And so, now we see intelligent people worldwide railing against retaliatory military strikes as if they are attempts at genocide when even the evidence, according to UN Genocide Convention definitions, evidently is misunderstood.
When we use terms such as genocide, holocaust, Nazi, or Fascist without the backup of definitions, we tend to inflate morally repulsive political policy endeavours and erode the warrants of humanitarian law.
News stories suggesting that Israel is committing genocide — even those coming from respected news organisations — are now muddling the Genocide Convention’s definition of the word. When we use terms such as genocide, holocaust, Nazi, or Fascist without the backup of definitions, we tend to inflate morally repulsive political policy endeavours and erode the warrants of humanitarian law. My December/January The World Financial Review article, “Why Are Wars Legal?” shows a generic view of war and laws that are supposed to guide military morals. I emphasise war itself is not legal but also that the laws against genocide, unfortunately by convention, do not incontestably protect civilian casualties, even when losses run into astonishingly large numbers.4
Besides charters and treaties, many other codes, conventions, pacts, and acts contribute to international law prohibiting torture, inhuman treatment of prisoners, and the use of chemical and biological weapons, yet with all that, war crimes persist. They come in feverish skirmishes with every war. Acknowledging my self-recognised naïveté, I feel that there are ways for treaties to be expressed well enough to outlaw the use of force on one country by another so tightly — yet not totally — that it would be in the aggressor’s best domestic interest to settle its dispute peacefully. The Kellogg-Briand Treaty was an attempt. It was the first pact to ban all wars, signed by all the warring countries of WWI in 1928, and yet it did not stop WWII.
For centuries before the Second World War, there were no enforceable laws involving crimes against humanity. As brutal as wars were, there were no international agreements and no criminal courts that could prosecute crimes of mass carnage. It’s not as if there were no laws against brutal attacks. There were and still are moral codes. One is the code of distinction that prohibits targeting civilians and permitting attacks on combatants, one that goes back to the rules suggested at the founding of the International Red Cross and set by the initial Geneva Convention. In the middle year of the American Civil War and the year when the International Red Cross was founded, Abraham Lincoln, US President and Commander-in-chief of the Union Army issued an order on how Union soldiers should — not must — conduct themselves in times of war.5 The Lieber Code military manual, titled Instructions for the Government of Armies of the United States in the Field6 was the first printed list of rules regulating the conduct of war and still is the principal humanitarian backbone of the Geneva Convention treaties between signatory states. It was the first modern broad set of the laws and customs of war since the meager attempts at war law morals of medieval and Renaissance Europe, a submission of reason in warfare. But even those official instructions were ignored by General William Sherman when he let Atlanta burn to demolish hospitals, schools, and civilian homes and buildings. That was an indirect violation of the Lieber Code.
A ghastly, repulsive, and horrid political policy without a name
Before World War II, we had the League of Nations, but it was just a 58-member treaty (with no US backing) that could hardly have intervened without a criminal prosecutorial court. Unlike today’s UN, with 97,000 military personnel coming from 120 countries, it had no armed peacekeeping force available to protect civilians and no criminal courts with laws of war crimes committed “with intent to destroy a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group.”7 Without criminal accountability, wars could be not only legal but also openly publicising intent to destroy an ethnical, racial, or religious group.
So, on January 30, 1939, Adolph Hitler, Chancellor of Germany with a plan of territorial expansion in Europe, addressed the Reichstag by announcing: “If the international Jewish financiers within and without Europe Succeded [sic] in plunging the nations once more into a world war, then the result will not be the Bolshevisation of the world and thereby the victory of Jewry but the obliteration of the Jewish race in Europe…”8 Now, what could he have meant by saying that? There is no other way to interpret his speech other than by admitting it was an intentional plan of what we now define as genocide.
Excerpt from a speech by Hitler predicting the extermination of the Jewish race in Europe. Courtesy: The Wiener Holocaust Library Reference Number: 1655/104 Doc. Number PS2360
Then came Germany’s surprise attack on Soviet Russia on June 22, 1941, when Winston Churchill delivered a live broadcast from London saying:
“As the armies advance, whole districts are being exterminated. Scores of thousands – literally scores of thousands – of executions in cold blood are being perpetrated by the German police troops upon the Russian patriots who defend their native soil,” he said. “We are in the presence of a crime without a name.”
And so, military extermination policy was in search of a name. The word genocide didn’t exist before 1944 when Raphael Lemkin, a Polish-Jewish lawyer, invented the term to include heinous policies in support of killing ethnic, racial, or religious groups. He used the term genocide in raising international outrage about atrocities committed by Nazis and wrote that Germany had schemed “to destroy or to cripple the subjugated peoples in their development so that, even in the case of Germany’s military defeat, it will be positioned to deal with other European nations from the vantage point of numerical, physical, and economic superiority.”9
The Allied forces did not go to war with Germany because of worries of genocide. Though genocide was part of Hitler’s plan, the word to define such horror had not yet been coined and had little connection to that war. The plan was carried out by massive public belief in propaganda against Jews, Blacks, Gays, and other non-Aryan citizens. But Germany, during Nazi control, was not the first genocidal government. The epic wars brought to life by the Homeric poets told of humanitarian carnage, and in the Middle Ages, crusading Teutonic Knights attempted to Christianise the Holy Land. More recently, Tsarist Russia and its pogroms against Jews were carried out by Cossacks along with anyone else drawn into government-condoned hatred of Jews. The Ottomans exterminated the Armenians. At the end of the 19th century, German Colonial rule waged ethnic extermination of the Herero and Nama tribes in Southwest Africa. All were certainly genocidal battles.10
The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (CPPCG) defined the word to make atrocities that in any way resemble the Holocaust or Armenian and Rwanda mass murders a crime to be punishable by international law.11 CPPCG is a human rights treaty reflecting customary law that all states and private armies must abide by. Sometimes it works; the International Criminal Court (ICC) has indicted 53 people of war crimes against humanity, 9 of whom are currently serving time. Although the word “genocide” has been explicitly defined as a legal term, the public impression of the word has no universally agreed-upon definition. With more than 285 distinct battles inciting more than 50 mass murders of almost 12 million combatants and 22 million civilians since the Genocide treaty was signed, there has been a growing and welcoming public sentiment that something should be done about malicious cruelty in war. However, given the weight of the word “genocide” as a legal tool used to sentence offenders, its prominence in public and academic use is being distorted.12
Genocide and collateral damage are two words that must fit together in the language of conflict to make sense of the humanitarian laws of war. And since war almost always brings collateral damage to muddle the distinction between intent and accidents, evidence gets fogged and lost.
Private citizens and political leaders who think they have sovereign immunity are not exempt from the Genocide Convention’s declaration of genocide as a crime.13, 14 The difficulty with bringing genocide cases to court is that international law requires proof of intention.15 Proof, though, has a problem: war almost always brings collateral damage to blur the line between intent and accidents. Genocide and collateral damage are two words that must fit together in the language of conflict to make sense of the humanitarian laws of war. And since war almost always brings collateral damage to muddle the distinction between intent and accidents, evidence gets fogged and lost. But even with proof from evidence, the Convention had no means of criminal enforcement until half a century later when the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague became established under the Rome Statute, a treaty-based statute of humanitarian laws under which offenders of war crimes, including public and private individuals, could be tried, sentenced, and imprisoned.
War law language accepts informality with ambiguity
We learn the meaning of most words by usage; the ones we know have come from repeated use, but the more we hear or read a word in context with others, the more precisely we understand what that word is supposed to mean. Some words, however, become understood as what we wish them to mean, not as defined by common usage. Some are used with partial accuracy to convey generic meanings because we speak a natural language that informally employs words and phrases with generosity.
“Genocide” is a slippery word. We wish that it could cover more ground than it does. Influential activists with big storylines declare certain military operations to be genocidal. Some are.16 Surely, there is no argument that what Nazi Germany did to Jews and other perceived enemies of Germany during WW II was genocidal. The word itself rose from that world in horror. There is no argument that the Ottoman Turk attacks on the Armenians and the Burmese attacks on the Rohingya were genocidal.17 Include the Rwandan civil war that killed between 200,000 and 500,000 Tutsi (likely an undercount).18,19,20,21,22 Many other conflicts are on the list of genocidal military operations, including the US 19th-century treatment of Native Americans.
But let us leave that list to concentrate on more modern wars between states that should do and know better. One state that is easy to pick is Russia. By all accounts, Russia has put itself on the genocide list by abducting children, separating them from their parents, and bringing them to Eastern Russia. That crime undoubtedly breaks laws backed by the Genocide Convention. One could also argue that the purposeful direct bombing of apartment buildings in Kyiv should not be considered collateral damage rather than intentional terrorism and, therefore, a plan to, perhaps not eliminate, but rather instill fear in the civilian population. You see, using genocide under its colloquial ambiguity allows its use to play as a double standard.23
Tourists visiting the National Memorial to the victims of Genocide in Kigali, Rwanda. Editorial credit: Oscar Espinosa / Shutterstock.com
Where is the line that divides genocide and collateral damage?
An alternative, perhaps an easy allied question is: Do the genocide accusations we hear about fall within the scope of the genocide treaty?24 It is a question that divides the common notion of what genocide means according to the UN Genocide Convention’s understanding. Etymologically deconstructing genocide as genos (Greek for γένος: race, stock, kin) and cide (Latin: the act of killing) depreciates its original intended significance, but so does the Convention’s legal definition, which seems to be on a measured spectrum between a mission of savagery and actions of retaliatory defence. But to know genocide is to understand how it happens — why the Cossacks carried out their pogroms, why ordinary Germans welcomed Kristallnacht, why members of the SS-Totenkopfverbände gassed and burned Jews in concentration camps, and why Ottomans massacred a million Armenians. Like those of the past, barbarisms still happen because narcissistic leaders, troubled by their failures in governance, heavily propagandise their subjects into believing that some national, ethnic, racial, or religious groups are threatening. Elimination of such groups then becomes legitimised. That is how genocides start. How they end also has a painful answer —REVOLTINGLY! — although with fated early deaths or exiles of perpetrating leaders and fortunately with survivors more committed to reestablishing and strengthening their heritage.
When writing about war, I typically avoid individual war examples and concentrate on the nonspecific overview of all wars and why we must find ways to limit them or at least diminish the resulting humanitarian horrors. However, from my conversations with experts, I am advised to bring in examples of specific war cases that could question the notion of genocide and tighten the definition to clarify when brutality, collateral damage, and military murders can be classified as genocidal. Therefore, as a timely example among many, let us examine the 2023 Israeli-Hamas war, the fifth and largest one between Israel and Hamas in just the last fifteen years. The irrational justification from the Israeli side is revenge for Hama’s brutal attack, but there is also a rational justification. Revenge is uncontrollable when one side starts a war through terrorism policy.
No reasonable being and no forward-looking country can deny that Hamas had committed terrorism after intentionally raping young adults, murdering children, and taking hostages in anticipation of a counterattack.
There are no rational arguments justifying what Hamas did on October 7th; none, other than the attempted tripe of justified liberation or resistance to Israeli alleged “apartheid,” another word that never should be used lightly. The attack on Israel left more than 1200 Israelis dead and another 253 being kidnapped, including innocent women and children. As a per capita comparison with the US population, that’s 40,000 dead. No reasonable being and no forward-looking country can deny that Hamas had committed terrorism after intentionally raping young adults, murdering children, and taking hostages in anticipation of a counterattack. Hamas opposes Israel’s right to exist and has proudly documented its goal of “the complete destruction of Israel and creation in its place of an Islamist state in all of historic Palestine.”25 Agreeing with that and justifying Hamas’s attack puts one in the camp of rejecting the core principle of international humanitarian law. As for the Israeli invasion of Gaza that killed many civilians and combatants, the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) never planned to exterminate Palestinians.
Destruction is another word in need of clarification. At pro-Palestinian demonstrations, marchers chant the historical battle cry “From the river to the sea,” lifted from a 25th anniversary Hamas address given by Khaled Mashal, former head of Hamas in 2012 who said, “Palestine from the river to the sea, from the north to the south, is our land and we will never give up one inch.” Does the clipped trope mean obliterating all of Israel, starting from the west bank of the Jordan River and ending in the Mediterranean Sea, where all Jews are to drown? If you ask those demonstrators what that rallying cry means, some will say yes, exterminate the Jews, and replace the land of Israel with an Islamic State. Many say, no, all we chant for is a Palestinian homeland. Others say it is a call for peace. A minority, in opposing protests, believe that all the land from the river to the sea was given to them by God, and some — with viewpoints as dangerous as any — will not be able to voice a sincere opinion. On that infamous October 7th, Jews were not driven to the sea. Hamas and Jihad militants obliterated the kibbutz Kfar Aza, raped and mutilated teenagers at a music festival, slaughtered babies, burned alive young people, and executed “parents in front of their children, children in front of their parents.”26 That was an act of terrorism to provoke an Israeli retaliatory war. Ron Hassner, Chancellor Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Berkeley, who surveyed 250 sstudents from various backgrounds, learned that 47% of the students who embrace the slogan at rallies don’t even know what it means.[i]
In the aftermath, the Israeli government felt the need to retaliate. Some analysts say Israel fell for Hamas’s trap. Israel did what so many other countries have done in the past when populations were victimised and instinctively called for revenge. From anger comes revenge, a human emotional entanglement that enables approvals of waging wars that go unpunished. So, the expected happened; Israel attacked the perpetrators of those unspeakable inhumane acts. But what did they not do? They did not rape. They did not pull children from their mothers. Unfortunately, they felt the only way to answer Hamas was to bomb Gaza and accept a mountain of collateral damage. I am not condoning revenge wars. They start from age-old psychosocial behaviour under the creed: my side is the morally justified one. Pearl Harbor was one, and my father took that revenge to its limits. As Noah Feldman, Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law at Harvard Law School put it in a recent luminous Atlantic article: “If you make the legality—or morality, for that matter—of whom you can target depend on whether you are right, that will be the end of humanitarian law: Everyone will say they are in the right and can kill whomever they choose.”27
Anyone has the right to use the word genocide as one wishes. But using that word heedlessly does not necessarily bear legal truth. With history now repeating itself as it always has each century, conspiracy propaganda from both left and right spins acceptance of truth and politically reflexive partisanship to harm policies favouring world stability. Using words as universal moral concepts is not necessarily condoning military attacks. War plans come through tactical considerations that generally involve collateral damage, civilian casualties, and strategies of self-defence that seem to cross the vernacular conceptions of the word genocide without crossing the legal line.
Many well-informed and confused activists are labelling Israel’s campaign as genocidal, a small, propagandised part of their ongoing strategy of demonising Israel, a country where Palestinian Israelis vote and the only vibrant democracy in the Middle East. So, one must ask, are the genocide accusations ones that fall within the scope of the genocide treaty? That treaty has no accord with the common calls of genocidal crime so often used with an inflated aspirant meaning. South Africa brought Israel to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) claiming that Israel is committing genocide by failing to prevent genocide. South Africa’s Justice Minister Ronald Lamola “condemned the targeting of civilians by Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups and the taking of hostages” without any recognition of Israel’s traumatic suffering. Deceivingly absent from his argument was the verity that Hamas’s policy of embedding combatants within Gaza’s human shield civilian population along with schools, hospitals, and public buildings. That was Lamola’s legal strategy, but when the media runs with that disingenuous summary, the world cognisance takes it from there, so the story spins to demonise the victim. The placards are drawn and brought to massive peace rallies of spontaneous followers who are determined and sincere, though with little or no factual understanding of why they are gathering.
On January 26, 2024, the ICJ’s 17-judge panel ruled that Israel must do all it can to prevent genocide, and to get basic aid to people in Gaza. The Israeli Judge voted in favour of an order for humanitarian aid and the prevention of inflammatory speech in the hope that the court’s order would “help to decrease tensions and discourage damaging rhetoric.”28 Of course, Israel denies South Africa’s genocide claims.
Dilemmas over the Gaza metro, from Hamas’s subterraneous launching of military attacks
Israel, a country of people who know too well the meaning of genocide, had no “Intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group…” nor did it forcibly “transfer children of the group to another group.” Its devastation of Gaza was retaliatorily against terrorist crimes, and the resulting wreckage caused hunger and death to innocent old and young civilians in high numbers. But the word retaliatory also gets thorny. Does retaliation mean a military action against combatants with a minimum of incidental damage to civilians, or does it mean action without care of collateral destruction and disproportionate suffering of noncombatants? That question brings with it a question of whether Israel cares about the noncombatants. Its war with Hamas may appear to be a war with Gaza, partly because civilian casualties seem excessive for the objective of defeating Hamas. But what may seem excessive might not be when combatants (many out of uniform) purposely mingle with noncombatants.
Many of the known Gaza tunnels were destroyed by Israel when Hamas started firing rockets at Israel, bombing buses, cafes, and bars. I have no tactical military wisdom, but Israel, given all its past impressive intelligence, should have been able to counterattack and accomplish its goal of freeing hostages with less haste, more control, understandable revenge, and careful, intelligent planning to minimise innocent civilian harm more measuredly. It is hard to imagine that IDF intelligence had not exhaustively surveilled the Gaza metro web with relatively available seismic sound wave imaging during the past two years.29, 30 A sweep of Hamas hideouts should have given Israel the advantage of being better able to take out Hamas from its roots below the surface than from the ground above to avoid civilian casualties. But such a sweep could also take out some of the remaining hostages who are likely being held in the subterraneous network. The Hamas attack gives Israel its right to attack enemy hideouts by permission of self-defence. Blame Hamas for cowardly embedding Hamas military in residential areas, hospitals, and schools, but Israel’s battle — far from what defines a genocide — must do more to protect innocent people caught in their missions.
What does self-defence mean?
Israel, for its entire existence from birth, has been a country in a battle of self-defence. One day after the announcement of its independence from the British Mandate of Palestine, it had to defend itself from overwhelming, unprovoked attacks from five Arab nations. There is no compact meaning of the word self-defence, not even a UN treaty definition. Russia used it as an excuse for the invasion of Ukraine. A recent UN report on the war in Ukraine claims “civilians account for nearly 90 percent of war-time casualties.”31 Where does Russia’s argument fit on the self-defence scale? When Russia invades an independent country, arguing that a few (or even a large number) of Russian separatists claim to be in danger, is that self-defence?
Many war crimes continue today, but a genocidal one is one that we tend to misperceive as a crime under humanitarian law.
Many war crimes continue today, but a genocidal one is one that we tend to misperceive as a crime under humanitarian law. We are confused because we think that the destruction of a nation comes under the bearing of genocidal war crimes. It does not. By the 1946 Resolution 96(1) of the UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (CPPCG) we have a legal definition of genocide that locks in the meaning of the word:32
Intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group; killing members of the group; causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; and forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.33
It is not a statement knotted in legal jargon. Follow the slightly cumbersome string of punctuations to unravel the intended meaning of genocide as defined in the Resolution. From that, genocide does not mean destruction, nor does it mean indiscriminate destruction; rather, it necessitates a coordinated plan for annihilating members of a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group.
Major modern wars are not declared wars.
Another intractable problem is not so much the word “self-defence”; a more challenging problem is the loopholes of the UN Charter that I brought up in my article, Why Are Wars Legal? The answer that I take from that piece is that wars are not legal except when one state claims self-defence. Israel’s case is self-defence, no matter how we define the compound noun. All states have the right to defend their territory. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine used a ruse that claimed pro-Russian separatists feared “Ukraine Nazis and fascists.” It’s a game Russia played in its 2008 invasion of Georgia, an old cheat to avoid incrimination by the ICC that relies on ambiguities in the UN Charter, in particular Articles 4 and 51 that, on the one hand, constrain states from engaging in armed conflict and, on the other, permit a country to start a war if it can claim preemptive self-defence.
Force, therefore, is not entirely outlawed since states maintain the right to defend a territory in response to attacks portraying international conflicts as internal matters. Declare your invasion as an internal armed conflict, give it a name to avoid calling it a war, and you might avoid all the ICC incriminations for any horrors you might do — Desert Storm, Infinite Justice, Enduring Freedom, Special Military Operation, or Iron Swords will do. Think about it: America has not declared war for the last 78 years; it never formally declared the Korean, Vietnam, Iraq, and Gulf wars as wars. It’s always safer to claim self-defence and give it a name to avoid all UN Charter legal obligations.
Heads of state may agree to war plans drawn up by military intelligence officers who, rightly or wrongly, believe their plan justifies jus ad bellum, which translates as the right to wage war because, as my father, who received a bronze star and a purple heart in WWII, said, “Some wars just have to be fought.” When diplomacy fails, and leaders intelligently believe that the nation’s security could be endangered, the smart move is to follow the advice of the Powell Doctrine — to pursue a clearly defined objective and risk-cost analysis that considers a thorough understanding of the possible consequences. Colin Powell, then chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, posed six questions in his 1992 Foreign Affairs article “U.S. Forces: Challenges Ahead” that had to be answered affirmatively before engaging the US in war.34,35,36 Once a state is in a war, the overarching question is how it should be fought. The best answer is to obey a reasonable moral code. Regrettably, moral codes break when wars lose control and cross into what might seem like genocides but aren’t.
The biggest persistent, intractable world conflict problem often is that wars go wrong with flawed leadership decisions. Unfortunately, General David Petraeus rightly wrote in his book Conflict, “The witness of history demonstrates that exceptional strategic leadership is the one absolute prerequisite for success, but also that it is as rare as the black swan.”37 I wish that to be true. Alas, exceptional leadership is considerably scarcer than black swan.
Joseph Mazur is an Emeritus Professor of Mathematics at Emerson College’s Marlboro Institute for Liberal Arts & Interdisciplinary Studies. He is a recipient of fellowships from the Guggenheim, Bogliasco, and Rockefeller Foundations, and the author of eight acclaimed popular science books. His latest book is The Clock Mirage: Our Myth of Measured Time (Yale). More information about him is at http://www.josephmazur.com/.
9. Raphael Lemkin, Axis Rule in Occupied Europe: Laws of Occupation, Analysis of Government, Proposals for Redress (Washington, DC: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1944), xi.
10. Raphael Lemkin, ‘War against Genocide’, Christian Science Monitor, 31 January 1948, 2. On the relationship between genocide and warfare, see Shaw, What is Genocide
11. Samantha Power, A Problem from Hell (New York: Basic Books, 2013) 7-12.
12. SamBarbara Harff, “No Lessons Learned from the Holocaust? Assessing Risks of Genocide and Political Mass Murder since 1955,” American Political Science Review, Vol. 97, No. 1 (February 2003): 57.
19. Wood, S. K. (2004). A Woman Scorned for the Least Condemned War Crime: Precedent and Problems with Prosecuting Rape as a Serious War Crime in the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda. Columbia Journal of Gender and Law, 13(2). https://doi.org/10.7916/cjgl.v13i2.2497
26. Anthony Blinken, “Secretary Antony J. Blinken and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu after Their Meeting,” U.S. Department of State, October 12, 2023.
Is the political objective we seek to achieve important, clearly defined and understood
Have all other nonviolent policy means failed?
Will military force achieve the objective?
At what cost?
Have the gains and risks been analysed?
How might the situation that we seek to alter, once it is altered by force, develop further and what might be the consequences?
36. Preceding the Powell Doctrine is the Weinberger Doctrine, disclosed by US Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger. It also lists 6 points that come from learning about the quagmires of the Vietnam War:
The United States should not commit forces to combat unless the vital national interests of the United States or its allies are involved.
US troops should only be committed wholeheartedly and with the clear intention of winning. Otherwise, troops should not be committed.
US combat troops should be committed only with clearly defined political and military objectives and with the capacity to accomplish those objectives.
The relationship between the objectives and the size and composition of the forces committed should be continually reassessed and adjusted if necessary.
US troops should not be committed to battle without a “reasonable assurance” of the support of US public opinion and Congress.
The commitment of US troops should be considered only as a last resort.
37. David Petraeus and Andrew Roberts, Conflict: The Evolution of Warfare from 1945 to Ukraine (New York: HarperCollins, 2023) 4.
The development of web applications encompasses various phases, including planning, design, development, and deployment. However, one of the most critical stages that significantly impacts the quality, performance, and security of web applications is testing. Testing web applications is a comprehensive process that involves evaluating the application’s functionality, usability, security, compatibility, and performance. Given the complexity and diversity of web technologies, selecting the right testing tools is paramount for ensuring the application meets its requirements and provides a seamless user experience. This article delves into the realm of testing tools for web application, highlighting their importance, types, and some of the most effective tools available for developers and QA professionals.
Importance of Testing Tools
Testing tools play a pivotal role in the development lifecycle of web applications. They help identify bugs and issues before the application becomes available to the end-user, ensuring that any potential problems are addressed early in the development process. This not only enhances the quality of the web application but also saves time and resources that would otherwise be spent on fixing issues post-deployment. Additionally, testing tools like BugBug facilitate the automation of repetitive tasks, making the testing process more efficient and allowing testers to focus on more critical aspects of the application.
Types of Testing Tools
Testing tools for web applications can be broadly categorized into several types, each serving a distinct purpose in the testing lifecycle:
Functional Testing Tools: These tools are designed to test the functions of a web application by simulating user actions and verifying the outcomes against expected results. They help ensure that the application behaves as intended.
Performance Testing Tools: Performance testing tools evaluate the speed, responsiveness, and stability of a web application under a specific workload. They are crucial for ensuring that the application can handle high traffic and perform optimally.
Security Testing Tools: With cyber threats on the rise, security testing tools are essential for identifying vulnerabilities within web applications. They help protect sensitive data and prevent unauthorized access.
Usability Testing Tools: Usability testing focuses on the user’s experience with the web application. These tools help identify navigational issues and any obstacles that might hinder the user experience.
Compatibility Testing Tools: These tools test the web application’s compatibility with different browsers, operating systems, and devices, ensuring consistent behavior across various platforms.
Selenium: Selenium is a powerful and widely used open-source tool for automating web browsers. It supports multiple programming languages, browsers, and operating systems, making it a versatile choice for functional testing.
TestComplete: TestComplete is a comprehensive testing platform that enables testers to create automated tests for web, mobile, and desktop applications. Its visual programming interface and script extensions make it accessible to testers of all skill levels.
Performance Testing Tools
LoadRunner: LoadRunner by Micro Focus is a leading performance testing tool that simulates thousands of users to test the performance of web applications under heavy loads. It provides detailed analytics and insights to identify bottlenecks and performance issues.
JMeter: Apache JMeter is an open-source software designed to load test functional behavior and measure performance. Originally designed for testing web applications, JMeter can also be used for other test functions.
Security Testing Tools
OWASP ZAP: The OWASP Zed Attack Proxy (ZAP) is an open-source web application security scanner. It helps find security vulnerabilities in web applications during development and testing phases.
Netsparker: Netsparker is a web application security scanner that automates the process of identifying vulnerabilities and security flaws. It’s known for its accuracy and the ability to detect SQL Injection, Cross-site Scripting (XSS), and other vulnerabilities.
Usability Testing Tools
UserTesting: UserTesting provides real-time feedback and insights from users across the globe. This tool allows you to observe how actual users interact with your web application, helping to improve its usability.
Optimizely: Optimizely is a platform for experimentation and personalization. It allows developers and marketers to test different versions of their web pages and applications to optimize the user experience.
Compatibility Testing Tools
BrowserStack: BrowserStack offers a cloud platform for testing web applications across various browsers and devices, ensuring compatibility and a seamless user experience.
CrossBrowserTesting: CrossBrowserTesting provides a cloud-based service to test web applications on over 2,000 browsers and real devices, making it easier to ensure consistent behavior across different platforms.
Conclusion
The landscape of testing tools for web applications is vast and diverse, with each tool serving a specific purpose in the testing lifecycle. Choosing the right set of tools is crucial for ensuring the quality, performance, security, and usability of web applications. By leveraging the strengths of these tools, developers and QA professionals can significantly improve the development process, reduce time to market, and deliver a superior product that meets the expectations of their users. As technology evolves, so do the tools for testing, making it essential for professionals to stay updated with the latest advancements in testing methodologies and tools.
Real estate has long been considered a relatively safe investment and one that can yield significant returns in the long term. Whether it’s rental income or capital appreciation, the wealth-building attributes of real estate make it a popular investment choice for many investors.
According to recent statistics, the global real estate investment market, valued at $11,444.7 billion in 2021, is set to reach $30,575.5 billion by 2031, representing a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 10.7% from 2022 to 2031.
For those seeking to capitalize on this growth, an awareness of the different ways to enter the market can be beneficial. It allows investors to build their wealth based on their appetite for risk, financing ability, and other factors which are important to them. In this article, we have outlined a few real estate investment strategies that can help you invest in this sector based on your unique goals and objectives.
Buy-to-Let
A buy-to-let investment involves investing in real estate with the purpose of renting it out to tenants. This medium to long-term strategy aims to generate a cash flow by covering any borrowing costs and other property-related expenses through the rents charged. In addition to the rental income, this strategy aims to build capital through the property’s appreciation in value over time.
This type of investment is common in the residential real estate sector with single-family rentals (SFRs), student housing, and condominiums being popular types of buy-to-let properties.
House Flipping
While the concept of generating a rental yield and capital appreciation are also present with this real estate investment strategy, the potential for capital gains is much greater than other strategies like buy-to-let.
House flipping is a relatively high-risk investment strategy that involves the purchase of a distressed property and renovating it to the point that it is suitable for occupancy. It is then sold relatively quickly for a profit. These properties are typically run-down and in need of significant repair work.
Foreclosed properties or short sales are also commonly purchased for house flipping purposes. Investors seek these undervalued properties and sell them at a price that is substantially higher than their initial investment. While the risk involved and the investment of time and resources is higher here, so too is the potential for large profits.
Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)
REITs allow investors to invest in real estate without directly owning any property. Instead, investors give their money to a corporation that owns or invests in income-producing real estate in return for a share of the REIT. Investors receive dividends from the REIT which are made from the income generated by the properties it owns.
This income primarily comes from the rents paid by tenants of the properties within the REIT’s portfolio. This is considered a relatively safe investment that offers investors exposure to the real estate sector without many of the risks that come with direct ownership of the asset.
The real estate investment sector is a varied one that offers a range of investments to suit a variety of risk profiles and investment appetites. By understanding your own investment goals and objectives you can make an informed decision as to which type of real estate investment best aligns with your financial strategy and tolerance for risk.
Criteria for admission to boarding schools in California for international students
California, a beacon of cultural diversity and innovation, hosts some of the most esteemed boarding schools in the United States. These institutions stand out not only for their academic rigor but also for their commitment to fostering a global community. For international students, boarding schools in California offer a unique blend of educational excellence, personal development, and cultural immersion.
The Allure of California Boarding Schools
Academic Rigor and Excellence
California boarding schools are renowned for their robust academic programs. They offer a diverse curriculum including Advanced Placement (AP) courses, International Baccalaureate (IB) programs, and specialized tracks in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). These challenging courses are designed to prepare students for the rigors of higher education, particularly in competitive universities.
A Melting Pot of Cultures
One of the most compelling features of California boarding schools is their culturally diverse student body. Students from all corners of the globe come together, creating a vibrant community that celebrates diversity. This multicultural environment allows students to develop a global perspective and enhances their understanding and appreciation of different cultures.
State-of-the-Art Facilities
Boarding schools in California pride themselves on their modern campuses equipped with advanced technology, science laboratories, art studios, and sports facilities. These resources provide students with ample opportunities to explore their interests and talents beyond the classroom.
Emphasis on Holistic Development
These schools are not just about academic learning; they place a significant emphasis on the overall development of students. Extracurricular activities, including sports, arts, and various clubs, are integral to the student experience, fostering teamwork, leadership, and personal growth.
Comprehensive College Preparation
California boarding schools offer extensive college counseling services to help students navigate the complexities of college admissions. This is particularly beneficial for international students who might be unfamiliar with the U.S. education system.
Benefits for International Students
Mastery of the English Language
Living and studying in an English-speaking environment provides international students with an excellent opportunity to develop fluency in English, an essential skill in today’s globalized world.
Building a Global Network
Students have the chance to build relationships with peers from around the world, establishing a network of contacts that can be valuable for their future academic and professional endeavors.
Sense of Community and Belonging
Many alumni speak of a strong sense of community and belonging that boarding school life fostered, which continues to be a source of support and connection throughout their lives.
Independence and Self-Discovery
Being away from home, students learn to be independent, resilient, and self-reliant. These life skills are invaluable as they transition into adulthood.
Cultural Exchange and Awareness
Exposure to a multitude of cultures fosters open-mindedness, empathy, and a deeper understanding of global issues. Students learn to appreciate and respect differences, preparing them to thrive in a multicultural world.
Admission Criteria for International Students
Academic Performance
Applicants must provide transcripts from their previous schools, showcasing their academic abilities. Strong performance in prior studies is crucial for admission.
English Language Proficiency
Non-native speakers must often demonstrate their English skills through standardized tests like the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or IELTS (International English Language Testing System).
Standardized Test Scores
Some schools may require scores from the SSAT (Secondary School Admission Test) or similar examinations, which assess the student’s readiness for the academic challenges of boarding school.
Personal Essays and Interviews
These are critical components of the application process, offering insights into the student’s personality, goals, and fit for the boarding school environment.
Letters of Recommendation
Recommendations from teachers or school officials provide a third-party perspective on the student’s academic potential and character.
Financial Documentation
Most schools require proof of the family’s financial ability to afford tuition and related expenses. However, many institutions offer scholarships and financial aid to international students.
Boarding schools in California are more than just educational institutions; they are gateways to personal and academic growth. For international students, they offer an unparalleled opportunity to immerse themselves in a diverse and dynamic environment, preparing them for success in a globalized world. The journey to joining one of these prestigious schools requires dedication and preparation, but the rewards are immeasurable. As students navigate this path, they open doors to a world of possibilities, making lifelong connections, and laying the foundation for a bright and successful future.
The perspectives on studying in boarding schools in California are as diverse as the community itself. Students find a platform for independence and cultural interaction, parents see a secure and nurturing environment for their children’s growth, educators engage in shaping well-rounded individuals, and alumni reflect on the enduring impact of their formative years. Together, these perspectives paint a picture of a holistic, challenging, and enriching educational experience that prepares students not just for college, but for life.
Why is it that despite advances in technology, the trust gap in remote work remains a challenging puzzle for many companies? In a candid conversation with Mike Nash, Founder & CEO of Trelliswork, we delved into this very question. Trelliswork, a Seattle-based company, helps companies run their business operating system, streamlining decision-making, alignment, and accountability in today’s hybrid and remote workplace. This mission is critical in today’s business landscape, where in-office presence is no longer a realistic measure of productivity and outcomes.
The Transparency Gap and Trust Issues
Nash highlighted two core challenges in remote work: the transparency gap and trust issues. His insight into the transparency gap reveals a deeper issue in remote work. Leadership teams, accustomed to traditional office environments, often equate visibility with productivity. This mindset overlooks the reality that many tasks are completed effectively outside the purview of physical office space. In a remote setting, where work becomes invisible in a physical sense, leaders may struggle to gauge productivity accurately. This misalignment can lead to a culture of mistrust, where leaders may unconsciously favour those they can see, leading to a skewed perception of employee contribution and value.
In a remote setting, where work becomes invisible in a physical sense, leaders may struggle to gauge productivity accurately. This misalignment can lead to a culture of mistrust, where leaders may unconsciously favour those they can see, leading to a skewed perception of employee contribution and value.
The trust issue is exacerbated when companies, uncertain about the efficacy of remote work, mandate returns to the office. Such decisions can signal a fundamental lack of trust in employees’ ability to work autonomously. This not only demotivates employees who have adapted to and perhaps thrived in a remote setting, but it also undermines the potential benefits of remote work, such as improved work-life balance, reduced commute times, and increased focus and productivity.
The second challenge Nash outlines is the often underappreciated need for structure in remote work environments. The misconception that remote work equates to a fully asynchronous work model can lead to disorganisation and a lack of cohesion within teams. In practice, the blend of synchronous (real-time interactions) and asynchronous (task-based, non-real-time interactions) work is essential.
In remote settings, the absence of a physical office environment removes the natural rhythm and routine of the workday. Without this, teams can struggle to find a cadence that suits all members. Regularly scheduled one-on-ones and team meetings become crucial, not only for maintaining workflow but also for nurturing team dynamics and culture. These interactions must be more than perfunctory check-ins; they need to be intentional spaces for alignment, feedback, and collaborative problem-solving.
Moreover, the lack of structure in remote work can place additional stress on managers. In the absence of clear guidelines or established remote work practices, managers are often left to devise their own strategies for team coordination and communication. This can lead to inconsistencies in management styles and expectations across the organisation, further complicating the remote work experience.
Addressing these challenges requires a shift in perspective at all levels of an organisation. For leadership, it means redefining productivity and success beyond the traditional metrics of office attendance and visible activity. For managers, it involves developing new skills and strategies to lead remote teams effectively, which includes fostering trust through transparency, regular communication, and recognition of individual and team achievements. Companies must also invest in creating structured frameworks for remote work that balance synchronous and asynchronous activities, ensuring that teams remain cohesive and aligned regardless of their physical location. By tackling these challenges head-on, organisations can not only bridge the trust gap but also unlock the full potential of a remote or hybrid workforce.
Reflecting on my own experiences consulting for over two dozen companies in helping them figure out their hybrid work models, I’ve observed that linking trust and structure in remote work can significantly bridge the transparency gap. Regular one-on-ones, where managers and team members set and review goals, not only enhance performance management but also foster a deeper sense of trust and alignment. This approach turns routine meetings into strategic sessions, focusing on both individual and collective progress.
Facilitating Innovation in a Remote Setting
In our discussion, Nash emphasised how the factory worker model, with its emphasis on repetitive, standardised tasks, is a poor fit for the realm of knowledge work. Knowledge workers, whose roles are more cerebral and less mechanical, engage in tasks that demand creativity, critical thinking, and innovation. These tasks defy the traditional boundaries of structured work hours and environments. They are not tasks that can be easily quantified or replicated by AI, which excels in routine and predictable scenarios. In knowledge work, the value lies in the ability to think outside the box, solve complex problems, and generate new ideas.
This shift necessitates a reevaluation of how productivity and efficiency are measured. In a remote or hybrid environment, the focus should be on the outcomes and the quality of work produced, rather than the time spent or the visibility of the employee during the work process. Autonomy plays a crucial role in this setting. Granting autonomy to employees, trusting them to manage their time and workload, and providing them with the freedom to explore creative solutions can lead to remarkable spikes in innovation and productivity.
The Future of Remote Work: Integrated Tools and Collaboration
In a remote or hybrid environment, the focus should be on the outcomes and the quality of work produced, rather than the time spent or the visibility of the employee during the work process.
Looking to the future, Nash’s optimism about remote and flexible work is rooted in the evolution of the tools to design, build, and run a modern business operating system. He envisions a landscape where these tools are more than just digital substitutes for in-person interactions; they are platforms that enhance and streamline work in today’s workplace. These tools would integrate various aspects of remote work, including team management, project coordination, and information sharing, into a cohesive and user-friendly system.
The goal is to develop tools that not only provide structure and process but also actively foster collaboration and trust among team members. This means going beyond basic communication tools to create systems that encourage and facilitate creative collaboration, information sharing, and team cohesion. The effectiveness of remote work hinges on the ability of teams to collaborate effectively, regardless of physical location.
This vision dovetails with a broader trend in the business world. Organisations are increasingly recognising that the playbook for remote and hybrid work needs to be rewritten. This new playbook calls for practices that are specifically tailored to the nuances of remote work, including structured collaboration, clear communication channels, and tools that support both synchronous and asynchronous work. The future of work is not about transplanting office culture to a digital space, but rather about creating a new culture that leverages the unique advantages of remote and hybrid models to foster innovation, efficiency, and job satisfaction.
Conclusion
As we navigate the complexities of remote work, it’s clear that trust and structure are the twin pillars supporting this new work paradigm. By embracing innovative tools and fostering a culture of transparency and autonomy, organisations can bridge the trust gap and unlock the full potential of their remote teams. The future of work is not just about adapting to change; it’s about leading the charge in creating dynamic, trust-filled, and productive work environments, no matter where we are located.
Dr. Gleb Tsipursky helps leaders use hybrid work to improve retention and productivity while cutting costs. He serves as the CEO of the boutique future-of-work consultancy Disaster Avoidance Experts. He is the best-selling author of 7 books, including the global best-sellers Never Go With Your Gut: How Pioneering Leaders Make the Best Decisions and Avoid Business Disasters and The Blindspots Between Us: How to Overcome Unconscious Cognitive Bias and Build Better Relationships. His newest book is Leading Hybrid and Remote Teams: A Manual on Benchmarking to Best Practices for Competitive Advantage. His cutting-edge thought leadership was featured in over 650 articles and 550 interviews in Harvard Business Review, Forbes, Inc. Magazine, USA Today, CBS News, Fox News, Time, Business Insider, Fortune, and elsewhere. His writing was translated into Chinese, Korean, German, Russian, Polish, Spanish, French, and other languages. His expertise comes from over 20 years of consulting, coaching, and speaking and training for Fortune 500 companies from Aflac to Xerox, and over 15 years in academia as a behavioural scientist at UNC-Chapel Hill and Ohio State. A proud Ukrainian American, Dr Gleb lives in Columbus, Ohio.
Financial stress in a household doesn’t just affect adults; children are also vulnerable to the psychological impacts of money worries. When children are exposed to constant discussions about financial difficulties, unpaid bills, or the inability to afford basic necessities, it can lead to significant stress. This stress stems from an environment of uncertainty and insecurity, which can disrupt their emotional well-being. Children, even at a young age, can sense when their parents or guardians are stressed, and this can lead to feelings of anxiety and fear about their own security and future.
The psychological impact of witnessing financial struggles can manifest in various ways. For instance, children might start to worry excessively about money, mimic the stress-related behaviors of adults, or feel guilty about the cost of their needs and wants. This can contribute to a broader sense of insecurity, affecting their overall mental health. When children are constantly exposed to an environment filled with financial tension, it may lead to long-term issues such as chronic anxiety and stress, which are detrimental to their emotional and physical health.
Signs and Symptoms of Stress in Children
Children may not always express their feelings of stress verbally, but there are several signs and symptoms that indicate they are experiencing stress related to financial issues in the family. Recognizing these signs early can help parents and caregivers take steps to address the child’s stress and provide the necessary support.
Changes in Behavior: Becoming more irritable, withdrawn, or showing regressive behaviors such as bedwetting.
Academic Performance: A noticeable decline in grades or loss of interest in schoolwork.
Sleep Patterns: Difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, or experiencing nightmares.
Social Interactions: Withdrawing from friends, or changes in their social behavior.
Physical Symptoms: Complaints of unexplained headaches, stomachaches, or other physical ailments.
The Role of Parental Communication
Effective communication about financial issues plays a critical role in mitigating the impact of financial stress on children. It’s important for parents to discuss financial matters in a way that is appropriate for the child’s age, ensuring they understand without feeling overwhelmed or anxious. Parents should reassure their children of their safety and security, emphasizing that the family can work through any challenge together. This can help foster a sense of stability and security.
Furthermore, parents should be open about financial challenges while also highlighting the steps being taken to address them. This approach not only teaches children about financial literacy but also helps them understand the value of resilience and problem-solving. It’s crucial for these conversations to be framed positively, focusing on solutions and the family’s strengths rather than the stress of the situation. This type of communication fosters a supportive environment that can help children feel more secure amidst financial uncertainty.
Strategies for Families to Mitigate the Impact
Families can adopt several strategies to lessen the negative impact of financial stress on children. By implementing these strategies, families can create a supportive and positive environment that helps children cope with financial stress in a healthy way, ensuring their mental well-being is preserved even in challenging times.
Create a Stable Routine: Consistency in daily routines can provide children with a sense of normalcy and security.
Focus on Low-cost Activities: Engage in bonding activities that do not require significant financial expenditure, such as family game nights, outdoor adventures, or creative arts and crafts at home.
Seek External Support: Do not hesitate to reach out to community resources, counseling services, or support groups for assistance. Organizations like Providence Pass offer support for families navigating these challenges.
Promote Open Communication: Encourage children to express their feelings and concerns, and respond with empathy and reassurance.
Educate on Financial Literacy: Involve children in age-appropriate financial planning and decision-making to help them understand and cope with financial issues.
The Importance of Professional Help
When children exhibit signs of mental health distress due to financial stress in the family, it is crucial to recognize when professional help is needed. Signs such as prolonged sadness, drastic changes in behavior or eating habits, withdrawal from social interactions, and declining academic performance are indicators that a child may need more support than the family can provide alone. In such cases, seeking professional help from psychologists, counselors, or therapists who specialize in children’s mental health can be a critical step towards healing.
These professionals can offer tailored strategies to help children cope with their feelings, understand their emotions, and develop healthy coping mechanisms. For families navigating these challenges, organizations like Providence Pass provide a supportive environment where children can find the guidance and care they need to overcome the mental health impacts of financial stress.
Educational Resources and Support Systems
Several educational resources and support systems are available to assist families dealing with financial stress and its impact on children. These resources can provide valuable information and support to help families navigate the complex relationship between financial stress and children’s mental health.
Community Programs: Many communities offer programs through local centers or nonprofits that provide financial counseling and support for families.
Online Resources: Websites and online forums offer a wealth of information on managing financial stress, including tips for budgeting and saving money.
School-Based Support Services: Schools often have counselors or social workers who can offer support and resources to children experiencing stress related to financial issues at home.
Financial Literacy Workshops: Organizations may host workshops that help families understand financial basics, creating a more stable environment for children.
Mental Health Services: Look for local or online mental health services that offer counseling specifically tailored to families and children facing financial hardships.
Preventative Measures for Families
To protect children from the mental health effects of financial stress, families can take several preventative measures. First, it’s important to engage in financial planning and education. Understanding how to manage finances, set a budget, and save for emergencies can significantly reduce the stress associated with financial uncertainty. Families should prioritize open discussions about money in an age-appropriate way, ensuring children understand the situation without feeling overwhelmed.
Additionally, establishing a financial safety net, such as an emergency fund, can provide a sense of security for the entire family. This proactive approach not only helps mitigate the immediate stress caused by financial issues but also teaches children valuable lessons about money management and resilience. By taking these steps, families can create a stable environment that supports children’s mental health and well-being, regardless of financial challenges.
In the dynamic realm of personal training, where competition is fierce and options abound, the significance of robust customer engagement cannot be overstated. For personal trainers, the ability to engage clients effectively not only elevates their overall experience but also cements their long-term commitment and satisfaction. This article delves into a comprehensive exploration of diverse strategies aimed at enhancing customer engagement, empowering personal trainers to forge enduring relationships with their clientele and flourish in their profession amid the evolving fitness landscape.
Understanding Client Needs
At the core of fostering meaningful customer engagement lies a profound understanding of the individualized needs and aspirations of each client. Personal trainers must dedicate ample time to conduct thorough assessments and consultations, delving into the intricacies oftheir client’s fitness goals, preferences, and challenges. Armed with this invaluable insight, trainers can tailor their approach and services to cater to the unique requirements of each client, thereby cultivating a deeper connection and fostering a sense of trust that underpins successful client-trainer relationships.
Setting Clear Goals
Effective goal-setting serves as the cornerstone of driving client engagement and progress within the realm of personal training. Through collaborative efforts, personal trainers work hand in hand with their clients to delineate realistic and measurable objectives, thereby providing a roadmap for their fitness journey and instilling a profound sense of purpose and accountability. Regularly revisiting and refining these goals ensures that clients remain motivated and invested in their pursuit of health and wellness, thereby sustaining momentum and fostering continued engagement.
Effective Communication
In the intricate tapestry of client-trainer relationships, effective communication emerges as a fundamental thread that binds them together. Personal trainers must prioritize the establishment of clear, open channels of communication to keep clients informed, motivated, and engaged throughout their fitness journey. Whether through providing timely feedback, addressing concerns promptly, or offering unwavering encouragement and support, adept communication fosters a sense of connection and trust that transcends the confines of the training session, thereby bolstering engagement and adherence.
Creating Personalized Experiences
Personalization stands as a pivotal tenet in the quest to enhance customer engagement and satisfaction within the realm of personal training. By tailoring workouts, nutrition plans, and coaching methodologies to align seamlessly with the unique preferences, abilities, and lifestyles of each client, personal trainers demonstrate a genuine commitment to their client’s holistic well-being. Leveraging technological advancements such as a useful personal trainer app and wearable devices further facilitates the delivery of personalized recommendations and adjustments, thereby deepening client-trainer rapport and fostering long-term engagement.
Fostering a Supportive Community
The cultivation of a supportive community forms an integral component of enhancing client engagement and motivation within the realm of personal training. By orchestrating avenues for connection and camaraderie, such as group training sessions, online forums, and social events, personal trainers facilitate the formation of meaningful bonds among clients. In this nurturing environment, clients feel empowered to share their progress, confront challenges, and celebrate victories, thereby fostering a sense of belonging and accountability that fuels sustained engagement and progress.
Offering Value-Added Services
Beyond the confines of traditional personal training sessions, the provision of value-added services catalyzes elevating customer engagement and satisfaction. Whether through hosting workshops, organizing fitness challenges, providing nutritional counseling, or granting access to exclusive resources and content, personal trainers expand their service repertoire to address the multifaceted wellness needs of their clientele. By positioning themselves as trusted advisors and partners in their client’s health and fitness journey, trainers solidify their bond and loyalty, thereby fostering enduring engagement and advocacy.
Continuous Education and Growth
In an industry marked by perpetual evolution and innovation, personal trainers must remain steadfast in their commitment to ongoing professional development. Investing in continuous education, attending workshops, obtaining certifications, and staying abreast of the latest research and trends equip trainers with the knowledge and skills necessary to deliver unparalleled service and results to their clients. By embodying a spirit of lifelong learning and growth, trainers inspire confidence and trust in their clients, thereby fostering deeper engagement and enduring loyalty that transcends fleeting trends.
Measuring and Adapting
The journey towards enhancing customer engagement within the realm of personal training is an iterative process characterized by regular assessment and adaptation. Implementing robust systems for gathering feedback,tracking client progress, and measuring satisfaction empowers trainers to identify areas for improvement and make necessary adjustments to their approach. By embracing a culture of continuous improvement and responsiveness to client needs, trainers ensure their efficacy and relevance in guiding clients toward their fitness goals, thereby fostering sustained engagement and mutual success.
In summation, the quest to augment customer engagement within the realm of personal training necessitates a multifaceted approach that acknowledges the diverse needs and preferences of clientele. By delving into the intricacies of client needs, setting clear goals, fostering effective communication, and delivering personalized experiences, trainers lay the groundwork for enduring client-trainer relationships built on trust and accountability. Cultivating a supportive community, offering value-added services, prioritizing continuous education, and embracing adaptability further fortify these bonds, fostering sustained engagement and advocacy that propel both clients and trainers toward mutual success in their pursuit of health and wellness.
Starting your financial recovery journey requires a clear understanding of where you stand. Begin by meticulously evaluating your current financial situation, which forms the foundation for effective planning and decision-making. This assessment involves listing all your debts, including credit cards, loans, and any other obligations, alongside your monthly expenses and any income sources. It’s crucial to differentiate between essential costs, such as housing, utilities, and food, and non-essential expenses that can be minimized or eliminated.
Creating a comprehensive list of your financial obligations and assets gives you a bird’s-eye view of your fiscal health. This list should include everything from your savings accounts and retirement funds to tangible assets like vehicles or property. By understanding your starting point, you can set realistic goals, prioritize spending, and develop a strategy to navigate your way out of debt. This process, though potentially daunting, is a critical first step in reclaiming control over your finances during recovery.
Creating a Budget
Developing a realistic and sustainable budget is next. A well-structured budget is your roadmap to financial stability, ensuring you live within your means while addressing debts and building savings. Follow these steps:
Identify Fixed and Variable Expenses: Distinguish between costs that stay the same each month, like rent or mortgage, and those that fluctuate, such as utility bills or groceries.
Prioritize Essential Spending: Allocate funds to necessities before anything else to ensure you’re covering the basics.
Set Aside Money for Savings and Debt Repayment: Even a small monthly contribution can make a significant difference over time.
Managing Debt
Tackling debt is a pivotal aspect of financial recovery. The snowball and avalanche methods are two effective strategies for debt repayment. The snowball method involves paying off your smallest debts first before moving on to larger ones, building momentum as each debt is cleared. Conversely, the avalanche method focuses on paying down debts with the highest interest rates first, potentially saving you money on interest over time.
Communication with creditors is also crucial. Many are willing to negotiate terms, including reduced payments or interest rates, especially when they understand you’re actively working towards repayment. Being upfront about your financial situation can lead to more manageable payment plans, helping you reduce your debt burden without overwhelming your budget.
Building an Emergency Fund
An emergency fund is your financial safety net, designed to cover unexpected expenses without derailing your recovery progress. Start by setting a modest savings goal, perhaps $500 or $1,000, then gradually increase this amount as your financial situation improves. This fund should ideally cover three to six months of living expenses, providing peace of mind and security in case of unforeseen circumstances such as medical emergencies or sudden unemployment.
Building this fund takes time and discipline. Consider setting up automatic transfers to your savings account each payday to make the process easier. Even small contributions can grow into a substantial reserve, ensuring you’re prepared for whatever life throws your way.
For individuals navigating the path of recovery, managing personal finances is a crucial element of creating a stable, fulfilling life. ADAPT Programs supports this journey, offering resources and guidance to help you achieve both recovery and financial wellness.
Rebuilding Credit
Improving your credit score is a crucial step in securing your financial future, especially after a period of recovery. By following these steps and maintaining responsible financial habits, you can gradually rebuild your credit score, enhancing your ability to secure loans and credit at better rates. Here are actionable steps to start rebuilding your credit:
Regularly Check Your Credit Reports: Obtain free reports from the three major credit bureaus annually to monitor for errors and track improvements.
Pay Bills On Time: Consistently paying bills by their due date significantly impacts your credit score positively.
Reduce Debt: Work towards lowering your overall debt, especially on credit cards, to improve your credit utilization ratio.
Consider Secured Credit Cards: These require a deposit that serves as your credit limit, helping to build credit with minimal risk.
Apply for Credit-Builder Loans: These loans are designed specifically to improve your credit score, as the money you borrow is held by the lender and released to you once the loan is repaid.
Investing in Your Future
Long-term financial planning is key to ensuring stability and growth well beyond your recovery period. Starting with retirement accounts, such as 401(k)s or IRAs, is a foundational step. These accounts not only offer tax advantages but also compound over time, significantly increasing your savings by the time you retire. It’s never too early or too late to start contributing to these accounts, even if you begin with small amounts.
Furthermore, investing in educational opportunities can yield significant returns in terms of career advancement and income potential. Whether it’s completing a degree, obtaining a certification, or learning new skills, education is an investment in your most valuable asset yourself.
Additionally, exploring other investment avenues like the stock market, real estate, or starting a business can diversify your income streams and contribute to financial growth. Remember, the key to successful investing is a well-researched, diversified portfolio aligned with your long-term goals and risk tolerance.
Seeking Professional Advice
Navigating the complexities of personal finance, especially during recovery, can be overwhelming. This is where professional financial advisors or counselors can provide invaluable assistance. They offer personalized advice tailored to your unique financial situation, helping you manage debt more effectively, make informed investment choices, and develop a comprehensive financial plan. Seeking professional advice is particularly beneficial when making significant financial decisions, dealing with complex financial products, or when you’re unsure about your next steps towards financial health.
Moreover, financial professionals can provide accountability, encouragement, and the expertise needed to navigate the financial aspects of your recovery journey. They can help you set realistic goals, identify potential pitfalls, and stay on track towards achieving financial independence and security. Whether you’re just starting on your path to recovery or looking to take your financial planning to the next level, consulting with a financial advisor can equip you with the strategies and confidence needed to make informed decisions and realize your financial aspirations.
Off-road adventures often take enthusiasts through a variety of terrains, from rocky trails to muddy tracks and even river crossings. While these challenges add excitement to the experience, they also pose potential risks to the vehicle, particularly its engine. Deep water crossings, in particular, can be hazardous as water entering the engine can lead to hydraulicking, a catastrophic situation where the engine seizes due to water filling the cylinders. To mitigate this risk and enhance the vehicle’s capabilities in such environments, 4×4 snorkels have become a popular accessory among off-road enthusiasts. These snorkels, which are essentially raised air intake systems, relocate the engine’s air intake point to a higher position, typically near the vehicle’s roofline. This strategic placement helps prevent water from entering the engine during water crossings, making them a valuable addition to any off-road rig.
Understanding 4×4 Snorkels
Before delving into whether you need a 4×4 snorkel, it’s crucial to have a solid understanding ofwhat they are and how they work. As mentioned earlier, a snorkel is a raised air intake system designed to relocate the engine’s air intake point to a higher position. By doing so, it helps prevent water from entering the engine during deep water crossings, thus reducing the risk of hydraulicking. However, the benefits of 4×4 snorkels extend beyond just water crossings. They also improve the engine’s performance by providing cleaner, cooler air, especially in dusty environments where traditional air intakes may suck in debris. This cleaner air intake can result in improved fuel efficiency, horsepower, and torque, making snorkels a worthwhile investment for off-road enthusiasts.
Benefits of Installing a 4×4 Snorkel
Installing a professional 4×4 snorkeloffers several benefits beyond just mitigating the risk of hydrolocking. Firstly, as mentioned earlier, it improves the engine’s performance by providing cleaner, cooler air. This can be especially beneficial in dusty environments where traditional air intakes may suck in debris, leading to increased engine wear and reduced performance. Additionally, snorkels can enhance the vehicle’s water-fording capabilities, allowing you to tackle deeper crossings with confidence. This is particularly important for off-road enthusiasts who frequently encounter challenging terrain with water obstacles. Moreover, snorkels can also help extend the service intervals of your engine’s air filter by reducing its exposure to dirt and dust, saving you time and money on maintenance in the long run.
Considerations Before Installation
While the benefits of installing a 4×4 snorkel are undeniable, there are several considerations to keep in mind before deciding to install one. Firstly, you’ll need to ensure that the snorkel you choose is compatible with your specific vehicle make and model. Not all snorkels are universal, and some may require modifications to fit properly, which could affect your vehicle’s warranty. Additionally, installation can be complex and may require cutting holes in your vehicle’s bodywork, which could impact its resale value. It’s also essential to consider the aesthetic impact of a snorkel on your vehicle’s appearance, as some may prefer a sleeker look without additional protrusions. Therefore, it’s crucial to weigh the potential benefits against these considerations before proceeding with installation.
Types of 4×4 Snorkels
When it comes to choosing a 4×4 snorkel, you’ll encounter various options, including different materials, designs, and brands. Common materials include plastic, polyethylene, and stainless steel, each with its advantages and drawbacks in terms of durability, weight, and cost. Plastic snorkels are lightweight and affordable but may be prone to cracking or fading over time. Polyethylene snorkels are more durable and resistant to UV damage but may be heavier and more expensive. Stainless steel snorkels are incredibly durable and corrosion-resistant but are typically the most expensive option. In addition to material, you’ll also need to consider the design of the snorkel, including its shape, size, and placement. Some snorkels feature additional features such as pre-cleaners or dust traps, which can further enhance their performance in dusty conditions. Ultimately, the best type of snorkel for you will depend on your specific needs and budget.
Installation Tips
Installing a 4×4 snorkel is not a task to be taken lightly, and proper installation is crucial for ensuring its effectiveness and longevity. While some enthusiasts may choose to tackle the installation themselves, it’s recommended to seek professional installation unless you’re confident in your skills and have access to the necessary tools. Before installation, thoroughly read the manufacturer’s instructions and ensure you have all the required components. Take your time and double-check everything to avoid any mistakes that could compromise the snorkel’s functionality.
Before installing a snorkel, carefully consider your specific needs, vehicle compatibility, and budget. Seek professional installation if you’re unsure or unfamiliar with the process, and invest in regular maintenance to keep your snorkel in top condition. Ultimately, whether you need a 4×4 snorkel depends on your off-road habits and the types of terrain you regularly traverse, but for many enthusiasts, it’s a valuable investment in their vehicle’s capabilities and longevity.
By Terence Tse
CFOs are evolving into AI-driven transformation orchestrators, balancing finance, technology, and strategy while upskilling teams, managing risks, and driving measurable business value.
A key insight from this year’s AI for CFOs event, organized...
The World Financial Review uses cookies to improve site functionality, provide you with a better browsing experience, and to enable our partners to advertise to you. Detailed information on the use of cookies on this Site, and how you can decline them, is provided in our Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions. By clicking on the accept button and using this Site, you consent to our Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions. ACCEPT
Privacy & Cookies Policy
Privacy Overview
This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.