PAT NEAL: The end of the last frontier – Peninsula Daily News

IN LAST WEEKS episode of heroes and villains of the North Olympic Peninsula, Victor Smith, a city father of Port Angeles, hanged in effigy in Port Townsend, was a federal agent and an indicted felon charged with theft, assault and fraud.

Smith had moved the Custom House at gunpoint from Port Townsend to Port Angeles, a city he called the Cherbourg of the Pacific.

In 1862, Smith had somehow gotten President Abraham Lincoln to declare Port Angeles a Second National City, in case Washington, D.C. was destroyed. Wed have another capitol 3,000 miles away where, coincidentally, Smith and his cronies held a lot of real estate.

Smith imagined a city built by the federal government with him as the leader.

Washington, D.C., was not destroyed.

But since Port Angeles had been declared a Second National City and could not be homesteaded, there was little incentive to come here for the next quarter century.

Meanwhile, as a treasury agent, Smith was shipwrecked while transferring $3 million to the San Francisco treasury.

The money was never found.

Before Smith could be charged with stealing the money, he died in another shipwreck.

Port Angeles, being a Federal Reserve that could not be homesteaded, became a virtual ghost town until 1887, when another Smith came along.

George Venable Smith was a Seattle city attorney involved with the anti-Chinese riots, during which mobs forcibly expelled the Chinese from Seattle and Tacoma over cheap labor and trade.

This new Smith had his own vision for a model city, a utopia with no Chinese which became the Puget Sound Cooperative colony.

Their motto was: Let the many combine in cooperation as the few have done in corporations.

They built a sawmill, shipyard, opera house, church and brought the first flush toilet to the Peninsula.

Despite such progress, the colony went broke by 1889.

Meanwhile, Victor Smiths 3,000-acre Federal Reserve was still closed to settlement.

That was, until John Murphy came to town in 1890.

Murphy organized Reserve Jumpers, who went into the Reserve to stake claims.

Congress conceded ownership to the squatters three years later.

The year 1890 was when railroad fever hit Port Angeles.

Norman Smith, Victors son, proved he was an apple that did not fall far from the tree when he built the worlds shortest railroad to hold the pass at Lake Crescent in anticipation of about 14 different transcontinental railroads that were supposedly eager to build their terminus in Port Angeles, a town isolated on three sides by treacherous bodies of water.

The Panic of 1893 cooled the railroad fever.

The only bright spot was the arrival of Admiral Beardslee and the U.S. Navy Pacific Squadron for summer maneuvers.

Beardslee spent so much time fishing in Lake Crescent that they named the Beardslee trout after him.

The seasonal influx of thousands of lonely, thirsty sailors into town provided an economic stimulus to the Peninsula moonshiners.

Meanwhile, Tom Aldwell had come to Port Angeles in 1890, determined to bring electricity with him.

For that, he was considered a modern-day hero even though there was no fish ladder on his dam on the Elwha River.

Only the Native Americans seemed to care about the destruction of the Elwha fisheries, but they had no voice since they did not become U.S. citizens until 1924.

With the building of the Elwha Dam, Michael Earles built the largest sawmill in Washington on the site of the SKlallam village Tse-whit-sen.

Charles Erickson brought the railroad to town, ending the last frontier.

Were these people heroes or villains? You decide.

_________

Pat Neal is a Hoh River fishing and rafting guide and wilderness gossip columnist whose column appears here every Wednesday.

He can be reached at 360-683-9867 or by email via patnealwild[emailprotected].

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PAT NEAL: The end of the last frontier - Peninsula Daily News

Fear of Recolonization pushed Jean Pierre Boyer to Turn Over Haiti’s Riches to France – Haitian Times

ByFr.MacelinJoseph

Slavery has ended. We are finally free, butare we? After our independence, we hoped that we would live in prosperity and freedom, but it was just a Utopia. Until now, we are still suffering from the remnants of slavery that is evident in our midst. We could not move forward primarily because the will and courage that empowered us to fight for our freedom seemed to vanish. We may have won our liberty, but the aftermath of slavery has manifested in our ideas and ideologies.

We were not able to pursue our dream of a bright future due to a dramatic decision taken by Jean Pierre Boyer. To eliminate the threat from France, Boyer was forced to sign an indemnity treaty in July 11,1825an amount ofU$28 Billionfor the recognition of our independence. From that moment, the Haitian economy went down and never recovered. The dream of economic prosperity is far away from us. The dream for a better tomorrow hasnt come back again.Today, it matters to state that payer for freedom is a crime against human rights and dignity.

Let us go back to the past to understand the current situation of poverty Haiti.To get rid of slavery, we were forced to pay France. Otherwise,we would be still living in slavery. As priest, a servant of God, a shepherd of the sheep, when I look at France today, I see a rich country being built with money from Haiti. I see the happiness in the eyes of each French, at the same time I see the sadness in the eyes of each Haitian. I see food on the table of each French, yet I see misery in streets of Haiti. The extreme misery implanted by France has kicked millions of Haitians into the ground. This must be taught in all Haitian schools. From generation to generation, the children need to know the reason Haiti isthe poorest country in American hemisphere. Does a French man or woman take time to realize that France is a First World country that has exploited a poor black country for a century? As a catholic priest, I decide not to forget and forgive France.

As we all know, we are living in a chaotic and dramatic socio-economic reality, which puts Haiti down for decades. Haitians are good and resilient people who have faced many struggles and challenges. France is booming, boosting its economy, creating new projects, new industry, and exporting billions yearly. Haiti, however, is moving backwards. Why Jean Pierre Boyer needed to turn over the riches of Haiti? It is obviousevery decision we take has consequences. For many reasons, I cannot blame Jean Pierre Boyer for having taken such a decision. In fact, I am wondering if Boyer was psychologically prepared to take such a decision, which later has economically destroyed our nation. I believe that the trauma of being enslaved pushed him to act in order to allow the Haitian people, from generation to generation, to live free. Yes, we are free, nevertheless we are known as one of the poorest countries in the world. From being victims to being survivors of slavery, it is a traumatic reality.

As I said, every decision making has consequences. From 1804 to 2020, where are we as a nation? We are paying for the decision of Jean Pierre Boyer. I believe that Haiti would be a great country like any European, Asian, or American country. After turning over the riches of Haiti to France, the country is living off of donations from other countries under a condition which forces it to always be under anothers control forever. I feel very sad saying that my country is living off of donations. It hurts me profoundly. I consider this as a modern slavery,like forinstance,we have the so-called Core Group formed by some embassies in Haiti. Needless to say, Haiti is being controlled by white people because they believe that a first black independent country in the world can be a threat. I want to say to all Haitians that charity, in any circumstance, will not be a blueprint to make Haiti an emerging country. It has neveroccurred in any other country. Also, wemustbear in mind that besides Haiti, no other country in the world was asked or forced to pay to get rid of slavery.

Due to this misery, we are always facing political turmoil because the Haitian government depends on donations to accomplish and complete its main projects. I am wondering if we are going to rely on donations forever. It is a big challenge since we lost our resources. The corruption is also a cancer in our society. We must fight against it. However, being an underdeveloped country is not a consequence of the corruption. I say this in order to bring you back to the root of our nations socioeconomic situation today. I have not lost hope. I dream of a new Haiti. It is possible. As of now, I am optimistic. We just need a hand to lift us up, while at the same time changing our mentality. It will not happen now. It will take time to recover from this dramatic socio-economic situation after Jean Pierre Boyer turned over our riches to France. As I stated above, we could be a great nation if we did not pay for

our freedom. May God Bless our poor nation.

Fr.MacelinJoseph,is a priest at theCongregation of the Immaculate Heart of Maryin Rio deJaniero,Brazil

The Haitian Times was founded in 1999 as a weekly English language newspaper based in Brooklyn, NY.The newspaper is widely regarded as the most authoritative voice for Haitian Diaspora.

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Fear of Recolonization pushed Jean Pierre Boyer to Turn Over Haiti's Riches to France - Haitian Times

I Attended the Firefly Gathering & Here’s What I Learned – Men’s Journal

Last summer, I decided to learn how to survive. Nothing too serious. Build a fire. Identify poisonous plants. Maybe hunt a small animal. I was never a Boy Scout, but Ive always had an ambient distrust of the modern world. I figured that having some survival skills might come in handy when things get bad a couple of decades from now. So I drove up from South Florida to a 940-acre farm just outside of Asheville, NC, to attend the Firefly Gathering, the countrys largest primitive technology festival. There, smiling New Age-types promised to teach and celebrate the spiritual and technical skills of our ancestors in order to live in harmony with the Earth. But beneath all their good vibes I could make out an ominous vision of the future.

I didnt expect them to be so right so soon.

On the campgrounds, I anticipated a lot of woo-woo earnestness. After all, this was a festival without electricity or running water, no internet and no smartphones. The crowd was filled with hippie types, armed with didgeridoos, wide eyes, and unrelenting positivity. But the festival was also attended by Christian homesteaders, blue-collar craftsmen, anarcho-primitivists towing around blonde, androgynous-looking children and yoga pants-wearing graduate students. Polite and cheery, they were like a support group for our dimming world. But they werent, in the traditional sense, preppers. The four-day festival was like if Mad Max was set in Canada. They preferred teepees to bomb shelters, hand-carved wooden spoons to assault rifles. Im an empath, a woman named Tara told me my first night, as tears slid down her cheeks. I can feel the Earths pain. I was quick to dismiss their alarmism. Things are bad, yes, but, at the time, I found their concerns to be exaggerated. Like they were trying to justify their quirky hobbies with a fantastical future.

When Firefly launched in 2007, 200 folks showed up. But in recent years, it has drawn more than a thousand people. Growing distress about the climate helps to explain the spike, said Marissa Percoco, Fireflys executive director. A portion of the people are motivated by fear, she said. They dont see modern society as a viable option. She first attended Firefly in 2010, when she was living off the grid, with her four children, near Chattanooga, TN. I taught a fermentation class, she said, and right away felt like I wasnt alone.

In 2019, Percocos team capped the number of attendees at 800, for a more intimate learning experience. The classes covered practical survival subjects, such as scythe techniques and how to butcher rabbits and make tools out of deer bone. Others were a bit more whimsical: herbal birth control, conversing with land spirits, plastic remediation meditation.

I couldnt resist some of the more peculiar classes. Symbiosis and the Ecology of Paradise was taught by a biologist named Lee Golos. Golos, who wore a bohemian poncho and was a dead ringer for pre-Islam Cat Stevens, explained that 150,000 years ago, humans and animals, including apex predators, lived in a paradise, thanks to an abundance of berries. We can return to this life, he said, if we embrace anarchism and permaculture. A woman asked whether, in this berry-eating utopia, friendly grizzly bears can nanny her children. Golos nodded, as if to say, Of course.

I took another class with an herbalist who called himself the Bush Ninja (his real name was Alex Howe). He led a class on ancient health remedies. For the class, he spread out an assortment of herbal medicines he procured while living in South Africa. They were all bitter and promised all kinds of cures. The Bush Ninja told us we need more bitter things in our lives. Weve saturated our diets with too much sweetness. One of the medicines was derived from the petrified piss of a gopher. It wasnt so bad.

The most intense class of the festival had me stuffed inside a tiny sweat lodge with 25 other semi-naked men and women. We huddled in darkness around a pit that held a dozen glowing, fire-soaked stones, our sweaty limbs rubbing up against each other. This class was supposed to get us in touch with our ancestors through suffering, but I could only think about how much oxygen we had left to breathe. The sweat lodge leader, Uncle Skee Strong Wind Pratt of the Pima tribe of Arizona, poured bowl after bowl of water over the rocks and hot vapor burned our lungs. I knew it was dangerous, but I felt I had to trust Uncle Skee. After 20 minutes, Uncle Skee opened the canvas flap, letting cool air, light, and relief flood into the hut. He invited us to pray or sing aloud. People said things about feeling the embrace of Mother Natures womb and sang about the love and presence of our ancestors. After about two hours we exited the hut. Everyone was covered in sweat-caked mud and we lined up to stare in each others eyes and then make a long embrace before we washed off in a cold stream nearby. What I wouldnt give now for the ability to hug a bunch of corny, sweaty strangers.

What I wouldnt give now for the ability to hug a bunch of corny, sweaty strangers.

I made sure to learn at least one practical skill. I attended a class on how to make a fire with a bow drill, an ancient technological upgrade from rubbing two sticks together. I failed again and again to get a blaze going. The spindle slipped out of the bow, or the embers died, or I burned my hand against the friction-hot wood. But the instructor, a large, shirtless boy just barely out of his teens, was patient. After an hour of rubbing, the coal turned red. I carefully packed it into some tinder and softly blew air into the smoldering matter I held in my hands. Smoke spiraled from the embers and a fire emerged. I held the flame in front of me like an offering and the young instructor let out a primal whoop. You did it! He shouted. It was the first thing Ive ever made using only the Earth. Ive hated everything Ive ever written, but I was proud of that little fire.

A woodworker named Marc Kessler led a class on how to make hand-hewn wood beams. I missed his class because I was too busy sampling rodent pee, but had a chance to chat with him over a fire. He sported a buckskin jacket he made himself. He told me I could live on $4,400 a year. We pray for the apocalypse every day, he told me. Something has got to change. Were screwing it all up.

When I left Firefly, my skepticism was still intact. I doubted the practicality or need of many of these skills in some imagined end-of-world scenario. Now, however, the virus has changed all that. These people were ahead of the curve. This virus is a soft apocalypse. A dress rehearsal for whats to come. And these festival-goers have not just the technical knowledge needed to survive, but something even more importanthope for a kind future.

This years Firefly Gathering has been cancelled, and its a shame because I would most certainly attend. I remember there being a class that taught which plants are safe to use in place of toilet paper.

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I Attended the Firefly Gathering & Here's What I Learned - Men's Journal

Bouncing forward: what does a society that takes care of everyone look like? – Positive.News

The pandemic has brought ideas such as universal basic income into the mainstream, but how might they work in practice?

The New Zealand government won international plaudits for its handling of the Covid-19 crisis. Acting swiftly and taking strict measures such as closing borders have helped to keep the death toll from the coronavirus at just 22.

Perhaps coincidentally, New Zealand is also one of a handful of Wellbeing Economy Governments a group of countries that share expertise on how to put the health and wellbeing of people and the natural world alongside economic growth as the aim of policy making. Other members of the partnership include Scotland, Wales and Iceland.

Politicians making mental health a priority, or pushing access to parks as an important issue, may seem radically different to the status quo but unprecedented crises call for new solutions.

According to Stewart Wallis, the chair of the Wellbeing Economy Alliance, a global network promoting change in economic systems, the coronavirus crisis has created a major opportunity for leaders to shift focus away from just growth and onto wellbeing measures.

Speaking at a recent roundtable discussion, he added that many more countries are set to join the alliance. Theres public support, too: in the UK, a YouGov poll in May found that 60 per cent of respondents want the government to prioritise health and wellbeing of citizens ahead of economic growth after the pandemic has subsided.

What might that look like in practice? One idea thats moving from fringes to the mainstream is universal basic income, whereby base payments are made to every citizen in the country, regardless of their employment or financial status. With governments covering the wages of millions of furloughed people, such a radical measure no longer seems out of reach.

In May, researchers at the University of Helsinki published a long-awaited report examining the results of a basic income trial in Finland. Running throughout 2017 and 2018, the study tracked 2,000 unemployed people aged 25-58 who received a basic income of 560 (495) per month.

The results: the wellbeing of people receiving the basic income was better than those in the control group. A survey at the end of the study showed that the test group had fewer health problems, lower stress levels and could concentrate better. Some participants took the opportunity to spend more time caring for loved ones or volunteering.

Although the Finland trial is not without criticism, its findings have added more weight to a swelling argument in favour of a basic income. What will start to be asked [after the pandemic] is what happens next time? This isnt going to be the last crisis, says Malcolm Torry, an economist and chair of the Citizens Basic Income Trust, which argues for basic income. There arent many answers, but citizens basic income is one of them.

Torry has the unenviable job of pouring through all the tax and welfare codes to simulate a hypothetical, revenue-neutral basic income that would be paid to everyone (some people would continue to receive existing benefits). The magic figure? 60 per week.

Its not going to change peoples lives overnight, he admits. The top earners probably wouldnt be any better off because they would be paying more tax and the tax-free threshold would have to come down, he adds. But under his modelling, low-income households could benefit to the tune of several hundred pounds a month. He adds: Its a limited piece of utopia that would actually work. The real answer is that until we try it, we wont know.

Its a limited piece of utopia that would actually work

According to a report published in May by the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA), the current welfare system in the UK is highly unlikely to survive the coronavirus crisis. Dr Stephen Davies, head of education at the IEA, argues that the crisis will strengthen support for a universal basic income and could provide the impetus for radical change.

The crisis has opened the door for other bold steps to help the most vulnerable in society, too. After an estimated 90 per cent of rough sleepers were housed in hotels or temporary accommodation during the lockdown, charities and campaigners have been putting pressure on government to seize the opportunity to keep people off the streets long-term.

Jeremy Gray, CEO of homelessness charity Evolve Housing, says the pandemic has shown whats possible, with a bit of will and money and people working together. He highlights the governments rough sleeping taskforce as a sign of positive change. Announced in May, the group is being led by Dame Louise Casey, who helped reduce rough sleeping by two thirds between 1999 and 2001. It worked then and theres no reason it cant work again, says Gray.

Organisations such as Evolve Housing, which offers accommodation alongside services to meet other needs of people experiencing homelessness, are well placed to provide longer-term support. However, Gray says, the challenge is capacity.

Some towns have taken matters into their own hands. Northamptons Single Homelessness Forum is working with landlords to find permanent homes for the 90 people it moved into hotels. The aim, according to its chair Reverend Sue Faulkner, is to make sure that no-one will fall through the cracks.

In social care, another sector struggling from years of chronic underfunding, the crisis has highlighted the invaluable contribution of its workers. Ruth Hannan, transform programme manager at the RSA, a leading arts charity, points to organisations such as Shared Lives, Community Circles and Wellbeing Teams for examples of social care that allow people using the services not just to survive, but thrive.

Wellbeing Teams, for example, takes its cue from the successful Buurtzorg scheme in the Netherlands, where nurses work in self-managed teams to improve the home care they offer to people. These organisations are already showing ways forward that allow even the most marginalised and vulnerable in society to live better.

What does a society with wellbeing at its heart look like? Here are some examples of positive policy

Future generations

A bill currently in parliament would force businesses and public bodies to protect the interests of young people and citizens of tomorrow. The Wellbeing of Future Generations bill also aims to establish a Commissioner for Future Generations for the whole of the UK, building on the successes of Sophie Howe, who holds the position in Wales.

Mental health

The New Zealand government made improving the nations mental health a key spending priority in its first wellbeing budget, released in 2019. Some NZ$1.9bn (960m) was allocated for mental health, including funding for new treatment facilities and for its Housing First programme to tackle homelessness.

Green spaces

Making sure people have easy access to nature and green spaces is a common feature of wellbeing-first policies. In Utrecht, Netherlands, authorities committed to improving ecoystsems in the city and saw a 24 per cent rise in green space per household as a result. Mapping green spaces confirmed they were easily accessible from anywhere in the city.

Main image: Thiago CerqueiraIllustrations: Stephen Cheetham

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Bouncing forward: what does a society that takes care of everyone look like? - Positive.News

Will virtual learning be better this fall? Will it be better enough? – Inside Higher Ed

Whether they like it or not -- most of them don't, and some of them are still insisting it's not the case -- I'm convinced that the vast majority of American colleges and universities are headed toward a mostly or entirely virtual fall. Those that don't start out that way will, as they did in the spring, have to pivot. COVID-19 will almost certainly demand it.

Early in April, about three weeks after most colleges physically closed their campuses because of the coronavirus, I (with trepidation) wrote a column headlined "Preparing for a Fall Without In-Person Classes."

At the time, most college officials I contacted weren't prepared to talk publicly about the possibility that the coronavirus could keep their campuses shuttered in the fall. It's not that they weren't thinking about it; they just didn't want to freak out students, parents and their own colleagues by conjecturing about a scenario most of them dreaded.

My conversations with those officials led me to posit three things in that April column:

Almost four months later, we find ourselves here. With each passing day, more and more colleges reverse the plans they originally announced in April or May (as incoming students were deciding whether and where to enroll and submit their deposits) to bring significant portions of students and employees back to their campuses this fall. Yes, some continue to say that they plan for a physical reopening, and some may even believe it themselves. But as the COVID-19 spread continues, I believe few will actually do so.

Which means most instructors and students will find themselves in a remote environment they overwhelmingly found to be dissatisfactory last spring, as numerous surveys have shown. Colleges have spent significant time and money in recent months trying to bolster their ability to offer (more) effective virtual learning, recognizing that even if they brought some or many students back to campus, some learners (and some instructors) would need to participate remotely.

Questions abound:

Will it work? Will the quality of the learning experience be better this fall than it was last spring? Will it be enough better to satisfy student (and parent!) expectations?

Or are the elements of the experience that students said they missed most -- classroom engagement, interaction with professors, socializing with other students -- difficult if not impossible to inject into online learning in ways that can satisfy students and parents?

I solicited perspectives from an array of people, including some advocates for online education and some haters.

Their consensus: virtual instruction will be better this fall than it was last spring, because colleges have invested heavily in faculty training and in improved technology (though many spent, and possibly squandered, countless dollars and hours reconfiguring campus classrooms and training professors to prepare their courses for both in-person and virtual delivery).

But fundamentally, students and parents will find the experience wanting, because it can't possibly meet their expectations for the socialization that they most want from a college education.

***

Students and professors were generally dissatisfied with their emergency remote learning experience last spring.

Among the reasons:

In recent months, colleges and universities have invested enormous amounts of money, time and energy into trying to improve the quality of the online learning they deliver this fall.

Quantifying that investment isn't easy. Up to half of the federal funds that colleges received through the CARES Act -- the portion they weren't required to allocate to students -- was restricted to "cover any costs associated with significant changes to the delivery of instruction."

Many colleges used it to invest in new teaching tools and in faculty training. A survey of college online learning leaders released last week by Quality Matters and Eduventures found that slightly more than half of colleges were requiring faculty members teaching online this fall to participate in training, while most others were making it optional. The quality of that training surely varied from institution to institution.

Individual colleges have expanded their own training through their teaching and learning centers, and others have turned to national professional groups like the Online Learning Consortium and Quality Matters as well as vendors for help. As just one example, Deb Adair, president of Quality Matters, says her group has provided paid training to nearly twice as many faculty members thus far this year than it did in 2019 (21,840 versus 11,310).

But numbers alone don't tell the story, Adair says. "A lot of the people in these courses are the ones who said, 'I'll never teach online,' but a lot of them have a good attitude," she says. "They know this is happening, they care about their students, and many of them want to be online in the fall, because they don't want the health risks" of being in the physical classroom.

Still, many struggle, she says. "A lot of them are not competent in the online space, and they feel it, they know it. They have a lot of expertise that now probably feels less relevant because they can't figure out how to get it across."

"There has never been this kind of investment in pedagogy in American higher education in my lifetime," says Jos Antonio Bowen, author of Teaching Naked and a frequent speaker at faculty professional development institutes. "There are unprecedented levels of faculty uptake -- they want to be better at this and want to learn. I'm getting good questions I never would have had from the curmudgeons."

Surpassing a 'Low Bar'

Will that training and several months of preparation result in better teaching than last spring?

"Im confident it will be better than spring 2020 -- a low bar," acknowledges Seth Matthew Fishman, assistant dean for curriculum and assessment at Villanova University's College of Liberal Arts & Sciences. Faculty members will have had more prep time, so fewer should fumble to push the right buttons technologically, and many should be more confident than they were in the spring.

Most trainings will have focused on both technology use and effective pedagogical practices, so "the use of technology will be a little better, and most professors should have some new active learning and other techniques that work well online," says Bowen, a senior scholar at the Association of American Colleges & Universities and former president of Goucher College. Some colleges may encourage faculty members to use course templates so students know where to find key resources or academic help no matter which course they're in, says Adair.

The degree of improvement will depend, of course, on how effectively colleges have prepared for the fall, says Whitney Kilgore, co-founder and chief academic officer at iDesign, which helps colleges design online academic programs.

"Whether we like it or not, this is what we are going to do."

"For institutions that have done the planning, laid the groundwork for the fall and taken time to provide training for faculty and proper supports for fall, the quality should be improved in a number of different ways," she says. "Courses will be better structured, and the cadence of assignments and assessments will be clearer so students know what's expected."

Professors' communication with and feedback for students should also be significantly better, Kilgore says. Rather than just getting on Zoom and talking to students, or red-lining a written submission, a good training might have shown professors how they can use the rubrics in a learning management system like Canvas to "give students more detailed granular feedback," or to use a voice feedback tool to supplement written comments on a student's paper so he or she can "hear and understand your intent."

"Something small like that humanizes feedback in a way thats deeply meaningful to students" and partially responds to the many students who say they yearn for more interaction and connection with instructors.

'Whether We Like It or Not'

Even some professors who once fell into the "I'll never teach online" camp that Adair described above say they've learned things this summer that could improve their courses this fall.

"The two most useful parts of the training for me were learning how to do stuff in Canvas and how to use Google Suite," says Peter C. Herman, an English professor at San Diego State University whose Inside Higher Ed essay last month, "Online Learning Is Not the Future," summed up his students' views of the transition to remote learning this way: "They hated it." (Herman wasn't shy about saying he did, too.)

And yet, like most other professors, he will be teaching again virtually this fall (San Diego State is part of the 23-campus California State University system, which was among the first universities in the country to say it would remain remote). "To my mind, there is no doubt that online education has very, very significant drawbacks," he says. "But whether we like it or not, this is what we are going to do."

Herman wasn't a complete technophobe before March's forced pivot online; in previous years he asked students to write short blog posts in Blackboard about readings before class discussions, and he had their peers to respond to those posts, "all completely independent of me."

When "everything blew up" last spring, Herman's focus was on "making the online class as close to the experience of a traditional face-to-face classroom as possible," he says, leaning heavily as many professors did on synchronous discussions via Zoom. (Herman will "not do the asynchronous thing" -- posting "video of me giving a lecture that students can access whenever they feel like it," he says -- "because it completely eradicates the one-to-one connection that students value.")

Herman is going to try to make his courses better in the fall, though, he says: "I'll try to take advantage of certain opportunities that are open to me through Canvas [San Diego State is switching from Blackboard] and Google Suites to make the learning experience better, more effective for the student."

For instance, instead of telling students in his introduction to literature course, "you go off and do this writing on your own," he plans to split the students into groups and have them collaborate on "creating a document on this problem or that problem in literature," to tap into the "sort of collaboration and community building" that such technology tools enable.

"I can't tell you whether I'll be successful in that, and it's possible that this experiment will fail miserably," Herman says.

***

Most learning experts interviewed for this column are far less worried about the possibility that professors' pedagogical experimentation in virtual learning will fail than that there won't be nearly enough of it. They also fear that some colleges and universities may have set their instructors up for failure by focusing on a physical return to campus.

Bowen says he was distressed that so many institutions invested so much time and energy into encouraging professors to build "flex" courses that could be delivered to students in person as well as virtually -- and by instructors remotely as well as in person.

"Most of the summer stress and activity has been about the 'flex,'" he says. "That's basically building two courses rather than one, and it's a very hard thing for faculty to do -- it was not going to be done well."

And "if your investment this summer was in Plexiglas [in the physical classroom] and streaming your faculty in remotely," says Kilgore of iDesign, "you were probably investing in the wrong thing."

Jessica Rowland Williams, director of Every Learner Everywhere, has a different worry. Her organization focuses on the use of technology to improve learning for first-generation and other students historically underserved by colleges and universities, and she acknowledges that disadvantaged students on balance struggled more than their peers with the shift to remote learning -- given inconsistent access to computers and high-speed internet, greater likelihood of having caregiving or work responsibilities, and lesser access to quiet and comfortable places to study.

That doesn't, however, mean that online learning is by definition a worse option for those students, as some educators suggest, Williams says. "What we have to do instead is actually design learning experiences for the students that are struggling, that we have not served well in the past.

"If we design a course for students who have internet, and students who didnt have internet did much worse, it's not those students' fault -- it's ours," she says. "Whereas if I told you you need to design a course for students with no internet access, you would design the course very differently. That's how we need to think."

That will not be easy work, she says. "We have to acknowledge that we've never it gotten it right in the hundreds of years we've been educating people -- we're certainly not going to in four months this summer In moving things online, we've essentially digitized the discrimination, all the other things in the classroom" that make first-generation and low-income students and students of color struggle, Williams says.

Undoing that will be a challenge, but also a "fantastic opportunity," Williams says. Marginalized students most need the sorts of things that all students say they want (and missed this spring) in their virtual learning: one-on-one engagement, clear communication, mentorship, a sense of belonging.

So if "you intentionally design [learning experiences] for the marginalized student, you're not somehow leaving out the other students," Williams says, "you're building something that all students say they want. It starts with listening to your students, not making assumptions about what they need, and finding a way to understand their perspective."

***

Another possibility is that there may be no way for colleges and instructors to meet the expectations of students and parents.

"Learning will improve this fall, after all of the investment colleges made, but I do not think it will translate into more satisfaction," says Bowen of AAC&U. "When you send your kids to college, you know that you're paying for networking and socialization and other things. Parents say, 'You've transformed my son and daughter,' and we take credit for it.

"If your investment this summer was in Plexiglas [in the physical classroom] and streaming your faculty in remotely, you were probably investing in the wrong thing."

"Now, we're stripping away so much of the growth that happens in the friction outside of classes, and people are going to demand more evidence of learning because the other stuff has vanished." (In the near term, colleges are facing significant expectations from parents to lower the cost of tuition, for what they view as a product or service that is "less than." (Another whole conversation, for another day, exists around whether and how colleges and universities are preparing to replicate or approximate virtually the much wider range of socializing and bonding experiences that residential colleges relish in providing.)

Noel Radomski, senior policy analyst at the Center for Research on College-Workforce Transitions and a longtime official at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, suggests students and parents should adjust their expectations for the changed circumstances around them, just as they have in other aspects of their lives.

"You go to a restaurant now, and yes, we know we can't do everything like we used to, and you probably don't like them as much, and you hope they will change soon," says Radomski. "But why do they think we can create an environment where everyone is safe any more than any of these other organizations in our society can? Do they think we can outsmart COVID-19?"

Radomski's comment is a reminder that as is true in just about every aspect of our lives right now, no matter how good or bad we have it, there is rarely a great option, let alone an ideal one. (I write this from a position of significant privilege, I fully acknowledge.) That's true for colleges, higher ed employees and students and families alike, weighing the pros and cons of continued remote learning versus the risks and rewards of a certainly diminished form of learning in socially distanced classrooms on campuses.

Herman, the San Diego State professor, summed up this landscape as you'd expect a literature professor might: quoting writers. Early in our conversation, as we discuss the spring's emergency remote learning, he cited a line from a Robert Frost poem to cast aspersions on online education compared to its in-person counterpart: "What to make of a diminished thing?"

Near the end of our discussion, as he talked about the work he has done to improve his courses for the fall as part of his obligation as an educator, he channeled Sir Thomas More from Utopia. "What you cannot turn to good, you must at least make as little bad as you can," Herman says.

"Thats what we are all trying to do," he adds, and that might just be the best we can expect this fall.

Read the original:

Will virtual learning be better this fall? Will it be better enough? - Inside Higher Ed

How Black Lives Matter went from a hashtag to a global rallying cry – CNN

It was July 2013 and George Zimmerman was on trial for murder in the killing of Trayvon Martin, a 17-year-old Black boy who had been walking in his father's Florida neighborhood. The night the verdict was set to be announced, Alicia Garza and some friends gathered for drinks.

That night Garza woke up in the middle of the night crying. So she began writing out how she felt, in an emotional Facebook post. She wrote that she continued to be surprised "at how little Black lives matter."

"That's really what Black Lives Matter was for me," Garza told MSNBC. "And that's why I said Black people, I love you. I love us. And that our lives matter. And that we matter. And that Black lives matter."

The phrase "Black lives matter" inspired Garza's friend, Patrisse Cullors, to create a hashtag. Almost instantly, it went viral.

"I wanted it to go viral," Cullors, who co-founded Black Lives Matter with Garza and Opal Tometi, told CNN.

"On July 15th, 2013 I said that Alicia and I had created a thing called #BlackLivesMatter and we hope that it will be bigger than we can ever imagine," Cullors said. "Over the last seven years we've developed more infrastructure and we've become more organized."

Momentum around the movement has grown amid calls for justice following the deaths of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor and George Floyd.

The phrase "Black Lives Matter" is being used now as more than just a hashtag -- it's a rallying cry. At protests, it's what many demonstrators write on their signs or chant as they march. Online, it's what many have used to spread the message against police brutality. And globally, it's being used by many to show solidarity with Black people.

While many believe the movement is more accepted than it once was, others remain skeptical of what it accomplishes and question its impact.

Here's what you need to know about the evolution of the movement, and why it matters.

Growth of a movement

Black Lives Matter is one of the most well-known organizations fighting for the well-being of Black people.

"We live in a country built to keep us away from these resources that we need," said Kailee Scales, managing director of the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation.

"Folks in the movement have been consistently fighting to reverse that trend, to raise awareness that this is not the way we're supposed to live," Scales told CNN.

Since the hashtag launched, the organization has become more formalized, taken on specific branding and branched out into nationwide chapters -- all in an attempt to solidify the group and allow them to create national campaigns while engaging the broader community.

Organizers put together a website, which led to the development of local chapters of BLM, first in Los Angeles in 2013 and then throughout the country, according to Scales.

After the protests in Ferguson, Missouri, against police brutality in 2014, the organization became more well known. In 2017 it became incorporated as the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation, Inc.

Today the network consists of 13 official chapters in the US, plus three more in Canada, according to the BLM website. Local chapters are semi-autonomous, meaning they "do the work that makes sense" for their communities, Scales said.

The structure allows the group to have an impact at all levels -- doing work both nationally and locally, she said. Each chapter works a little differently and has different focuses, depending on community needs.

The Chicago chapter, for example, focuses more on police accountability, while the Boston chapter does a lot of activity around mutual aid, Scales said.

The group has called for defunding the police for at least five years, Black Lives Matter Los Angeles co-founder Melina Abdullah told CNN. The most recent push began in May, and at the time the chapter had little support from local politicians.

After George Floyd's killing, however, the group gained momentum and received some support from a few members of the Los Angeles City Council.

And there is more work to be done, Abdullah said.

"(We) never thought that that (amount) was anywhere near enough," she told CNN. "But it's a step forward that we forced."

The different chapters are bound by a set of guiding principles, which work to ground the individual entities.

But they also work together. Chapters tend to work across state lines, Abdullah told CNN. When the BLM chapter in South Bend, Indiana, was getting started, Abdullah said the group worked closely with BLMLA -- specifically comparing notes on the terms of mayors Pete Buttigieg and Eric Garcetti.

It's worth noting that not every protest or demonstration is part of the Black Lives Matter network, as some may be organized by people simply using the movement's name. And not every person attending a BLM protest is a part of their local BLM chapter.

The movement is largely decentralized, with no one besides managing director Scales receiving pay, said Abdullah, who also works as a professor at California State University in Los Angeles.

Chapters tend to have a loose leadership structure, with a focus on on-the-ground organizing -- allowing chapters the autonomy to organize in the way they see fit.

Until George Floyd's death, Abdullah said BLMLA had only raised $100,000 in the last seven years, money that it used for "the basic cost of organizing," things like renting rooms, making copies, printing banners and hiring unarmed security. They also try to provide limited support to families who lose members to police brutality, like aiding with funeral costs, which Abdullah said can sometimes run up to $20,000.

And unless money is earmarked specifically for the local chapters, money donated through the main network goes to the larger global network, Abdullah said. Chapters can ask for a little money from the national organization, but it's not always a significant amount, she said.

But with donations streaming in after Floyd's death, BLMLA has more money than it has ever had.

"We're stepping back to take a minute and process what we should be doing with the newfound money that we've never had before," she said.

'All Lives Matter' and other backlash

With more notoriety comes more scrutiny, and the Black Lives Matter movement has experienced its fair share of criticism.

Many have condemned the more progressive demands of the cause, most notably the call to defund the police, which would instead invest those funds in communities, especially marginalized ones where much of the policing occurs.

Others have called the movement too radical.

Still, Michael Kazin, who studies social movements at Georgetown University, said it's surprising that the movement hasn't received more backlash. He said it's the first time in history that a movement focused on Black equality has seen this kind of support from White people.

"Even in the '60s, with the (March on Washington), polls at the time never had more than 15, 20% support among Whites," Kazin, who is also the co-editor of the democratic-socialist publication Dissent Magazine, told CNN.

"We're seeing huge crowds in little cities, or even where there's hardly any Black people," Kazin said. "That's new. That didn't happen in the '60s, or even in 2013."

Why people are rallying behind BLM

Even large corporations and brands, which may have been silent in the past, are getting involved.

With the rise of social media in the 2010s, images showing police brutality against Black people have reached a much wider audience. Now a whole generation has grown up exposed to the issue of systemic racism.

Or, as Minneapolis community organizer Shanene Herbert put it, the trauma.

More people are demanding change. And BLM has been a big motivator in that shift.

Mary Westbrook, who lives in Philadelphia and participated in the city's protests in June, told CNN that she felt it was important for her to support the movement.

"I've lived in this city for 16 years," the 38-year-old told CNN in a Twitter message in June. "I am a children's librarian at the library right there on the Parkway (which is why I know the area and streets there really well). I see every day what black and other POC are dealing with in this city."

In the last seven years, BLM activists have made their message mainstream, according to Marcia Chatelain, author of "Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America."

"There's been a shift in the public and a willingness to engage with their ideas," Chatelain, an American studies professor at Georgetown University, told CNN.

For example, she said, "people are willing to take a second to understand what defunding the police and prison abolition are all about."

What the future holds

When asked what she hopes for BLM's future, co-founder Cullors said she knows the movement will win.

"I know this because our work is full of love, healing and dignity," she said. "And we center Black people's humanity and life over our death and decimation."

The task isn't an easy one. Kazin, the Georgetown professor, pointed out that the BLM movement is about power -- having power to decide how policing will look, or having power to access quality education.

BLM signs in windows, anti-racist reading lists -- all these things are good, Kazin said. But unless they are coupled with a true shift in power and larger political solidarity efforts, little will change.

Still, people are listening now. And Scales, like Cullors, is optimistic.

"At this point, we don't stop," she said. "We're not able to relax. It's now the opportunity to push for the true transformation that we've been working for."

CNN's Christina Zdanowicz contributed to this report.

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How Black Lives Matter went from a hashtag to a global rallying cry - CNN

From the renegade to Black Lives Matter how Black creators are changing TikTok culture. – NBC News

In early June, Erynn Chambers stepped onto her porch, just outside the front door of her North Carolina home, opened TikTok on her phone, and began to film herself.

"Black neighborhoods are overpoliced, so of course they have higher rates of crime," she sang to her own tune. "And white perpetrators are undercharged, so of course they have lower rates of crime."

Chambers, 27, who started using the short-form video app during quarantine, had just watched a TikTok by drag queen Online Kyne discussing the manipulation of statistics to make Black Americans appear more violent. Chambers, an elementary school music teacher, set her frustration to music.

"It went viral pretty much overnight," Chambers said. "It was incredible."

Chambers refers to her content, made under the user name @Rynnstar, as "edu-tainment" education and entertainment and she uses it, in part, to raise awareness of the American Black experience. She's one of a number of Black creators on TikTok who have used the app as a platform for advocacy against racism. Chambers' post has nearly 2 million views and was reposted countless times.

But TikTok sits uneasily at the intersection of viral social media, celebrity and activism. The platform has long been accused of elevating white voices over Black voices. While Black creators have been integral to the rise of TikTok some of the most popular dances, challenges and trends were born in the imaginations of Black TikTokers their work hasn't always gotten the same level of attention as that of their white peers.

Black creators said that their content wasn't highlighted on the "For You" page at the same rate as that of their white peers and that their videos have been taken down and audio-disabled without explanation, and experts say they often don't get credit for trends and challenges they start.

Over the last few months, however, in the wake of the deaths of George Floyd in police custody in May and Breonna Taylor in March, TikTok has made some forays into elevating Black creators on the app. Yet some worry that there's a flip side to the elevation of activism: burnout.

In early June, just days before Chambers' viral video was posted, TikTok posted an apology to its Black creators, saying it was sorry to those "who have felt unsafe, unsupported, or suppressed." TikTok promised long-term action to make the platform more diverse and to elevate Black creators. The apology came after a TikTok Blackout in May, an on-app protest against the suppression of Black voices, as protests against police brutality and racism took place worldwide.

Since then, some users of TikTok, including many Black creators, have reported seeing a more diverse and inclusive "For You" page, TikTok's infinite scroll homepage, which feeds users a constant stream of videos. In the past, the "For You" page has been accused of what might be called infinite whiteness.

But grading the app's move toward inclusiveness and how successfully it's amplifying Black voices differs across content creators. Some say they are optimistic that a more inclusive TikTok is in the works; others describe the battle for representation as simply exhausting. Each of the half-dozen Black TikTok creators who spoke to NBC News said they've experienced burnout but some, who say they are tired of arguing with followers and fighting for representation, are considering leaving the app altogether.

One frustration that can lead to burnout is the lack of credit given to Black creators who originate trends on the app, said University of Southern California assistant journalism professor Allissa Richardson, author of "Bearing Witness While Black: African Americans, Smartphones and the New Protest #Journalism."

"I saw a ton of Black youth creators complaining that even though they made up these dance challenges, they were increasingly being pushed to the bottom of the search results on TikTok," Richardson said.

Most famous is the renegade, a dance phenomenon that helped propel white creators like Charli D'Amelio to over 70 million followers. It was created by a Black 14-year-old named Jalaiah Harmon. Although the trend was, for a time, the most popular on the app, Jalaiah was recognized only toward the end of the trend's life cycle by mainstream media and TikTok alike, garnering profiles in the The New York Times and Teen Vogue. She now has over 1 million followers on TikTok.

TikTok isn't the only social media platform to have come under scrutiny over its handling of race. YouTube, Twitter and Reddit have been accused of allowing hate speech to thrive.

"TikTok is acknowledging the problem. They're not saying it's not real. They're saying we have work to do," said Bria Jones, 26, a fashion, beauty and lifestyle TikTok influencer based in Kansas. Jones, who goes by @HeyBriaJones on the app, has grown a base of more than 278,000 followers in just under a year.

Mutale Nkonde, a fellow at Stanford University's Digital Civil Society Lab who is a member of TikTok's independent advisory board, the Content Advisory Council (she doesn't work for TikTok), said she has been impressed with TikTok's proactiveness in addressing racism on the app.

"They're really leading in terms of seeking out people who will push back against the technology when the technology is not doing right by Black people," Nkonde said.

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The issues of racial bias and content suppression of Black creators on TikTok reached a boiling point on May 19, when Black TikTok creators held a Blackout to uplift their content and raise awareness that their videos were underrepresented.

During the Blackout, users changed their profile pictures to the Black Lives Matter raised first. Black creators used specific hashtags like "#ImBlackMovement" and posted videos about their content and experiences on TikTok. In solidarity, some white creators agreed not to post content to help amplify their Black counterparts.

June 1 brought the TikTok apology.

TikTok CEO Kevin Mayer, along with some of the app's engineers, also held a video conference last month with around a dozen Black creators, including Jones, to learn more about their experiences.

"I do feel like they are making changes," Jones said. Other Black creators said they're noticing more equality on the app, too.

High school activist Deonna Blocker, 17, who goes by @Deesymone on the app, estimates that she now sees 70 percent Black creators on her "For You" page and 30 percent white creators. However, because every user's "For You" page is different based on the content a user interacts with, it's unclear whether any other user is being shown the same breakdown of content.

"I think they're definitely doing a better job at presenting Black creators. Before ... my ['For You' page] was very white, and I would very rarely see a Black creator," Deonna said. "Once everything went down with George Floyd and even Juneteenth and the Blackouts ... it went up significantly." Deonna's videos calling out racism and highlighting Blackouts have gotten thousands of views.

Improvement can be creator-specific: TikTok's "For You" homepage feeds each user a unique stream of content. While some Black creators say they're seeing changes noticing more engagement and increases in followers others say they believe they're shadow banned on the app, or blocked from reaching the main TikTok feed without any kind of notification from TikTok.

TikTok told NBC News it unequivocally does not shadow ban users.

Nkonde, the advisory council member, said the app has also told her it doesn't engage in shadow banning. But she said that if shadow banning still occurs as a glitch in the system, it must be addressed.

"If your app is just going to have all of these glitches and all of these glitches impact Black people, your app is still racist," Nkonde said.

Emily Barbour, 25, who is @emuhhhleebee on the app, said she feels as though she's being gaslighted when she's told that the app is working to highlight Black creators. Some videos Barbour has posted that she felt would typically get high levels of engagement have hardly made a blip on the radar of other TikTokers.

"It's exhausting, because it's just following along this pattern that's been going on for decades, years, centuries, where Black people aren't being heard and everybody's pretending it's not happening," Barbour said.

Chambers, who created the viral song, had used her platform to convey a wealth of information, from linguistics to history to activism, long before this spring's Black Lives Matter protests. But Chambers said that after the May Blackout and the June apology, she noticed that her account was starting to pick up traction. Her account has more than 400,000 followers.

Other TikTokers, like Jones, moved toward activism after Floyd's death.

"I started speaking on Black lives, and I started speaking on my experiences, and I started this series where I talked about my experiences with microaggressions, and that went very, very viral and brought in a lot of new followers for me, and those were just straight up stories I experienced," Jones said.

Jones said she shifted her TikTok's focus to include education when she interacted with followers who told her they had changed their behavior after learning from her.

But a large following can be excessively demanding.

"When you've got 400,000 people who want to hear you and are expecting to hear from you, it can be exhausting," Chambers said.

All of the creators who spoke to NBC News said they have experienced burnout at one point or another especially those whose pages have been elevated and whose follower counts have skyrocketed.

"People assume because you're willing to speak up about something, you're now an ambassador to everybody else in your demographic, and it's not true. ... It does contribute a lot to the burnout, because I don't know everything. Not one of us knows everything," Barbour said.

Barbour said that for Black creators, sharing their trauma in the name of education can feel draining and that having to argue with followers about their experiences can lead them to want to quit altogether.

"It's so unrealistic to assume because you like this Black creator and because they speak up about these things that they're going to speak up about everything and give their opinions about everything," she said. "It can't work, especially considering this is an app and it's something we're not getting paid for."

Frustration and burnout aren't the only side effects Black creators experience when their content isn't elevated and they're not given credit for their work, said Richardson, the journalism professor.

"For some of these kids, they do want to have that level of clout that will enable them to do other things that they love," she said. "And without that necessary audience, those eyeballs, without that metric in place to prove that they are an influencer, they're denied the lucrative endorsements that maybe their white peers receive more regularly."

Jones said she believes a more equitable TikTok is coming, particularly after the meeting with other Black creators and TikTok executives last month.

"It's a difficult issue, because it's so much deeper than an algorithm," Jones said. "It's a society thing. It's going to take a lot of work."

TikTok executives told Jones that they planned to check in with the creators who were invited to the meeting after 90 days to discuss whether they've seen improvements in the app's equity.

Jones said she's optimistic that the future of TikTok is one in which Black creators are on a level playing field with their white counterparts.

"It will come in time. I don't know what that timeline's going to look like, but I'm very hopeful TikTok has the resources and brainpower on their team to make this happen," she said.

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From the renegade to Black Lives Matter how Black creators are changing TikTok culture. - NBC News

Suspects ID’d in theft, vandalism of Black Lives Matter signs – The Salem News

Police in Wenham and Marblehead say they have identifiedsuspects in the thefts and vandalism of Black Lives Matter signs in those communities.

Wenham Town Administrator Anthony Ansaldi told the Board of SelectmenTuesday night that police received a call about a theft in progress on Saturday night and that officers apprehended two suspects, according to an online recording of the meeting.

Deputy police Chief Kevin DiNapoli, who was one of the responding officers, told selectmen that an investigation tied the suspects to two previous incidents of stolen Black Lives Matter signs. Police are also investigating a fourth incident, he said.

"It may end up being a total of four cases," DiNapoli told selectmen. He said police were working with the Essex District Attorney's office to determine what charges to file.Ansaldi told selectmen that the suspects were not from Wenham.

DiNapoli did not return a message seeking more information. Carrie Kimball, a spokeswoman for the DA's office, said the suspects were not arrested, but said police have submitted an application for a criminal complaint in Ipswich District Court. Kimball said the complaint would not be made public unless or until the clerk issues a criminal complaint.

In Marblehead, police posted a message on the department's Facebook page saying they had concluded their investigation into the vandalism of a Black Lives Matter banner at the Unitarian Universalist Church. The message said the matter has been referred to the clerk magistrate of the Lynn District Court, who will determine if there is probable cause for a criminal complaint to be issued.

Marblehead police Chief Robert Picariello said he had nothing further to say beyond the department's Facebook post.

The incident occurred on June 28 at the church on Mugford Street. Police released a video showing a man walking up to the area where a Black Lives Matter banner was hung, crouching over, and then walking away. Police did not release details of the damage to the sign.

In Beverly, police are still investigating the theft of a Black Lives Matter flag from a flagpole outside City Hall on Cabot Street overnight on July 4 or 5. Police Chief John LeLacheur said Wednesday that police have interviewed several people but had no new information to release.

The incidents in Beverly and Marblehead sparked a protest outside Beverly City Hall on Tuesday, where about 75 people gathered for two hours to listen to speakers. Protest organizers said they plan to return to Beverly City Hall on Friday at 4 p.m. and march to the Unitarian Universalist Church in Marblehead.

Staff writer Paul Leighton can be reached at 978-338-2535 or pleighton@salemnews.com.

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Suspects ID'd in theft, vandalism of Black Lives Matter signs - The Salem News

Boston Celtics release photos of Black Lives Matter jerseys, including Jaylen Browns Liberation jersey & m – MassLive.com

The Boston Celtics released photos of their jerseys for the bubble on Wednesday, bearing messages related to the Black Lives Matter movement.

Several of the NBAs approved slogans are represented. Jayson Tatum and Daniel Theis went with Black Lives Matter, while Jaylen Brown chose Liberation. Both Tacko Fall and Vincent Poirier chose Egalite, which is French for equality. Both Enes Kanter and Marcus Smart will wear Freedom. Robert Williams went with Respect Us. Gordon Hayward opted for Education Reform.

Brown told reporters earlier this month that he was considering wearing nothing on the back of his jersey -- no name or message at all. That idea was originally suggested by Miami Heat star Jimmy Butler.

What I thought was clever with that was the potential of not having anything was playing for the people that we dont get to see every single day or we dont hear their names, Brown said. We hear Breonna Taylor, we hear Philando Castile, we hear Ahmaud Arbery, Trayvon Martin. We hear all those names that we hear in the media because somebody was lucky enough to have a cell phone, but what about the people who didnt have the cell phone available at the time and they experienced police brutality, they experienced social stratification and education or not getting help in healthcare? There are so many different things that go unnoticed and its bigger than what we see now. I think police brutality is just the tip of the iceberg. Being able to have an empty space and playing for some of those people that we dont know their names and we may not ever know their names, I think thats powerful too.

Smart said he wished for more options, but he wanted to support the movement.

Like I said, I would have loved to have the option to choose, but I still wanted to show that I still have care for the cause and I still want to keep awareness going and stuff like that, Smart said. So Im going to put Freedom on the back of my jersey.

Both Kemba Walker and Semi Ojeleye, meanwhile, opted for Love us.

With everything Ive seen going on in the world, the root of it is hate, Ojeleye said. When it boils down to it at the end of the day we have to treat people right, and the only way to do that is to love people, regardless of skin color, ethnicity, where they are from, what they believe in, we have to treat people the right way, and to do that, you have to love them. So thats what I believe God wants us to do, thats why Im going to put that on the back, and hopefully we can continue that conversation until we all get it right.

Heres the full list.

The Celtics open their seeding games against the Milwaukee Bucks on Friday.

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Boston Celtics release photos of Black Lives Matter jerseys, including Jaylen Browns Liberation jersey & m - MassLive.com

Black Lives Matter sign in Whitehorse damaged, while another disappears – CBC.ca

When Dan Bushnell of Whitehorse bought plywood to make a couple ofroadside signs in support of anti-racism protesters, he figured he'd buy some extra.

"We didn't buy two sheets of plywood. We bought four, because we knew full well the signs would be vandalized, that they would be destroyed," Bushnell said.

"It wasn't a question of whether or not they were going to be vandalized, unfortunately. It was when."

Bushnell was proven right one of the two big signs was recently damaged, and the other simply disappeared from alongside Two Mile Hill in the city's downtown on Monday.

They were erected last month, when anti-racism demonstrations were being staged around the world, including in Whitehorse. Bushnell said it felt like a timely gesture of support.

"BLACK LIVES THEY MATTER HERE," the signs read.

"It's something that needed to be done, and that Ias an individual wanted to show support and say, you know, this is something that in my community even, in my town, I'm actually not going to stand for it," Bushnellsaid.

"We live in a community where racism is still very, very prevalent."

He says he fixed the sign on Two Mile Hill three times before it disappeared. The other, on Robert Service Way, he fixed twice.

"Now it's currently at my house, because someone smashed a hole in the centre of it," he said.

Paige Gallettesaysshe's not surprised by what happened to the signs. She's more surprised that they stood for as long as they did.

She said she was excited when they first went up.

"It was nice to see that, you know, as a Black person we don't always have to do all the work and that white people can step up and support community by using their skills and resources," she said.

"The fact that [the signs]stayed up for a long time also says that not only are we ready to have this conversation, but people are ready to step up and to support community members."

She calls what happened to the signs a reality check.

"Obviously it's not good that it happened,but it's a good visual of what happens in our community," she said.

Bushnell says he's not deterred he's working to put up new signs. And he says he's been told by city officials that he'll need a permit.

"I'm going to reach out to some folks and see if we can get them up on the highway, maybe get them a bit higher so they're harder for people to vandalize, and see what we can do," he said.

"It's about letting people know, like, this is a place where we actually care about this, and this is a place where we're going to work on it."

Original post:

Black Lives Matter sign in Whitehorse damaged, while another disappears - CBC.ca

New polling shows most Oregonians support Black Lives Matter, many dont approve of the job their local polic – OregonLive

Forty-five percent of Oregonians do not approve of the job their local police are doing, according to new polling released Tuesday by the Portland-based pollster DHM Research and the Oregon Values and Beliefs Center.

The statewide survey plumbed 603 Oregonians opinions on police, protests and racial injustice. And their opinions were stark: 55% reported that they think police treat white people better than Black people. The surveys margin of error ranges from plus or minus two to four percentage points, depending on the questions.

Oregonians increasingly support the Black Lives Matter movement and George Floyd protests. More than two-thirds of Oregonians polled support the Black Lives Matter movement now, in contrast to 54% in a 2018 survey by the same company. The police killing of George Floyd has sparked protests in Portland over the past 62 days and the polling showed that Democrats, Portland residents, and 18- to 29-year-olds are the most supportive of the protests.

And only 35% of Oregonians support how police nationwide have responded to protests.

At the same time, Oregonians are also increasingly frustrated with the direction that the state is going. The percentage of Oregonians who think the state is heading in the right direction has fallen sharply in the last few months, from 51% in April to 43% in June, and now to 33% in July, according to the poll.

DHM Research reported it hasnt recorded such a sharp decline in sentiment since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

The survey didnt address why Oregonians are feeling so pessimistic, but the report said theyre more likely to believe crime is increasing in their communities, and a vast majority dont support the way the police have responded to recent protests only 35% approve.

Despite the large support for the Black Lives Matter movement and George Floyd protests, theres not a consensus as to how and whether Oregons police departments should be reformed. But 62% of Oregonians reported that the deaths of Black people during encounters with police in recent years are a sign of a bigger problem.

While 31% of respondents reported that police reform hasnt worked and defunding police and reinventing the approach to public safety is necessary for change, 39% believe police departments problems with race can be fixed by reforming the existing system. One-fifth said police departments dont need reform.

A majority of Oregonians, 57%, support cutting some police funding, and shifting those resources to social services.

Theres more agreement among Oregonians on specific policy changes to policing. The study found high levels of support for policies such as requiring police officers to intervene and stop excessive use of force by other officers, requiring officers to report each time they use or threaten to use force, requiring states to release officer disciplinary records and banning the use of chokeholds and no-knock warrants.

And while federal officers have used tear gas and less-lethal munitions almost nightly in Portland during recent protests, Oregonians are split about whether to ban them. Statewide, 50% of those polled said they would support a ban, while 55% in the Portland metro area support one.

The poll found racial injustice is the second-most important community issue Oregonians want their elected officials to act upon, only behind COVID-19. Almost two-thirds are worried that the recent protests may lead to an increase in coronavirus cases.

-- Celina Tebor

ctebor@oregonian.com

@CelinaTebor

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New polling shows most Oregonians support Black Lives Matter, many dont approve of the job their local polic - OregonLive

Why Portland, Among the Whitest U.S. Cities, Embraced Black Lives Matter – The New York Times

PORTLAND, Ore. Seyi Fasoranti, a chemist who moved to Oregon from the East Coast six months ago, has watched the Black Lives Matter protests in Portland with fascination. A sea of white faces in one of the whitest major American cities has cried out for racial justice every night for nearly two months.

Its something I joke about with my friends, Mr. Fasoranti, who is Black, said over the din of protest chants this week. There are more Black Lives Matter signs in Portland than Black people.

Loud advocacy has been a hallmark of Portland life for decades, but unlike past protests over environmental policies or foreign wars, racism is a more complicated topic in Oregon, one that is intertwined with demographics and the states legacy of some of the most brutal anti-Black laws in the nation.

During 56 straight nights of protests here, throngs of largely white protesters have raised their fists in the air and chanted, This is not a riot, its a revolution. They have thrown water bottles at the federal courthouse, tried to pry off the plywood that protects the entrance and engaged in running battles with police officers through clouds of tear gas. In recent nights, the number of protesters has swollen into the thousands.

Damany Igw, 43, a bath products salesman who is Black and has taken part in dozens of the protests, says white crowds have shielded him from the police, all the while yelling Black power!

I feel the most protected that I ever have in my city, Mr. Igw said during a Wednesday night protest that lasted well into Thursday morning. White people cant understand what weve been through completely, but they are trying to empathize. Thats a beginning.

Of the 35 cities in the United States with populations larger than 500,000, Portland is the whitest, according to census data, with 71 percent of residents categorized as non-Latino whites.

Oregons relative homogeneity the state is three-quarters white compared with neighboring California, where white people make up 37 percent of the population was not accidental. The state was founded on principles of white supremacy. A 19th-century lash law called for whipping any Black person found in the state. In the early part of the 20th century Oregons Legislature was dominated by members of the Ku Klux Klan.

Today the average income level for Black families in Portland is nearly half that of white residents, and police shootings of Black residents are disproportionate to their 6 percent share of the population. Three years ago, two good Samaritans were fatally stabbed while trying to stop a man from shouting slurs at two African-American women on a commuter train, one of whom was wearing Muslim dress.

Really there are two Portlands that exist, said Walidah Imarisha, a scholar of Black history in Oregon. Theres white Portland and Portland of color.

The differences, she said, cover almost every aspect of life. Theres massive racial disparities around wealth, health care, schools and criminal legal systems that white Portlanders just dont understand.

Yet on the streets this week in Portland there was optimism among Black protest leaders who generally spoke admiringly of the large white crowds, which were reinvigorated last week after clashes with federal riot police officers who are protecting a U.S. courthouse and other buildings.

Xavier Warner, a Black protest organizer, called the predominance of white protesters a beautiful thing that speaks to the progressive ethos in the city.

Teal Lindseth, another Black organizer, said she saw the irony in predominantly white Portland having among the longest continuous protests stemming from the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis on May 25. But she said she was thankful for the strength in numbers. They hurt us less when there are more people, she said.

The role of white protesters has some detractors in the Black community.

In an op-ed published Thursday in The Washington Post, the Rev. E.D. Mondain, the president of the Portland branch of the N.A.A.C.P., called the protests a spectacle that distracted attention from the Black Lives Matter movement.

Are they really furthering the cause of justice, or is this another example of white co-optation? he wrote.

But in a measure of the divided opinion on this question, Mr. Mondains predecessor at the N.A.A.C.P., Jo Ann Hardesty, a city commissioner, rejected his criticism.

Theres a lot of new, aware folks who have joined into the battle for Black lives, she said during a news conference on Thursday.

Ms. Hardesty, who took office in 2019 as the first African-American woman on the Portland City Council, said the protests were serving the dual purposes of fighting racial injustice and rejecting the presence of federal agents sent to the city by the Trump administration.

Both protest goals were important, she said. And one is not any more important than the other.

Joe Lowndes, an expert on right-wing politics and race at the University of Oregon, said the protests reflected an intertwining of interests in recent years between racial justice advocates and the largely white anti-fascist movement. Both are deeply distrustful of the police and want police powers and budgets curtailed. The presence of far-right groups in Oregon, emboldened during the Trump administration, has also brought anti-racists and anti-fascists into closer alignment, he said.

Speeches and chants at the protests have touched on the legacy of slavery and the stripping of lands from Native Americans. From a historical perspective, the sight of hundreds of white protesters chanting one of that movements most popular refrains Stolen lands and stolen people can be jarring.

As the destination of the Lewis and Clark expeditions, Oregon once symbolized the conquest of the American West and the subjugation of Native peoples.

Some white protesters said it was this white supremacist legacy that helped spur them into the streets.

Bringing that history to light is definitely a motivating factor, said Liza Lopetrone, a veterinary nurse who joined the Wall of Moms protest this week that consisted mostly of white women locking arms in the face of the federal agents. Oregon has an extremely racist history. Im not from here but I take responsibility for it now.

Another woman at the protest, Julie Liggins, had a more immediate connection to prejudice and racism in Portland. She is white and her husband of three decades, Reginald, is Black.

During the years he drove his car to work, Mr. Liggins said, he was pulled over by Portland police multiple times without cause. He said he switched to riding the bus. But two years ago when Mr. Liggins, who is 60, ran to catch a bus, the police pulled it over after misidentifying him for a robbery suspect in his 20s.

Mr. Liggins said he was encouraged by the protests even if he wished the reckoning over race in America had occurred earlier. And he loves his life in Portland.

You can literally go days without seeing people that look like you, he said. But I find Portland to be a very progressive city despite its racist past. I can honestly say that as an interracial couple we havent had any problems here.

Mr. Fasoranti, the chemist, says he has been impressed with the awareness of racial issues in Portland and described the current round of protests as something that feels genuine.

He says he feels welcome in the city and was intrigued soon after he arrived when a white motorist pulled over to the sidewalk and asked if he needed a ride. He has been invited to conversations about gentrification and the displacement of Black residents.

There are less of these conversations in New York or New Jersey, where I used to live, he said.

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Why Portland, Among the Whitest U.S. Cities, Embraced Black Lives Matter - The New York Times

Downtown Little Rock business gets spray-painted with Black Lives Matter and expletives – KARK

LITTLE ROCK, Ark.Businesses across Arkansas are struggling to stay open amid the pandemic and for the owner of one in downtown Little Rock, its even more difficult while paying to fix what others destroyed.

Paula Dempsey, the owner of Dempsey Bakery, says when she showed up to the shop on Sunday, she found messages spray-painted all over her building.

It just makes you sick, said Dempsey.

The spray painted messages read, No justice, No peace,F*** copsand Black lives Matter.

Dempsey says this isnt the first time this has happened. She says her building was spray-painted in May following the George Floyd protests.

I was just upset. My husband was really upset because of the vulgarity on the wall, recalled Dempsey.

Dempsey said she thought this was a one-time deal and was shocked to see it had happened again this week.

Five or ten thousand dollars right now or anytime really that you werent counting on having to spend is devastating, said Dempsey.

Dempsey says she is all for people expressing their feelings, but not when it is at the expense of those already hurting from a pandemic.

To then have to deal with that as well Its hard to keep going, said Dempsey.

She says she wants the ones who keep writing messages on the wall to hear the message of her own.

This is not the way to go about this and violence and destruction of other peoples property is not acceptable. Its just not, said Dempsey.

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Downtown Little Rock business gets spray-painted with Black Lives Matter and expletives - KARK

Animal Health Matters: Euthanasia When it’s time to say goodbye – Farm Forum

Having cleaned up from the afternoons small chute job out in the country, it was time to settle into an office chair and look through the phone messages our secretary at the vet clinic had for me.

I dreaded returning the call at the top of the list. It was a long-time client whose dog Id examined a couple days ago. Buddy, their 13-year-old black Lab had been steadily but rapidly declining over the past week. Cataracts were clouding his vision, and arthritis made it a struggle to get up after lying down. Now Buddy had lost control of his bowels and urination. The writing was on the wall, and wed had a very sad and frank conversation about Buddys prospects. On the phone, Buddys owners confirmed my suspicions theyd made the decision to euthanize Buddy.

As a special favor, our vet tech and I went out to the family farm to perform the procedure. After the barbiturate had gone through Buddys bloodstream and his body fell limp, tears flowed from every one of the family members present. Their decision was an excruciating one to come to, but all knew it was the right thing to do.

The Veterinarians Oath mandates that veterinarians use their skills and knowledge to, among other duties, relieve animal suffering. We use preventive medicine, medical treatments and surgery to accomplish this for our patients, but at the very end of lifes road lies possibly our most important procedure: that of euthanasia.

The word euthanasia translates to good death. When animals face irresolvable pain and suffering, it is the one last merciful action that we as humans can grant them a good death. Its a procedure unique to veterinary medicine and the part of a veterinarians job that gives students the most apprehension about entering the profession.

In offering this relief to patients, veterinarians shoulder the responsibility of ensuring that euthanasia is truly a good death as peaceful and painless as possible. For companion animals we usually use heavy doses of barbiturate anesthetic to shut down the animals system. As far as we can tell, it is truly as peaceful as the animal going to sleep. For cattle and other large animals, barbiturates often arent options, since residues of that drug in the carcass make rendering impossible. Captive bolt and gunshot performed properly can be acceptable. Our veterinary association has an extensive set of guidelines regarding euthanasia of different species all of them provide for the animals immediate unconsciousness prior to death. Anything less is not a good death. The last thing we want is for an animal to experience even more pain as we attempt to put it out of its misery.

The veterinary logistics surrounding euthanasia are relatively straightforward compared with making the actual decision. For farm animals, some guidelines exist. For example, swine veterinarians recommend euthanizing a pig when there is no response to treatment over a two-day period or if there otherwise is no prospect for recovery. One could probably apply this to other food animals as well.

But in the case of a long-time family companion such as a dog or cat, strict guidelines dont exist. Sometimes the decision to euthanize is obvious: a catastrophic injury or rapid onset of a painful terminal illness. Most of the time, particularly with older pets, its much less clear. Ive had some owners put off the decision while the animals probably suffered longer than they should have. Others maybe were a bit quick to come to the decision. Its not a call I can make the family has to come to peace with it on their own time. I provide the best input I can mostly medical but sometimes philosophical. A veterinarian I know asks his clients to name three things the pet really enjoyed doing during their life. Maybe it was going out hunting the first day of pheasant season. Or jumping up in the pickup cab for a ride to town. Whatever that list is for that animal, the thought was, when theyre no longer able to do those things, it is time to consider euthanasia.

I dont know any veterinarian who doesnt dislike euthanizing animals, but I also dont know any who arent grateful they have that ability to relieve an animals suffering in that manner.

Russ Daly, DVM, is the Extension Veterinarian at South Dakota State University. He can be reached via e-mail at russell.daly@sdstate.eduor at 605-688-5171.

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Animal Health Matters: Euthanasia When it's time to say goodbye - Farm Forum

When Gassing Animals to Death Doesn’t Work – Sentient Media

If gassing doesnt always work, why is it an approved method of depopulating farmed animals? Award-winning veterinarian Dr. Jonas Watson explains.

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If gassing doesnt always work, why is it an approved method of depopulating farmed animals? Award-winning veterinarian Dr. Jonas Watson explains.

In a July 8th Facebook post, Winnipeg Chicken Save, part of the global Animal Save Movement, provided important context to the story of the two chickens found at the landfill, who are now safe at a local animal sanctuary called The Good Place.

Egg farms have been mass culling chickens throughout Manitoba due to COVID-19, from restaurants not needing eggs. Chickens are killed en masse from gas suffocation, corpses thrown onto a truck and dumped at a landfill. Yesterday afternoon, after another dumping of a truckload full of murdered chickens, a friend of The Good Place/Employee noticed a chicken standing under a nearby shelter. Terrified and alone but alive.

The landfill employee contacted local animal rescuers, who went to retrieve the chicken, now named Lola, only to be called back later that day for a second, now named Phoenix.

Dr. Watson does not consider gassing to be a humane form of euthanasia, although it is still an industry-standard practice. According to him, there are many variables at play that could lead to an animal not dying when gassed, including inappropriate gas concentration, inadequate gas flow rate, inappropriate numbers or sizes of animals in the chamber, and insufficient duration of gas exposure. Indeed, in one undercover video captured by PETA in 2016, a fur farm worker gassing minks in a metal drum describes how one animal stayed alive for twenty minutes by hiding under carcasses in pockets of clean air.

For animals who endure gassing, which works by replacing oxygen with either CO2 or nitrogen causing asphyxiation, suffering is almost certain. Gases used to kill chickens commonly cause head shaking, gasping, and convulsions prior to the cessation of electrical brain activity, says Dr. Watson. And pigs killed with gas, he says, very likely experience fear and stress, and possibly physical pain, as evidenced by squealing, open-mouthed breathing, changes in heart rate, incoordination, and efforts made to escape. He can only imagine what it would be like for those animals who dont die.

These chickens survived being gassed, buried among their sisters, transported, dumped in a landfill, then managed to climb their way out through corpses and were spotted by humans who wanted to help, not hurt them, reads the Winnipeg Chicken Save post.

So why is gassing an approved method of mass depopulation on farms? Dr. Watson says, despite evidence of animal distress and aversion, inhaled gases continue to be administered because the benefits are perceived by industry to outweigh any welfare concerns associated with their use. In other words, its simply convenient. Gases like CO2 are readily available, inexpensive, usually fast-acting, less psychologically-traumatizing to use by the humans involved when compared to alternative methods, and do not leave toxic residues in animal tissue from which food is produced, he says.

There are also no laws in Canada overseeing the treatment of animals on farms, with standard farming practices typically exempt from any federal and provincial animal cruelty laws. The voluntary, industry-created code of practice regarding mass depopulation on poultry farms requires that all birds be confirmed dead before disposal. This rule is not always honored. Time and again, even before COVID-19, investigators visiting these farms find animals in dumpsters still alive. As a result, piles of unprofitable, dead and living animals continue to be dumped in landfills like trash.

Dr. Watson does believe, however, that the general public is slowly waking up to the truth about animal gassing. Despite how frequently gases like CO2 are used to asphyxiate animals, concerns by the public about the humaneness of this approach are increasing, he says. As such, a society genuinely concerned with the welfare of its animals would be wise to evaluate alternative methods when faced with the task of killing large groups of animals.

Or, perhaps more visibility and transparency around these mass killings will prompt consumers to reevaluate why the food system requires entire sheds of animals to be killed to begin with.

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When Gassing Animals to Death Doesn't Work - Sentient Media

How to watch NASA launch its next rover to Mars today – The Verge

On Thursday morning, NASA is scheduled to launch its next rover to Mars, the beginning of a years-long mission to figure out if the Red Planet ever hosted life. The rover, called Perseverance, is equipped with instruments to look for evidence of ancient Martian microbes, but its prime goal is to excavate samples and leave them on Mars so that one day they can be returned to Earth for study. Theres even a tiny helicopter aboard named Ingenuity.

Perseverances ride to Mars is the Atlas V rocket, made and operated by the United Launch Alliance. Atlas V rockets have previously flown four NASA missions to Mars, including the Curiosity rover, which landed on the Red Planet in 2012. For this flight, the rocket is equipped with four small boosters at its base to give the vehicle an extra boost during its initial climb and set Perseverance en route to Mars.

The vehicle will take off from ULAs launch site in Cape Canaveral, Florida, with liftoff slated for 7:50AM ET. The company has a two-hour launch window, so the Atlas V can take off up until 9:50AM ET if necessary. Once the rocket lifts off, itll take a little less than an hour for the capsule carrying Perseverance to separate from the Atlas V and begin its journey. Itll take about six and a half months for the rover to travel to the Red Planet, reaching Mars sometime in February 2021.

So far, weather is looking good for launch, despite the fact that a hurricane is on track to make landfall in Florida this weekend. Theres an 80 percent chance conditions will be favorable for launch on Thursday, according to the Space Forces 45th Space Wing, which oversees missions out of the Cape. If Perseverance cant launch on Thursday morning, there are opportunities to launch every single day up until August 17th. But for NASA, its pretty crucial that Perseverance gets off the ground this summer. The window to launch to Mars is only open every two years, when Earth and the Red Planet come closest to one another on their orbits around the Sun. If NASA cant launch this year, the agency must wait until 2022 to try again.

For now, everything seems on track for launch. NASAs coverage will begin at 7AM ET, and the agency will do a post-launch press conference at 11:30AM ET if all goes well. Check back later to watch NASAs next rover embark on its journey to search for ancient life on Mars.

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How to watch NASA launch its next rover to Mars today - The Verge

NASAs Mars Perseverance Rover Launch: When to Watch – The New York Times

The final launch of the summer of Mars missions is nearly underway.

On Thursday, NASA hopes to send a robotic rover and a small experimental helicopter on a journey of six and a half months to the red planet. It follows two earlier launches by the United Arab Emirates and China.

NASA was originally scheduled to lift off earlier in July, but had to overcome a number of technical delays that pushed back the launch. While it is last to leave, all three missions should arrive at the red planet at about the same time, in February.

NASAs Perseverance rover will lift off from the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida on Thursday at 7:50 a.m. Eastern time.

The launch, aboard a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket, is being streamed live by NASA on its website. Or you can watch it in the video player below:

The rocket with the rover on top was rolled out to its launchpad on Wednesday, and about two hours before the scheduled launch time, U.L.A. reported that fueling had started.

Weather looked promising, with an 80 percent chance of favorable conditions for launch.

Perseverance is a car-size wheeled robot nearly identical in design to NASAs previous Mars rover, Curiosity, which landed in 2012. However, Perseverance is headed to a different place a crater named Jezero that was once a lake carrying a different set of instruments. Curiosity was designed to look for habitable environments, and it found signs of a freshwater lake. Perseverance is to go a step farther and search for evidence of past life that might have lived in the lake at Jezero.

Perseverance is also carrying a couple of devices that are more fun than scientific: several cameras, which will record various views as the spacecraft zooms through the atmosphere en route to landing; and two microphones, which will be the first to record sounds on another planet.

It is carrying an experimental helicopter, too.

Yup, its called Ingenuity. The four-pound Marscopter is a technology experiment, and if it works, it will be the first powered flight on another planet. The rotors have to spin at 2,4000 revolutions a minute to generate lift in the thin atmosphere of Mars, just one percent as dense at Earths at the surface.

A couple of experiments on Perseverance have nothing to do with searching for past life, but they could help future life on Mars astronauts from Earth.

One of the crucial supplies that astronauts will need is oxygen, for breathing and as a rocket propellant.

The Mars Oxygen In-Situ Resource Utilization Experiment, or MOXIE, will take carbon dioxide molecules from the Martian atmosphere and split them into oxygen atoms and carbon monoxide.

MOXIE will try to demonstrate that is possible on the surface of the red planet. But the amount of oxygen it could produce less than ounce per hour is tiny.

Were only making about enough oxygen to keep a small dog alive, said Michael Hecht, the principal investigator for MOXIE.

But if the idea works, the technique could be employed in the future on a much larger scale to fill up a rocket. So astronauts in a future Mars mission could take off from Mars to come home, he said.

Perseverance is also carrying samples of materials used in spacesuits, mounted on a target used to calibrate one of the rovers instruments.

When I send somebody to Mars in my spacesuit, I want to make sure that they stay alive that whole time, Amy Ross, one of NASAs spacesuit designers said during a news conference on Tuesday.

With Perseverance taking repeated measurements over a couple of years on Mars, we can understand how our materials hold up or dont in that environment, she said.

Perseverance will land on Mars on Feb. 18 next year at 3:40 p.m. Eastern time.

Every 26 months, Earth and Mars come close to each other, which allows the quickest, most efficient trip from Earth to Mars. If the launch does not occur by the middle of August, NASA would have to wait until the next opportunity, in 2022.

Jezero crater was filled with water about 3.5 billion years ago when Mars was warmer and wetter. From orbit, earlier NASA spacecraft spotted a dried-up river on one side of Jezero and an outflow channel can be seen on the other side. The sediments of a fan-shape delta can be seen where the river spilled into the crater. No one knows if anything ever lived on Mars, but if it did, Jezero would be a prime place to look, scientists decided.

Landing on Mars is difficult. The planets thin atmosphere isnt thick enough to provide enough drag to slow down a spacecraft like Perseverance, which will be arriving at more than 12,000 miles per hour. But the atmosphere is still thick enough to generate thousands of degrees of heat, complicating the task of slowing down Perseverance before it slams into the ground. Quite a few landing attempts by NASA and other space agencies have ended with creating new craters on the red planets surface.

But NASA has pulled off five consecutive successful landings. To increase the likelihood that Perseverance rover will be the sixth, NASA has made adjustments to the parachute that slows the spacecraft when it reaches the Martian atmosphere. It has also improved the rovers ability to identify a smooth landing site.

The Emirates Mars Mission successfully lifted off on a Japanese rocket on July 20.

The space program of the United Arab Emirates is modest, and its bid to join the ranks of countries that have reached Mars is part of an ambitious effort to inspire Emirati youth to take up careers in science and technology.

Its Hope spacecraft will orbit Mars for a number of years, helping scientists study the planets weather cycles.

China launched the second mission, Tianwen-1, on July 23.

The countrys space program has seen a number of successes in recent years, including two rovers that landed on Earths moon as well as a pair of space stations deployed in orbit. But its previous attempt to get to Mars in 2011 was lost when the Russian rocket it was riding on failed and burned up in Earths atmosphere.

The new Chinese mission includes an orbiter, a lander and a rover. While other countries have taken a staggered approach to visiting Mars an orbiter first, then a lander, then finally a rover China emphasizes that it will attempt to operate all of these components for the first time at once.

The orbiter, according to four scientists involved in the mission, will study Mars and its atmosphere for about one Martian year, or 687 days on Earth. In addition to two cameras, the spacecraft carries subsurface radar, a detector to study the Martian magnetic field and three other scientific instruments.

The rover will try to land in the Utopia Planitia region in the mid-northern Martian latitudes. NASAs Viking 2 mission touched down there in 1976. Earlier studies using data from NASAs Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter showed that Utopia Planitia has a layer of water ice equivalent to what is found in Lake Superior on Earth.

If it manages the perilous Martian landing, the rover will use a mix of cameras, ground-penetrating radar and other instruments to better understand the distribution of underground ice, which future human colonists on Mars could use to sustain themselves. Chinas mission is to last about 90 Martian days.

A fourth mission, the joint Russian-European Rosalind Franklin rover, was to launch this summer, too. But technical hurdles, aggravated by the coronavirus pandemic, could not be overcome in time. It is now scheduled to launch in 2022.

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NASAs Mars Perseverance Rover Launch: When to Watch - The New York Times

Giant waves of sand are moving on Mars – Science Magazine

Megaripples near a sand dune on Mars.

By Katherine KorneiJul. 23, 2020 , 8:00 AM

Researchers have spotted large waves of martian sand migrating for the first time. The discovery dispels the long-held belief that these megaripples havent moved since they formed hundreds of thousands of years ago. Theyre also evidence of stronger-than-expected winds on the Red Planet.

Its pretty staggering that humans can detect these changes on Mars, says Ralph Lorenz, a planetary scientist at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory who was not involved in the research. We can now measure processes on the surface of another planet that are just a couple times faster than our hair grows.

Megaripples are found in deserts on Earth, often between dunes. Waves in the sand spaced up to tens of meters apart, theyre a larger version of ripples that undulate every 10 centimeters or so on many sand dunes.

But unlike dunes, megaripples are made up of two sizes of sand grains. Coarser, heavier grains cap the crests of megaripples, making it harder for wind to move these features around, says Simone Silvestro, a planetary scientist at Italys National Institute of Astrophysics in Naples.

Since the early 2000s, Mars rovers and orbiters have repeatedly spotted megaripples on the Red Planet. But they didnt seem to change in any measurable way, which led some scientists to think they were relics from Marss past, when its thicker atmosphere permitted stronger winds.

Now, using images captured by NASAs Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, Silvestro and his colleagues have shown that some megaripples do creep alongjust very slowly.

The researchers focused on two sites near the equator of Mars. They analyzed roughly 1100 megaripples in McLaughlin crater and 300 in the Nili Fossae region. They looked for signs of movement by comparing time-lapse images of each sitetaken 7.6 and 9.4 years apart, respectively. Megaripples in both regions advanced by about 10 centimeters per year, the team reports in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets. Thats about how fast megaripples move in the Lut Desert of Iran.

Its a surprise that megaripples move at all on Mars, says Jim Zimbelman, a planetary geologist at the Smithsonian Institutions Air and Space Museum. Just a few decades ago, there was no evidence that sands on Mars were mobile, he says. None of us thought that the winds were strong enough.

Winds on Mars might be accelerating small grains of sand, Silvestro and his colleagues suggest. Once these grains start to rollor bounce, they can act like battering rams, knocking into larger grains and setting them in motion. This process, known as impact-driven creep, has been observed on Earth.

Sand dunes on Mars likely donated their grains to the megaripples migration, the team concludes, because nearby dunes moved in the same direction as the megaripples.

Atmospheric models of Mars suggest winds capable of moving sand are rare. This discovery of migrating megaripples will force those models to be revised, the team suggests.

Silvestro plans to expand his search for migrating megaripples to the whole planet. He suspects the speediest megaripples will be near Marss fastest moving dunes. Megaripples on the move are beacons of windy conditions, which might in turn kick-start dust storms, the researchers suggest. Airborne dust can blanket solar panels, reducing their efficiency, and it can also gum up mechanical parts like gears. Thats bad news for Mars rovers and human habitats alike.

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Giant waves of sand are moving on Mars - Science Magazine

The race to Mars: Who is blasting off to the Red Planet and why? – The Irish News

Humanitys hunger to reach Mars edged a step closer on Thursday as China launched its latest mission to the Red Planet.

While lift-off was successful, the toughest hurdle will be landing, a feat which is notoriously difficult on the fourth planet from the Sun.

Here, we summarise who is attempting to explore Mars and why.

Why Mars?

Mars is seen as an ideal candidate for exploration because it is close by in our solar system and is the most similar to Earth.

One of the biggest questions is whether life has existed beyond Earth, and Mars is a good place to start investigating, given that evidence points to it once being full of water, warmer and with a thicker atmosphere, making it a potentially habitable environment.

Who has made it to Mars?

The US is the only country to successfully land a spacecraft on Martian soil so far, having done so eight times since 1976 its InSight and Curiosity rovers are still operational.

Six other spacecraft are currently observing Mars from above, including three belonging to the US, two European and one from India.

What of Chinas latest attempt?

Chinas Tianwen-1 mission includes an orbiter and a rover, which will take seven months to reach Mars.

If successful in landing, their aim is to explore for underground water as well as searching for evidence of possible ancient life.

The solar-powered rover weighs 529lb (240kg) and should operate for about three months, while the orbiter is expected to last two years.

China previously tried to reach the Red Planet in 2011, sending an orbiter with a Russian mission, but the spacecraft failed to make it out of Earths orbit.

Didnt the United Arab Emirates launch a mission?

Yes, the United Arab Emirates set off to Mars just a few days ago though this is a probe, so will not take on the difficult task of landing on the planet.

Amal or Hope is the first interplanetary mission for the Arab world and aims to look at the upper atmosphere and monitor climate change for at least two years.

Isnt the US planning to launch another mission to Mars?

Nasa is preparing its next mission to Mars, Perseverance, with a daily launch window set to open on July 30.

It will also seek out signs of ancient life, as well as collect rock and soil samples for possible return to Earth.

And what about Europe?

The European Space Agency, along with the Russian Roscosmos, is hoping to send its first rover, named after English chemist Rosalind Franklin, to Mars.

Originally planned for launch this summer, the ExoMars mission has been postponed for at least two years as a number of key tests still need to be carried out.

Given that the journey from Earth to Mars can only be attempted when the planets are in specific positions, the next launch date will not be until between August and October 2022.

Who else is interested in Mars?

Technology entrepreneur Elon Musk is a notable party also keen to reach Mars and even hopes to live there himself one day.

His firm, SpaceX, has been working closely with Nasa, recently managing to take two astronauts to the International Space Station (ISS) on behalf of the agency.

But the 49-year-old has his eyes set on the Red Planet, where he dreams of establishing a self-sustaining city, complete with iron foundries and even pizzerias.

In 2017, Mr Musk said he hoped to send unmanned spacecraft to Mars by 2022, followed by the first crewed flight in 2024.

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The race to Mars: Who is blasting off to the Red Planet and why? - The Irish News

Q&A: The World is Going to Mars. An Aerospace Engineer Explains – University of Virginia

On Monday the United Arab Emirates launched a research mission to Mars, intent on studying the planets atmosphere and climate. China launched a Mars orbiter and probe on Thursday. And next week, the United States will launch its most sophisticated Mars rover ever, Perseverance. Likewise, Japan plans a mission to the Red Planet in 2024. And the U.S. intends to put humans on Mars by the mid-2030s. Russia is on the quest, too. Is this a new space race?

Chris Goyne, a University of Virginia professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering, is training students who will play roles in engineering humanitys future on the fourth planet from the sun.

Here, he discusses Mars exploration for readers of UVA Today.

Q. Why is there so much international interest in visiting Mars? Is it because technological advancements are such that any advanced nation can get in the game?

A. Astronomically speaking, Mars is relatively close to Earth; sometimes as close as 34 million miles away. When you live next door to someone, you usually want to get to know them. I guess its a little bit like that with Mars, since it is Earths neighbor.

There is a lot of activity in terms of launching missions to Mars this year because, to shorten the trip and use less fuel, its best to wait until Earth and Mars are best aligned. This happens every two years, so many nations are launching right now.

In terms of technological advances, electronics are constantly getting smaller and computers are becoming more powerful, so nations can do more science with smaller spacecraft, and the smaller size lowers the mission cost.

Q. Is this the making of a new space race?

A. There is definitely national pride at stake in the exploration of Mars. Many of the current robotic missions to Mars are paving the way for human exploration. It will be a significant achievement to land humans on Mars, and from a technical perspective, the feat will surpass landing people on the moon.

There will definitely be some bragging rights, and therefore I think countries have an eye on each other.

Q. Do you expect findings to be shared between nations? Would we do better with more collaboration and less competition?

A. At the end of the day, missions to Mars are scientific endeavors and they are focused on learning more about our solar system. Historically, we have done a good job with international exchange of scientific data, particularly when it is not related to defense. Many people would like to see more collaboration in space exploration.

My hope is that, rather than Mars exploration be a race, we can use the International Space Station as a model and one day develop an international human Mars mission. A crewed Mars mission will be expensive, and so international cooperation would be a way to share the cost.

Q. Do you think evidence of past life on Mars will be discovered? Is it discoverable with rovers and eventually helicopters, considering the vastness of the Martian surface and subsurface?

A. Mars may once have been a warm and wet place, but it is now cold and dry. So, the planet was once more like Earth. We know that life can exist in very extreme places on Earth. Outside of Earth, Mars is the most likely planet in our solar system to have harbored life in the past.

If life did exist there, we will find out. Mars spacecraft and rovers have very sophisticated instruments for detecting the traces of life. My hunch is that it is only a matter of time before we find something.

Q. Considering the ever-increasing capabilities of robots for exploration, does it make sense to send humans to Mars?

A. Robots are quickly becoming more and more sophisticated, so one could argue that we dont need to send humans to Mars to learn about the planet. But robots dont capture our imagination like other humans do. We want to ask someone, What was it like to travel to Mars? and What did you feel while you were there? Robots cant answer these questions.

Beyond the emotional aspect, humans are better problem-solvers than robots. We do a much better job when things break or dont go as planned.

Q. Is UVA doing anything in this realm, such as student training?

A. UVA has a highly ranked aerospace engineering program that includes training in astronautics and spacecraft design.It is very exciting to think that some of our current students could be the few people to walk on Mars.

Human missions to Mars are expected to take place in the mid-2030s. Many people enter the NASA astronaut corps in their mid-to-late 30s and retire by 50. This means that some of our current students and recent alumni are in the right age range to be eligible for a crewed mission to Mars. UVA has some of the best students in the world and our engineering program will prepare them well to be a Martian astronaut.

To any of my current students: Can I tag along?

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Q&A: The World is Going to Mars. An Aerospace Engineer Explains - University of Virginia