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Monthly Archives: July 2020
Gaze up tonight and remember the moon landing – Lynchburg News and Advance
Posted: July 21, 2020 at 12:08 pm
If all goes well, another Virginian will touch Mars indirectly first. On July 30, NASA is set to launch a robotic rover to Mars. Its name, Perseverance, was submitted by Alexander Mather, a 7th-grader at Lake Braddock Secondary School in Fairfax County. If it lands safely in February, Perseverance will search for signs of past microbial life on the red planet, something Cardman likely has a special interest in.
The real question about when humans return to the moon, and go onto Mars, isnt a technological one, but a political one. Are we willing to pay for it?
Our record for sustained funding science is spotty at best. Trump has been gung-ho about space, but Congress hasnt necessarily shared that enthusiasm. The 2024 goal seems driven entirely by politics. Of course, so was Kennedys goal to put a man on the moon by the end of the 60s, just a slightly different kind of politics. We know Trump is keen to meet that 2024 deadline; would a President Biden feel the same way? No clue, but since Kennedy, Democrats have been more interested in spending money on earth, not off it.
Its unclear whether that 2024 deadline can be met. The website Axios recently quoted one of the nations space policy experts, John Logsdon, of George Washington University, as saying: I think basically, making 2024 would be a miracle. Axios then proceeded to list all the reasons why basically delays in funding and testing.
The rest is here:
Gaze up tonight and remember the moon landing - Lynchburg News and Advance
Posted in Moon Colonization
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NASA ties up with JAXA to build a rover for astronauts on the moon – Blasting News United States
Posted: at 12:08 pm
The American Space Agency, NASA has decided to link up with Japan's Aerospace Exploration Agency JAXA to build a moon rover for the movement of astronauts on the alien planet. JAXA designed one such vehicle with Toyota in 2019 and it impressed NASA. The vehicle runs on Renewable Energy like solar power, which would be the most probable source of energy for missions to other planets. It has already proven its usefulness on Mars where Curiosity has been operating 24X7 for nearly five years. Another lander on Mars is InSight, which is a later addition. These robotic applications depend on solar power and JAXAs vehicle could join the inventory of NASA.
The Firstpost says NASA took a decision to join hands with JAXA to set the stage for a permanent human presence on the Moon. The two sides have formalized an agreement. It will ensure the involvement of JAXA to the Lunar Gateway, apart from exploration in orbit and on the lunar surface. Perhaps NASA will put its earlier plans on the backburner. Those related to inflatable tents and underground bases. JAXA could also be involved in other activities of the Artemis mission. This mission is for Americans to revisit the Moon by 2024 and land the first woman there.
America sent the first man to the Moon half a century back and it now wants to repeat the performance with a woman.
NASA has changed its strategy. Instead of going it alone, it wants to collaborate with commercial and international partners. The intention is to establish sustainable exploration by the end of the decade.
The first target of NASA is the Moon followed by Mars by 2033. It wanted to use pressurized surface vehicles for use by astronauts in the Artemis mission. However, Toyota was on course to develop a mobile home that could operate on the Moon in consultation with JAXA. That impressed NASA. The Japanese space agency announced last year that the vehicle was a two-seater but it could probably accommodate more after modifications.
There is no clarification on that aspect.
Firstpost quotes NASA engineer Mark Kirasich saying, "This thing is the coolest element Ive ever seen for people. It's like an RV for the Moon. We are going to try and develop this jointly with JAXA, as a Japanese contribution to our plan." He said this while laying out the plans the agency had for conducting activities on the lunar surface. Obviously, renewable energy and artificial intelligence would play vital roles. Any work related to outer space and colonization of distant planets is a cost-intensive affair.
Hence, a joint venture between NASA and JAXA would be economical. This is a plus point in its favor.
According to Republic World, the American space agency is fine-tuning its Artemis program. The agency NASA plans to land the first woman and a man to the moon by 2024. It needs a vehicle that will take care of the movements of astronauts on the alien surface. They will live and work inside while traveling across the moon. The six-wheeler vehicle will be self-driven and depend on solar power. NASA is relying on outsiders to chip in with their expertise on important cost-intensive projects. It has announced the names of three companies that could design and develop human landing systems (HLS) for its Artemis program.
NASA will select one of these for its lunar mission. Incidentally, SpaceX is one of the companies entrusted with the work and it is already providing its spacecraft for movement of astronauts to and from the International Space Station. The company, owned by Elon Musk, has established the concept of reusable rockets to introduce economy in space research.
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NASA ties up with JAXA to build a rover for astronauts on the moon - Blasting News United States
Posted in Moon Colonization
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More than 1,000 senior US police officers have visited Israel. Here’s what they learn from Israel’s police force and why it’s controversial. – JTA…
Posted: at 12:08 pm
(JTA) In June, as protests against aggressive and abusive policing in the United States took hold, so did a false accusation about a group of programs that sends American police chiefs to learn from their counterparts in Israel.
The tactics used by the police in America, kneeling on George Floyds neck, that was learnt from seminars with Israeli secret services, a British actress told a newspaperin one illustrative incident. A member of the British Parliament was demoted for sharing the story laudingly on social media.
Over the past couple of months, the accusation has popped up elsewhere. Its the latest version of a claim that has circulated in anti-Zionist circles for years that U.S. police delegations to Israel serve to import brutal and militarized policing to the U.S.
The organizations running the trips say that beyond being false the trips do not teach physical, on-the-ground tactics such as chokeholds the claim that Israel encourages American police brutality is an anti-Semitic canard.
These types of instances existed long before any of these professional leadership exchanges happened, and are part and parcel of the history of the U.S., said George Selim, senior vice president of programs at the Anti-Defamation League, which runs police delegations to Israel, regarding American police brutality. Seeking to link Israel as a state to U.S. police misconduct is a bizarre excuse for the centuries-long history of racism and injustice that has been part of American history, really since our founding.
The main organization opposing the delegations has been Jewish Voice for Peace, or JVP, an anti-Zionist group that published a 2018 report calling the trips a Deadly Exchange. The report says they normalize the violent repression of communities and movements the government defines as threatening.
Based on the report, JVP has campaigned for an end to police delegations to Israel, and has succeeded in banning them and other international police exchanges in Durham, North Carolina. It also has successfully pressured two New England police officials to withdraw from delegations.
Now JVP is seeking to temper the anti-Israel criticism tied to recent protests of police brutality. In a June update to its Deadly Exchange campaign, JVP said that Suggesting that Israel is the start or source of American police violence or racism shifts the blame from the United States to Israel and furthers an antisemitic ideology.
But JVP is still campaigning against the trips not, they say, as the driver of police abuse in the United States but because the group says such exchanges allow police forces from two countries with histories of racial discrimination and allegations of oppressive policing to swap strategies.
On these trips its about sharing and swapping ideas and tactics, but thats not to say that the mission from the United States officials wasnt there to begin with, said Stefanie Fox, JVPs executive director. Its like, oh great, then lets adapt this and adopt this to the practice were already trying to do of surveillance and of suppression of protest and of racial profiling.
Trip organizers and participants, however, say thats a fundamental mischaracterization of the trips. They say the trips, which are far from unique among international police exchanges, expose participants to a variety of policing practices in Israel, from surveillance systems to models for community policing in minority communities. The itineraries, they add, mostly consist of lectures, meetings and tours.
What we do is focus on management and policy issues, not training, not specific tactical training, said Steven Pomerantz, director of the Homeland Security Program at the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs, or JINSA, a conservative think tank that runs some of the delegations. Theres no shooting, theres no wrestling, theres no chokeholds. Thats just not what this is about. Its about the constituent parts of successful law enforcement [and] counterterrorism responsibilities in local policing.
Tammy Gillies, the Anti-Defamation Leagues San Diego regional director, meets with Palestinian police officials in Jericho during a 2019 delegation. (Courtesy of the ADL)
A focus on counterterrorism in a post-9/11 world
The delegations to Israel began in the 1990s and ramped up after the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001. The sponsoring organizations and their Israeli partners frame the trips as an opportunity for American police to learn from a country and police force with many decades of experience protecting civilian populations from attack.
There was a lot of interest, and still is, in understanding the Israeli approach to terrorism and counterterrorism, said Robbie Friedmann, who runs the Georgia International Law Enforcement Exchange, a program at Georgia State University that takes senior police officers on delegations to Israel and elsewhere. Delegations learn about the need to provide balance between fighting terror and providing services, so that if someone gets their apartment burglarized, they know thats something the Israel Police will take care of.
More than 1,000 participants, mostly senior law enforcement officials, have gone on the trips, which are primarily provided by Friedmanns program, the ADL and the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs. Each organization has taken several hundred police officials to Israel, a small fraction of the leaders of the approximately 18,000 police departments in the United States. The trips are generally privately funded and are free for participants, though none of the organizations would share the exact sources of the funding or the costs of the trip.
Israel is far from the only country to host a delegation of police officials from abroad. Foreign police officers come to the United States to see how police forces here operate, and countries across the world also host delegations. Friedmanns group has run tours in countries throughout Europe and South America, as well as in China, Australia and elsewhere.
And the trips are just one example of a whole industry of delegations to Israel. Jewish organizations regularly offer Israel trips to politicians, community activists, celebrities, students, business executives and an array of others. As with those trips, part of the goal of the police delegations is to acquaint the participants with Israel and give them a favorable view of the country.
The main goal of the trips, across the groups that organize them, is to share Israeli expertise in counterterrorism. Organizers say the trips are about observation, policy and systems, not about doing active-duty training or teaching American officers physical maneuvers.
In Israel in general, confronted with the kind of threats they are, theyre still very resilient, said Lou Dekmar, the chief of police of LaGrange, Georgia, and the past president of the International Association of Chiefs of Police, who has been on several delegations to Israel. How important it is, when there is a crime or an attack, to quickly address it, process it and reintroduce a state of normalcy.
But American officials do get to see their Israeli counterparts in action. The field of counterterrorism in Israel covers a range of topics, from responding to a terror attack in real time to gathering intelligence to policing mass protests. In addition to the Israel Police, some of the trips meet with the Border Police, which patrols the border with the West Bank, as well as the Israel Security Service, or Shin Bet, and the army.
Some trips take officers on a tour of Israels surveillance system in eastern Jerusalem, as well as study how to clear the scene of a terror attack so that normal life can resume. The excursions emphasize efficient sharing of intelligence between the Israeli military and police, as well as the importance of having defined procedures in place at West Bank border crossings for Palestinians who enter Israel. Delegations also visit Israels National Police Academy, where they view training in action.
A 2019 itinerary from the ADL, for example, had the delegation observe security procedures at Ben Gurion Airport, a West Bank checkpoint and eastern Jerusalem, in addition to visiting the Gaza border and the Palestinian police. The delegation also visited Israels Police Academy and other Israeli police institutions, the Yad Vashem Holocaust museum, and Christian and Jewish religious sites.
Chief Janet Moon of the Peachtree City, Georgia, Police Department, who visited Israel with Friedmanns institute in 2015, remembers watching training on how police officers shoot at a moving vehicle.
No matter where you go in the world, law enforcement is law enforcement, she said. They have the same challenges with budgeting, resource allocation, community policing. And theyve been dealing with terrorism a lot longer than we have.
The Deadly Exchange campaign: Expos or anti-Semitism?
An interest in counterterrorism is not the only thing that Israeli and American police have in common. As in the United States, minorities in Israel have long complained of mistreatment from law enforcement, though in the case of Israels Arab minority, one recent protest movement called for more policing in Arab cities.
Israel Police officers also have been accused of profiling both Arab and Ethiopian Israelis, and recent years have seen large protests by the Ethiopian community against police brutality.
For participants in these programs, the extensive itineraries and opportunities for observation are seen as a benefit because Israeli and U.S. police face similar challenges regarding crowd control, detection of terror threats, airport security and patrolling diverse populations. But to critics of the trips, who already oppose much of how Israel and America practice policing, the combination of the two is damning.
Militarized, racist, violent policing in this country, rooted in centuries of colonization and slavery and warmaking here in the U.S., alongside Israeli occupation and the brutality enacted against Palestinians there theres no good sense in which those governments should be trading and cross training and developing relationships with one another, the JVPs Fox said.
Her groups Deadly Exchange report claims that the trips goals include justifying racial profiling and suppressing public protests through use of force.
The report cites some examples of American policing practices that came from Israel. It notes that the Atlanta Police Departments camera surveillance system is modeled after Jerusalems, following a 2008 police delegation to Israel, for example, and cites testimony by the administrator of the Department of Homeland Securitys Transportation Security Administration in 2016 that said Israeli training and Israels airport security practices have informed those of his agency.
But more often, the report notes general links between American and Israeli policing practices without showing that controversial practices in the United States were learned in Israel or created with Israeli participation. In one section, discussions of Israeli crowd control are portrayed as technical know-how based in disregard for the right of Palestinians to oppose the Israeli occupation. The report also suggests that a Jewish lawmaker in New York who lobbied for racial profiling was influenced by Israels example, when in fact he did not link his support for Israel to that proposal and had not participated in police exchanges.
Trip organizers say that the Deadly Exchange reports claims amount to bigotry.
To me this is a libel, following a long string of libels in Jewish history, JINSAs Pomerantz said. This is kind of the same thing, that the Jews are responsible for whats happening in minority communities in America at the hands of the police. Its just another one of those libels.
Palestinian activists and their allies point back to accusations of Israeli police misconduct as the core reason that they say the trips shouldnt be happening. Yousef Munayyer, a Palestinian-American scholar, says he is routinely profiled when he returns to Israel, where his extended family still lives and where he was born.
Yes, our police need to get better here in the United States, said Munayyer, a nonresident fellow at the Arab Center in Washington, D.C. But do they really need to be training in a place and with forces where racial profiling is a value, where racial profiling is actually central to the ethos of the security system?
Hundreds of demonstrators in Haifa protest the recent Israeli police killing of an unarmed autistic Palestinian man, June 2, 2020. Protesters in Israel and the United States have sought to link police violence in both countries. (Mati Milstein/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
What the trip participants bring home
The delegations do broach uncomfortable topics, organizers say. When it comes to racial profiling, for example, the Georgia State programs Friedmann said, We receive briefings based on the policies, and that participants learn about the process for filing complaints.
Whats important is not to suggest that Israel is a perfect society, he said. But it is a society based on the rule of law, and if an officer is behaving egregiously, it will be handled.
Similarly, Selim said, the ADL trips naturally discuss the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, including on its visits to Palestinian police in the West Bank and to an Israeli border crossing. He said those portions of the trip are especially valuable for participants from border cities in the United States.
Its impossible to talk about policing and security in Israel without talking about the conflict, he said. When there are police executives from Southern California or from Texas or from Arizona, New Mexico, that have joined the delegation in the past two decades, these are in many instances border cities and border towns on the Mexican border.
He added, Issues of cross-border dialogue, engagement, holistic community policing in those cities is very real for them. So to see that in an international context is very helpful for a comparative sense of what works, what doesnt.
In addition to discussing counterterrorism, the trips also show Israels efforts at community policing in Arab-Israeli cities. Micky Rosenfeld, the spokesperson for the Israel Police, said the police have opened new police stations in Arab-Israeli areas and increased their efforts to recruit Arab police officers.
The situation in America is complicated in the same way that the situation [in Israel] is also complicated, he said. Building an ongoing relationship with the community is something that takes time, and it has to come both from the community and law enforcement.
Both Moon and Dekmar say they have been influenced by Israels approach to community policing. Dekmar noticed that the Israel Police has started recruiting Arab-Israeli cadets as early as high school to increase the chances that theyll become officers. He says he began identifying and engaging minority high-schoolers as candidates to serve in his Georgia department as well.
That was a direct result of the experience I saw in Israel, Dekmar said. A recognition that if youre going to recruit from minority populations, you need to start developing relationships younger.
The police chiefs have also implemented procedures or technologies they saw in Israel in their home departments. Moon installed a geo-location system in her 911 call center similar to one she saw in Israel. Dekmar said he adopted an Israeli mentality of conducting training more improvisationally, with less complex equipment.
[I] recognize that this is a very complicated situation that doesnt necessarily lend itself to good guys and bad guys, Dekmar said. It lends itself to an understanding of different cultures placed in a position that potentially could clash at any time.
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1,000 US police officers learned from Israel visit, why its controversial – The Jerusalem Post
Posted: at 12:08 pm
In June, as protests against aggressive and abusive policing in the United States took hold, so did a false accusation about a group of programs that sends American police chiefs to learn from their counterparts in Israel.
The organizations running the trips say that beyond being false the trips do not teach physical, on-the-ground tactics such as chokeholds the claim that Israel encourages American police brutality is an antisemitic canard.
These types of instances existed long before any of these professional leadership exchanges happened, and are part and parcel of the history of the US, said George Selim, senior vice president of programs at the Anti-Defamation League, which runs police delegations to Israel, regarding American police brutality. Seeking to link Israel as a state to US police misconduct is a bizarre excuse for the centuries-long history of racism and injustice that has been part of American history, really since our founding.
The main organization opposing the delegations has been Jewish Voice for Peace, or JVP, an anti-Zionist group that published a 2018 report calling the trips a Deadly Exchange. The report says they normalize the violent repression of communities and movements the government defines as threatening.
Based on the report, JVP has campaigned for an end to police delegations to Israel, and has succeeded in banning them and other international police exchanges in Durham, North Carolina. It also has successfully pressured two New England police officials to withdraw from delegations.
Now JVP is seeking to temper the anti-Israel criticism tied to recent protests of police brutality. In a June update to its Deadly Exchange campaign, JVP said that Suggesting that Israel is the start or source of American police violence or racism shifts the blame from the United States to Israel and furthers an antisemitic ideology.
But JVP is still campaigning against the trips not, they say, as the driver of police abuse in the United States but because the group says such exchanges allow police forces from two countries with histories of racial discrimination and allegations of oppressive policing to swap strategies.
On these trips its about sharing and swapping ideas and tactics, but thats not to say that the mission from the United States officials wasnt there to begin with, said Stefanie Fox, JVPs executive director. Its like, oh great, then lets adapt this and adopt this to the practice were already trying to do of surveillance and of suppression of protest and of racial profiling.
Trip organizers and participants, however, say thats a fundamental mischaracterization of the trips. They say the trips, which are far from unique among international police exchanges, expose participants to a variety of policing practices in Israel, from surveillance systems to models for community policing in minority communities. The itineraries, they add, mostly consist of lectures, meetings and tours.
What we do is focus on management and policy issues, not training, not specific tactical training, said Steven Pomerantz, director of the Homeland Security Program at the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs, or JINSA, a conservative think tank that runs some of the delegations. Theres no shooting, theres no wrestling, theres no chokeholds. Thats just not what this is about. Its about the constituent parts of successful law enforcement [and] counterterrorism responsibilities in local policing.
A focus on counterterrorism in a post-9/11 world
The delegations to Israel began in the 1990s and ramped up after the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001. The sponsoring organizations and their Israeli partners frame the trips as an opportunity for American police to learn from a country and police force with many decades of experience protecting civilian populations from attack.
There was a lot of interest, and still is, in understanding the Israeli approach to terrorism and counterterrorism, said Robbie Friedmann, who runs the Georgia International Law Enforcement Exchange, a program at Georgia State University that takes senior police officers on delegations to Israel and elsewhere. Delegations learn about the need to provide balance between fighting terror and providing services, so that if someone gets their apartment burglarized, they know thats something the Israel Police will take care of.
More than 1,000 participants, mostly senior law enforcement officials, have gone on the trips, which are primarily provided by Friedmanns program, the ADL and the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs. Each organization has taken several hundred police officials to Israel, a small fraction of the leaders of the approximately 18,000 police departments in the United States. The trips are generally privately funded and are free for participants, though none of the organizations would share the exact sources of the funding or the costs of the trip.
Israel is far from the only country to host a delegation of police officials from abroad. Foreign police officers come to the United States to see how police forces here operate, and countries across the world also host delegations. Friedmanns group has run tours in countries throughout Europe and South America, as well as in China, Australia and elsewhere.
And the trips are just one example of a whole industry of delegations to Israel. Jewish organizations regularly offer Israel trips to politicians, community activists, celebrities, students, business executives and an array of others. As with those trips, part of the goal of the police delegations is to acquaint the participants with Israel and give them a favorable view of the country.
The main goal of the trips, across the groups that organize them, is to share Israeli expertise in counterterrorism. Organizers say the trips are about observation, policy and systems, not about doing active-duty training or teaching American officers physical maneuvers.
In Israel in general, confronted with the kind of threats they are, theyre still very resilient, said Lou Dekmar, the chief of police of LaGrange, Georgia, and the past president of the International Association of Chiefs of Police, who has been on several delegations to Israel. How important it is, when there is a crime or an attack, to quickly address it, process it and reintroduce a state of normalcy.
But American officials do get to see their Israeli counterparts in action. The field of counterterrorism in Israel covers a range of topics, from responding to a terror attack in real time to gathering intelligence to policing mass protests. In addition to the Israel Police, some of the trips meet with the Border Police, which patrols the border with the West Bank, as well as the Israel Security Service, or Shin Bet, and the army.
Some trips take officers on a tour of Israels surveillance system in eastern Jerusalem, as well as study how to clear the scene of a terror attack so that normal life can resume. The excursions emphasize efficient sharing of intelligence between the Israeli military and police, as well as the importance of having defined procedures in place at West Bank border crossings for Palestinians who enter Israel. Delegations also visit Israels National Police Academy, where they view training in action.
A 2019 itinerary from the ADL, for example, had the delegation observe security procedures at Ben Gurion Airport, a West Bank checkpoint and eastern Jerusalem, in addition to visiting the Gaza border and the Palestinian police. The delegation also visited Israels Police Academy and other Israeli police institutions, the Yad Vashem Holocaust museum, and Christian and Jewish religious sites.
Chief Janet Moon of the Peachtree City, Georgia, Police Department, who visited Israel with Friedmanns institute in 2015, remembers watching training on how police officers shoot at a moving vehicle.
No matter where you go in the world, law enforcement is law enforcement, she said. They have the same challenges with budgeting, resource allocation, community policing. And theyve been dealing with terrorism a lot longer than we have.
The Deadly Exchange campaign: Expos or antisemitism?
An interest in counterterrorism is not the only thing that Israeli and American police have in common. As in the United States, minorities in Israel have long complained of mistreatment from law enforcement, though in the case of Israels Arab minority, one recent protest movement called for more policing in Arab cities.
Israel Police officers also have been accused of profiling both Arab and Ethiopian Israelis, and recent years have seen large protests by the Ethiopian community against police brutality.
For participants in these programs, the extensive itineraries and opportunities for observation are seen as a benefit because Israeli and US police face similar challenges regarding crowd control, detection of terror threats, airport security and patrolling diverse populations. But to critics of the trips, who already oppose much of how Israel and America practice policing, the combination of the two is damning.
Militarized, racist, violent policing in this country, rooted in centuries of colonization and slavery and warmaking here in the US, alongside Israeli occupation and the brutality enacted against Palestinians there theres no good sense in which those governments should be trading and cross training and developing relationships with one another, the JVPs Fox said.
Her groups Deadly Exchange report claims that the trips goals include justifying racial profiling and suppressing public protests through use of force.
The report cites some examples of American policing practices that came from Israel. It notes that the Atlanta Police Departments camera surveillance system is modeled after Jerusalems, following a 2008 police delegation to Israel, for example, and cites testimony by the administrator of the Department of Homeland Securitys Transportation Security Administration in 2016 that said Israeli training and Israels airport security practices have informed those of his agency.
But more often, the report notes general links between American and Israeli policing practices without showing that controversial practices in the United States were learned in Israel or created with Israeli participation. In one section, discussions of Israeli crowd control are portrayed as technical know-how based in disregard for the right of Palestinians to oppose the Israeli occupation. The report also suggests that a Jewish lawmaker in New York who lobbied for racial profiling was influenced by Israels example, when in fact he did not link his support for Israel to that proposal and had not participated in police exchanges.
Trip organizers say that the Deadly Exchange reports claims amount to bigotry.
To me this is a libel, following a long string of libels in Jewish history, JINSAs Pomerantz said. This is kind of the same thing, that the Jews are responsible for whats happening in minority communities in America at the hands of the police. Its just another one of those libels.
Palestinian activists and their allies point back to accusations of Israeli police misconduct as the core reason that they say the trips shouldnt be happening. Yousef Munayyer, a Palestinian-American scholar, says he is routinely profiled when he returns to Israel, where his extended family still lives and where he was born.
Yes, our police need to get better here in the United States, said Munayyer, a nonresident fellow at the Arab Center in Washington, D.C. But do they really need to be training in a place and with forces where racial profiling is a value, where racial profiling is actually central to the ethos of the security system?
What the trip participants bring home
The delegations do broach uncomfortable topics, organizers say. When it comes to racial profiling, for example, the Georgia State programs Friedmann said, We receive briefings based on the policies, and that participants learn about the process for filing complaints.
Whats important is not to suggest that Israel is a perfect society, he said. But it is a society based on the rule of law, and if an officer is behaving egregiously, it will be handled.
Similarly, Selim said, the ADL trips naturally discuss the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, including on its visits to Palestinian police in the West Bank and to an Israeli border crossing. He said those portions of the trip are especially valuable for participants from border cities in the United States.
Its impossible to talk about policing and security in Israel without talking about the conflict, he said. When there are police executives from Southern California or from Texas or from Arizona, New Mexico, that have joined the delegation in the past two decades, these are in many instances border cities and border towns on the Mexican border.
He added, Issues of cross-border dialogue, engagement, holistic community policing in those cities is very real for them. So to see that in an international context is very helpful for a comparative sense of what works, what doesnt.
In addition to discussing counterterrorism, the trips also show Israels efforts at community policing in Arab-Israeli cities. Micky Rosenfeld, the spokesperson for the Israel Police, said the police have opened new police stations in Arab-Israeli areas and increased their efforts to recruit Arab police officers.
The situation in America is complicated in the same way that the situation [in Israel] is also complicated, he said. Building an ongoing relationship with the community is something that takes time, and it has to come both from the community and law enforcement.
Both Moon and Dekmar say they have been influenced by Israels approach to community policing. Dekmar noticed that the Israel Police has started recruiting Arab-Israeli cadets as early as high school to increase the chances that theyll become officers. He says he began identifying and engaging minority high-schoolers as candidates to serve in his Georgia department as well.
That was a direct result of the experience I saw in Israel, Dekmar said. A recognition that if youre going to recruit from minority populations, you need to start developing relationships younger.
The police chiefs have also implemented procedures or technologies they saw in Israel in their home departments. Moon installed a geo-location system in her 911 call center similar to one she saw in Israel. Dekmar said he adopted an Israeli mentality of conducting training more improvisationally, with less complex equipment.
[I] recognize that this is a very complicated situation that doesnt necessarily lend itself to good guys and bad guys, Dekmar said. It lends itself to an understanding of different cultures placed in a position that potentially could clash at any time.
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1,000 US police officers learned from Israel visit, why its controversial - The Jerusalem Post
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ParentWise: What happened to the Golden Rule? – Monadnock Ledger Transcript
Posted: at 12:08 pm
The multilayers of our present-day predicament have erupted in a perfect storm. One layer is the COVID pandemic keeping everyone at home, schools and camps closed, social distancing. Containing the virus requires following rules. Another layer is the protests of police brutality againstBlack peoplebringing people to the streets stretching the pandemic rules. In the deeper layers is the unrest of factions of society subjugated for so many generations by other factions of society deemed superior. Adding to the perfect storm, the coronavirus attacks the black faction at a vastly greater rate. And the virus is spiking in many states. Our country has been brought to its knees.
I cannot help but draw parallels between the macrocosm of society and the microcosm of the family.
As Trevor Noah of The Daily Show so eloquently described in his off-the-cuff FacebookLive event, society is a group of people who agree to a contract. There are rights and wrongs, written laws, and a constitution that bind that contract. As well as unspoken rights and wrongs that mature members of society agree to in order to get along.
In the microcosm, children are raised by the rules and agreements of a family structure. They mature under the authority of parents until they are ready to join into the contract of society.
Ideally, the principles and agreements of both the family and society are established for the good of all the people to be looked out for, cared for by those principles. This is what binds us and supports us unless they dont apply to all. Both the family and society have lived under double standards for a very, very long time. What is good for some is not good for all.
When some factions are not treated by the same standards as others, uprisings occur. In the family, teen rebellion both civil and violent; in society, protests and demonstrations both civil and violent. What we are seeing in the streets is an uprising of the people for whom the principles of society do not apply. Trevor Noah left us with the question, What if you lived in a society, whose principles you had agreed to, but those very principles neglected to care for you and protect you? How would you feel?
So too within a family. Children blindly trust they will be cared for and their needs met within their family. But when those in authority think their own needs are more important, children fall under the fear and control of manipulative rules of behavior the reward and punishment methods that have been used for ages leaving children feeling powerless and misunderstood. Many protest when age allows, and when the protest is loud enough, they become problems to society. Others submit, losing themselves and their sense of agency in the process.
When authority figures in society and in the family behave in the way they want their people to behave, when double standards disappear, they set an example that people want to follow. This is a democracy. This is a caring, connected family. The golden rule binds to build a strong structure.
The legitimacy and authenticity of society and family both depends on agreeing to a set of basic core principles of respect, trust, balance, fairness. With agreement comes the expectation that those principles apply to all. But when both the family and society live by a you do as I say or else principle, fear replaces respect and havoc will wreak at some point. Human beings can only be held down for so long.
When some respond to Black Lives Matter by saying all lives matter, they are missing the point. When parents respond to a childs out of control behavior with punitive tactics, they are missing the point. When society uses its principles to protect some and not others, society misses the point. The point is that those who are in revolt are screaming to matter. Because they feel invisible, rejected, unacceptable, powerless, and misunderstood the opposite of mattering.
Will we learn anything from this perfect storm, or will we just get tired and go back to the same old, same old?
Ask yourself, do you model behavior toward your children that you want them to mirror? What do you think will happen if you allow yourself to behave in ways you dont allow your children to behave? If you yell and threaten and punish, what do you think your children learn to do to get what they want?
We want our children to move into society with the standards of the golden rule. They will if they have been nurtured on it. We want the golden rule to apply to all factions of that society dont we?
Look for Bonnies new podcast, Tell Me About Your Kids, launching this week wherever you get podcasts.
Bonnie Harris is a parenting specialist who teaches and speaks internationally and at The River Center in Peterborough. Bonnie offers individual parent counseling, parenting workshops and professional trainings. To set up an in-person or online coaching session, email her at bh@bonnieharris.com. You can sign up for her email newsletter on her website, bonnieharris.com.
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Your letters: Live the ‘Golden Rule’ – wear your face mask – Wadena Pioneer Journal
Posted: at 12:08 pm
Many of us grew up learning the Bible's "Golden Rule." This tells us that we should do to others as we want them to do to us.
During this COVID-19 crisis, this means I should wear a mask to protect you from the virus, and you should extend the same protection to me and others. Wear your mask!
Countries such as Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, New Zealand and Australia immediately implemented many safeguards in January and February, including nearly universal wearing of masks. Taiwan, with a population of 24 million, has had only 447 infections and seven deaths since the outbreak.
Australia with a population slightly larger than Florida, has had fewer total infections in six months than Florida had recently in one day. Masks are not the only reason, but they have played a key role in limiting the spread of COVID-19 in these countries.
Contrary to the President's false assertions that 99% of cases are "totally harmless," and that "by April, you know, in theory, when it gets warmer, it miraculously goes away," between 15-20% of COVID cases require hospitalizations, with 3-5% of total cases resulting in death. Clearly this is not harmless! In addition, the pandemic is projected to last at least another year.
Wearing masks is not about "individual freedoms." It is about protecting our families and neighbors. Please, please wear a mask. Live the Golden Rule!
Paul Anderson
Wadena
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Readers sound off on police criticism, nuns and the Golden Rule – New York Daily News
Posted: at 12:08 pm
Bronx: Im confused. First, the Daily News and the public howl about summons and arrest quotas, even publishing stories about the brave police officers who came forward to whine about this evil. Now, you complain that not enough arrests and summonses are being made. If you dont want a quota, you cannot complain about the number of arrests and summonses, since there is no mandatory number expected of officers. I also remember reading some nonsense about smart policing, which is a fantasy, just like, you cannot arrest your way out of crime. I had to laugh when I heard that one. If thats true, why are arrests down and crime going up? Stop talking out of both sides of your mouth. I fully support cops standing on the sidelines until the mayor, the City Council, the press and the defund the police believers decide theyve had enough. Eric Reynolds, NYPD Det., retired
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KEEPING THE FAITH | How to embrace kindness as a lifestyle – Mahoning Matters
Posted: at 12:08 pm
The Golden Rule encourages us to treat others with respect, kindness and fairness. It is advanced by the concepts of compassion and empathy.
It is hard to imagine but there was a recent time when we looked forward to renting videotapes.
Yeah, I pretty much dated myself. Each tape had a sticker affixed that said, Please be kind and rewind
It was not a requirement, but a hope that one would be mindful of the next viewers desire to enjoy the same experience. The sticker was in essence a visual appeal to the renter to be considerate of others.
The Golden Rule is the moral principle and practice of treating other people as one's self would prefer to be treated. It is considered to be one of Jesus' most profound and impactful teachings. He taught in Matthew 7:12 Do to others whatever you would like them to do to you. This is the essence of all that is taught in the law and the prophets.
The Golden Rule encourages us to treat others with respect, kindness and fairness. It is advanced by the concepts of compassion and empathy. Its basic principle is that you would extend yourself to others as you want to be done to you. Kindness is a virtue that is embraced by many cultures and religions.
Kindness is the ability to display concern for others without expecting praise, recognition or reward.
I also believe that within the Golden Rule, we should treat others as they wish to be treated. I try not to presume to know what is best for someone, especially if their approach is not the same as mine; I try to honor and respect their preference.
In third grade at Mary Haddow Elementary School, a classmate untied my shoe in a failed attempt to be funny. However it was not known, but my younger sister tied my shoes for me daily!
Raising my hand in horror yet without shame, upon being acknowledged I said, "Mrs. Phifer, Anthony untied my shoes and I don't know how to tie them!"
I don't remember her immediate response but we were then given classwork to complete independently. It was then she took me to a private area and observed my unsuccessful attempts to tie. She quickly realized that I was left-handed trying to tie like I was right-handed!
It was not on her lesson plans for the day or within the curriculum to teach ME a skill others had already mastered in kindergarten! Without judgment or scorn, she taught me how to complete this once difficult task!
Recently I recalled the impact of that episode several times on the same day yet on different occasions. While I have long acknowledged this act to her directly, I felt led to further express my appreciation in a tangible way.
My Granny often said, "Give me my flowers while I can smell them!" It is a blessing that Mrs. Phifer still lives within walking blocks of my home. As an educator, she lived among the students she taught. Hence, I arrived at her home with a floral arrangement unannounced!
It was Lewis/Louie standing at her door, but she kept addressing me as "Rev. Macklin" After excusing myself for the impromptu visit, I shared my appreciation for that impactful teaching moment.
She recalled the moment as well, saying "I was not going to let him do that to you again! This act also effectively took away the power of the bully. I remain grateful for her intentional response of kindness. Four decades later I still vividly recall her single act of empathy.
We have been bombarded in the midst of this pandemic with a series of unnatural disasters the human acts or inactions which cause harm or aggravate circumstances which are in our control. Even the wearing of face masks to protect others has become a contentious act for some.
The Golden Rule is reinforced and stated in the Old Testament as well. Leviticus 19:18 admonishes, Do not seek revenge or bear a grudge against anyone among your people but love your neighbor as yourself. I am the LORD. While we can debate the justification or gross injustice of any one conflict, I am disheartened when I think of the devastation created by wars motivated by racial or religious hatred.
The local and national news has reported numerous examples of inhumane domestic aggression and insensitivity with increasing episodes of violence, racial strife, sexual harassment, civil unrest, marginalization of victims and intimidation.These behaviors demean the victim and damage our civic life. Flashes of aggression in word and deed can be life-changing.
We all become less when these offenses are perpetrated. I contend that preventing conflict should be one of the most important human aspirations.
Be kind especially to unkind people they need it the most. Kind words can heal the heart and mind. Luke 6:35 directs us to Love your enemies, and do good, and lend, expecting nothing in return, and your reward will be great."
Pope Francis said it well, Let us learn to live with kindness, to love everyone, even when they do not love us. The true reward of being good to others is spreading some joy and offering hope.
John Wesley once said, Do all the good you can. By all the means you can. In all the ways you can. In all the places you can. At all the times you can. To all the people you can. As long as ever you can.
Even when things seem to be in disarray, God still finds a way to show love and kindness. As we are made in His image, we have the ability to do the same to others.
The world is demanding us to be kind especially under the pressure given the climate in this country and the extraordinary pressure we are all under. We all need to give each other a lot more mercy! We have been through some challenging times where we must constantly reassess, recalculate and readjust things differently in real-time.
The late Rev Lonnie Kwajo Asim Simon, the pastor emeritus of the New Bethel Baptist Church and was recognized in the community as The Peoples Pastor for his stalwart advocacy for humanity. He was an accomplished author and poet in his own right. However he would frequently conclude public gathering with a recitation by Charles Meigs entitled Others
Lord help me live from day to dayIn such a self-forgetful wayThat even when I kneel to prayMy prayer shall be for Others.
Help me in all the work I doTo ever be sincere and trueAnd know that all I do for youMust needs be done for Others.
Let self be crucified and slainAnd buried deep; and all in vainMay efforts be to rise againUnless to live for Others.
And when my work on earth is doneAnd my new work in heavens begunMay I forget the crown Ive wonWhile thinking still of Others.
Others, Lord, yes othersLet this my motto beHelp me to live for othersThat I may live like Thee.
We must embrace kindness as a lifestyle so that in the event of conflict, kindness would ebb naturally from us instead of forced politeness or attempting to be nice without being offensive. Proverbs 16:23-24 From a wise mind comes wise speech; the words of the wise are persuasive. Kind words are like honey sweet to the soul and healthy for the body.I contend the best medicine for the world today is kindness so please administer a generous dose often!
I honor the legacy of civil rights icons Reverend C. T. Vivian and the honorable U.S. Rep. John Lewis who passed away within hours of each other. These men were central figures in the early struggles of Americas Civil Rights Movement. These agents of change used their platforms to show the world how it could be better using the approach of non-violence. Both valiantly faced while experiencing violent bigotry as they walked alongside Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. for the cause of equality.
They displayed the essence of the Golden Rule during a time when it was not extended to them. As Congressman Lewis stood earlier this year, battling terminal cancer, on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Bloody Sunday he issued a challenge to the conscience of America to get in good trouble, necessary trouble Remember it is always your choice whether to be an instrument of peace or a tool of torture. Choose wisely and keep fighting the good faith!
Rev. Lewis W. Macklin II is the lead pastor of Holy Trinity Missionary Baptist Church, chaplain for the Youngstown Police Department and coordinator of the Mahoning Valley African American Male Wellness Walk. He resides in Youngstown with Dorothy, his partner in marriage and ministry. They share the love and joy of 5 children and 6 grandchildren.
All biblical references cited are New Living Translation unless otherwise noted.
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Putting the Golden Rule to work at John McGee Trucking – Overdrive Magazine
Posted: at 12:08 pm
John McGee of Simsboro, Louisiana, began driving truck in 1985, buying his first one and going into business for himself six years later. He got his start hauling for a brother-in-laws logging business in the North-Central part of the state, where hes lived his entire life.
Then oil field work in his area started picking up around 2004 and he leased to an oil-services hauler. The company sold out in 2010. When he did that, I acquired some of his customer base the new company didnt want, McGee said. He got his authority and has been running John McGee Trucking ever since.
In 2013, McGee was still hauling full time himself and employed two operators. A few years later, he began to add trucks and tankers. The company nearly quadrupled annual revenues to almost $4M between 2016 and the present. McGee cleared a healthy 30% profit in 2019, though he has almost the same amount tied up in financed equipment and a new shop finished the early part of that year. The company now employs 16 full-time drivers.
John McGees equipment-procurement approach utilizes financing for the late-model power units with an autodraft for the payments and cash for the trailers in efforts to minimize debt. The power units are replaced on a five-year cycle.
Through it all, hes considered the Golden Rule to be the lynchpin of his success. As he puts it: Treat all people employees, customers, vendors as we wish to be treated.
Drivers are paid by the hour, with overtime. Schedules are somewhat staggered to serve what can be a 24/7 business.
Drivers at the fleet operate Mack daycabs, pulling mostly tankers with wastewaster from producing wells, doing generally as much site work as they do driving. A typical haul might be around 30 miles or so one-way, and McGee generally keeps drivers within a 125-mile, four-state radius around his home base. I decided early on in my career to try to be at home every night, he says, and hes structured his business to allow the same for his drivers.
With the finishing touches put on this 7,000-square-foot, two-bay shop in early 2019, John McGee Trucking realized a diversification opportunity when a chicken-feed mill came in across the street. McGee bought his first hopper bottom trailers this year with hopes of securing a stable grain contract with one of the mills suppliers.
The pre- and mid-pandemic downswing in oil prices on the world market didnt impact his midstream oil production customers like it did the completion side, where products are refined. Not yet, anyway, though he well knows oil field work largely depends on world markets. If production companies decide to go forward with projects, well probably expand with one or two trucks there over the next year.
John McGee
Hes got an eye out on diversification as a backstop, however. After the company finished building its 7,000-square-foot shop for more in-house maintenance about a year and a half ago, a chicken-feed mill started going up across the street. Earlier this year, McGee Trucking got its feet wet with a couple of hopper bottom trailers hauling grain for another customer. McGee characterizes the grain business as an awfully cutthroat one compared to what hes used to.
I turn down loads every day, he says. Nonetheless, with the mill scheduled for completion in early 2021, hes hopeful we can get a stable contract with one of their suppliers hauling grain.
Toward that end, he seeks to emphasize dependability and quality service. There are people still out here that appreciate quality, he says. Some can haul for a dollar a turn cheaper, but are they going to be reliable and dependable and safe? Some shippers do want more than just the cheapest price. We try to go over and above our competitors in that respect.
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Love in action the Golden Rule: Meditation for 6th Sunday after Trinity – Guardian
Posted: at 12:08 pm
The golden rule is one rule that has universal application and endorsed by all the great world religions, as shown in their sacred books as follows:
Christianity: Therefore, whatever you want men to do to you, do also to them, for this is the Law and the Prophets (Matt. 7:12)
Confucianism: Do not do to others what you would not like yourself. Then there will be no resentment against you, either in the family or in the state. (Analects 12:2)
Buddhism: Hurt not others in ways that you yourself would find hurtful (Udana-Varga 5,1)
Hinduism: This is the sum of duty; do naught onto others what you would not have them do unto you. (Mahabharata 5,1517)
Islam: No one of you is a believer until he desires for his brother that which he desires for himself. (Sunnah, 40 Hadith of an-Nawawi 13)
Judaism: What is hateful to you, do not do to your fellowman. This is the entire Law; all the rest is commentary. (Talmud, Shabbat 3id)
Taoism: Regard your neighbours gain as your gain, and your neighbours loss as your own loss. (Tai Shang Kan Yin Pien)
Zoroastrianism: That nature alone is good which refrains from doing another whatsoever is not good for itself. (Dadisten-I-dinik, 94,5)
Philosophers like Socrates and Aristotle also upheld the Golden Rule:Socrates (436-338 BC): Do not do unto others what angers you if done to you by others.Aristotle (384-322 BC) We should behave toward friends as we would wish friends to behave toward us.
However, unfortunately, out of selfishness and evil heart, many people do not only fail to live up to it, but also go further to act wickedly towards their neighbours. People in some of these religions even kill others ritually and religiously (in the name of religion like the Boko Haram). It should not be so with Christians because Christianity is built on love, even for the unbelievers and enemies! This love is to be in practical terms Love in Action.
The Ven. Dr. Princewill Onyinyechukwu Ireoba is the Rector, Ibru International Ecumenical Centre, Agbarha-Otor, Delta State.
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