Daily Archives: January 28, 2022

COVID infection before or after vaccination creates super immunity – Deseret News

Posted: January 28, 2022 at 12:12 am

A new study suggests that getting infected by the novel coronavirus before or after COVID-19 vaccination can create so-called super immunity from COVID-19 although experts dont want you trying to deliberately catch the coronavirus.

The news: Researchers at the Oregon Health & Science University found that getting a vaccine shot after recovering from coronavirus provides protection similar to getting COVID-19 after vaccination, which has been noted to create super immunity.

Flashback: The Oregon Health & Science University previously published a study for the Journal of the American Medical Association that found breakthrough infections from the delta variant created a robust immune response against the delta variant or super immunity.

Why it matters: People who have this so-called super immunity are better protected from COVID-19 infection and severe symptoms, the researchers said.

What theyre saying: These results, together with our previous work, point to a time when SARS-CoV-2 may become a mostly mild endemic infection like a seasonal respiratory tract infection, instead of a worldwide pandemic, said study co-author Marcel Curlin, per The Oregonian.

Yes, but: Senior co-author Fikadu Tafesse told The Oregonian this is not a reason for people to intentionally catch COVID-19, saying there are long-term consequences to a COVID-19 infection that arent worth it.

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New omicron variant is putting scientists on alert. Here’s what to know : Goats and Soda – NPR

Posted: at 12:12 am

A computer-generated image of the omicron variant of the coronavirus. Uma Shankar Sharma/Getty Images hide caption

A computer-generated image of the omicron variant of the coronavirus.

Just as the omicron surge starts to recede in parts of the U.S., scientists have their eye on another coronavirus variant spreading rapidly in parts of Asia and Europe. It's officially called "omicron BA.2," and this week scientists detected cases of it in several U.S. states, including California, Texas and Washington.

Although BA.2 is currently rare in the U.S., scientists expect it to spread in the country over the next month. There's growing evidence that it's just as contagious as or possibly a bit more contagious than the first omicron variant, called "omicron BA.1."

"It could be that BA.2 does have some small advantage," says Emma Hodcroft, an epidemiologist at the University of Bern who has been tracking variants all around the world throughout the pandemic via the Nextstrain project. "BA.2 might well be, like, 1% to 3% more transmissible, or something like that."

So the big question now is, will that small difference be enough for this variant to lengthen the ongoing surge in the U.S., as it has in Denmark?

You can think of BA.2 as a sibling of BA.1, Hodcroft says. They share a bunch of mutations about 30 or so but they also have a bunch of mutations that are unique.

"They are quite similar, but they're also different," she says. "So very much like siblings, in my opinion. Different but obviously related."

Back in November, when scientists in South Africa and Botswana discovered omicron, they didn't find just one version. They found three, called BA.1, BA.2 and BA.3 by the Phylogenetic Assignment of Named Global Outbreak Lineages at the University of Edinburgh.

The first one, BA.1, took off rapidly and spread around the world, including in the United States. And initially, it looked like BA.2 and BA.3 were weaker and less able to keep up with BA.1.

"We thought, 'OK, BA.2 is just not as fit as its sibling BA.1, and it will kind of peter out,' " Hodcroft says.

But that's not what happened not at all.

Over the past several weeks, omicron BA.2 has begun to surprise scientists. And it's starting to look like it can, in some countries, outcompete its sibling omicron BA.1 and, really, any other variants.

Back in December, omicron BA.1 caused a massive surge in cases in Denmark, similar to the surge in the United States. But then, just as cases began to decline, BA.2 started spreading very rapidly in Denmark. After only a few weeks, BA.2 took over the outbreak there and has lengthened Denmark's surge. Denmark's cases are climbing steeply, with more than 40,000 recorded each day. Since the second week in January, BA.2 has caused more than 50% of those cases, according to the Statens Serum Institut in Copenhagen.

People queue for rapid coronavirus tests at a center set up at a church in Aalborg, Denmark, where a second omicron variant has fueled a surge. Henning Bagger/Ritzau Scanpix/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

People queue for rapid coronavirus tests at a center set up at a church in Aalborg, Denmark, where a second omicron variant has fueled a surge.

Omicron BA.2 is also growing exponentially in England and Germany, where it's causing at least 5% of cases in both places. Scientists are concerned it could lengthen surges in those locations as well as possibly in the United States.

Together, this data indicates that BA.2 is not BA.1's weaker sibling, but rather that BA.2 is quite strong and possibly more contagious.

Many studies have shown that infections with omicron BA.1 carry a reduced risk of severe disease compared with the delta variant of the coronavirus.

Preliminary evidence from Denmark suggests this will also be the case with omicron BA.2, says Dr. Peter Chin-Hong at the University of California San Francisco.

"Scientists there have found that there was no increased risk in going to the hospital if you have BA.2 compared to if you have BA.1," Chin-Hong says. "That could change, but that's what we know so far."

And there's cautious optimism about inoculations. Preliminary data from the U.K. government shows that a third shot of a COVID-19 vaccine protects against an infection of BA.2 just as well as it does against BA.1. In both cases, it reduces the risk of a symptomatic infection by about 60% to 70%. In addition, there are many similarities between BA.1's and BA.2's spike proteins the part of the virus that many antibodies target.

So Chin-Hong expects the vaccines will likely provide superb protection against severe disease.

"I have no guarantee that you won't get infected or possibly reinfected [if you've already had COVID-19], meaning that you might have the sniffles or feel like you have another cold, but I feel very, very confident that you would be protected from serious disease in the general population."

And Chin-Hong says that this distinction is critical for the future of COVID-19. Going forward, he says, communities need to shift their focus from stopping all infections to keeping everyone safe from severe disease and hospitalization.

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New omicron variant is putting scientists on alert. Here's what to know : Goats and Soda - NPR

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COVID hits one of the last uninfected places on the planet – WPRI.com

Posted: at 12:12 am

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) When the coronavirus began spreading around the world, the remote Pacific archipelago of Kiribati closed its borders, ensuring the disease didnt reach its shores for nearly two full years.

Kiribati finally began reopening this month, allowing the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to charter a plane to bring home 54 of the island nations citizens. Many of those aboard were missionaries who had left Kiribati before the border closure to spread the faith abroad for what is commonly known as the Mormon church.

Officials tested each returning passenger three times in nearby Fiji, required that they be vaccinated, and put them in quarantine with additional testing when they arrived home.

It wasnt enough.

More than half the passengers tested positive for the virus, which has now slipped out into the community and prompted the government to declare a state of disaster. An initial 36 positive cases from the flight had ballooned to 181 cases by Friday.

Kiribati and several other small Pacific nations were among the last places on the planet to have avoided any virus outbreaks, thanks to their remote locations and strict border controls. But their defenses appear no match against the highly contagious omicron variant.

Generally speaking, its inevitable. It will get to every corner of the world, said Helen Petousis-Harris, a vaccine expert at the University of Auckland in New Zealand. Its a matter of buying enough time to prepare and getting as many people vaccinated as possible.

Only 33% of Kiribatis 113,000 people are fully vaccinated, while 59% have had at least one dose, according to the online scientific publication Our World in Data. And like many other Pacific nations, Kiribati offers only basic health services.

Dr. Api Talemaitoga, who chairs a network of Indigenous Pacific Island doctors in New Zealand, said Kiribati had only a couple of intensive care beds in the entire nation, and in the past relied on sending its sickest patients to Fiji or New Zealand for treatment.

He said that given the limitations of Kiribatis health system, his first reaction when he heard about the outbreak was, Oh, my lord.

Kiribati has now opened multiple quarantine sites, declared a curfew and imposed lockdowns. President Taneti Maamau said on social media that the government is using all its resources to manage the situation, and urged people to get vaccinated.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, based in the U.S. state of Utah, has a strong presence in many Pacific nations, including Kiribati, where its 20,000 members make it the third-largest Christian denomination. The church has about 53,000 missionaries serving full time around the world, working to convert people.

The pandemic has presented challenges for their missionary work, which is considered a rite of passage for men as young as 18 and women as young as 19.

As the pandemic ebbed and flowed, the church responded. Itrecalled about 26,000 missionaries who were serving overseasin June 2020, reassigning them to proselytize online from home before sending some back out into the field five months later.

When COVID-19 vaccines became widely available in many countries in April 2021, church officialsencouraged all missionaries to get inoculated and required it of those serving outside their home countries.

Church spokesperson Sam Penrod said the returning missionaries remained in quarantine, were cooperating with local health authorities and would be released from their service upon completion of their quarantine.

With Kiribatis borders being closed since the onset of the pandemic, many of these individuals have continued as missionaries well beyond their 18 to 24 months of anticipated service, with some serving as long as 44 months, he said.

Before this months outbreak, Kiribati had reported just two virus cases: crew members on an incoming cargo ship that ultimately wasnt permitted to dock.

But the Kiribati charter flight wasnt the first time missionaries returning home to a Pacific island nation tested positive for COVID-19.

In October, a missionary returning to Tonga from service in Africa wasreported as the countrys first and so far only positive case after flying home via New Zealand. Like those returning to Kiribati, he also was vaccinated and quarantined.

Tonga is desperately trying to prevent any outbreaks as it recovers from adevastating volcanic eruptionandtsunamiearlier this month. The nation of 105,000 has been receiving aid from around the world but has requested that crews from incoming military ships and planes drop their supplies andleave without having any contactwith those on the ground.

Theyve got enough on their hands without compounding it with the spread of COVID, said Petousis-Harris, the vaccine expert. Anything they can do to keep it out is going to be important. COVID would be just compounding that disaster.

In the long term, however, it is going to be impossible to stop the virus from entering Tonga or any other community, Petousis-Harris said.

Nearby Samoa, with a population of 205,000, is also trying to prevent its first outbreak. It imposed a lockdown through until Friday evening after 15 passengers on an incoming flight from Australia last week tested positive.

By Thursday, that number had grown to 27, including five front-line nurses who had treated the passengers. Officials said all those infected had been isolated and there was no community outbreak so far.

While the incursion of the virus into the Pacific has prompted lockdowns and other restrictions, there were signs that not all traditional aspects of island life would be lost for long.

Government has decided to allow fishing, Kiribati declared on Thursday, while listing certain restrictions on times and places. Only four people will be allowed to be on a boat or part of a group fishing near shore.

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Portland Police Used a Proud Boy Meme in Their Training Materials. The Feds Want Answers – Rolling Stone

Posted: at 12:12 am

The Portland City Attorney apologized Tuesday to the Department of Justice for not turning over riot-police training materials that included a right-wing meme about bashing dirty hippies. In retrospect, I agree that we should have provided the material to DOJ sooner, wrote city attorney Robert Taylor in a letter dated Jan. 25. I take responsibility and apologize.

The mea culpa comes days after the feds formally rebuked the Portland Police Bureau for covering up its use of a Proud Boys meme in training materials. A slide from a crowd-control PowerPoint developed for Portland police featured the Prayer of the Alt Knight a meme showing a riot cop bashing a long-haired citizen, with an overlay of text that reads, in part: Woe be unto you, dirty hippy I shall send among you, My humble servants with hat, and with bat; That they may christen your heads with hickory, And anoint your faces with pepper spray.

(The meme is linked to the Fraternal Order of Alt-Knights, identified by the Southern Poverty Law Center as the tactical defense arm of the Proud Boys, the violent, far-right Western chauvinist group.)

The slide made headlines when it was released by Mayor Ted Wheelers office despite the city attempting to bury the news by releasing it on the Friday afternoon before the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday weekend.

For the bureaus critics, the slide gave lie to longstanding claims by PPB officials to have zero opinion about the ideology or politics or speech of protesters. In recent years, Portland has emerged as a rift zone, where the nations ideological divisions erupt violently in the streets. But rather than acting the part of neutral peace-keepers between right- and the left-wing factions, PPB officers often appear to welcome extremists like the Proud Boys as informal allies.

Lawyers for the Civil Rights division of the Justice Department blasted the city both for the offensive content of the training, and for hiding the PowerPoint from Uncle Sam. The City should have reported these [riot] training materials when they were developed, as required, insists a letter sent to the city attorney and police chief last week. The materials were delivered to the feds on Jan. 14.

The Portland police have been under federal supervision for nearly a decade. The Justice Department found in 2012 that Portland police had engaged in a pattern or practice of using excessive force in particular against those with mental illness. The bureaus violent policing of Portlands racial-justice protests, involving more than 6,000 uses of force in 2020 alone, caused PPB to fall out of compliance with its reform agreement with DOJ last year. Federal overseers have called out the bureau for an unconstitutional reliance on violence and a leadership that broadly sees all force as justified.

The Justice Department makes clear that problems with the PPB training extend beyond a single slide, and that the full, 110-slide deck features training slides that have varying degrees of offensive content, incorrect guidance, and false or misleading information. It adds that the government would have made substantial edits or rejected the training materials outright had it been made aware of them.

The DOJ lawyers add that the existence of these [riot] training materials might have materially impacted our assessments of the Citys compliance with federal oversight, because the training of crowd-control officers was central to our 2021 annual compliance report as well as to ongoing mediation.

The DOJ letter acidly denounces the citys decision to keep the materials under wraps. Some PPB and City employees knew or should have known about these materials for years, it insists. The City Attorneys Office has reportedly known about them since at least September 2021. In his apologetic response, City Attorney Taylor writes that he had planned to turn over the training slides as part of the citys annual disclosures to the Justice Department later this month.

In Portlands odd system of government, the mayor doubles as the police commissioner. Wheeler has said he was disgusted by the inclusion of the hippie-bashing slide. But his office said that the document had not been released to protect the integrity of an internal police investigation that started last September when the slide surfaced as part of litigation against the Portland Police Bureau for alleged widespread brutality against protesters. (Despite having months to investigate, the police say they have no clear leads on who added the Proud Boy meme to the police training.)

The mayors office said it only made the slide public to get out in front of a legal filing in that brutality case, which has now been submitted to federal court. The motion in suit filed by the activist group Dont Shoot Portland seeks class-action status to hold PPB responsible for its violent and unlawful conduct against an estimated tens of thousands of Black Lives Matter protesters.

The suit accuses PPB of unconstitutionally punishing entire crowds for the law-breaking actions of a few individuals, and of viewpoint discrimination against protesters who demanded police accountability. Citing the 6,000 uses of force as well as nearly 300 deployments of tear gas in the summer and fall of 2020, the lawsuit decries a politically motivated police campaign of violence against demonstrators.

Ample evidence suggests that the PPBs response to left-wing protests against white supremacy and police violence was motivated by the PPBs strong disagreement with the message of those protests, the motion alleges. PPBs violent response to those demonstrating against white supremacy and police brutality, it adds, is starkly contrasted by its more favorable treatment of right-wing, neo-fascist, white supremacist demonstrators.

The motion insists that Portland cops were motivated by the goal of silencing advocates for police reform, and it alleges that police tactics were so excessive that they would chill a person of ordinary firmness from continuing to engage in the [constitutionally] protected activity of street protest. The document rebukes Portland police officers for repeatedly turning the streets of downtown into a war zone with only one active army the PPB chasing fleeing civilians.

Taking aim at PPB leadership as well as riot cops, the litigation decries a complete lack of accountability for officers who engaged in violence. A deposition of a PPB commander accompanying the lawsuit reveals that across more than a dozen nights of protest from May through September 2020 not a single officer was disciplined for excessive use of force.

The lawsuit also highlights two uses of force that a federal judge ruled violated a restraining order to protect protesters, resulting in federal contempt findings against PPB. But neither case resulted in discipline by the bureau.

An exchange in the deposition of the police commander speaks volumes to PPBs view of itself as beyond reproach:

Lawyer: Does the City have concerns about making findings that are in direct contradiction to a federal court judge?

PPB Commander: No.

Juan Chavez, a civil rights attorney with the Oregon Justice Resource Center, is one of the lawyers for the plaintiffs in the case. He denounces PPB for failures of training, failures of policy, and failures of accountability. Most outrageous, he insists, PPB has engaged in unconstitutional collective punishment of crowds of protesters with tear gas, bull rushes, baton strikes, etc when many had done nothing to justify that violence.

The fourth amendment standard for use of force, Chavez insists, is highly specific, requiring probable cause for each act of police violence and each person they use force against. Chavez elaborates that PPB, itself, has admitted to a practice of collective punishment: We saw this time and time again in their own reporting, Chavez says, paraphrasing the reports: The crowd was hostile; The crowd was anti-police; The crowd was chanting ACAB (an acronym meaning all cops are bastards). Time and again, PPB officers were making the case that an entire crowd now had generated the amount of legal justification to use force against them, Chavez says. And thats just not how the Constitution is enforced.

Chavez hastens to add that the aim of the class-action lawsuit is not to recover monetary damages, rather for the court to hand down an enforceable order against police violence. Chavez hopes that would curb PPBs brutality going forward but also validate the experience of tens of thousands of people who were injured in the street. They were told PPB is following the law when we know they know they werent.

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Spotify Was Never Going to Drop Joe Rogan – WIRED

Posted: at 12:12 am

This week, Spotify removed the musical catalog of Neil Young from its platform. On Monday, the legendary rocker published a letter decrying the Swedish streamer for spreading false information about Covid-19 vaccines. In it, he cited the Spotify-exclusive podcast The Joe Rogan Experience in particular: They can have Rogan or Young. Not both. Spotify quickly made its choiceRogan.

Of course it did. Young vs. Spotify has been framed as a culture-war victory for Joe Rogan, but its not. There was no battle. Yes, plenty of people are angry at Rogan, including the 270 health care professionals whose highly publicized open letter to Spotify about the podcasters content inspired Young. But there is no evidence that this rancor has impacted Rogans position as Spotifys golden boy. His podcast remains number one on its charts in the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. (Young, in contrast, is the 778th most popular musical artist.) Spotify didnt give Rogan a reported $100 million in a noble effort to spearhead a public health campaign. It gave him the money to be his freewheeling, contrarian, and almost constantly controversial self. Hes a shock jock. Spotify knew what it was buying in May 2020. Back then, when it ported over Rogans catalog, it left out more than 40 older episodes, including interviews with Sandy Hook conspiracy theorist Alex Jones and Proud Boys founder Gavin McInnesand it faced a wave of backlash from angry fans for doing so. This time around, it seems less inclined to rankle Rogans acolytes than it is to accept that a fraction of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young superfans who care about public health will be deleting their accounts.

No disrespect to Neil Young, but he was never going to move the needle here. Ever. Even if he got other artists on board to boycott Spotify, its unlikely any coalition would have the desired effect. First of all, there are practical roadblocks, as musicians are rarely the owners of their own music. Young didnt actually have the ability to remove his albums, and had to get permission from his label to do so; its far from a given that the major labels would do the same for their contemporary stars. But say they didand say the streamers current top four artists, Drake, Ed Sheeran, Bad Bunny, and Ariana Grande, joined forces and yanked their music from Spotifyeven then, it is unlikely that Spotify would exile Rogan.

Remember: Twitter only dumped President Trump when he was a lame duck. And Twitter hadnt paid Trump $100 million to exclusively appear on its platform. Even if Spotifys C-suite develops a raging guilty conscience over Rogan encouraging young people not to get the Covid-19 vaccine, it wouldnt be able to moderate his content without implicating itself as a publisher in addition to admitting its responsibility as a platform. This would then set a precedent for additional scrutiny toward Spotify-exclusive hits. God forbid Call Her Daddy host Alex Cooper starts insisting George W. Bush did 9/11 or Dax Shepherd decides to interview a bunch of eugenicists. The podcasting division would become a minefield. And Spotify needs podcasting to succeed.

Spotify started out with music, but it has thundered into the podcasting space, pouring hundreds upon hundreds of millions into a remarkably efficient effort to unseat Apple and establish itself as the premiere destination for podcasts. It paid $340 million for the podcast network Gimlet Media in 2019 and nearly $200 million for The Ringer (my former employer) in 2020, as part of this blitz. When people listen to music on Spotify, the streamer has to pay a third party (usually the record label). But when people listen to Spotify-owned podcasts, theres no third party to pay. Spotify can place ads within its own podcasts even for premium users, who do not have ads in between songs. While premium subscriptions are still the companys primary money-maker, advertisements are catching up, a development credited to the podcast arm. Podcasts are central to Spotifys growth strategy. Rogan is central to Spotifys podcasting arm. There would have to be a consumer boycott on an unprecedented scale to make cracking down on Rogan worthwhile from a business perspective. My guess? As long as Rogan stays on the top of Spotifys charts, he will remain inoculated against repercussions.

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Invoking The Kinkster": Thoughts After Colleyville | Cary Kozberg | The Blogs – The Times of Israel

Posted: at 12:10 am

Known for his uniquely irreverent wit, Richard Kinky Friedman is a Jewish country-western singer/songwriter from my home state of Texas. He is also the author of detective mysteries and a former gubernatorial candidate.

Although not among the most famous in show business, the Kinkster (as he is affectionately known) has been around a while. Fifty years ago, he caught the attention of the American Jewish community with his iconic song Ride Em, Jewboy. The lyrics tell of a cowboy who imagines himself watching Jews herded into the trains going to Auschwitz, and comparing them to the cattle he herds, which eventually also will be slaughtered. Although the title was deemed offensive (and still is, by some), the lyrics themselves are quite poignant.

That song was followed a couple of years later by another eye-brow raiser on his second albumthe uber-politically incorrect They Aint Makin Jews Like Jesus Anymore. Sung in the first person, it tells of a Jewish guy in a bar who challenges a redneck patron for spewing all kinds of racial epithets. After some initial verbal exchanges, the narrator hits him with everything I had, right square between the eyes, then confidently declares to the other bar patrons:

They aint makin Jews like Jesus anymoreWe dont turn the other cheek the way we done before.

In the wake of Colleyvilleand Pittsburgh and PowayIve been thinking about these words. They were first recorded not long after the Yom Kippur War. Six years earlier, Israel miraculously defeated several Arab armies in a war for her survival. Although the Yom Kippur War was longer and more devastating, it ended with Israel still victorious.

Since then, Israel has fought more wars. Against conventional armies and terrorist groups, she has continued to show the world that, after the Holocaustwe dont turn the other cheek the way we done before. Or, as someone else once succinctly expressed the same sentiment never again!

That someone was the late Rabbi Meir Kahane, founder of the Jewish Defense League. Never Again is the title of his book, first published in 1972. At that time, Jews were being attacked in this country and abroad by Palestinian terrorists (Munich), radical Black activists (NYC), and far-Left terrorist groups sympathetic to the Arab cause (e.g., the Japanese Red Army and the German Baader-Meinhof Gang). With attacks coming from so many directions and the memory of the Holocaust still fresh, Kahanes message was this: Jews needed to understand that responses to physical attacks had to be more than just writing letters to the editor and appealing to societys better angels. Ultimately Jews are responsible for their own safety and security. Therefore, they had to learn how to respond with physical force, both armed and unarmed. Such sentiments led to the founding of the JDL and helped to make the rabbi an anathema among many if not most Jews in America.

Fast forward 50+ years: same scenarios, different characters. Rabbi Kahane still remains an anathema among most American Jews. Yet, ironically, the same Jews who hold him in such contempt reliably repeat his words Never Again! Why? Because 50+ years later, the words have a different tenor. Originally, they were a call for Jews to learn physical self-defense, and not rely only on law enforcement. Today, the phrase has become more of a bromide, a clich. Reliably invoked in the wake of attacks on Jewish individuals or institutions, it has become the inspiration to write more letters, hold more vigils, or organize more outreach to those who either hate us, or who are indifferent to what happens to us. In other words, to be righteously indignantbut politely and without offense.

To be sure, in the wake of Pittsburgh, Poway and now Colleyville, Jewish institutions all over the world are beefing up security with better technology and hiring professional security personnel. Local and national government resources offer training on how to respond to an active shooter (run, hide, and fight). All of these are good and necessary. But they are not sufficient. As we are seeing today, even first-line precautions dont always stop the virus. Intruders can get through the most sophisticated technology and neutralize armed security. Thus, the intended victims may have to stop aggression with their own counter-aggression. And yet, despite the stories we tell about our warrior-ancestors Joshua, King David and Judah Maccabee, despite the memory of the Holocaust when only few Jews took up arms against their enemies, despite the State of Israels showing the world that now Jews dont the other cheek the way we done before, mainstream American Jewry still hasnt gotten the memo.

Item: Both congregations in Pittsburgh and Colleyville reportedly had offered active-shooter training to their congregations. From the beginning, the people in Colleyville were never able to hide and apparently had nothing to fight back with. After eleven hours (!), the rabbi distracted the intruder by throwing a chair at him, and the hostages were able to escape. When the congregants in Pittsburgh responded to the shooter by doing what they had been told to dohide by ducking under the pews the shooter walked up and down the aisles, picking them off one by one.

Item: In the face of ongoing threats, Jews are told to be more vigilant. Yet, on the very day that the Colleyville congregations security officer was absent, vigilance and situational awareness should have been heightened and standard security protocol should have been followed. Yet, allowing compassion to eclipse good judgment, the rabbi himself let the intruder in. This is not to take away from the courage he showed during the 11-hour ordeal. But the hard truth is that his good deed endangered his life and the lives of his congregants. For those 11 hours, everyone in that synagogue was at the intruders mercy. Had the intruder been more competent and more focused, the situation most probably would have ended very badly.

A recent op-ed piece in the UKs Jewish Chronicle that appeared after Colleyville stated:

Anti-Semitism is no longer at arms-length, somewhere else on the globe and irrelevant. It is here, it has power, and it is ferocious. It is aiming at America and Jews together. The Jewish community is waking to its danger and the danger to the America that has given them a place to live, to strive, and to thrive for so long.

Anti-Semitism no longer being at arms-length means that our Jewish cheeks, as it were, are also no longer at arms-length. Regrettably, we live in a time when our cheeks may be hit from any directionfrom the Right or from the Left, from in front of us or from behind us.

If we are going to continue to thrive as a vibrant community in America, we must not succumb to weakness or victimhood. Instead, we as a community must be resolute in affirming in words and actions WE DONT TURN THE OTHER CHEEK THE WAY WE DONE BEFORE!.

And as the Kinkster reminds us in another song also from that second album:

Its time for the chosen ones to choose.

Cary Kozberg is a rabbi who has served in congregations, Hillel, and health care chaplaincy. He is currently rabbi of Temple Sholom in Springfield, Ohio

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Preserving Columbus statue would show we value diversity of thought (Your Letters) – syracuse.com

Posted: at 12:10 am

To the Editor:

I was surprised to see throughout our city many posters with a particularly interesting message containing two demands. The first one was to celebrate diversity; he second, to replace the Columbus statue. But how can we celebrate diversity by removing a preeminent symbol of diversity?

The Syracuse Columbus statue was paid for with the donations of Italian immigrants; people who risked their lives coming to America in filthy hulls of ships, escaping from an economic crisis. And exactly as other minority groups at the time, they were segregated not de jure but de facto fiercely criticized by the press, and subjected to all kinds of humiliations and discriminations. It should not be difficult to understand that those who paid for the Columbus statue were not thinking about the flaws in the life of the explorer, but in the values that he embodied to their community. For Italians, Columbus was a reason to be proud of their identity, and a symbol of their bravery and success in a hostile new land. And anyone who is an immigrant me included can easily relate to this.

But even if you think that Columbus and 99% of the people of his time were sadistic maniacs that enslaved or slaughtered people for pleasure, you should still be in favor of keeping the statue. Why? Because it is, like it or not, a piece of well-preserved evidence of our citys multicultural past. What could be more diverse in essence, than respecting what constituted the heritage of older generations? And what is the price we pay to keep that heritage? I do not think that the discomfort of a small sector of the population is reason enough to deny our cultural legacy. Moreover, being willing to preserve a statue of a controversial figure in the center of our city speaks volumes about our commitment to diversity and liberal values. It states that we accept different points of view, or that at least we are open to debate. However, if we ask for its removal, we deliberately exclude a manifestation of that diversity that we seek to protect.

At this point, its relevant to ask ourselves what portion of the concept of diversity we are trying to embrace. Since diversity is such a broad term going far beyond racial issues it would be a huge mistake to consciously choose its racial over ideological implication. Doing so would make us hypocrites regarding an important human value, because any kind of inclusionary diversity that can be achieved in a free society is the result of diversity of thought. That diversity (of thought, ideologies, ideas, political views and worldviews) that the statue of Columbus represents especially today should not be abandoned to fit in with the fashionable narrative. In the short term (the one that worries most politicians) those who have blindly consumed this narrative will applaud the cancelers of Columbus for their apparent courage and historical empathy, but in the long term (the one that should concern us, citizens) this will leave a terrible precedent: the imposition of an absolute vision of the world from one political spectrum on another.

Unfortunately, the citys debate over the statue has gotten too political when it shouldnt have. Although our biased media outlets have tried to sell it to us in this way, it is not about empowering a marginalized community by removing the stigma of their oppression. Its not even about Columbus. It is about politicians taking advantage of the pain of a community and censoring the voice of another community to paint themselves as social justice warriors; and it is also about the willingness of the public to either acknowledge or conceal a part of history that our modern standards consider politically incorrect.

We can defend the rights of those who need it, and at the same time understand that we are doing no good by filtering our past for future generations. Whether or not we want to praise some historical figures in textbooks is one thing, but wanting to erase any trace of them is another. In fact, it is the liberals and not the conservatives who should be advocating for the preservation of the Columbus statue. Being liberal does not mean believing as absolute truth everything that is fashionable to say for leftist celebrities, or joining the current trend on social networks because it flirts with certain terms that sound pleasant to the ear. It means siding with individual freedom, and being open and tolerant of our differences, rather than accepting preconceived values imposed on us by religious or governmental authorities.

The best, most inclusive and truly liberal solution would be to raise funds for the Indigenous people to erect their own statue in a central location of the city. Only in this way would we recognize the relevance of both the Italian and Native American communities without the need to underestimate the heritage of one or the other.

Justo Antonio Triana

Syracuse

Related: Crowd gathers at Syracuse courthouse to hear arguments in Columbus monument case

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Jennie Nguyen Dust-Up Is Bravo’s Latest Battle In The War Over Its Soul – The Federalist

Posted: at 12:10 am

Jennie Nguyen fled war-torn Vietnam on a boat. She was captured by Thai pirates, Nguyen says, and saved from a refugee camp three years later by Christians who sponsored her journey to America. Bravo just fired Nguyen, the networks first Vietnamese Real Housewife, over anti-woke memes she posted in 2020.

Some of Nguyens posts have been described as racist in the media since a Reddit user dug them up earlier this month. After each of her cast members took her turn denouncing Nguyen, she apologized, describing the memes as offensive and hurtful. It wasnt enough. By Tuesday, Nguyen had been axed from the Real Housewives of Salt Lake City.

Heres a representative sampling of the memes, which would have been hard for Bravo to miss when they vetted Nguyen as a member of the cast.

The posts are not gentle criticisms of the social justice movement, that much is clear. Theyre biting, politically incorrect, and openly unsympathetic. Theyre also pretty standard fare in the universe of political memes and the universe of parents Facebook feeds. Thats not because the country is teeming with racists, its because a movement considered mainstream by the political establishment is actually very polarizing.

Nguyen, for instance, posted the Community meme that said, If you follow the officers [sic] orders, you wont get shot, on Aug. 27, 2020, in the aftermath of Black Lives Matter riots that torched Kenosha, Wis. over the shooting of Jacob Blake. It turned out Blake, who is now paralyzed, was armed with a knife, resisting arrest, trying to enter an SUV with his children in it, and hadnt responded to stun-gun shocks. State and federal prosecutors ultimately declined to charge the officer who fired.

Again, Nguyens post is sharp and unsympathetic, but hardly racist or inaccurate in the context of that particular incident. The Blaze article she posted about George Floyds death is also accurate, and theres nothing racial in Nguyens Sept. 23 post about crime, especially in the context of 2020 where Antifa rioters from all racial backgrounds were vandalizing cities around the country.

The graphic Nguyen posted on Sept. 2 makes a pretty popular argument in crude terms: the countrys problems have more to do with culture than cops. If you use the false, expansionist definition of racism that thinkers like Ibram X. Kendi successfully mainstreamed, then yes, Jennie Nguyen and many other Americans are virulently racist.

But this is not a problem with them, its a problem with the definition, which has been weaponized by ideologues and partisans to make our cities less safe for people of all races while elite leftists move to the suburbs. Remember when the ultra-left mayor of Minneapolis was booed out of a rally for saying he wasnt fully on board with abolishing the entire police department? Under the Kendi definition, support for systems of oppression (like capitalism or policing) is not anti-racism, thus it is racism.

That word used to be commonly understood as a label for people who discriminate against others based on the idea their race is inferior. The far left intentionally changed this.

I have no idea whether Nguyen is racist, but deciding these memes mark an unacceptable level of racism sends a message that reasonable opinions are bigotry. It reinforces dangerous new norms of what constitutes racism and what constitutes a fixable offense.

Of course, its also a double standard on more levels than one. Nguyens castmate Mary Cosby told her she love[s] slanted eyes earlier this season. She also said something about Mexican thugs who make drugs. Cosby seems to have quit the show amid mounting allegations the Pentecostal church she runs is exploitive at best and a cult at worst.

Nguyen herself said on this weeks episode of the show that she broke her husbands ribs during an argument once. That seems worse than holding conservative views about policing, but the outrage is disproportionate.

Bravo has been happy to follow the legal drama of RHOSLCs Jen Shah, whos pleading not guilty to charges of fraud in a telemarketing scheme. Teresa Giudice went to prison. Its great television, and thats okay.

Bravo does not cast Real Housewives as protagonists. Theyre not supposed to function as role models and theyre not supposed to normalize bad behavior. When we laugh or gasp at their bad behavior, we reinforce the boundaries of whats right and wrong. Firing Nguyen instead of forcing her to talk through the issue with her cast is silly because its falsely predicated on the notion her posts were racist, but also because its less constructive.

Above all, Bravo is a business. Like many businesses around the country, the networks culturally progressive leaders see backlash from hyper-political leftists on social media and the entertainment press as a threat to their bottom line. Its not, even for a niche subculture like the Bravo universe. Nguyens diversity mattered to them until she turned out to be ideologically diverse by the standards of their bubbles.

As woke culture built momentum in recent years, Bravo proactively started adding layers of leftist messaging to its shows, casting finger-waggers who intentionally steered the plots toward politics in order to lecture their castmates about good and evil. Its sucking the life out of the network, saddling shows that used to chronicle the decadence of the nouveau riche with protagonists who dont deserve that framing.

Indeed, amid the news of Nguyens firing, commentators and fans suddenly turned their attention to Ramona Singer. Whether you think shes racist (I have no idea), Singer is one of the greatest housewives of all time, and shes almost certainly one of the least likable. How? Because thats what the franchise is about.

Its entirely reasonable to take exception with the idea of shows being predicated on that kind of model. But if youre a fan of the network, it makes absolutely no sense to suddenly demand ideological and moral purity from the women who arent fully left.

If Bravo got rid of Singer, theyd basically be conceding the entire franchise is built on an immoral foundation. Again, thats a reasonable argument. But its one that would turn Bravo into a much less interesting network, even by the standards of people cheering for Singers departure.

These women are not meant to be protagonists. They are not meant to behave virtuously. They are antiheroes who sell access to their materialistic lives for brand visibility. They arent running for president, theyre running for a job that shows us what fame and money does to families.

Emily Jashinsky is culture editor at The Federalist. She previously covered politics as a commentary writer for the Washington Examiner. Prior to joining the Examiner, Emily was the spokeswoman for Young Americas Foundation. Shes interviewed leading politicians and entertainers and appeared regularly as a guest on major television news programs, including Fox News Sunday, Media Buzz, and The McLaughlin Group. Her work has been featured in the Wall Street Journal, the New York Post, Real Clear Politics, and more. Emily also serves as director of the National Journalism Center and a visiting fellow at Independent Women's Forum. Originally from Wisconsin, she is a graduate of George Washington University.

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The Dilemma of Hong Kong’s Fixation on Zero COVID – The Diplomat

Posted: at 12:10 am

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In the past couple weeks, Hong Kongs battle against the COVID-19 pandemic made international headlines in a strange and unexpected way. Facing a virus outbreak in recent weeks, Hong Kong officials implemented a range of measures in response to what was labelled a fifth wave, but the one that caught the most attention must be the culling of more than 2,200 hamsters after a COVID-19 case was traced to workers of a pet shop, and traces of the virus were found on 11 hamsters out of the 178 tested.

Authorities then called on the public to turn in their pet hamsters to be culled en masse, in spite of outcry from animal lovers. An expert from the WHO also said that the risk of animals like hamsters infecting humans with the coronavirus remains low. So far at least one hamster which was turned in by its owner, as opposed to the previous lot in pet shops, was found to be carrying the virus.

Another recent COVID-19 report that became the talk of the town was how a schoolteacher caught the virus apparently by encountering two other infected people in a subway station tunnel, for a brief period of nine seconds, while all were wearing masks and had no direct contact. Such detective-work in tracing individual cases has become a hallmark of the zero COVID tactics undertaken by Hong Kong authorities ever since the beginning of the COVID-19 outbreak.

The Distraction of the Hamsters

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Meanwhile, city authorities confirmed more than 170 new COVID-19 infections from two nearby public housing buildings in Kwai Chung, the highest number in 18 months, resulting in authorities ordering a five-day lockdown for the thousands of residents in both buildings. Mandatory COVID-19 testing was ordered for hundreds of thousands of citizens across the city, based on contact tracing or just being residents or workers in buildings with confirmed cases. And, in a case of bad timing, all these are happening as the city heads into the Lunar New Year holiday period, traditionally the most festive time of the year. Restaurants have been ordered to reduce capacity and the traditional annual flower markets are cancelled.

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Amid the current wave, medical experts continue to emphasize to the public the need for Hong Kong to achieve a higher full vaccination rate Hong Kongs fully vaccinated rate of 63 percent is on par with the U.S., but is starkly lower than regional peers such as Taiwan (72 percent), Japan (79 percent), South Korea (85 percent) and Singapore (87 percent). Meanwhile, however, Hong Kongs experts are also sidetracked into defending government actions such as the culling of hamsters, by partially blaming the mass euthanasia on people who did not get vaccinated.

All these are regrettable distractions in Hong Kongs fight against COVID-19. The government seems to be trapped in a rabbit hole to justify what Chief Executive Carrie Lam has called the dynamic zero-infection strategy, code words for adhering to Chinas overall zero COVID approach. The team of government medical advisers continues to correctly stress that, despite the overall lower rate of serious infection from the Omicron variant, the effect on the older population and those with chronic illness may still be severe. However, there is a lack of any effective plan of communication and action to relate such concerns in a way that will convince more of the holdouts to get vaccinated.

Moreover, although most people would agree that getting more Hong Kongers to vaccinate is a good thing, it would be misleading to simply infer that a high vaccination rate would automatically mean zero or even low infection. We can see this from the recent surge of cases in South Korea, one of the countries with the highest vaccination rates.

It is a mismanagement of both policy messaging and public resources to fixate on relatively unproductive matters such as culling hamsters. Instead, in order to protect the most vulnerable, what has the Hong Kong government done to prioritize the protection of senior citizens and directly assist those who are most in need of medical attention? In order to maintain social distancing, rather than or in addition to suspending crowd gatherings such as flower markets, what have the authorities done to effectively encourage or even mandate measures such as working from home? The answer is, very little.

The Urgent Need to Manage the Jump From Zero

As other countries increasingly emphasize the large-scale provision of frequent, voluntary, and free self-testing at home for all, Hong Kong continues to rely on officially mandated compulsory testing drives by having the police round up residents of entire buildings overnight to get all inside tested, causing them much anxiety and discomfort, and thereby creating an undesirable stigma for what should be an effective and fundamental safeguard against infection.

Understandably, going from zero COVID-19 cases to any positive number, however small, would be a big shock. For a population trained and accustomed to the comfort of zero infections for most of the last two years, it can be frightening to accept a new reality of living with COVID. That may explain why, while many people in Hong Kong are unhappy and dissatisfied with the governments responses, they are just as uncomfortable with the concept of treating COVID-19 as endemic, with many expressing shock at the relaxed and callous manner with which some in the West regard the COVID-19 virus.

But like it or not, if the rest of the world has decided to live with COVID, it will be more and more impractical for any government to insist on a zero COVID stand. This is true for Hong Kong as much as it is true for China. Indeed, the cost of isolation appears to be mounting, with no end in sight. In a recent survey by the American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong, 44 percent of the respondents indicated they may leave Hong Kong due to its draconian border controls and social restrictions. Currently, flights from a list of Group A countries are suspended, and no individuals who have stayed for more than two hours in any of these countries within the last 21 days will be allowed to enter Hong Kong even if they are Hong Kong citizens. These countries include Australia, Canada, France, India, Pakistan, the Philippines, the U.K. and the U.S.

Such travel bans are hardly scientific, and even the World Health Organization has recommended against them in a recent report as unsustainable. These border closures can bring dire consequences to the economy, and the interruption to the supply chain of goods and business confidence has already been increasingly felt by local and global businesses. Lam has acknowledged that rising costs will be felt by everyone. Nonetheless, the government has offered no alternative, no solution, and no relief.

Zero COVID Is More Politics Than Science

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Just as regrettably, criticizing or casting doubts on zero COVID is politically incorrect and a taboo in Hong Kong. Even among the medical community, there is a lack of open discussion in search of a more balanced approach than a practically unattainable and unsustainable target of zero COVID. Only a few medical academics have come out to express doubts over matters such as the lack of scientific reasons to support the 21-days centralized quarantine period for infection, compared with quarantining at home for as short as five days in many other countries. If science is not driving Hong Kongs COVID-19 response, what is?

The governments key goal is to open its border with mainland China, which would require matching the mainlands zero CVID stance. This ambition is the real cause of draconian measures, including the hamster culling.

Such is the awkward situation that Hong Kong has found itself in, being an international hub for finance and commerce, yet with no choice but to follow Chinas zero COVID obsession. Over the past year, the Hong Kong administration along with the local pro-Beijing politicians now unopposed after the purging of all opposition from Hong Kongs political scene has been adamantly pursuing harsher and harsher domestic measures, purportedly trying to meet Beijings requirements for re-opening the border with the mainland. While the re-opening is still denied by Beijing, Hong Kong has instead succeeded in isolating itself from the rest of the world.

The longer Hong Kong holds out before it finds a way to counterbalance its zero COVID deference to Beijing with the real-world costs to its people, the more difficult and the higher the cost it will be for Hong Kong to extract itself from the hole it dug for itself. On the other hand, Beijing should see Hong Kong as the ideal testing ground for an exit plan from zero COVID. After all, Hong Kongs value is always its differentiation from the mainland, rather than complete integration and sameness.

However, judging from the political development in the last few years, such rethinking on the role of Hong Kong will prove elusive. Thats doubly true in 2022, which is an exceptionally political year for China with Xi Jinpings planned ascension to a precedent-breaking third term and for Hong Kong, with Beijing loyalists jockeying for Beijings favor to be anointed as the next chief executive. Under those circumstances, its unlikely either Beijing or Hong Kong will take the political risks needed to move away from zero COVID. So, sadly, while many in the rest of the world may see the beginning of the end to the pandemic, Hong Kong, and indeed China, show no signs of moving forward.

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Alien abductions: What explains this phenomenon? – Big Think

Posted: at 12:10 am

If there is anything confounding about the whole issue of alien abduction, it is the utter conviction of those who claim ETs have taken them into their spaceships. Usually during sleep. Usually to perform illicit sexual experiments, as in the hilarious Saturday Night Live skits like this one with Kate McKinnon, Cecily Strong, and Ryan Gosling. For many people, millions in fact, this is serious business. How come?

In the U.S., the first popular story of abduction by extraterrestrials was that of Betty and Barney Hill. The couple from New Hampshire claimed to have been kidnapped into a UFO on September 19, 1961. The Hills account, however, is the second abduction story that became world famous. The first is from 1957 and centered around Antnio Villas Boas, a farmer from rural Brazil. (A sensationalist video about the case can be seen at this link.) Since I grew up in Brazil and live in New Hampshire, Im naturally curious and no wonder some of my research is on astrobiology and the origin of life!

According to Villas Boas, on the night of October 16th, while he was plowing fields with his tractor, he was taken into a spaceship by a group of ETs measuring about 5 feet tall. He was put in a room and saw gas coming out of the walls. The gas made him very sick. Then, a very attractive female naked, with long platinum blonde hair, fire-red pubic hair, and deep-blue cat eyes came and forced him to have intercourse. (I speculate that he didnt resist too much.)

According to Villas Boas, her intentions were quite clear: to produce a human-alien hybrid that she would raise on her planet. After he got back, Villas Boas noted he had burns on his body. A doctor from a reputable medical center diagnosed them as being radiation burns. This doctor, Olavo Fontes, had contacts with the American UFO research group APRO. Villas Boas had no recollection how he got the burns.

We must wonder whether these aliens are really that smart, given that they keep repeating the same experiment on human anatomy over and over again.

The story gained worldwide popularity in the late 1950s. Many believed its veracity for politically incorrect reasons, claiming that a humble farmer from rural Brazil would not be able to concoct such a tale. In reality, Villas Boas was neither humble nor uneducated. His family owned large tracts of land. He later became a lawyer and practiced until his death in 1992. No doubt his notoriety helped his career.

The overwhelming majority of scientists categorically denies that narratives of abductions have any real component. When told in earnest, most are products of various kinds of abnormal psychological states, from fantasy-prone personalities to self-hypnotic trances, false-memory syndrome, sleep paralysis, environmental disturbances during sleep, or some more serious type of psychopathology. Another possibility is a misrepresentation of reality caused by posttraumatic stress, plausibly due to some unwanted sexual encounter.

American researcher and skeptic Peter Rogerson questioned the veracity of Villas Boas narrative, and indeed of many others, arguing that an article about alien abduction had appeared in the popular magazine O Cruzeiro in November 1957. He noted that Villas Boas story only started to gain popularity in 1958 and that Villas Boas could have predated his encounter to give it more credibility. Also, Rogerson argued that Villas Boas (and other presumed abductees) was influenced by the sensationalist narratives of ufologist George Adamski, who was very popular in the 1950s. For anyone interested in the history of abductions, Rogersons article is an essential read.

Most abduction stories have elements in common with that of Villas Boas: kidnapping into an alien spaceship, medical exams that center around the human reproductive system (or explicit sexual contact with extraterrestrials), and mysterious marks left on the body. Carl Sagan, in his wonderful book The Demon Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark, brings these elements together, arguing for a connection between what abductees say now and what narratives of mysterious sexual night encounters have been saying for ages.

There are mythologies dating back to Sumerian folklore of 2400 BCE in which a demon in either male or female form seduces people in their sleep. Saints Augustine and Thomas Aquinas wrote of the incubus and succubus demons that come during sleep to have sexual relations with unwilling humans. Similar stories appear in cultures across the world. Villas Boas platinum blonde sure fits the bill.

The nearest star to Earth is about four light-years away. Our fastest spaceship would take some 100,000 years to get there. If intelligent aliens exist and came here, they must have technologies that are beyond anything we can imagine because they must be capable of (1) fast interstellar travel; (2) passing undetected by radar; and (3) leaving without a trace. The feats are even more spectacular considering there are thousands of abduction narratives and UFO encounters, a topic that has been making headlines recently.

On the other hand, we must wonder whether these aliens are really that smart, given that they keep repeating the same experiment on human anatomy over and over again. Can they not figure out human biology? Or do they just have a perverted side? And are there different aliens coming to Earth? If so, how many species are out there, fixated on us? I find the possibility highly improbable, given their spectacular space travel technology.

J. William Schopf, a paleontologist at the University of California, once said that extraordinary claims demand extraordinary evidence, a quote Carl Sagan made famous. In the case of alien abductions, very ordinary explanations easily surpass the absence of extraordinary evidence. (Where are they? How come no serious scientists ever have any contact with them?)

Scientists dont say this because they are stubborn, nasty, insensitive, or blind. We would love to have evidence of extraterrestrial life, especially intelligent life! Thats what astrobiology wants. (See my recent post on finding biosignatures with the James Webb Space Telescope.) We would be the first to embrace the facts if there were any.

The fundamental precept of science is to base claims on evidence backed by solid, verifiable data. Otherwise, why give scientific claims any credibility? Thats what distinguishes what we do from fake news. I, for one, cannot wait to find convincing evidence of extraterrestrial life. It will most probably not be very intelligent more like simple alien bacteria. But, wow, how amazing would it be to know that life is not just a fluke that happened only here? Or, even more amazingly, that it is?

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