It’s possible that I shall make an ass of myself. But in that case one can always get out of it with a little dialectic. I have, of course, so worded my proposition as to be right either way (K.Marx, Letter to F.Engels on the Indian Mutiny)
Friday, September 25, 2020
Sep 25 2020
AP
The "man cave" under Grand Central Terminal in New York.
Three railroad workers have been suspended for turning a storage room under New York's Grand Central Terminal into an unauthorised “man cave” with a television, a refrigerator, a microwave and a futon couch, officials say.
A Metropolitan Transportation Authority investigation found that managers at Metro-North Railroad were unaware of the hideaway beneath Track 114.
"Many a New Yorker has fantasized about kicking back with a cold beer in a prime piece of Manhattan real estate – especially one this close to good transportation,” MTA Inspector General Carolyn Pokorny said in a news release.
“But few would have the chutzpah to commandeer a secret room beneath Grand Central Terminal.”
Three Metro-North employees – a wireman, a carpenter foreman and an electrical foreman – were suspended without pay pending disciplinary hearings.
AP
Three railroad workers have been suspended for turning a storage room under New York's Grand Central Terminal into an unauthorised "man cave" with a television, a refrigerator, a microwave and a futon couch.
The investigation began after the MTA's office of the inspector general received an anonymous tip in February 2019 alleging that there was a “man cave” under Grand Central with “a couch and a flat screen TV” where three specific employees would “hang out and get drunk and party.”
Investigators found the room, which had wooden cabinets designed to conceal the TV and futon, according to the report.
Railroad officials said the space presented a fire hazard because rescue workers would have had difficulty accessing an unmapped room.
AP
THE FIRST WOMAN AND JEW TO BE SO HONOURED
Trump booed while paying respects to late Justice Ginsburg
U.S. President Donald Trump was hit with cries of 'Vote him out' as he visited the U.S. Supreme Court, where the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg lies in repose.
US President Donald Trump paid respects to late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on Thursday morning, just two days before he announces his nominee to replace her on the high court.
The US president and first lady Melania Trump – both wearing masks – stood silently at the top of the steps of the court and looked down at Ginsburg's flag-draped coffin, surrounded by white flowers.
The death of the liberal-leaning justice has sparked a controversy over the balance of the court just weeks before the November presidential election.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP
US President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump pay respects as Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg lies in repose at the Supreme Court building.
Trump has called Ginsburg an “amazing woman,” but some spectators were not happy that he came.
Moments after he arrived, booing could be heard from those holding about a block away from the building.
The spectators chanted “vote him out” as the president stood near the coffin.
ALEX BRANDON/AP
US President Donald Trump wants to replace Ginsburg on the Supreme Court before the November 3 election.
He walked back into the court as the chants grew louder.
As the motorcade returned to the White House, there were also chants of “Breonna Taylor" from some spectators standing on the sidewalk.
AP
'My spirits will be lifted': Japan embraces the flights to nowhere
Sep 25 2020
Qantas 'Flight to Nowhere' Sells out Within Minutes
The "flight to nowhere" in Australia sold out in ten minutes. People have been deprived of travel during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The scenic flight on the A380 was sold out (file photo).
Desperate times call for desperate measures, and with the spread of the novel coronavirus causing a dive in the use of passenger planes, major airlines are focusing on "scenic flights," by utilising planes that are not in service.
In what seems to be a vain effort to make up for the loss of revenue caused by the drop in flights, the concept is gaining popularity and tickets are selling out.
The world's largest double-decker Airbus, the A380, which is also known as a "flying hotel," normally operates on flights to Hawaii. However, due to low demand, the Hawaii route is currently out of service and the plane has not been used.
In its second attempt following one in August, All Nippon Airways (ANA) flew the A380 on a 90-minute scenic flight over Mt. Fuji, Nagoya and Miyakejima island, then back to Narita, on the Sunday of the four-day weekend.
Both flights of about 350 seats, including economy class (from 14,000 yen or NZ$200) and first-class (50,000 yen or US$725) were sold out. A 39-year-old office worker from Wakayama City said, "I rarely have the opportunity to fly on the A380. Even with the coronavirus crisis, my spirits will be lifted."
Riley Kennedy of RNZ Aug 01 2020
MARTY SHARPE/STUFF
Stephen Vaughan from Immigration NZ, left, and Detective Inspector Mike Foster speak after Matamata's sentencing.
This story was originally published on RNZ.co.nz and is republished with permission.
One in 150 people are living in "modern slavery" in New Zealand, Australia and the Pacific Islands, according to a new report by a human rights charity.
The Walk Free report identifies cases of forced labour, commercial sexual exploitation of children, and forced marriage in the Pacific.
The report, Murky waters: A qualitative assessment of modern slavery in the Pacific region, said exploitation was fuelled by widespread poverty, migration, and the abuse of cultural practices.
Senior researcher Elise Gordon said they had conducted interviews with law enforcement officers, victim support workers, policy and advocacy stakeholders, and people in the education and training industry in New Zealand, Australia, Fiji, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, the Solomon Islands, Tonga, and Vanuatu.
123RF
Walk Free, a human rights charity, says New Zealand isn’t doing enough to stop modern slavery.
"We have heard reports of signs of modern slavery among migrant workers in the construction industry, stemming from increasing foreign investment in Pacific Island communities," Gordon said.
"Also fishing, a major industry in the region, brings with it a poor track record as being notorious for forced labour and human trafficking for labour exploitation."
Modern slavery was likely to increase as climate change exacerbated poverty and migration, Gordon said.
The report was released in the same week the first person to be convicted of slavery in New Zealand was sent to jail.
It said only a third of 54 Commonwealth countries had criminalised forced marriage and 23 nations had failed to criminalise the commercial sexual exploitation of children.
New Zealand did not do enough to stop modern slavery through its supply chain, the report stated.
Walk Free director Grace Forrest said the introduction of a modern slavery Bill should be among the New Zealand government's top priorities after the election.
The Australian government passed a Modern Slavery Act last year.
Sep 21 2020
MORNING REPORT/RNZ
Two people in Solomon Islands have died after being injured after what's thought to be a bomb from the Second World War blew up in the capital Honiara.
This story was originally published on RNZ.co.nz and is republished with permission.
Two people in the Solomon Islands have died after suffering injuries from a bomb blast in Honiara.
Police said the two, an Australian and a British citizen, were working for a Norwegian aid agency conducting a survey on unexploded ordnance.
The agency has named them as Trent Lee and Stephen Atkinson.
Inspector Clifford Tunuki said police were working overnight to clear the site of the explosion, which took place in a residential area in west Honiara.
GOOGLE MAPS
Police worked overnight to clear the site of the explosion, which took place in a residential area in west Honiara in the Solomon Islands.
Investigators will try to determine why explosives were present at a block of residential flats, which also serve as the project office.
The project aims to locate unexploded bombs dating back to the Second World War.
Rod McGuirk, Sep 24 2020
The enduring mystery of whale beaching
As rescuers try to free a pod of around 470 stranded whales off the Australian island of Tasmania, scientists puzzle over the cause of the mysterious phenomenon.
Authorities have rescued 88 pilot whales and are attempting to free 20 others that survived Australia’s worst mass stranding, as crews prepare to remove 380 decomposing carcasses from the shallows of Tasmania state, officials said Thursday.
Crews found the 20 whales that are still alive on the fourth day of the rescue operation, Tasmania Parks and Wildlife Service Manager Nic Deka said.
“Whenever we've got live animals that have a chance and we have the resources, then we'll certainly give it a go,” Deka said.
Almost 500 whales were discovered on Monday and Wednesday beached on the shore and sand bars along the remote west coast of the island state near the town of Strahan.
As rescuers try to free a pod of around 470 stranded whales off the Australian island of Tasmania, scientists puzzle over the cause of the mysterious phenomenon.
The task of removing hundreds of tons of whale carcasses begins Friday and is likely to take days, Marine Conservation Programme wildlife biologist Kris Carlyon said.
Methods under consideration include towing the carcasses or loading them on barges to take them out to sea to be dumped somewhere where they will not drift ashore or create navigational hazards.
Carlyon said rescue crews were working 12-hour days.
PATRICK GEE/AP
Authorities revised up the number of pilot whales rescued from Australia's worst-ever mass stranding from 50 to 70 on Thursday.
“Everyone’s tired, feeling the fatigue, long days," Carlyon said. “The emotional toll can be significant."
Why the whales ran aground is a mystery.
Theories include that the pod followed sick whales or made a navigational error.
PATRICK GEE/AP
Rescue workers make a survey from a boat as they check on stranded whales near Strahan, Australia.
Tasmania is the only part of Australia prone to mass strandings, although they occasionally occur on the Australian mainland.
Australia’s largest mass stranding had previously been 320 pilot whales near the Western Australia state town of Dunsborough in 1996.
Tasmania’s previous largest stranding involved 294 whales on the northwest coast in 1935.
PATRICK GEE/AP
Whale carcasses are scattered along the water's edge near Strahan, Australia.
* Race to save surviving whales in Tasmania after huge stranding
* Nearly 500 pilot whales stranded on Australia's coast, 380 have died
* Around 90 stranded pilot whales dead off Australia's Tasmanian coast
Emily Rauhala 12:12, Sep 25 2020
Johnson calls for 'spirit of togetherness' to survive tough coronavirus winter
Prime Minister Boris Johnson has urged the country to "summon the discipline, and the resolve, and the spirit of togetherness that will carry us through".
Brace yourselves. That's the message coming from leaders in Europe, Britain and Canada as autumn arrives, bringing with it crisp air and predictions of a dark pandemic winter.
Europe faces a "decisive moment." Britain is at a "perilous turning point." Canadians probably shouldn't gather for Thanksgiving next month.
KIRSTY WIGGLESWORTH/AP
Leaders in Britain and Canada are issuing stark warnings as a Covid winter approaches .
Leaders are emphasising the risks ahead for countries heading into cooler months with case counts now growing again, not shrinking, and populations already fed up with pandemic restrictions.
They're highlighting the deadly seriousness of a disease that has killed nearly one million people worldwide in the first nine months of this year - and is expected to kill many more.
And they're offering a sharp contrast to President Donald Trump, who has sought to downplay the severity of the US outbreak, which is the worst in the world.
Experts long predicted that a summer respite from strict coronavirus measures, plus the return to schools and offices, would lead to more cases come fall. Now fall is here and cases are rising - fast.
There's little doubt they'll climb further as the weather gets colder, activities move indoors and the cold and flu season hits. Leaders see a limited window to blunt the force of the next wave.
"It is only September," said Isaac Bogoch, an infectious-disease specialist at Toronto General Hospital. "If you live in the northern hemisphere, there is a long fall and winter ahead."
There isn't much mystery as to why cases are climbing - or why it's happening now. After a brutal spring, many countries relaxed coronavirus restrictions through June, July and August, allowing citizens some simple pleasures: Visits with family, a drink at the pub, even parties for some.
VICTORIA JONES/AP
Leaders in Europe and Canada see a limited window to blunt the force of the next wave.
Then, through late August and September children in many countries started returning to school, allowing more parents to return to offices.
It's clear that the return to semi-normalcy has exacted a cost. The fear is that community transmission will continue, leading to a surge in hospitalisations and deaths.
Top European officials have been issuing dire warnings about the wave of new cases engulfing many countries.
"We are at a decisive moment," Stella Kyriakides, the European Union's top official for health issues, said on Thursday.
"Everyone has to act decisively," she said. "It might be our last chance to prevent a repeat of last spring."
The World Health Organisation is delivering a similar message. Hans Kluge, the WHO's regional director for Europe, described the situation as "very serious".
Kluge told reporters last week that half of European countries had reported increases in cases of more than 10 per cent in the past two weeks. In seven countries, they'd doubled.
France is on high alert.
Prime Minister Jean Castex last week spoke of a "clear deterioration of the situation."
On Wednesday, the French health ministry imposed new restrictions to curb what epidemiologists are calling a "second wave" and to ease the load on hospitals. In certain urban areas, including Paris, group sizes will now be limited and bars will be required to stop serving after 10pm.
But the government has shied away from imposing another nationwide lockdown, after a strict shutdown from mid-March to mid-May.
In Britain, the mood has shifted from optimism to alarm.
Earlier this month, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he was hopeful that some aspects of ordinary life would be "back to normal by Christmas" thanks in part to "Operation Moonshot," the government's plan to test 10 million Brits every day.
But on Monday, Patrick Vallance, the British government's chief scientific adviser, and Chris Whitty, chief medical officer for England, said cases were doubling roughly every seven days. If that rates holds, they warned, there could be 50,000 per day by mid-October.
The next day, Johnson unveiled a package of new restrictions he said could be in place for six months.
JESSICA TAYLOR/AP
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson unveiled new restrictions this week.
In a televised address he explained the need: "As in Spain and France and many other countries, we have reached a perilous turning point."
Pubs and restaurants in England will now be required to close by 10pm. Masks will be mandatory for certain types of workers, including taxi drivers, retail workers and bar and restaurant staff.
"Now is the time for us all to summon the discipline and the resolve and the spirit of togetherness that will carry us through," he said.
In Canada, where the weather is already turning, the situation is also worrying.
A spike in cases in the country's four largest provinces has reversed gains made during the late spring and early summer.
Public health officials say most of the new cases are concentrated in adults aged 20 to 39, but it's only a matter of time before the virus spreads to people at greater risk.
Hospitalisations, a lagging indicator of infections, are slowly climbing. Some testing centres in Ontario have been so overwhelmed that they have reached capacity and had to turn people away before even opening.
If the country continues on its current path, public health officials say, it will reach 5000 cases a day by late October - more than at the height of its spring wave.
As in Europe, officials so far have opted for smaller and more targeted localised restrictions, keen to avoid another widespread shutdown.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stressed that people needed to change their behaviour to avert a winter lockdown - and save the holiday season. Thanksgiving - October 12 in Canada - is likely a wash, he said in a nationally televised address on Wednesday. But depending on how Canadians respond now, they might "have a shot" at Christmas.
"The second wave isn't just starting," he said. "It's already underway."
The Washington Post
Sep 25 2020
Net zero by 2060: China’s bold new carbon emissions goal
As US President Donald Trump dismisses climate change, Chinese President Xi Jinping says China will aim to be carbon-neutral by 2060.
Chinese President Xi Jinping says his country will aim to stop adding to the global warming problem by 2060.
Xi's announcement during a speech on Tuesday (local time) to the UN General Assembly is a significant step for the world's biggest emitter of greenhouse gases.
Calling for a “green revolution”, Xi said the coronavirus pandemic had shown the need to preserve the environment.
“Humankind can no longer afford to ignore the repeated warnings of nature,” he said.
SAM MCNEIL/AP
Smoke and steam rise from a coal processing plant in Hejin in central China's Shanxi Province.
Citing the Paris Agreement that he and former US President Barack Obama helped forge in 2015, Xi said his country would raise its emissions reduction targets with “vigorous policies and measures”.
“We aim to have CO2 emissions peak before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality before 2060,” he said.
The term “carbon neutrality” means releasing no additional CO2 into the atmosphere, though technically it allows countries to keep emitting if they ensure that an equal amount is captured again in some form.
The announcement was cheered by climate campaigners. Greenpeace executive director Jennifer Morgan called it “an important signal” that showed climate change is “top of agenda for China”.
“A big shift for curbing emissions and a significant step forward in international cooperation,” UN climate chief Patricia Espinosa said.
MARY ALTAFFER/AP
Chinese President Xi Jinping remotely addresses the 75th session of the UN General Assembly.
The goal will be a challenge for China, which relies heavily for its electricity on coal, one of the most carbon-intensive fossil fuels.
China released the equivalent of 10 billion tons of carbon dioxide, or CO2, into the atmosphere in 2018, according to the Global Carbon Project that tracks emissions worldwide. That was almost twice as much as the United States and three times as much as the European Union.
Several other major emitters have set earlier deadlines, with the EU aiming to be carbon neutral by 2050. Frans Timmermans, who leads the EU executive’s efforts on climate change, welcomed Xi’s announcement.
“We need decisive action from every country to keep temperatures under control, tackle climate change and keep our planet inhabitable,” he said.
The United States has so far not set such a goal. US President Donald Trump, who once described climate change as a hoax invented by China, has started the process of pulling the US out of the Paris accord.
If China fulfils Xi’s goal, it could prevent 0.2 to 0.4 degrees Celsius further warming for the world, according to “very rough estimates” by MIT management professor John Sterman, who models and tracks emission reductions and pledges with Climate Interactive.
EVAN VUCCI/AP
US President Donald Trump once described climate change as a hoax invented by China.
But much depends on how they do their emissions reduction and how soon they cut them, he said, adding he has to do a more thorough analysis.
“That’s a lot,” Sterman said. “China’s by far the world’s big emitter. They're emitting more than the EU and US together.’’
“It puts a lot more pressure on the United States,” Sterman said.
Perhaps even more important than the carbon neutrality pledge is the effort to peak carbon dioxide emissions before 2030 instead of by 2030, Sterman said. Carbon dioxide’s more than 100-year lifetime in the air makes earlier emission cuts more effective than promises in the future, he said.
“Emissions that don’t happen between now and 2030 are going to reduce warming a lot more than the same emission reductions after 2060,” Sterman said.
However, pledges are not the same as actions. What’s needed is signs of action, such as eliminating plans to build new coal-fired power plants, cutting subsidies for coal power and getting off coal entirely, Sterman said. Coal is the biggest carbon dioxide emitter of power sources.
Twenty-nine nations before China have pledged to achieve climate neutrality in different years, according to the Carbon Neutrality Coalition.
With China, the 30 countries that have some kind of carbon neutrality pledges, account for about 43 per cent of the world’s carbon dioxide emissions from the burning of fossil fuels. The largest polluting countries not on the list are the United States, India, Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, South Africa, Turkey, Brazil and Australia.
AP
New research strengthens evidence for climate change increasing risk of wildfires, review finds
UNIVERSITY OF EAST ANGLIA
New scientific publications reviewed since January 2020 strengthen the evidence that climate change increases the frequency and/or severity of fire weather in many regions of the world.
Published today at ScienceBrief.org, the updated review on the link between climate change and risks of wildfires focuses on articles relevant to the fires ongoing in the western United States, new findings relevant to the southeastern Australian wildfires that raged during the 2019-2020 season, and new findings published since an initial review of research was conducted in January 2020.
The ScienceBrief Review in January looked at 57 peer-reviewed papers on the link between climate change and wildfire risk published since the IPCC's Fifth Assessment Report in 2013.
The update, led by Dr Matthew Jones of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research at the University of East Anglia (UEA), covers 116 scientific articles. It involved researchers from UEA, the University of California, the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), Australia, and Met Office Hadley Centre, at the University of Exeter.
Fire weather refers to periods with a high fire risk due to a combination of high temperatures, low humidity, low rainfall and often high winds.
The western US is among the regions where the trends in fire weather have been most pronounced in the past at least 40 years. Fire activity is influenced by a range of other factors including land management practices. However, the authors say land management alone cannot explain recent increases in wildfire extent and intensity in the western US or southeast Australia because increased fire weather from climate change amplifies fire risk where fuels remain available.
Dr Jones, a senior research associate, said: "The western US is a hot spot for increases in fire weather caused by climate change, and it is completely unsurprising that wildfires are becoming more frequent and intense in the region.
"The western US is now more exposed to fire risks than it was before humans began altering the global climate by using fossil energy on a grand scale. Regardless of the ignition source, warmer, drier forests are primed to burn more regularly than they were in the past.
"Climate models indicate that fire weather will continue to rise this century in many parts of the world, and increasingly so for each added degree of global warming. A switch to an economy supported by renewable energy sources is needed to avoid the worst impacts of climate change on fire risk."
Key messages from the new analysis:
- More than 100 studies published since 2013 show strong consensus that climate change promotes the weather conditions on which wildfires depend, increasing their likelihood.
- Natural variability is superimposed on the increasingly warm and dry background conditions resulting from climate change, leading to more extreme fires and more extreme fire seasons.
- Land management can enhance or compound climate-driven changes in wildfire risk, either through fuel reductions or fuel accumulation as unintended by-product of fire suppression. Fire suppression efforts are made more difficult by climate change.
- There is an unequivocal and pervasive role of climate change in increasing the intensity and length in which fire weather occurs; land management is likely to have contributed too, but does not alone account for recent increases in wildfire extent and severity in the western US and in southeast Australia.
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The original literature review and the update were carried out using the new ScienceBrief online platform, set up by researchers at UEA and the Tyndall Centre. Written by scientists, it helps make sense of peer-reviewed publications and keep up with science. ScienceBrief Reviews support transparent, continuous, and rapid reviews of current knowledge.
'Climate Change Increases the Risk of Wildfires' (ScienceBrief Review September 2020 update),, Adam J P Smith, Matthew W Jones, John T Abatzoglou, Josep G Canadell, Richard A Betts, is published at ScienceBrief.org on September 25.
New way of analyzing soil organic matter will help predict climate change
Geoscience lab at Baylor studies dozens of soil samples from across North America to understand soil formation patterns
BAYLOR UNIVERSITY
A new way of analyzing the chemical composition of soil organic matter will help scientists predict how soils store carbon -- and how soil carbon may affect climate in the future, says a Baylor University researcher.
A study by scientists from Iowa State University and Baylor University, published in the academic journal Nature Geoscience, used an archive of data on soils from a wide range of environments across North America -- including tundra, tropical rainforests, deserts and prairies -- to find patterns to better understand the formation of soil organic matter, which is mostly composed of residues left by dead plants and microorganisms.
Researchers analyzed samples of 42 soils from archives of the National Ecological Observatory Network and samples taken from additional sites, representing all of the major soil types on the continent.
The soils were analyzed by William C. Hockaday, Ph.D., associate professor of geosciences at Baylor University, and visiting scientist Chenglong Ye, a postdoctoral scientist at Nanjing Agricultural University, in the Molecular Biogeochemistry Lab at Baylor. They used a technique called nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, which allowed them to analyze the chemical structure and composition of natural organic molecules in the soil.
"Soils are a foundation of society by providing food, clean water and clean air," Hockaday said. "Soils also have a major role in climate change as one of the largest reservoirs of carbon on the planet. Even so, the chemical makeup of this carbon has been debated by scientists for over 100 years."
"With this study, we wanted to address the questions of whether organic matter is chemically similar across environments or if it varies predictably across environments," said Steven Hall, Ph.D., the study's lead author and assistant professor of ecology, evolution and organismal biology at Iowa State.
The study revealed patterns in soil organic matter chemistry that held true across climates. Understanding these patterns, or rules for how and why organic matter forms and persists in soil, will help scientists predict how soils in various ecosystems store carbon. Carbon can contribute to climate change when released from soil into the atmosphere as a greenhouse gas. An improved understanding of what kinds of soil carbon exist in different environments can paint a clearer picture of how soil carbon may affect climate and how future climate changes may affect the reservoir of soil carbon, researchers said.
"This study brought together a strong team of scientists, and for me, it was the first time to consider chemical patterns at a continental scale," Hockaday said. "It is exciting and gratifying when you inform a long-standing debate and offer an explanation of a major pattern that exists in nature."
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