Wednesday, March 03, 2021

[Video] Raya Dunayevskaya’s Intersectional Marxism


Get to know Raya Dunayevskaya’s brand of intersectional Marxism at this book launch event sponsored by the IMHO. Recorded on February 17, 2021. Speakers: Paul Mason, Alessandra Spano, Karel Ludenhoff, David Black, and Kieran Durkin — Editors.

Raya Dunayevskaya is one of the twentieth century’s great but underappreciated Marxist, feminist, and anti-racist thinkers. Her unique philosophy and practice of Marxist-Humanism—as well as her grasp of Hegelian dialectics and the deep humanism that informs Marx’s thought—has much to teach us today.

Join us for a launching session of Raya Dunayevskaya’s Intersectional Marxism: Race, Class, Gender, and the Dialectics of Liberation (Palgrave Macmillan, 2021). Kieran Durkin, one of the editors of the book, will introduce the meeting. Then we will hear four presentations from Alessandra Spano, Paul Mason, Karel Ludenhoff, and David Black, each of whom have contributed chapters to the book, in which they discuss how different aspects of Dunayevskaya’s works can inspire us today.

Paul Mason is an award-winning journalist, writer, filmmaker and public speaker. He has written a number of books, including PostcapitalismWhy It’s Kicking Off Everywhere and Clear Bright Future: A Radical Defence of the Human Being. Current work in development includes a short book about Karl Marx, a drama-documentary about the Spanish Civil War, and the play Feel My Pulse.

Alessandra Spano is a Ph.D candidate in Political Philosophy at the Department of Political and Social Sciences of Catania. She received an M.A. in Philosophy at the University of Bologna with a thesis focused on the political thought of Raya Dunayevskaya. This research was the inspiration for her focus on Marxist-Feminism and critical theory, the concentration for her doctoral investigation, particularly looking at the United States as a political space that is simultaneously imperialist, ‘colonized’, and global. Her interests include: Marxism, feminist theory, African-American studies, German idealism, psychoanalysis, and radicalism in the United States.

Karel Ludenhoff is an Amsterdam-based labor activist and a writer on Marx’s critique of political economy whose essays have appeared in Logos and other journals.

David Black born 1950 in Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, now resident in London, works as a journalist, author, musician and video-maker. His published books include, (co-authored with Chris Ford) 1839: The Chartist InsurrectionThe Philosophical Roots of Anti-Capitalism: Essays on History, Culture, and Dialectical Thought; (as editor) Red Republican: the Complete Annotated Works of Helen Macfarlane; and Psychedelic Tricksters: A True Secret History of LSD.

Kieran Durkin is Marie SkÅ‚odowska-Curie Global Fellow at the University of York, and former Visiting Scholar at University of California Santa Barbara, where he has been studying the Marxist Humanist tradition. He is author of The Radical Humanism of Erich Fromm and (co-edited with Joan Braune) Erich Fromm’s Critical Theory: Hope, Humanism, and the Future.

 



It's time for Canada to end the shameful practice of exporting live horses to Japan for slaughter.
 
Over the weekend, CTV's W5 aired a new investigative piece exposing the heartbreaking suffering horses endure on international flights. These sensitive animals are bred, confined in barren feedlots, then shipped to Japan in the dead of night so they can be killed and eaten raw as a delicacy. Tragically, thousands of Canadian horses will suffer this fate every year.
 
The flight to Japan is long and gruelling, and horses are denied all comfort. Horses are regularly crammed tightly together in tiny wooden crates without any food, water, or rest. It’s common for horses to sustain injuries or die en route.
 
Canadian authorities aren't effectively enforcing animal transport laws on horse shipments, and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency is being challenged in court for giving the go-ahead to shipments that don't comply with Canadian laws and cause horses to suffer.
 
There’s an important opportunity to help end this industry right now. Please take a moment to sign the new parliamentary petition to stop Canada's live horse export trade.

 
Help End Live Horse Exports!
 
Thank you for speaking up for horses.
Documentary on jazz piano legend Oscar Peterson in production from Barry Avrich

TORONTO — Canadian filmmaker Barry Avrich has started production on a feature documentary on the late Montreal-raised jazz legend Oscar Peterson
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© Provided by The Canadian Press

A news release from Avrich's Melbar Entertainment Group says Kelly Peterson, the widow of the virtuoso pianist, will act as consulting producer on "Oscar Peterson: Black and White."

The film is billed as a "docu-concert" and will include archival concert footage as well as interviews with family members and musicians who played with the Grammy winner, who died in 2007 at the age of 82 in Mississauga, Ont.

It will also feature new performances from artists playing Peterson's music, including Dave Young, Larnell Lewis, Jackie Richardson, Robi Botos, and Measha Brueggergosman.

Melbar says the doc will explore Peterson's life and acclaimed career, from his artistic influence and mentorship of other artists, to the racism that he endured and his legacy as "an uncompromising musician with a sense of racial pride."

The film is set for a release in the fall and comes on the heels of the release of Historica Canada's Heritage Minute on Peterson.



Gallery: Rising Black Stars To Watch In 2021 (ET Canada)


"It is a privilege and career highlight for me to tell Oscar's inspiring story and further immortalize his relentless yet iconic music in this film," said Avrich, a Canadian Screen Award-winning producer and director behind scores of live TV specials and documentaries, including last year's "The Howie Mandel Project."

Peterson dazzled audiences with his piano playing around the world and worked with a jazz giants including Ella Fitzgerald, Count Basie, Louis Armstrong and Nat King Cole.

His 1962 composition "Hymn to Freedom" became an anthem of the Civil Rights Movement, while his 1964 recording “The Canadiana Suite” was in honour of his home country.

Avrich and Mark Selby will produce the doc. Avrich will also executive produce, alongside Jeffrey Latimer and Randy Lennox.

Other musicians who will perform in the film include Joe Sealy, Stu Harrison, Denzal Sinclaire, and Daniel Clarke Bouchard.

“It is gratifying that Oscar’s legacy continues to resonate and inspire music lovers and musicians everywhere," said Kelly Peterson.

"I am delighted that this documentary will capture his story, his journey and his place in music history now, and forever."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 3, 2021.

Victoria Ahearn, The Canadian Press
The man who saves forgotten cats in Fukushima's nuclear zone

HE FINDS THEM AT NIGHT
WHEN THEY GLOW IN THE DARK

By Tim Kelly and Kim Kyung Hoon 

© Reuters/KIM KYUNG-HOON 
The Wider Image: The man who saves forgotten cats in Fukushima's nuclear zone

FUKUSHIMA, Japan (Reuters) - A decade ago, Sakae Kato stayed behind to rescue cats abandoned by neighbours who fled the radiation clouds belching from the nearby Fukushima nuclear plant. He won't leave.

"I want to make sure I am here to take care of the last one," he said from his home in the contaminated quarantine zone. "After that I want to die, whether that be a day or hour later."

So far he has buried 23 cats in his garden, the most recent graves disturbed by wild boars that roam the depopulated community. He is looking after 41 others in his home and another empty building on his property.

Kato leaves food for feral cats in a storage shed he heats with a paraffin stove. He has also rescued a dog, Pochi. With no running water, he has to fill bottles from a nearby mountain spring, and drive to public toilets.

The 57-year-old, a small construction business owner in his former life, says his decision to stay as 160,000 other people evacuated the area was spurred in part by the shock of finding dead pets in abandoned houses he helped demolish.

The cats also gave him a reason to stay on land that has been owned by his family for three generations.

"I don't want to leave, I like living in these mountains," he said standing in front of his house, which he is allowed to visit but, technically, not allowed to sleep in.

The two-storey wooden structure is in poor condition.

Rotten floorboards sag. It is peppered with holes where wall panels and roof tiles that kept the rain out were dislodged by a powerful earth tremor last month, stirring frightening memories of the devastating quake on March 11, 2001, that led to a tsunami and a nuclear meltdown.

"It might last another two or three years. The walls have started to lean," Kato said.

Decontamination in fields near his house signal that other residents will soon be allowed to return.

He estimates he spends $7,000 a month on his animals, part of it to buy dog food for wild boar that gather near his house at sunset. Farmers consider them pests, and also blame them for wrecking empty homes.

On Feb. 25, Kato was arrested on suspicion of freeing wild boar caught in traps set up by Japan's government in November. At time this article was published, he was still being detained for questioning.

FEAR LINGERS

About 30 km (19 miles) southeast, still in the restricted zone, Hisae Unuma is also surveying the state of her home, which withstood the earthquake a decade ago but is now close to collapsing after years of being battered by wind, rain and snow.

"I'm surprised it's still standing," the 67-year-old farmer said, a week after the tremor that damaged Kato's house.

"I could see my cattle in the field from there," she said pointing to the living room, a view now blocked by a tangle of bamboo.

Unuma fled as the cooling system at Tokyo Electric Power Co's nuclear plant 2.5 km away failed and its reactors began to melt down.

The government, which has adopted Fukushima as a symbol of national revival amid preparations for Tokyo Olympic Games, is encouraging residents to return to decontaminated land.

Lingering fears about the nuclear plant, jobs and poor infrastructure are keeping many away, though.

Unuma, now a vegetable farmer in Saitama prefecture near Tokyo, where her husband died three years ago, won't return even if the government scrapes the radioactive soil off her fields.

Radiation levels around her house are around 20 times the background level in Tokyo, according to a dosimeter reading carried out by Reuters.

Only the removal of Fukushima's radioactive cores will make her feel safe, a task that will take decades to complete.

"Never mind the threat from earthquakes, those reactors could blow if someone dropped a tool in the wrong place," she said.

Before making the four-hour drive back to her new home, Unuma visits the Ranch of Hope, a cattle farm owned by Masami Yoshizawa, who defied an order to cull his irradiated livestock in protest against the government and Tokyo Electric Power.

Among the 233 bullocks still there is the last surviving bullock from the 50-strong herd Unuma used to tend, and one of her last living links to the life she had before the disaster.

Her bullock ignores her when she tries to lure him over, so Yoshizawa gives her a handful of cabbage to try to tempt him.

"The thing about cattle, is that they really only think about food," Yoshizawa said.

(Reporting by Tim Kelly and Kim Kyong Hoon; Additional reporting by Akira Tomoshige; Editing by Pravin Char)


Why Are So Many People Upset About Elizabeth Warren’s Millionaire Tax?
Sarah Midkiff 

In one of her first moves as a new member of the Senate Finance Committee, Sen. Elizabeth Warren unveiled legislation this week that would introduce a tax on the net worth of the super-rich. As the coronavirus pandemic devastates the economy, disproportionately affecting lower-income households, the United States’ multi-millionaires and billionaires have actually seen their wealth increase exponentially. Warren now plans to combat that in a new proposal.
© Provided by Refinery29

“This is a wealth tax that has been needed for a long time. We need it to produce more revenue, to create more opportunity in America,” Warren said in a statement. “But it is a wealth tax that we particularly need because of the changes in this country under the pandemic. We have watched the wealth of the billionaire class in America increase by more than a trillion dollars over the last year.”

The proposal, called the Ultra-Millionaire Tax Act, would introduce a 2% annual tax on households and trusts over $50 million. Once exceeding $1 billion, an additional 1% annual surtax would be added. So just to really clarify: If you do not make or have a net worth of $50 million or more, you will not be affected by this tax.

Warren and the group of lawmakers behind the wealth tax argue that it would go directly toward digging the U.S. out of the pandemic-induced economic crisis while also allocating funds toward infrastructural priorities like childcare and early education. If passed, it is estimated to generate $3 trillion in revenue over the next 10 years without raising taxes on 99.95% of American households. For reference, as a whole, that same percentage of U.S. residents does not have a collective net worth that would be enough to be subject to this tax, reports CBS.

But shortly after this legislation was announced, some hopped on Twitter to call it “political grandstanding,” or to remind people that the tax would keep happening every year, which amounts to a lot of money in the lifetime of a billionaire (which is kind of the point). Some argued that it would harm the businesses themselves and their employees. But one could argue that it does more harm to businesses and employees to keep a select few so wealthy that they couldn’t spend all their money in a lifetime if they tried.

The Ultra-Millionaire Tax Act was released by Warren alongside Reps. Pramila Jayapal and Brendan Boyle. It is co-sponsored by Democratic Sens. Bernie Sanders, Kirsten Gillibrand, Sheldon Whitehouse, Jeff Merkley, Brian Schatz, Ed Markey, and Mazie Hirono. With the 50-50 chamber split in the Senate, getting a majority — let alone a two-thirds majority — could prove exceptionally challenging.

However, even though there seems to be a contentious divide among politicians, the idea of a wealth tax actually has widespread support among the American people. A Reuters/Ipsos poll released last year showed that nearly two-thirds of Americans agreed that the very rich should be contributing more in taxes. This includes a majority of Republican voters.

Perhaps that is the two-thirds majority Congress should be paying attention to.

Like what you see? How about some more R29 goodness, right here?

Sen. Warren Explains Why Billionaires Are Babies


Police say Edmonton’s Indigenous population is ‘highly victimized’ amid rising racism in city

Allison Bench


 
© The Canadian Press Images/Francis Vachon Edmonton Police badge is seen during a police memorial parade in Ottawa Sunday September 26, 2010.

In the wake of an alarming number of recent racist incidents in Edmonton, police say it's likely there are also frequent incidents against the city's Indigenous community that are largely going unreported.

The recent concerning incidents include reports from five Somali-Canadian women, all wearing hijabs, who were attacked or threatened in the city in the last 10 weeks.

Another racist incident involved a protest held in Edmonton on Feb. 20 that saw participants marching with tiki torches -- which are viewed by many as a symbol of racism after they were used by white nationalists during a notoriously violent and deadly weekend in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017.

Read more: Edmonton police chief condemns tiki torch carrying but says no evidence of hate crime at recent rally

Edmonton police have condemned the racism. But on Wednesday, during a Facebook live on hate crimes in Edmonton, officials said police statistics show while there has been a recent increase in incidents towards Black citizens -- there are likely many incidents happening against First Nations people that aren't being reported.

7 months after massive anti-racism rally in Edmonton, efforts to address the issues continue


"Statistically, of recent (incidents) it's been the Muslim community," said Sgt. Gary Willits with the hate crimes and violent extremist unit.

Read more: ‘Racism is a real problem’: Muslim women fearful following attacks in Edmonton

"The hatred, though, towards one identifiable community is hands down, the last several years... the Black community. A lot of offenses against the Black community.

"Statistically, I don't have the proof to show this... but (incidents also against) our Indigenous population," Willits said.


"(They're) highly victimized, I see it, I hear it. But we're not getting the reporting.

"I don't know if that's because of the mistrust toward police. I don't know if that's something that's been normalized because it's been going on for generations," he said. "But our Indigenous community, it's happening frequently. We're trying to work on that, because we need that reporting, we need people to come forward."

Eleanor VanGunst, mental health counsellor with the Edmonton Native Healing Centre, says she believes that mistrust is a fact of life that has been present for generations.

"It's more multi-factorial than just mistrust," VanGunst said. "The RCMP was created in order to assist with implementation of the Indian Act.

"Many, many years of that history, the RCMP may be further away from that history than they originally were, but there is still the mistrust of that particular institution or system," she said.

Read more: The RCMP was created to control Indigenous people. Can that relationship be reset?

"The other thing is, through many years of inter-generational trauma, people have maybe not had the best response when they did ask for assistance. So it has reinforced in them the behaviour of not asking for assistance, because no one has ever really helped them, so why bother?"

VanGunst added that she's heard, through her work at the centre -- which offers community support and services to First Nations people in the city -- the majority of interactions with police that her clients have are negative.

"A lot of times that we see Edmonton police, is if they're looking for somebody," she said. "And that could be due to crime, or that (the person has not been) located for a number of days."

VanGunst added that many of her clients report incidents directly to her through their counselling sessions.

"Because this is a safe space to people to speak, we will often hear about how (clients) were unfairly treated -- targeted, followed in stores," she said.


"We get to hear an awful lot about how they're not happy that this has occurred, but nobody seems to really do much about it in follow up."

Video: Edmonton Police Service chief commits to action for city’s racialized communities

She also believes outreach would be a difficult task for officers.

"(Police are) not so much coming in to just sit and chat with the people. I think part of that is their thinking, is they don't want to traumatize the participants that come here.


"Using Indigenous officers to help bridge the gap -- that might be helpful."

In 2018, the Edmonton Police Service launched a Indigenous Community Engagement Strategy that aimed to develop positive community partnership.

Then in late 2020, the force announced it would be creating a new Indigenous advisory council to help address the inequities and barriers Indigenous people face in the city, and develop and implement the best policing practices to address those challenges.

Read more: Edmonton Police Service recruiting community members for Indigenous advisory council

Willits said in the short term, he believes reporting an incident is imperative.

"We need people to report. We need people to know you have a voice, you have value and we want to hear from you," he said.

VanGunst said her recommendation for all Edmontonians is to educate themselves on the barriers being faced by marginalized communities.

"For people to not just look at somebody who is marginalized and Indigenous and assume the worst of them," she said. "Educate yourselves on what may have brought that person to where they're at this moment. Have a little more empathy for the many, many generations of trauma that person is carrying with them."
Montreal’s Asian community sees increase in targeted hate crimes, police say

Hate crimes toward members of Montreal's Asian community have seen a dramatic increase over the last year, according to Montreal police
.© 
News Hate crimes towards Montreal's Asian community have seen a dramatic increase over the last year according to Montreal police.

A total of 30 crimes targeting the Asian community were recorded in 2020 between the months of March and December.

Of those, 22 were considered "heinous crimes" and eight were recorded as "hate crimes."

READ MORE: Montreal police increase patrols in Chinatown following string of robberies

"It's a big jump," said SPVM Spokesperson Manuel Couture. Only six crimes were reported by Montreal's Asian community in 2019, according to the SPVM.

Couture said one-third of the incidents were related to COVID-19 and had a racist anti-Asian sentiment.

The majority of the cases, more than 40 per cent, involved vandalism and graffiti, Couture said.

READ MORE: Montreal police meet with Chinatown business owners after rash of break-ins, vandalism

"The pandemic made it more clear that racism is strongly in place in the community," said Chan Association president Jimmy Chan.

Chan said during the height of targeted attacks in Chinatown, fear and worry were at an all-time high.

"In one single night, there were seven stores with their windows smashed in," Chan said.

READ MORE: Montreal’s Chinatown faces second wave of vandalism, break-ins

The situation forced Chan to launch the first-ever Chinatown Security Service.

For weeks, Chan says the group of citizens patrolled the Chinatown area during the evenings.


"Almost every night, we would station in China town patrolling. It wasn't easy but people felt secure."

After an outcry in the community, the city of Montreal and the SPVM launched a security campaign.

Since November 2020, police have increased foot patrols and surveillance.

"We will talk to people in the street. We do door to doors, just to make sure everyone understands these acts are unacceptable," Const. Couture said.

Both Chan and the police say that regular reports should be made.

"People need to speak up," Chan said.

"We have our right, our space and a right to speak."
Benefits of LSD Microdosing Might Just Be 
a Manifestation of The Placebo Effect
Peter Dockrill 

For years now, experiments with LSD and other psychedelic drugs have suggested that 'microdoses' of the substances can offer a range of psychological benefits to people, with the potential to help treat depression and other mental health conditions

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© shunli zhao/Getty Images

The notion that these long-controversial drugs might actually improve people's mental wellbeing, cognition, and creativity was hailed as an exciting new paradigm in medical research – but according to a new study, the supposed benefits of these substances may not be what they seem.

In what's being described as the largest placebo-controlled trial on psychedelics to date, researchers found that the positive psychological effects linked with psychedelic microdosing may just be a manifestation of the placebo effect.

The placebo effect is a strange phenomenon where people appear to experience a medical benefit even when they've only taken a placebo, such as a sugar pill that contains no active medical substance.

While the mechanisms that empower the placebo effect remain debated, researchers suggest the phenomenon is tied to people's expectations: if people believe they might be affected by something, that belief in itself can trigger varying physiological effects that may alter their experience.

In the new LSD study, the same phenomenon could well have been taking place.

Researchers from Imperial College London recruited 191 volunteers: people who were already experienced psychedelics microdosers.

In an online 'self-blinded' experiment – in which the participants did not know what was inside the capsules they were taking – half the group ingested LSD microdoses, and the other half acted as controls, taking capsules that looked the same but were in fact placebos.

Over the course of four weeks, the participants took their regimen of mystery capsules (either LSD or placebo), while filling out surveys on how they were feeling, and performing cognitive tests online.

The results ultimately showed that those taking LSD microdoses felt better after taking their pills, significant improvements in psychological measures of well-being, mindfulness, life satisfaction, and paranoia.

However, the same benefits were seen in the people taking the placebo pills, with no significant differences evident between the two groups.

"Our results are mixed: on the one hand, we observed microdosing's benefits in a wide range of psychological measures; on the other hand, equal benefits were seen among participants taking placebos," says first author of the study Balázs Sziget, a research associate with Imperial College London's Centre for Psychedelic Research.

"These findings suggest that the benefits are not due to the drug, but rather due to the placebo-like expectation effects."

"Many participants who reported that they experienced positive effects while taking the placebo were shocked to learn after the study that they hadn't been taking the real drug."

It's not the first time that researchers have probed the strange nexus between psychedelics and placebos, but the researchers say theirs is the first to conduct a placebo-controlled investigation of the accumulative effects of repeated microdosing.

Based on the results, the experiment seems to confirm the commonly reported anecdotal reports that the act of microdosing LSD confers positive psychological benefits – only it suggests those improvements "are not due to the pharmacological action of microdosing, but are rather explained by the placebo effect".

That said, minor differences in some psychological measures were evident between the two groups, although the researchers say the effect sizes were small, with debatable clinical and practical value.

"In summary," the authors conclude, "these results strongly suggest that the actual content of capsules did not determine differences between the conditions, but beliefs about their content did." (Original emphasis.)

The researchers emphasise that their self-blinding experiment – in which the participants mixed up their own capsules at home to take part in the trial – comes with certain limitations, acknowledging that the results are less rigorous than data from a conventional clinical trial.

But there's no denying the potential impact of these findings, which show that we can't discount the possibility that the placebo effect may influence the results of contemporary psychedelics research – and in a way that is quite mind-blowing.

"An empty pill with strong belief/intentions makes nearly everything," one astonished participant, who took only placebos in the trial, told the researchers.

"You put spirituality into an empty pill here…wow!"

The findings are reported in eLife.

Fossils of oldest titanosaur discovered in Argentina
Doyle Rice, USA TODAY 


© Jorge González An artist's conception of the Ninjatitan zapatai dinosaur, which roamed the Earth some 140 million years ago.

At about 140 million years old, fossils from a huge dinosaur dug up in Argentina might be the oldest titanosaur yet discovered, scientists announced this week in a new study.

Titanosaurs are a group of long-necked, plant-eating dinosaurs that may have been the largest animals ever to walk the Earth, according to Reuters. Known as Ninjatitan zapatai, the recently discovered animal was about 66 feet in length and had a long neck and tail, Sci-News said.

"It is the oldest record known, not only from Argentina but worldwide," study lead author Pablo Gallina, a researcher at the National Council for Scientific and Technical Research of Argentina (CONICET), told Reuters.

“This discovery is also very important for the knowledge of the evolutionary history of sauropods because the fossil records of the Early Cretaceous epoch, in around 140 million years ago, are really very scarce throughout the world,” he said in a statement.

The new discovery meant titanosaurs lived longer ago than previously thought – at the beginning of the Cretaceous era that ended with the demise of the dinosaurs about 66 million years ago, Reuters said.

The fossilized remains of Ninjatitan zapatai were discovered in Neuquén province in Argentina's Patagonia region.

The creature was named after Argentine paleontologist Sebastian Apesteguia, nicknamed "El Ninja," and technician Rogelio Zapata, according to AFP.

The discovery of Ninjatitan zapatai was announced in a study in the journal Ameghiniana.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Fossils of oldest titanosaur discovered in Argentina

Cleanup of Arecibo Observatory's collapsed radio telescope seen from space

Elizabeth Howell 

The sad work of dismantling the remains of the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico is underway.
© Provided by Space arecibo observatory

Fresh satellite images from Maxar Technologies from Feb. 23 show work crews removing part of the structure and clearing the land for safety reasons, after the telescope collapsed Dec. 1, 2020.

The National Science Foundation (which stewarded the telescope since the 1970s) had no updates about Arecibo's status recently on Twitter or on its press releases. It announced the decommissioning of the famed observatory back in November, however, due to hurricane and cable damage deemed too dangerous to repair. The new pictures are therefore no surprise.

Related: Astronomers are still reeling from the loss of iconic Arecibo radio telescope

The collapse, documented in pictures and video, saw the 900-ton platform that hung above the radio dish suddenly falling 450 feet (140 meters) into the structure below at 8 a.m. local time. A preliminary investigation is ongoing for the cause amid the cleanup; a first update Jan. 21 from NSF suggested manufacturing error in the cables may have contributed to the collapse.

"We at NSF are extremely grateful that the safety zones were adequate and that nobody was physically hurt," Ashley Zauderer, the program director for the Arecibo Observatory at the NSF, said during a virtual town hall event held separately Jan. 11 at the 237th conference of the American Astronomical Society.

"I say 'physically hurt' because we do want to clearly communicate that we understand that this was a very traumatic event, impacting a lot of people," Zauderer added. "There is a lot of hurt."

The telescope's astronomical achievements are vast, but include scanning asteroids that came close to Earth, examining exoplanets and once sending a message to extraterrestrials in 1974. The public was also familiar with Arecibo's work through sci-fi films in the 1990s such as "Goldeneye" of the James Bond franchise, and the alien-focused "Contact" that starred a young Matthew McConaughey decades before his more famous space flick "Interstellar" (2014).

Arecibo's location in Puerto Rico brought tourism and scientific employment to the island associated with the telescope's work; how to secure that for the future is still being discussed. A recent editorial in Astronomy magazine suggested selling off pieces of Arecibo (in the context of a growing, worldwide space memorabilia market) to contribute to a fund for education and outreach at the former facility.

Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.