Sunday, April 23, 2023

GOP states targeting diversity, equity efforts in higher ed

by DAVID A. LIEB Associated Press
April 22, 2023
Photo by Andrew Patrick on Pexels.com

Frustrated by college diversity initiatives he says are “fomenting radical and toxic divisions,” Texas state Rep. Carl Tepper set out to put an end to diversity, equity and inclusion offices in higher education.

The freshman Republican lawmaker filed a bill to ban such offices. Three months later, he filed a new version of the legislation doing the same thing. The difference? Tepper switched the wording to align with a new model bill developed by the Manhattan Institute and Goldwater Institute, a pair of conservative think tanks based in New York and Arizona, respectively.

Republican lawmakers in at least a dozen states have proposed more than 30 bills this year targeting diversity, equity and inclusion efforts in higher education, an Associated Press analysis found using the bill-tracking software Plural. The measures have become the latest flashpoint in a cultural battle involving race, ethnicity and gender that has been amplified by prominent Republicans, including former President Donald Trump and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, potential rivals for the GOP presidential nomination in 2024.

Many of the proposals root in one of a half-dozen conservative or libertarian organizations offering recommendations for limiting consideration of diversity, equity and inclusion in employment decisions, training and student admissions. Some measures mirror the model bills nearly exactly. Others copy key definitions or phrases while adapting the concepts to their particular states.

“There’s a tremendous appetite on the right to deal with this issue,” said Joe Cohn, legislative and policy director for the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, which in February added its own model bill to the swelling ranks of proposals.

The bills are an outgrowth of recent Republican attempts to limit critical race theory, a viewpoint that racism is historically systemic in the nation’s institutions and continues today to maintain the dominance of white people in society. Christopher Rufo, who now is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, helped propel conservative outrage in 2020 against what he has described as critical-race-theory concepts infiltrating governments and educational institutions.

Trump responded by issuing an order in September 2020 banning training involving “divisive concepts” about race for government employees and contractors. Similar wording began cropping up in state-level legislation the following year.

Florida’s so-called “Stop WOKE” law, which DeSantis signed last year, is among the most prominent measures. It bars businesses, colleges and K-12 schools from giving training on certain racial concepts, such as the theory that people of a particular race are inherently racist, privileged or oppressed. Courts have currently blocked the law’s enforcement in colleges, universities and businesses.

DeSantis has continued to press the issue. He proposed legislation this year to ban diversity, equity and inclusion offices as part of a broader agenda to reshape higher education. He also appointed Rufo and other conservatives to the New College of Florida’s oversight board, which then abolished the liberal arts college’s office that handles diversity, equity and inclusion programs.

“DeSantis has been so vocal about the changes he wants to make in universities that it has probably spurred activity in other states,” said Jenna Robinson, president of the James G. Martin Center for Academic Renewal, a conservative nonprofit based in Raleigh, North Carolina.

On their face, diversity, equity and inclusion may seem uncontentious. Higher education institutions, along with many businesses, have devoted resources to inclusivity for years.

“DEI is woven into the fabric of good universities,” said Karma Chavez, chair of the Department of Mexican American and Latina/o Studies and co-chair of the College of Liberal Arts diversity committee at the University of Texas.

Campus DEI offices often spearhead services tailored to students of various races, genders, sexual orientations, cultures and abilities. Some college administrators also consider diversity and equity when admitting students, providing scholarships or deciding which faculty to hire and promote. Applicants may be asked not only for resumes and references, but also for statements about how they would advance DEI efforts.

Tepper contends DEI initiatives are “ideologically driven” on a “Marxist foundation.” Republican lawmakers in other states have used similar arguments.

During a recent Missouri House debate, Republican Rep. Doug Richey put forth a series of budget amendments prohibiting state funding for DEI initiatives in government agencies and higher education. He asserted the offices espouse “racist policies” and “Marxist ideology that is trying to strip away from us the concepts of the nuclear family, of merit, of character and of being judged by what you are capable of.”

Provisions blocking spending on diversity, equity and inclusion efforts also have been added to budget bills in Kansas and Texas. Separate bills banning spending for DEI offices in higher education have been proposed in Arizona, Florida, Iowa, Oklahoma, Utah and West Virginia, though some of those already have failed.

Other bills, such as in Ohio and South Carolina, would allow such offices but ban mandatory DEI training and forbid administrators from requesting DEI statements from staff and students.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s administration warned state entities in February not to use DEI factors in employment decisions. That prompted the state’s largest university systems to pause such practices and led students at the University of Texas to organize in defense of DEI efforts.


“It feels like an attack on my identity,” said Sameeha Rizvi, a university senior who said she has benefitted from DEI initiatives as a Muslim woman of color with a disability. “It is exceptionally hurtful and tiring to see this very hateful rhetoric being employed by legislators.”

The American Association of University Professors, which has about 45,000 members nationwide, said the bills mischaracterize DEI initiatives.

“They’re dog whistling that DEI initiatives are something sinister and subversive that people should be afraid of, and that’s not true at all,” association President Irene Mulvey said.

The Martin Center and Goldwater Institute released model legislation last year describing mandatory DEI statements from students and staff as a prohibited “political test.” Lawmakers in Georgia, Florida, Oklahoma and Texas all filed bills this year using the suggested wording.

Cicero Action, an advocacy group based in Austin, Texas, and the newly formed Do No Harm organization, based in Richmond, Virginia, also have provided guidance to state lawmakers drafting bills against diversity, equity and inclusion requirements in higher education. Similar bills in Missouri and Tennessee both follow Do No Harm’s outline of barring mandatory DEI instruction for medical students and health care providers.

University of Missouri medical students have lobbied against the legislation, asserting it could jeopardize the school’s accreditation and prevent doctors from learning about unique circumstances affecting the health of people from various ethnic, socioeconomic and geographic backgrounds.

“We’re not just hurting ourselves, we’re hurting patients if these bills get passed,” medical student Jay Devineni said.

Families left to fend for themselves after asbestos cleanup efforts stall at Denver condo complex

Families who live and own property at Atlantis Condominiums have been out of their homes for three weeks




By: Danielle Kreutter
 Apr 23, 2023

DENVER — Families who live and own property at Atlantis Condominiums on Hale Parkway in Denver have been out of their homes for three weeks, forced to fend for themselves as asbestos cleanup efforts stall.

Denver7 has been covering what's becoming a common problem in Colorado. We've shared the story of owners at Club Valencia who have been out of their homes for months after a major asbestos problem was discovered following a fire at the Parker Road complex.

Owners at Atlantis Condominiums also have no timeline on when they can go back home after they said asbestos was discovered in their building and they were told to evacuate on March 27.

"They told us it would be a week, then we'll be able to come home. Now it's been three weeks," said one homeowner who did not want to be identified, but said he was compelled to share the story about what his family and dozens of other owners are going through.

Condo owners aren't allowed back and anything inside is likely contaminated. He, his wife and their newborn baby have been staying in a hotel since then.


"We spent months just trying to prepare for the newborn baby, but now everything that we have in the condo, most of the things, they're going to be thrown away," he said. "I also work from home. That's my main source of income, so now I can't work."

Residents told Denver7 that the announcement about asbestos came not long after renovations began. The building manager said the exact cause is under investigation.

The family said their homeowner's insurance company told them their personal policy does not cover asbestos. The building's insurance is what would cover them.

Weeks have gone by with no progress and clean-up has yet to start. Homeowners are feeling the financial pinch.


"We are paying for the mortgage. We're paying for the hotel expenses. We didn't even enjoy the first few weeks that we were planning to enjoy with our newborn baby," the homeowner said.

The building manager told Denver7 the board is working with the building's insurance company and a vendor's insurance company to see who will cover the cleanup.

"We don't know if we would be able to live in that building anymore. We don't even know if we're financially able to afford buying a new property, even if we want to move out. This is messing up plans that we've been having for years," the homeowner said.

He is hoping for answers soon for all the homeowners who have been left to fend for themselves.

In the meantime, he has set up a GoFundMe to raise money to cover the out-of-pocket costs piling up while his family waits for the cleanup to begin. Click here if you'd like to support it.

CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M

NIGERIA
EXCLUSIVE: Buhari’s Minister, Festus Keyamo Caught In US Home Purchase Scandal Despite Bragging As EFCC Prosecutor



April 22, 2023

The document showed that Keyamo got the property at 5509 Silver Canyon LN TX 77583 in Savannah Trace, with no traceable income that could justify the purchase.

Adocument exposing how the Nigerian Minister of state for Labour and Employment, Festus Keyamo, bought a property in Texas, the United States worth over $359,000 has been obtained by SaharaReporters.

The document showed that Keyamo got the property at 5509 Silver Canyon LN TX 77583 in Savannah Trace, with no traceable income that could justify the purchase.

Keyamo had in the past been a prosecutor with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) but got the same property few years after he was appointed as minister.



“Behold the man that keeps bragging that he is EFCC prosecutor; he bought a house in Texas. How much was he earning as a minister barely two years after he was appointed? Remember he had stopped practicing because of his appointment,” a top source queried.

Keyamo, also presently spokesman of the Presidential Campaign Council of the All Progressives Congress, had handled several corruption cases for the EFCC,

In 2016, he withdrew as the prosecuting counsel in a corruption case between the Federal government and former Governor Timipre Sylva of Bayelsa State.

Keyamo had said he was stepping down as the lead prosecutor for the case instituted by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, due to recent developments which could hinder him from prosecuting the case effectively and vigorous.
He did not give details of the developments.

To put forward the paraphernalia of a public servant without corruption, Keyamo had in January 2023 written to the anti-graft agencies, ICPC, EFCC and CCB to arrest, interrogate and prosecute the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Atiku Abubakar for alleged fleecing of public funds.

The minister gave the agencies 72 hours to initiate arrest, investigation and possible prosecution of the former Vice President.

In a suit filed at an Abuja Federal High Court against the CCB, ICPC and EFCC, the Minister prayed the court to make a mandatory order compelling the anti-graft agencies to invite and/or arrest, investigate and (if found wanting) prosecute the Atiku in respect of the information available to him “in respect of a certain bank account belonging to a company named Marine Float and other accounts of two undisclosed companies, which information he disclosed to a certain close aide of his called Michael Achimugu, as to how the said accounts were used as “Special Purpose Vehicles” to secretly divert and misappropriate public funds between 1999 and 2007 when the 1st Defendant served as Vice President of Nigeria.”

He had also asked for a mandatory order compelling Atiku to make himself available to the anti-graft agencies “to aid and investigate the former Vice President on information available to him in respect of a certain bank account belonging to a company named Marine Float and other accounts of two undisclosed companies, which information he disclosed to a certain close aide of his called Michael Achimugu, as to how the said accounts were used as a “Special Purpose Vehicles” to secretly divert and misappropriate public funds between 1999 and 2007 when the 1st Defendant served as Vice President of Nigeria.”

Number of bodies exhumed from suspected Kenyan cult graves jumps to 47

A photograph shows an abandoned house in the forest that buried bodies have been exhumed 
 Shakahola, outside the coastal town of Malindi, on April 23, 2023. — AFP pic

NAIROBI, April 24 — Kenyan police have now exhumed the bodies of 47 people thought to be followers of a Christian cult who believed they would go to heaven if they starved themselves to death.

Police near the coastal town of Malindi started exhuming bodies on Friday from the Shakahola forest.

“In total, 47 people have died at the Shakahola forest,” detective Charles Kamau told Reuters on Sunday.

The exhumations were still ongoing, Kamau said.

Earlier this month, police rescued 15 members of the group — worshippers at the Good News International Church — who they said had been told to starve themselves to death. Four of them died before they reached hospital, police said.

The leader of the church, Paul Mackenzie, was arrested following a tip-off that suggested the existence of shallow graves belonging to at least 31 of Mackenzie’s followers.

Local media, citing police sources, reported that Mackenzie has refused to eat or drink while in police custody.

Interior Minister Kithure Kindiki said the entire 800-acre forest had been sealed off and declared a scene of crime.

“This horrendous blight on our conscience must lead not only to the most severe punishment of the perpetrator(s) of the atrocity on so many innocent souls, but tighter regulation (including self-regulation) of every church, mosque, temple or synagogue going forward,” he said.

 — Reuters

Kenyan 'cult' leader arrested after starved

bodies found in shallow graves


The flag of Kenya. Photo: Leonid Altman / 123RF

Kenyan police have exhumed 21 bodies near the coastal town of Malindi, as they investigate a preacher said to have told followers to starve to death.

Dead children were among those exhumed, and police said they expected to find even more bodies.

The shallow graves are in Shakahola forest, where 15 members of the Good News International Church were rescued last week.

Preacher Paul Mackenzie Nthenge is in custody, pending a court appearance.

State broadcaster KBC described him as a "cult leader", and reported that 58 graves have so far been identified.

Mr Mackenzie has denied wrongdoing, but has been refused bail. He insists that he shut down his church in 2019.

He allegedly told followers to starve themselves in order to "meet Jesus".

The Kenyan daily The Standard said pathologists will take DNA samples and conduct tests to determine whether the victims died of starvation.

Police arrested Mr Mackenzie on 15 April after discovering the bodies of four people suspected of having starved themselves to death.

Victor Kaudo of the Malindi Social Justice Centre told Citizen TV "when we are in this forest and come to an area where we see a big and tall cross, we know that means more than five people are buried there".

The preacher allegedly named three villages Nazareth, Bethlehem and Judea and baptised followers in ponds before telling them to fast, The Standard reports.

Kenya is a religious country and there have been previous cases of people being lured into dangerous, unregulated churches or cults.

- BBC

Dead wildlife found at oilsands tailings pond in northern Alberta

Suncor and Alberta Energy Regulator have initiated investigations


Stephen Cook · CBC News · Posted: Apr 22, 2023 
The discovery was made at a tailings pond at Suncor's base plant north of Fort McMurray, Alta. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press )

The Alberta Energy Regulator is investigating after dozens of bird carcasses were discovered at an oilsands site near Fort McMurray, Alta.

A post on the AER website on Saturday afternoon said Suncor reported around 4 p.m. Friday that 32 dead waterfowl were found at a tailings pond 29 kilometres north of the community. An update from the regulator late that night said a sweep had been completed by Suncor on Saturday and revised the count to 43 birds as well as two muskrats, one bat and one vole.

An AER inspector was immediately sent to the site to investigate, the announcement said, to ensure mitigation strategies are in place and implemented appropriately by the energy company.

A spokesperson for Suncor said its wildlife team made the discovery during a regular, required check at the edge of a tailings pond at its base plant.

"Based on the wildlife's state, we believe this is not due to a recent event," spokesperson Erin Rees said in an email.

She said the company has a wildlife mitigation program in place to prevent operating harming wildlife, including a regulatory approved bird protection plan.

At the time of discovery, all bird deterrent systems — which includes canons, radar, and effigies — were active, Rees said.

Suncor has initiated its own investigation.

AER said it will continue to assess the situation and provide further updates as needed.

The agency said it is working with Suncor, Alberta Environment and Parks as well as Environment Canada to ensure that all safety, wildlife and environment requirements are met during the response to the discovery.


Imperial Oil CEO 'deeply apologetic' in Commons committee testimony on oilsands tailings leak

Incidents of bird deaths at oilsands tailings ponds over the years include 50 birds that landed at an Imperial Oil tailings area near its Kearl oilsands project in northern Alberta in May 2020. Imperial said at the time it believed it occurred in spite of deterrents because most of the natural water bodies in the area were still frozen.

In January 2019, Syncrude was fined more than $2.7 million after pleading guilty to environmental charges in the deaths of 31 great blue herons at one of its oilsands mines north of Fort McMurray in 2015.

Syncrude was also fined $3 million in 2010 after more than 1,600 ducks died when they landed on a tailings pond in 2008.
WHITE CHRISTIAN MALE SNOWFLAKES
Montana Republicans condemn 'hate-filled' remarks by transgender Rep. Zooey Zephyr: 'Not public service'

Montana legislator Zooey Zephyr said Republicans have blood on their hands

By Andrea Vacchiano , Jon Street | Fox News

Montana trans lawmaker rips colleagues who support bill banning transgender medical treatments for minors

Montana Rep. Zooey Zephyr said when debating SB99, "If you vote yes on this bill and yes on these amendments I hope the next time there’s an invocation when you bow your heads in prayer, you see the blood on your hands."

A Montana state representative condemned a transgender legislator's "hate-filled remarks" to Fox News Digital, accusing the representative of "seeking media attention."

The controversy stems from comments made by State Rep. Zooey Zephyr during a Tuesday debate about a bill that would ban gender-affirming care for minors.

Zephyr accused the bill's supporters of being complicit in the deaths of transgender youths.

"The only thing I will say, is if you vote yes on this bill and yes on these amendments, I hope the next time there’s an invocation when you bow your heads in prayer, you see the blood on your hands," Zephyr said.

TRANS MONTANA LAWMAKER LASHES OUT AT GOP COLLEAGUES DURING HOUSE FLOOR DEBATE: 'BLOOD ON YOUR HANDS'


Braxton Mitchell (L) and Zooey Zephyr (R). Democratic Rep. Zooey Zephyr — the first transgender lawmaker in Montana legislature history — drew criticism Tuesday after telling Republican colleagues during a House floor debate on amendments to Senate Bill 99 that the lawmaker hopes they "see the blood on your hands" when they pray. (Montana Legislature via leg.mt.gov)

After her remarks, Republican Speaker Matt Regier refused to allow Zephyr to express her thoughts on a bill that would put binary definitions of sex in the state code. Zephyr was also barred from speaking at Thursday and Friday sessions.

"Not only has my colleague violated decorum, but has broken the trust given by the other 99 Representatives," Montana state representative Braxton Mitchell told Fox News Digital. "The hate-filled remarks were an act of self-service, not public service."

MONTANA TRANS LAWMAKER DECRIES MISGENDERING BY REPUBLICANS CALLING FOR CENSURE OVER BLOODY PRAYER REMARK


Republican Sen. Theresa Manzella is shown with members of the conservative Montana Freedom Caucus in the Old Supreme Court chambers at the Montana State Capitol on Jan. 19, 2023. The caucus deliberately misgendered a transgender lawmaker in a letter and a social media post demanding the House censor Democratic Rep. Zooey Zephyr for comments she made on the floor about a bill to ban gender affirming medical care for transgender children. (Thom Bridge/Independent Record via AP)

"I applaud the Speaker and Majority Leader for giving my colleague opportunities to rectify the consequences of this stunt," the Republican lawmaker added. "Since the hateful attack on the House, the Representative has tried to create further opportunities to seek media attention. We will not stand for it."

Regier reportedly demanded Zephyr to apologize before allowing her to speak in the sessions again. Zephyr stood by her remarks, accusing the bill of targeting her community.



FILE - Zooey Zephyr, right, attends a legislative training session at the state Capitol in Helena, Mont., on Nov. 16, 2022. Zephyr, who is one of the first two transgender candidates elected to the Montana Legislature, was intentionally misgendered on April 18, 2023, in a demand by the Montana Freedom Caucus that the state House censure her for comments she made on the House floor about a bill to ban transgender medical care for children. (Thom Bridge/Independent Record via AP, File)

"When there are bills targeting the LGBTQ community, I stand up to defend my community," Zephyr said. "And I choose my words with clarity and precision and I spoke to the real harms that these bills bring."
MACHETE COOKS
Danny Trejo on his new book, 'Trejo's Cantina'

April 22, 20235:18 PM ET
Heard on All Things Considered
LISTEN·7-Minute Download

Transcript

NPR's Adrian Florido speaks with Danny Trejo about his new cookbook, Trejo's Cantina: Cocktails, Snacks & Amazing Non-Alcoholic Drinks from the Heart of Hollywood

ADRIAN FLORIDO, HOST:

Chances are you know Danny Trejo's work as an actor. He's known for portraying tough guys in films like the "Machete" franchise, "From Dusk Till Dawn," "Con Air." If you go way back, you remember him from the classic LA gang film "Blood In Blood Out." But in addition to his decades-long acting career, food and cooking are also a big part of Danny Trejo's life. Here in Los Angeles, he's got several successful Mexican restaurants, a cantina and a coffee and donut shop. Now Danny Trejo has a new cookbook where he explains his love for food, community and his hometown, LA. It's called "Trejo's Cantina: Cocktails, Snacks & Amazing Non-Alcoholic Drinks From The Heart Of Hollywood." And Danny Trejo is with me now to talk more about the book and what inspired it. Danny Trejo, welcome.

DANNY TREJO: Hello. How are you doing?

FLORIDO: I'm doing fine. I'm excited to talk with you today.

TREJO: Thank you. Thank you, man. It's a pleasure.

FLORIDO: This is a book of recipes for cantina food. About half his food, but the other half is recipes for cocktails and drinks. But you don't drink. You've been sober for - what? - 40 years now?

TREJO: Fifty years. Yeah. I know. I dedicated this book to the non-drinking community, the recovery community. But it has some great recipes. And I have my favorite of all times, you know, my fight night nachos, which are, like, just perfect for, you know, guys over watching the fights or a football game. And we do our nachos special because every time people make nachos, you always run out of the top before, and then you just got a whole plate of chips down at the bottom that nobody wants to eat. So what we did was we put a bed of chips and then a top of the topping and then another bed of chips and a top of topping. So what you have is a full meal and...

FLORIDO: Which is just the way it should be, done, right?

TREJO: Yeah. Right. For breakfast, I just put two eggs over easy on top of that, and I got breakfast.

FLORIDO: What got you into cooking?

TREJO: Well, you know what? My mom was an unbelievable cook. When I was in the universities in California, and...

FLORIDO: When you talk - wait. When you say the universities of California, you're talking about...

TREJO: San Quentin, Folsom (laughter).

FLORIDO: They're prisons. Yeah.

TREJO: Yeah.

FLORIDO: You spent some time in prison in the '60s, as is a well-known part of your life story.

TREJO: Yeah. And, you know, it's so funny. There's a friend of mine, a guy named Clifton Collins, who was actually Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez's grandson. And Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez was one of the first Latinos in movies. He was John Wayne's sidekick all the time. And he developed a book. It's called "Ramen." And it's all the recipes from different penitentiaries that guys use to make Top Ramen. There's some great recipes in there. And those were all the ones because when me and him were talking, we gave him our recipes, you know.

FLORIDO: Wait. So you were telling me about how in prison you would bring all this stuff down to the yard.

TREJO: Yeah. And put everything together and mix it up and make, you know, Top Ramen with egg and hot dogs and cheese. And you'd make a nice casserole, you know, And everybody loved it. So we just brought it out to the streets. Me, I brought it, you know, into my restaurants (laughter).

FLORIDO: You pepper this book with a lot of the lessons that you learned about cooking while in prison.

TREJO: Right.

FLORIDO: And maybe not even just about cooking, but about, you know, the role that food plays in our lives. How do those lessons from prisons show up in this cookbook?

TREJO: I did a movie called "Machete," and in it, actually, Jessica Alba says a quote. She says something that I was - we were talking about. She says, my Jualita (ph) always says, you know, don't have any problems without eating a good meal. It's tough to make a good decision if you're hungry. It's tough to be in a good mood if you're hungry. So it's like, you know, like, you have to celebrate food. You have to celebrate life, you know. And food and life go together.

FLORIDO: A big part of your book is what you call the holy trinity - cilantro, onion and lime...

TREJO: (Laughter).

FLORIDO: ...Which are a big part of a lot of Mexican food. And I have to be honest with you. I cannot stand raw onion. And so I have had to get through being a Mexican without eating raw onion.

TREJO: You - raw onions? I like cooked onions...

FLORIDO: Yeah, that I can do...

TREJO: ...Myself (laughter).

FLORIDO: ...But raw onion I can't, and it's in everything. So every time I go and order a burrito, I have to say, (speaking Spanish), you know, no onion.

TREJO: Cook my onions, you and me. You know, I loved cooked - everything - I loved everything cooked. And it's like I think the only thing I'd ever eat would be one of my danger dogs, I'll eat chopped onion on that, you know. But I like, you know, just cooked a little bit.

TREJO: I noticed that there was no recipe in this book for guacamole, but I have a, like, very important question for you about guacamole, because whenever my dad calls up, like, all of his kids and his brothers and sisters, my aunts and uncles, to come over to the house because he's making carne asada, I am the guy who gets tasked with making the guacamole. They hand me the molcajete, the mortar and pestle, because I learned to make it from my grandmother. And it's a really simple recipe where you ground raw garlic into the molcajete.

TREJO: Yes, yes, yes.

FLORIDO: Then ground in some toasted jalapenos, the (speaking Spanish) and a little bit of salt on top.

TREJO: Yeah.

FLORIDO: No onion. No diced tomato. I see raw onion and diced tomato in guacamole everywhere now, and I'm wondering how you feel about that.

TREJO: Our recipe for guacamole was in our first book. And we have probably some of the best guacamole in LA. And we do it with a little ground-up jalapeno like your grandma. And I absolutely love it. But yeah, I don't have no onion in it.

FLORIDO: No onion. Right. Good. Good. You're one of mine. (Speaking Spanish). I'm glad to know that Danny Trejo and I have the same taste in guacamole.

TREJO: Yes.

FLORIDO: Well, Danny Trejo, in addition to cooking, I understand you've got another new venture. It's a new record label, Trejo's Music. And you've got a new album which includes this song called "Outlaw." Let's listen to a little bit of it.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "OUTLAW")

TREJO: (Singing) From San Jose to East LA, I'm a motorcycle rider, a highway flyer. I'm an outlaw, baby. Just an outlaw.

(LAUGHTER)

FLORIDO: Tell me a little bit about this song.

TREJO: Yeah. You know what? I started the record label, so we put a studio in my garage. And I was on the microphone. And I was singing. And Baby Bash came over, and he was listening to me and says, let's put that on the album. I go, I'm not a singer. He goes, that's not a voice song. That's a sing song. So we put it on. It did really well (laughter). But I'm not switching careers, so don't worry, fans.

(LAUGHTER)

FLORIDO: You'll stick to cooking, it sounds like - cooking and acting. I've been speaking with Danny Trejo. His new cookbook, "Trejo's Cantina: Cocktails, Snacks & Amazing Non-Alcoholic Drinks From The Heart Of Hollywood" is out now. Danny Trejo, thanks so much for joining us.

TREJO: Hey, thank you so much. It's been an absolute pleasure. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.


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NAACP sues Mississippi over 'separate and unequal policing'

JACKSON, Miss. — The NAACP warns that ''separate and unequal policing'' will return to Mississippi's majority-Black capital under a state-run police department, and the civil rights organization is suing the governor and other officials over it.

Republican Gov. Tate Reeves says violent crime in Jackson has made it necessary to expand where the Capitol Police can patrol and to authorize some appointed rather than elected judges.

But the NAACP said in its lawsuit filed late Friday that these are serious violations of the principle of self-government because they take control of the police and some courts out of the hands of residents.

''In certain areas of Jackson, a citizen can be arrested by a police department led by a State-appointed official, be charged by a State-appointed prosecutor, be tried before a State-appointed judge, and be sentenced to imprisonment in a State penitentiary regardless of the severity of the act,'' the lawsuit says.

Derrick Johnson, the national president of the NAACP, is himself a resident of Jackson. At a community meeting earlier this month, he said the policing law would treat Black people as ''second-class citizens.''

The legislation was passed by a majority-white and Republican-controlled state House and Senate. Jackson is governed by Democrats and about 83% of residents are Black, the largest percentage of any major U.S. city.

The governor said this week that the Jackson Police Department is severely understaffed and he believes the state-run Capitol Police can provide stability. The city of 150,000 residents has had more than 100 homicides in each of the past three years.

''We're working to address it,'' Reeves said in a statement Friday. ''And when we do, we're met with overwhelming false cries of racism and mainstream media who falsely call our actions 'Jim Crow.'''

According to one of the bills Reeves signed into law Friday, Capitol Police will have ''concurrent" jurisdiction with Jackson Police Department in the city. The expanded jurisdiction for the Capitol Police would begin July 1.

Another law will create a temporary court within a Capitol Complex Improvement District covering a portion of Jackson. The court will have the same power as municipal courts, which handle misdemeanor cases, traffic violations and initial appearances for some criminal charges. The new law says people convicted in the Capitol Complex Improvement District Court may be put in a state prison rather than in a city or county jail.

The judge of the new court is not required to live in Jackson and will be appointed by the Mississippi Supreme Court chief justice. The current chief justice is a conservative white man.

Encore: Civil rights tourism may protect Mississippi history
April 22, 2023

Heard on All Things Considered
By  Kirk Siegler
Debbie Elliott

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Transcript

Civil rights trails across the South have proven to be an economic driver. In Mississippi, there's a new push to better tell that history. And now, the federal government is getting involved.


ADRIAN FLORIDO, HOST:

Civil rights trails across the South have proven to be an economic driver for some communities. In Mississippi, there's a push to better tell that civil rights history, and the federal government is getting involved. We turn now to NPR's rural affairs correspondent Kirk Siegler and Debbie Elliott, who covers the South. They report there is a sense of urgency in getting this work done before memories fade and landmarks are lost.

(SOUNDBITE OF TRAIN WHISTLE BLOWING)

DEBBIE ELLIOTT, BYLINE: We start our journey on a remote country highway running along the railroad tracks in Money, Miss. There's a lone historical marker on the side of the road, but at first, it's unclear just why it's here.

KIRK SIEGLER, BYLINE: OK, You've brought me to this crumbled structure that's got vegetation all over it. Nature's taken over. Why?

ELLIOTT: So this is what's left of Bryant Grocery.

(SOUNDBITE OF VEHICLES PASSING)

ELLIOTT: This store is where Emmett Till, a 14-year-old Black teenager visiting from Chicago, allegedly flirted with the white female shopkeeper in 1955 - a violation of the Jim Crow code.

SIEGLER: Days later, his disfigured body, beaten, shot and bloated, was pulled from the Tallahatchie River. The brutal killing sparked the modern civil rights movement.

ELLIOTT: But this key building in the Emmett Till story is close to collapsing. We're in the heart of the Mississippi Delta in the northwest part of the state, where cotton and soybean farms stretch as far as the eye can see. It's easy to miss a lot of these important landmarks.

JOHNNY THOMAS: Right here in the barn there, he was beaten and then taken on what we call the tear trail of terror.

ELLIOTT: This is Johnny Thomas, the longtime mayor of the tiny, all-Black town of Glendora. We're outside of the museum he founded here in an old cotton gin on property that was once owned by one of Emmett Till's murderers.

(SOUNDBITE OF FOOTSTEPS)

ELLIOTT: He takes us to a nearby abandoned bridge, grass grown up all around.

THOMAS: This is the Black Bayou. This is the way - the route they would say that the body took.

ELLIOTT: Thomas says this spot, where the bridge span is severed, is thought to be where they dumped Emmett Till into the Black Bayou with the weight of an industrial cotton gin fan strapped to his back.

THOMAS: We see here, Emmett's body broke the bridge, the weight that broke the bridge.

ELLIOTT: This is one of several chilling, significant sites in the Emmett Till story.

SIEGLER: But the only thing a lot of them have in common are roadside historical markers for the Mississippi Freedom Trail. Federal money now coming in is giving some momentum to build up the tourism infrastructure here.

ELLIOTT: But it's a tall order. While there is a major state civil rights museum in the capital city, Jackson, a lot of these little Delta towns with big claims to America's civil rights history are spread out over a 250-mile expanse. A recent study by the National Park Service noted there's not enough context or investment.

SIEGLER: Johnny Thomas is encouraged by efforts in Congress to create a federally run Emmett Till National Historic District, linking all these sites and putting them in context.

THOMAS: Well, the significance for this community would be transforming. I mean, we the oldest community in the county, and we look like the oldest community in the county. We've been left behind. We are not benefiting as we should with this history.

SIEGLER: Almost everyone in Glendora lives below the federal poverty line, the same as it was when Thomas was a kid, and he's 69. Across the Delta, the land and wealth remain largely in the hands of the minority white population.

ELLIOTT: Some think civil rights tourism could help lift these little towns, so long as the people at the heart of the story are in charge of the narrative. Rolando Herts runs the Delta Center for Culture and Learning at Delta State University.

ROLANDO HERTS: I think that's part of the concern that we see now, with civil rights heritage tourism now on the rise, it's African American civil rights. But who will be in control of that story? Who will be benefiting from the stories that are being told?

ELLIOTT: Herts is working with local communities to highlight this history through the Mississippi Delta National Heritage Area, a National Park Service program that's brought millions in federal grants.

SIEGLER: And he says there's a sense of urgency to preserve and interpret these civil rights sites before key people and places are gone.

FELICIA KING: Oh, yeah, Yep. OK.

ELLIOTT: Felicia King walks into a fragile clapboard house near downtown Indianola, Miss.

SIEGLER: A tarp covers the roof, and inside, the floorboards are rotting away.

KING: My grandfather built this house, my dad's dad, Estelle Tye King.

SIEGLER: She always thought this was just a rental house. But after she inherited it, she learned it was actually once the headquarters for SNCC, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, during its Freedom Summer campaign in the mid-'60s.

KING: That was some dangerous times to be in the Mississippi Delta (laughter), trying to get Black people educated on their rights to vote and to vote. You know, that was people - they killed people behind that.

SIEGLER: Many freedom houses like this were bombed or burned down. King is using a park service grant to stabilize this home so it won't be lost.

ELLIOTT: She's been pondering why, growing up, she never heard about the role her grandfather and this house played in the civil rights movement.

KING: And the answer is because it's painful. Not it was painful; it's painful to talk about.

ELLIOTT: King hopes the next generation can take inspiration from how what happened in Mississippi changed the course of American democracy.

KING: We have history here. We matter. We are important. We have value here.

SIEGLER: You feel that same pride over in Mound Bayou, a nearby town founded by former slaves.

DARRYL JOHNSON: Darryl.

ELLIOTT: Debbie Elliott, good to meet you.

D JOHNSON: Debbie, good to meet you.

SIEGLER: Hi, I'm Kirk.

D JOHNSON: Kirk.

SIEGLER: Nice to meet you.

D JOHNSON: Deb and Kirk.

SIEGLER: That's right.

D JOHNSON: I'm Darryl.

SIEGLER: Darryl Johnson and his brother, Herman, have used a grant from the Mississippi Delta National Heritage Area to amass an eclectic collection of Americana in an old high school band room.

HERMAN JOHNSON: Enslaved people had a vision, and in that vision, they came and they founded Mound Bayou, here in the most inhospitable state in the country.

SIEGLER: During Jim Crow, the town thrived as a center for Black enterprise, with its own hospital, insurance companies and newspapers.

ELLIOTT: Though, like much of the Mississippi Delta, Mound, Bayou is not thriving today. Darryl Johnson says new investment in civil rights tourism could be a boost locally but, more importantly, help heal a divided people.

D JOHNSON: If we tell this story, we can help a whole nation and the whole world in understanding who the United States is.

SIEGLER: And in Delta towns like Mound Bayou, they're counting on this. I'm Kirk Siegler.

ELLIOTT: And I'm Debbie Elliott, NPR News, Mound Bayou, Miss.


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Encore: Greenland's melting ice and right whales

April 22, 2023
Heard on All Things Considered
By Lauren Sommer

LISTEN· 6:44  Download

Transcript

Climate change is causing ice caps and glaciers to disappear. One animal that the ice melt is affecting is the North Atlantic right whale.
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ADRIAN FLORIDO, HOST:

Around the world today, many people are marking Earth Day, calling for urgent action to reverse catastrophic climate change. It isn't just about protecting the planet for humans, of course.

(SOUNDBITE OF WHALES VOCALIZING)

FLORIDO: That's a North Atlantic right whale. They're highly endangered. And several years ago, they disappeared from the waters off the coast of Maine, where they're normally found. Now scientists are linking that to mysterious changes that begin thousands of miles away. Lauren Sommer from NPR's Climate Desk takes us there.

LAUREN SOMMER, BYLINE: On a warm summer day, the surface of Greenland is alive.

ANDREW SOLE: So this water is just coming from the surface of the ice sheet, which is melting all the time. So we saw lower down...

SOMMER: Andrew Sole is a researcher at the University of Sheffield. We're in west Greenland, and there's ice as far as we can see. It forms craggy peaks, deep crevices, and it's all liquefying.

SOLE: The meltwater gathers, forms little rivulets, little streams, and they all feed into a main river.

SOMMER: A river on top of the ice. And that river suddenly disappears. It drops into a dark, somewhat terrifying crack in the ice - basically, a hidden waterfall.

SOLE: Now, where it's going is to the bed of the ice sheet.

SOMMER: Greenland is melting more and more as the climate gets hotter. It's losing 280 billion tons of ice a year. And that melt is going to speed up. But by how much? That's what Sole is here studying.

SOLE: What is it, 200 milliliters?

UNIDENTIFIED PERSON: Yeah.

SOLE: Two hundred milliliters. OK, go for it, Ryan.

SOMMER: His research team is tracking this meltwater by releasing a colorful nontoxic dye.

SOLE: So now the whole river downstream of Ryan has turned a really fluorescent bright pink. And it's, to be honest, quite a surreal sight, surrounded by the lovely white ice and the sort of blue turquoise color of the water.

SOMMER: This meltwater pours to the bottom of the ice sheet and flows underneath it, building up the pressure.

SOLE: What happens under the ice is that water pressure is sufficient to lift the ice or to reduce the friction at the base of the ice to speed it up.

SOMMER: That means the ice sheet moves faster at certain times of year, sliding towards the Atlantic Ocean. And that's where it can have huge consequences. Greenland is at the crux of a crucial ocean current, one that controls what it's like in the ocean and on land. It's called the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, or AMOC for short.

AMY BOWER: The AMOC has been depicted as a conveyor belt.

SOMMER: Amy Bower studies ocean currents at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. Here's how this giant ocean conveyor belt works. The current carries warm water from the equator up the East Coast of the U.S., all the way to Greenland. That's where the salty water cools off. It gets heavy and sinks to the bottom of the ocean.

BOWER: And then go back towards the equator, down deep, carrying that cold water, kind of a return flow.

SOMMER: This giant conveyor belt can carry more water than 8,000 Mississippi Rivers, and it's powered by that sinking that happens near Greenland. But that's also where more freshwater is pouring into the ocean from all that melting ice.

BOWER: Freshwater is like, I don't want to sink. I don't want to sink. I'm very light (laughter). I don't want to sink. So fresh water tends to inhibit this sinking motion.

SOMMER: If the sinking gets weaker, the whole ocean current could slow down. There are signs that's already happening, though some scientists say it needs to be studied longer to be certain. And when currents change, it can cascade through the whole ocean.

It's late summer and scientist Philip Hamilton is searching for North Atlantic right whales.

PHILIP HAMILTON: It's our fourth night at sea. It's been a challenging trip so far.

SOMMER: He knows most of the whales individually by name. That's because there are only 340 of them left. And for decades, he's tracked them with a team from the Anderson Cabot Center for Ocean Life.

HAMILTON: We've only been able to find about 20 whales in this large area, and we're expecting to find more like 70 or 80.

SOMMER: Normally, Hamilton would be on the water in the Gulf of Maine during the summer, but around 2015, the whales began disappearing from there. Now he's looking hundreds of miles away in Canadian waters, where some of the right whales have turned up.

HAMILTON: We saw a calf, appears to have a propeller cut on its chin after only eight months of life. Pretty distressing.

SOMMER: Over a two-year period, 21 right whales were killed in Canada, many hit by ships or tangled in ropes from fishing gear. There were no protections for the whales because no one was expecting them there. But the whales needed to move because they were following their food.

ERIN MEYER-GUTBROD: I usually just call them bugs, and I think of them as bugs in the water.

SOMMER: Erin Meyer-Gutbrod is an ecologist at the University of South Carolina. She's talking about a tiny plankton called calanus finmarchicus. Right whales used to feed on them in the Gulf of Maine, but the water there is getting hotter because of shifting ocean currents. It's the kind of change scientists say could only get worse as Greenland keeps melting.

MEYER-GUTBROD: The Gulf of Maine is warming faster than 99% of the global ocean.

SOMMER: The plankton declined, so whales had to search for them in new places. The Canadian government recently started closing fishing grounds when whales are around to protect them, but they're still dangerously close to extinction, especially as the oceans keep changing.

MEYER-GUTBROD: Which puts us all in this state of emergency because then we don't really know where they're going to go, which means that we can't effectively protect their habitat.

SOMMER: Meyer-Gutbrod says it's not just whales at risk. Changing ocean currents could cause entire ecosystems to shift or die off.

MEYER-GUTBROD: We're just entering this time of extreme uncertainty. You know, we can't look at the past and allow that to shape the future because humans have kind of thrown a wrench in what used to be natural processes.

SOMMER: She says one hope for the whales and the rest of the ecosystem is to protect them by predicting these changes ahead of time, to know what might happen. And to do that, scientists need to better understand how climate change could be setting off this cascade, from hotter oceans to shifting ocean currents and, ultimately, to how a huge hunk of ice sitting on top of Greenland is disappearing increasingly fast.

Lauren Sommer, NPR News.

FLORIDO: NPR's Climate Desk is looking at the far-reaching effects of melting ice all this week. You can catch more of their stories right here or online at npr.org/icemelt.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.