Sunday, August 09, 2020

UPDATE
Warming shatters Canada's last Arctic ice shelf
AP 2020-08-10 

Reuters

The collapse of the Milne Ice Shelf, the last fully intact ice shelf in Canada, is seen reducing its size by about 43 percent according to Environment and Climate Change Canada in a combination of satellite images taken from July 30 to August 4, 2020 over Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, Canada.

Much of Canada’s remaining intact ice shelf has broken apart into hulking iceberg islands due to a hot summer and global warming, scientists said.

Canada’s 4,000-year-old Milne Ice Shelf on the northwestern edge of Ellesmere Island had been the country’s last intact ice shelf until the end of July when ice analyst Adrienne White of the Canadian Ice Service noticed that satellite photos showed that about 43 percent of it had broken off. She said it happened around July 30 or 31.

Two giant icebergs formed along with lots of smaller ones, and they have already started drifting away, White said. The biggest is nearly the size of Manhattan — 55 square kilometers and 11.5 kilometers long. They are 70 to 80 meters thick.

“This is a huge, huge block of ice,” White said. “If one of these is moving toward an oil rig, there’s nothing you can really do aside from move your oil rig.”

The 187-square-kilometer undulating white ice shelf of ridges and troughs dotted with blue meltwater had been larger than the District of Columbia but now is down to 106 square kilometers.

Temperatures from May to early August in the region have been 5 degrees Celsius warmer than the 1980 to 2010 average, University of Ottawa glaciology professor Luke Copland said.

This is on top of an Arctic that already had been warming much faster than the rest of globe, with this region warming even faster.

“Without a doubt, it’s climate change,” Copland said, noting the ice shelf is melting from both hotter air above and warmer water below.

“The Milne was very special. It’s an amazingly pretty location.”

Ice shelves are hundreds to thousands of years old, thicker than long-term sea ice, but not as big and old as glaciers, Copland said. Canada had a large continuous ice shelf across the northern coast of Ellesmere Island in the territory of Nunavut, but it has been breaking apart over recent decades because of global warming. By 2005 it was down to six remaining ice shelves but “the Milne was really the last complete ice shelf.”

“There aren’t very many ice shelves around the Arctic any more,” Copland added. “It seems we’ve lost pretty much all of them from northern Greenland and the Russian Arctic. There may be a few in a few protected fjords.”
UPDATE
Mauritius battles devastating fuel spill

AFP 2020-08-10

AFP

A large patch of leaked oil and the vessel MV Wakashio that ran aground near Blue Bay Marine Park off the coast of south-east Mauritius.

Thousands of Mauritians raced to contain a catastrophic oil spill swamping its pristine ocean and beaches on Sunday as frustration mounts over why more wasn’t done to prevent the ecological disaster.

The bulk carrier MV Wakashio has been seeping fuel into a protected marine park boasting unspoiled coral reefs, mangrove forests and endangered species, prompting the government to declare an unprecedented environmental emergency.

Attempts to stabilize the stricken vessel, which ran aground on July 25 but only started leaking oil last week, and to pump 4,000 tons of fuel from its hold have failed. Local authorities fear rough seas could rupture the tanker.

Japan said on Sunday it would send a six-member expert team to assist, joining France which dispatched a naval vessel and military aircraft from nearby Reunion Island after Mauritius issued an appeal for international help.

Thousands of volunteers, many smeared head-to-toe in black sludge, are marshaling along the coastline, stringing together miles of improvised floating barriers made of straw in a desperate attempt to hold back the oily tide.

Mitsui OSK Lines, which operates the vessel owned by a Japanese company, said yesterday that 1,000 tons of fuel oil had escaped so far.

“We are terribly sorry,” the shipping firm’s vice-president, Akihiko Ono, told reporters in Tokyo, promising to “make all-out efforts to resolve the case.” But conservationists say the damage could already be done.

Aerial images show the enormous scale of the disaster, with huge stretches of azure seas around the marooned cargo ship stained a deep inky black, and the region’s fabled lagoons and inlets clouded over.

Thick muck has inundated unspoiled marine habitats and white-sand beaches, causing what experts say is irreparable damage to the fragile coastal ecosystem upon which Mauritius and its economy relies.

Pressure is mounting on the government to explain why more wasn’t done in the two weeks since the bulk carrier ran aground.

The opposition has called for the resignation of the environment and fisheries ministers, while volunteers have ignored an official order to leave the clean-up operation to local authorities, donning rubber gloves to sift through the sludge.

“People by the thousands are coming together. No one is listening to the government anymore,” said Ashok Subron, an environmental activist at Mahebourg, one of the worst-hit areas.

“People have realized that they need to take things into their hands. We are here to protect our fauna and flora.”

Police said on Sunday they would execute a search warrant to board the Wakashio and seize items of interest, including the ship’s log.

Mauritius and its 1.3 million inhabitants depend crucially on the sea for eco-tourism, fostering a reputation as a conservation success story and a world-class destination for nature lovers.


SEE
https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/2020/08/locals-in-mauritius-are-going-to-great.html

https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/2020/08/mauritian-prime-minister-seeks.html

https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/2020/08/the-oil-spill-at-mauritius-is-disaster.html

https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/2020/08/update-mauritius-battles-devastating.html

https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/2020/08/mauritius-oil-spill-locals-scramble-to.html

https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/2020/08/oil-spill-off-mauritius-is-visible-from.html

https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/2020/08/france-offers-aid-as-mauritius-declares.html

https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/2020/08/mauritius-facing-catastrophe-as-oil.html


Europe stunned by US coronavirus bungling
AP 2020-08-09


AFP
US President Donald Trump signs executive orders extending coronavirus economic relief, during a news conference in Bedminster, New Jersey on Saturday. The United States has registered over five million cases in the coronavirus pandemic, Johns Hopkins University's tally showed on Sunday, as well as over 162,000 deaths as the country struggles to control the disease.
The United States’ failure to contain the spread of the coronavirus has been met with astonishment and alarm in Europe, as the world’s most powerful country registered over 5 million confirmed infections as of Sunday.

Perhaps nowhere outside the US is America’s bungled virus response viewed with more consternation than in Italy. Italians were unprepared when the outbreak exploded in February and the country still has one of the world’s highest official death tolls at 35,000.

But after a strict nationwide 10-week lockdown, vigilant tracing of new clusters and general acceptance of mask mandates and social distancing, Italy has become a model of virus containment.

“Don’t they care about their health?” a mask-clad Patrizia Antonini asked about people in the United States as she walked with friends along the banks of Lake Bracciano, north of Rome. “They need to take our precautions ... They need a real lockdown.”

Much of the incredulity in Europe stems from the fact that America had the benefit of time, European experience and medical know-how to treat the virus that the continent itself didn’t have when the first COVID-19 patients started filling intensive care units.

Yet, more than four months into a sustained outbreak, the US has already hit an astonishing milestone of 5 million confirmed infections, easily the highest in the world. Health officials believe the actual number is closer to 50 million, given testing limitations and the fact that as many as 40 percent of all cases are asymptomatic.

“We Italians always saw America as a model,” said Massimo Franco, columnist with daily Corriere della Sera. “But with this virus we’ve discovered a country that is very fragile, with bad infrastructure and a public health system that is non-existent.”

Italian Health Minister Roberto Speranza hasn’t shied away from criticizing the US, officially condemning as “wrong” Washington’s decision to withhold funding from the World Health Organization and marveling personally at US President Donald Trump’s virus response.

After Trump finally donned a protective mask last month, Speranza told La7 television: “I’m not surprised by Trump’s behavior now. I’m profoundly surprised by his behavior before.”

With America’s list-leading 160,000 dead, politicized resistance to masks and rising caseload, European nations have barred American tourists and visitors from other countries with growing cases from freely traveling to the bloc.

France and Germany are now imposing tests on arrival for travelers from “at risk” countries, the US included.

“I am very well aware that this impinges on individual freedoms, but I believe that this is a justifiable intervention,” German Health Minister Jens Spahn said in announcing the tests last week.

In the US, new cases run at about 54,000 a day — an immensely higher number even when taking into account its larger population. And while that’s down from a peak of well over 70,000 last month, cases are rising in nearly 20 states, and deaths are climbing. In contrast, at least for now Europe appears to have the virus somewhat under control.

“Had the medical professionals been allowed to operate in the States, you would have belatedly gotten to a point of getting to grips with this back in March,” said Scott Lucas, professor of international studies at the University of Birmingham, England.

“But of course, the medical and public health professionals were not allowed to proceed unchecked,” he said, referring to Trump’s frequent undercutting of his own experts.

Trump’s frequent complaints about Dr Anthony Fauci have regularly made headlines in Europe, where the US infectious diseases expert is a respected eminence grise. Italy’s leading COVID-19 hospital offered Fauci a job if Trump fired him.

Source: AP
Watching that ‘mushroom cloud’ over Beirut on Hiroshima's anniversary…Is someone sending us a message?

İbrahim Karagül
TURKEY https://www.yenisafak.com/en/
07 August 2020


Thousands of people injured, more than a hundred dead, 250,000 homeless, billions of dollars in damages, and the collapse of a country’s economy. Israel, a hostile country in the south, Syrian war in the East, the closure of Lebanon’s sea gate, a country whose entire economy depends on the sea.

A total of 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate was kept at the harbor for six years. Who kept it there, why, whose was the secret hand that kept it there, what was the purpose for keeping it there? The resulting blast, the explosion that was felt 250 kilometers away, even from the Turkish Republic of North Cyprus (TRNC).

Hiroshima’s anniversary, similar mushroom cloud: Does this mean ‘Watch your step’?

The image of that horrific explosion, that mushroom cloud, and two days before Hiroshima’s anniversary (Aug. 2, 1945), 75 years later, the world having to watch a similar scene unfold all over again.

Did Israel, which possesses nuclear weapons, or another power, make the Arab/Islamic world watch the scene of a micronuclear attack? Was the message they were trying to relay: “Watch your step”? Was a memory shock staged? Does this imply, “I will take over you as the U.S. took over Japan with two nuclear bombs”?

It is an ‘accident’ but… Unexpected things always happen in this region

So many ideas come to one’s mind. When the location of the explosion is Lebanon, Israel’s occupation and attacks aimed at Lebanon is known to all, the plans to spill the Syria war over to Lebanon are no secret, and Israel’s recent pressures on Lebanon are well documented, all possibilities must be considered.

According to official statements, this is not an unexpected accident. There is currently no finding to prove that it is an attack. However, the truth will be revealed in time. Unexpected things always happen in this region. Unpredictable evils are exhibited.

When the dust cloud settles, the second step is taken…

All sorts of unrest, plots, covert operations, dark messages, ruthless showdowns are exhibited. This region is the playing field of all powers. Lebanon is the laboratory of these games.

You will see the truth once the dust cloud settles. You will understand the picture when the next step is taken. The murderer is there, very close, and, most of the time, teary-eyed.

We will never forget these photographs, images carved into our minds

Grave chaoses have taken place in our region and continue to do so. A new photograph has been added to the shots we have not been able to forget and will not forget for the last three decades. It was like the war of symbols.

One cannot forget the pictures of the father and son after the invasion of Iraq, in the desert surrounded by barbwires, with sacks over their heads, that father using his hand as a shield to protect his son from the sun.

Abu Ghraib cannot be forgotten. The people of Baghdad remaining in their houses while outsiders were looting the city when Baghdad was invaded, that silent protest cannot be forgotten. Saddam Hussein’s execution, especially on the morning of eid, and the presentation of this execution to the world cannot be forgotten.

Sheberghan, Ahmad Yasin, enslaved Muslim youth

Images from Sheberghan prison in Afghanistan, the torture centers at Bagram airbase, the killing of the people brought from Mazar-e Sharif by raining bullets on the train carriages carrying them, their suffocation cannot be forgotten.

The CIA buying and selling the images of the Muslim youth in chains on the slave trade aircraft, that slave trade cannot be forgotten.

Sheikh Ahmad Yasin’s martyrdom by a missile during morning prayer, the participants in the assassination meetings held at Ariel Sharon’s farm cannot be forgotten.

Mushroom cloud over Beirut cannot be forgotten either.Are fears being instilled in our minds?

These were not only acts of violence. These were not only attacks. They were not only massacres/slaughters. These were messages given to the people of the region, to the Muslim world. Each of these were well planned mind operations.

That mushroom cloud rising from Beirut on the anniversary of Hiroshima is like this. It is unforgettable. It seems as though it was planned to carve fear into our minds, to imply something.

Let us say it is an accident and let it slide. Yet, if we do not question these, much worse events will occur. The new photograph operations of those planning unimaginable evils will be carved into our minds.

Everything was planned based on our weaknesses.

Yes, those who were keeping the 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate there are guilty. This is a weakness. If you notice, in every event experienced in this region throughout the years, “weaknesses” have been used as a camouflage. In Iraq, Saddam was bad, Afghanistan had al-Qaida, Syria had Daesh. They were all weaknesses, and all scenarios were plotted based on these weaknesses.

While we were busy discussing these only, they were dividing the region, splitting it between them, building thick walls between our cities, and plundering our resources and fortunes.

Harbors, airports, warehouses, silos, agricultural areas are targeted.

The pandemic changed the world in such a drastic way and it is going to continue to change it. The instruments of the war, the showdown are also changing and will continue to change. We are discussing bioterrorism, biological wars today.

We are discussing how humanity can survive, whether this will be continued, if yes, how we can fight it, which power and state will exploit it.

The explosion in Beirut is teaching new lessons: Harbors, airports, logistics centers, warehouses, grain reserves, agricultural areas, fields that are strategic for civilian life may be targeted now.

Nations may be punished with starvation

Countries, nations and communities may be punished with starvation. Wars or attacks may shift from the military domain to civilian domains, urban centers may be destroyed and nations collapsed.

Everything is starting all over again – such as new rights, new wrongs, new habits, new ways to settle scores.

Turkey must take into consideration new sorts of threats post-pandemic.

Turkey, which ran to Lebanon’s aid, which supported this country with all its might, must urgently identify the “new sorts of threats” and take measures after the explosion in Beirut.

New protection shields must be formed in the fields mentioned above, in fields related to food, health, and life sources.

It appears that the energy conflict in the East Mediterranean is going to further grow. Lebanon is perhaps going to be scapegoated in this fight. We will see this when the “second step” is taken.

Shipyard, Union Reach Tentative Deal to End Strike in Maine


A striking shipbuilder walks outside Bath Iron Works, June 22, 2020, in Bath, Maine. Production workers at one of the Navy's largest shipbuilders overwhelmingly voted to strike, rejecting the company's three-year contract offer Sunday and threatening to further delay delivery of ships. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
BATH, Maine (AP) — Navy shipbuilder Bath Iron Works and production workers reached a tentative agreement to end a strike that has stretched on for more than a month during a pandemic, officials announced Saturday.
The proposal, which was unanimously endorsed by the union's negotiating team, will be put forth to the 4,300 members of Machinists Local S6 later this month, said Jay Wadleigh, a district union official.
A federal mediator helped to bring the two sides together on subcontracting, seniority and work rules. The tentative agreement, reached late Friday, retains the company’s proposal for annual wage increases of 3% over three years, along with some health care improvements, Wadleigh said.
“It preserves our subcontracting process, protects seniority provisions and calls for a collaborative effort to get back on schedule,” he said.
The tentative agreement positions the shipyard and workers “to partner together to improve schedule performance, restore the yard’s competitiveness and ensure ‘Bath Built’ remains ‘Best Built’ for generations to come,” said Dirk Lesko, the shipyard's president, referencing the shipyard slogan “Bath built is best built.”
Voting on the proposal will take place online and via telephone from Aug. 21-23.
Production workers went on strike June 22 after overwhelmingly rejecting the company’s final offer. The strike dragged on for more than six weeks against the backdrop of the coronavirus pandemic — during which workers lost their company-paid insurance — and an election year in which some politicians sought to get involved on behalf of workers.
Frustration at the shipyard — a subsidiary of General Dynamics that builds guided-missile destroyers for the U.S. Navy — had been building among workers since the last contract in which the Machinists accepted concessions that were deemed necessary to win a U.S. Coast Guard contract — and save shipbuilding jobs.
Bath Iron Works lost that contract to another shipyard in 2016. It also lost a lucrative competition for Navy frigates in late April. Shipbuilders contended production workers shouldn’t shoulder the cost for problems they blame on mismanagement.
The pandemic exacerbated the tensions at the shipyard. Some workers were angry when the shipyard rebuffed requests to shut down for two weeks. The shipyard was considered essential and production continued even though hundreds of workers stayed home.
The strike threatened to put production further behind schedule at a time of growing competition from China and Russia. Bath Iron Works was already six months behind before the strike, partly because of the pandemic.
The shipyard, a major employer in Maine with 6,800 workers, has been undergoing a transition as aging workers reach retirement. The shipyard hired 1,800 workers last year and expects to hire 1,000 workers this year. Despite all of the new workers, who must be trained, the shipyard said it needs the flexibility of hiring subcontractors.
The last strike, in 2000, lasted 55 days.
Robert Martinez Jr., the international president of the Machinists who rallied shipbuilders two weeks ago in Bath, said in a statement that he was proud of the Local S6 “for standing strong in defense of themselves, their families and good Maine jobs.”
In Bath, motorists honked as they drove by pickets in front of the union hall, across from the shipyard.
David Archer, a sand blaster, said he was happy to see the strike coming closer to a resolution. He has a blood disorder that puts him at a higher risk for the coronavirus, and he had to cut back on weekly blood tests during the strike. Each test costs $1,000, he said.
But he remained resolute. “I understand what we’re striking for, and I stand behind my fellow brothers and sisters," he said.
This article was written by DAVID SHARP from The Associated Press and was legally licensed through the Industry Dive publisher network. Please direct all licensing questions to legal@industrydive.com.
A BEIRUT CONSPIRACY THEORY 


Um, why is there a gigantic black cloud circling the globe?
Australia’s epic wildfires — along with freak thunderstorms — rocketed dust particles and ash 15 miles into the atmosphere. The massive 'fire cloud' is drifting around the Pacific Ocean.

By James Burch

The scientific name is cumulonimbus flammagenitus, but the more common nickname is ‘fire cloud.’ NASA calls them the "fire-breathing dragon of clouds," according to their website.

One of the largest fire clouds ever recorded has been drifting around the Southern Hemisphere for over a month. Heat and freak thunderstorms generated by Australia’s massive wildfires sent ash and toxic materials high into the atmosphere, where they formed a massive dark cloud of debris. It’s been measured at 15 miles high at some points, and at one point it covered more than 1 million square miles — about half the size of Canada.

NASA has been tracking the massive cloud from space as it slowly drifted over to South America and then looped back toward Oceania where it hovered over New Zealand, turning glaciers brown, and perhaps hastening their melting.

As Australian firefighters get their blazes under control, the cloud has been dissipating. Health experts say toxic chemicals and debris eventually drop back to Earth, through the air or within raindrops, where they can be inhaled or ingested by humans and animals.

The giant cloud may also impact global weather by blocking sunlight to the Earth’s surface, an effect known as "nuclear winter," named after a hypothesis that the world would become extremely cold due to the firestorms of a nuclear war. The same effect happens in major volcanic eruptions when giant plumes of ash sweep across continents. In 1815 the Mount Tambora volcano in Indonesia created the "year without summer" across much of the globe, including in the United States, where farmers lost crops as seasonal temperatures plummeted.

Right now, scientists aren’t sure when the Australian fire cloud will dissipate or whether it will start moving again.

VIDEO
Bill Gates: US only country to have coronavirus 'testing insanity'
BY ZACK BUDRYK - 08/09/20

Microsoft founder Bill Gates on Sunday lamented the U.S.’ coronavirus “testing insanity,” which he said had caused the country to fall behind the rest of the world, much of which has begun reopening after flattening infection growth.

“A variety of early missteps by the U.S. and then the political atmosphere meant that we didn’t get our testing going,” Gates said Sunday on CNN’s “Fareed Zakaria GPS.” “It’s nonsense that any sort of travel ban we did was at all beneficial. That doesn’t pass the common sense test… and now we’ve executed our lockdowns nationwide with less fidelity than other countries.”

Commercial labs, he said, have left customers struggling with long wait-times while “very wealthy people have access to these quick-turnaround tests.”

“It’s mind-blowing that you can’t get the government to improve the testing because they just want to say how great it is,” he continued. “I’ve said to them, look, have a CDC website that prioritizes who gets tested. Don’t reimburse any test where the result goes back after three days. You’re paying billions of dollars in this very inequitable way to get the most worthless testing results in the world.”

“No other country has the testing insanity, because they won’t talk about fixing it, because they think they need to just keep acting like they’ve done a competent job,” he added.

Without sufficiently rapid testing, Gates continued, people with the virus may not be able to self-isolate in time to contain the infection. He added that he believes a vaccine will likely be developed by the end of 2020 or within the first half of 2021.

President Trump has vocally defended the U.S.’ testing for the virus and repeatedly claimed that the country’s numbers are only high due to the testing regimen, despite the fact that the positive percentage rate of the tests remains high as well.
What Trump got wrong by pushing coal
BY CAROLYN KISSANE, OPINION CONTRIBUTOR — 08/09/20
THE HILL

© Greg Nash

While campaigning in Columbus, Ohio, in March 2016, Hillary Clinton said something that she later cited as the comment she “regret[s] the most” from her presidential run. Clinton announced that she would put coal miners and companies out of business if she became president. Her comments likely cost her significant support across the coal-mining states of Ohio, Kentucky, Wyoming, Montana and Pennsylvania.

In the end, it wasn’t Clinton who put the hurt on coal country but instead the rapidly declining costs of renewable energy, especially solar and wind, uber-cheap natural gas and an array of states and cities with ambitious climate change action plans requiring sharp reductions in carbon dioxide emissions. Four years ago, the writing was on the wall: Saving coal would require disregarding the market and reversing the plans towards decarbonization.

Over the course of Donald Trump’s presidency, the U.S. has remained the world’s premiere oil and gas producer. But coal has continued to struggle. Bringing back coal in the United States was not something that could be achieved by executive decree.

In 2016 “Trump digs coal” became a campaign slogan, and in almost every speech he pledged to revive the sector. “We're gonna put the miners back to work. We're gonna get those mines open," he said on numerous occasions.

 Trump assured coal companies and communities that he would bring coal-mining jobs back and protect the industry. He saw what he considered to be alienated and angry coal miners who were seeing their livelihoods disappear, and he capitalized on their frustration. He captured their attention, won votes and in the first year of his presidency continued to tout his ability to resuscitate the industry. Clinton’s comments are closer to today’s reality. With the 2020 election around the corner, it’s clear Trump hasn’t kept his promises.

Hydrocarbons are not going away, but an energy transition is well under way. Many developed countries are moving away from coal, oil and gas, and even states and cities in the United States are saying no to future use of fossil fuels. To understand why requires understanding the evolution of energy systems and development, and the resolve of many state and local governments to use cleaner energy.

Coal production depends on demand, and the sector has relied on the power sector for over 90 percent of its use. As the power sector evolves, coal consumption has declined. Cheaper and cleaner sources of energy, such as wind and solar, are displacing coal, and moving into the market share of natural gas in different states such as California and New York.

The position of natural gas in the U.S. energy space is illustrated by the evolution of coal-fired plants. According to recently released EIA data, between 2011 and 2019, 121 U.S. coal-fired power plants were repurposed to burn other types of fuels, with 103 converted to or replaced by natural gas-fired plants.

Coal was in decline before 2016. Thirteen years ago, coal consumption peaked and has declined every year since. In 2019, only 966,000 gigawatts of electricity was generated by coal, and in the first half of 2020 thousands coal workers lost their jobs. Meanwhile, before the COVID crisis, solar energy was experiencing exponential growth, averaging 49 percent a year.

The COVID-driven recession has hastened coal’s demise. Demand for coal fell over 18 percent during April and May as the virus shrunk demand for power. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, U.S. electric generation is forecast to drop by 5 percent, with fossil fuels such as coal hit the hardest. With domestic demand falling and coal exports in decline, there’s no future scenario for coal’s comeback.

Coal’s contribution to U.S. economic development and industrialization must be acknowledged. The energy source once fueled almost half of all U.S. electricity but now powers less than a quarter and continues to decline. Coal provided a reliable and affordable source of energy and enhanced energy security. But with climate change posing untold risks and threats, coal’s high-carbon emissions will eventually make it a stranded asset.

Every new beginning comes from some other beginning’s end. Trump came into office selling a vision he wasn’t able to fully implement and maintain. Clinton may regret her anti-coal comments, but does Trump regret his misplaced promises and his failure to deliver?

Carolyn Kissane, PhD, is academic director and a clinical professor at the New York University Center for Global Affairs and a non-resident fellow at the Payne Institute at the Colorado School of Mines.
UK  Hundreds join rapper Wretch 32 at protest against police use of Tasers

The peaceful event called for ‘justice’ for a list of people who have died after coming into contact with police.


Rapper Wretch 32 attends a rally against police use of Tasers at Tottenham police station, north London (Helen William/PA)

By Helen William, PA August 08 2020

Hundreds of people have gathered outside a north London police station to support rapper Wretch 32 – whose father was Tasered by police – and to protest against racism in the force.

The crowd gathered peacefully in scorching temperatures to hear speeches and demonstrate outside Tottenham Police Station.

It comes after the 35-year-old musician, whose real name is Jermaine Scott, posted a video on Twitter of his father Millard Scott, 62, falling downstairs after being Tasered by officers in north London in April.

The Metropolitan Police has said no further action will be taken over the incident.

We have got to keep on protesting because this is for all of our kids and our future. They can tear down your family from top to bottomSon of Cynthia Jarrett

Wretch 32 could be seen mingling in the crowd on Saturday, as protesters spoke of their own treatment at the hands of police.

The crowd called for officers to stop what they called the over-policing of black communities, along with the use of excessive force, Tasers, stop-and-search and the disproportionate use of handcuffing during arrest.

A list was pinned to a barrier outside the police station featuring the names of people – both black and white – who have died after coming into contact with police, dating back to the 1980s.

Banners called for “justice” for Cynthia Jarrett, Joy Gardner, Mark Duggan, Smiley Culture, Roger Sylvester, Ian Tomlinson and Jean Charles de Menezes.

Messages which read “The Met Police must cease and desist” and “Defund the police, invest in our lives” were pinned to a door at the police station.

Mina Agyepong, 42, told the crowd her 12-year-old son Kai “is traumatised and he is angry” after armed police raided her north London home late at night in July to arrest him.

He had been playing with a toy gun. Suspicions had been raised by a passer-by who said they saw a black male holding a firearm on the sofa.

She said: “I worry now what his relationship is going to be with the police – that sense of distrust. Stop criminalising our children.”

The 1985 Tottenham riots began when Broadwater Farm resident Ms Jarrett died of heart failure after four policemen burst into her home during a raid on October 5.

Winston Silcott, who was one of the Tottenham Three, was a steward at the rally (Helen William/PA)

Her son fought back tears as he told the crowd: “I get emotional when I think about my mother because I love her.

“We have all got to stick together and keep on marching. We have got to keep on protesting because this is for all of our kids and our future. They can tear down your family from top to bottom.”

Winston Silcott was one of the Tottenham Three, alongside Engin Raghip and Mark Braithwaite, convicted in 1987 of Pc Keith Blakelock’s murder during the riots.

Their convictions were quashed by the Court of Appeal in 1991, after questions were raised about the way police interviews were carried out.

Mr Silcott helped steward Saturday’s demonstration.

Scotland Yard said officers had gone to the address of Wretch 32’s father in Tottenham on April 21 as part of an operation to tackle a drugs supply linked to serious violence in Haringey.

The police watchdog, the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), has said it will not investigate the incident and the matter should be dealt with within the Met Police.

Deputy Police Commissioner Sir Stephen House told a London Assembly Police and Crime Committee in July that the IOPC had decided “this matter should be returned to you, the Metropolitan Police, to be dealt with in a reasonable and proportionate matter”.

Protester pinned up posters on the doors to the police station (Helen William/PA)

The Metropolitan Police had reviewed the incident at the time and said it had found no misconduct, but the IOPC called the matter in to make its own assessment.

The police said no further action is being taken as there is no public complaint and no indication of misconduct.

It added that should a public complaint be made or information provided about injuries, it would refer the matter again to the IOPC.

Treena Fleming, the Metropolitan Police commander of the North Area Command Unit, said: “I can understand why any use of Taser can look alarming, and why it did look alarming in this case.

“We never underestimate the impact such an incident can have on a family and the wider community.”

She said officers “are highly trained to engage, explain and try to resolve situations, using force only when absolutely necessary”.

PA
Finland Sends Anti-Maskers To The United States
AUGUST 8, 2020 BY ANDREW HALL



Helsinki, Finland – The government of this Northern European country of approximately 5.5 souls is sending citizens who refuse to wear face masks to the United States.

“We didn’t want to be cruel to the states who have been making a good faith attempt at managing the pandemic,” Finnish Prime Minister Andrew Canard said. “So, we’re sending our citizens who refuse to obey basic public health procedures to Texas, Florida, and South Dakota.”
Finland Was Prepared

The New York Times reported that Finland was well prepared at the beginning of the crisis

“Finland is the prepper nation of the Nordics, always ready for a major catastrophe or a World War III,” said Magnus Hakenstad, a scholar at the Norwegian Institute for Defence Studies

Though year after year Finland has ranked high on the list of happiest nations, its location and historical lessons have taught the nation of 5.5 million to prepare for the worst, Tomi Lounema, the chief executive of Finland’s National Emergency Supply Agency, said on Saturday.

“It’s in the Finnish people’s DNA to be prepared,” Mr. Lounema said, referring to his country’s proximity to Russia, its eastern neighbor. (Finland fought off a Soviet invasion in 1939.)


The Finnish government was gobsmacked when a minority of citizens refused to put on face masks. Due to the high quality of education in the country, there is typically great respect for science. However, some individuals still balked at donning a mask and in doing so protect others from catching COVID-19.

“We don’t have time for their paskapuhe. Why not send them to the States?” reflected Prime Minister Canard.

Those Fins kicked out will still enjoy free healthcare. While they may not be wanted in their home country many in Finland believed putting them at the mercy of the American for-profit healthcare system would be a crime against humanity.


Meet the only man to witness all 3 WWII atomic bomb blasts


Richard Sisk,
Military.com


Manhattan Project officials, including Dr. Robert J. Oppenheimer, in the white hat, and next to him Gen. Leslie Groves, inspect the remains of the Trinity test tower on September 9, 1945. Los Alamos National Laboratory/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

August is the 75th anniversary of the first and only use of the atomic bomb in warfare, the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on August 6 and 9.

Only one person witnessed both those bombings and the Trinity test in the United States — the three major atomic blasts that led to the end of World War II.

More than 600,000 men and women worked on the Manhattan Project nationwide, but only one of them bore witness to all three major atomic blasts in 1945 that led to the end of World War II.

Lawrence Johnston was aboard B-29 Superfortress bombers tending to instruments measuring the power of the world's first nuclear explosions in the "Trinity" test in New Mexico, as well as for the bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which prompted Japan's surrender and brought the war to a close.
As the nation approaches the 75th anniversary of Japan's capitulation on August 15, 1945, when Emperor Hirohito went on the radio to announce that the time had come to "bear the unbearable" and accept the allied terms for unconditional surrender, Johnston's story is unique.

A young physicist born to missionary parents in China, Johnston had done groundbreaking work on the atomic bomb's intricate trigger mechanism.

When the bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan, on August 6, 1945, his first reaction on seeing the blinding flash and the mushroom cloud was: "Praise the Lord, my detonators worked."

He was well aware of the immense destructive power and carnage that the bomb would inflict on the city after witnessing the Trinity test but -- like most of the scientists at Los Alamos who created the weapon -- saw its use as the horrific means to achieve the final end to a war that was causing far more killing.

The final death toll from the Hiroshima bombing may never be known, but estimates say at least 80,000 were killed in the initial shock waves and firestorm, some vaporized and leaving only silhouettes to their existence on walls. About 135,000 died overall.
Lawrence Johnston with Fat man core on Tinian Island in 1945. Los Alamos National Laboratory

Johnston said he knew that, "All those people that were going to be killed -- I was praying for them. … I was praying that God would help us bring an end to the war."


"So many people were being killed every day, so many Japanese being killed every day by the bombers" with conventional weapons, he said.

Johnston reflected on his role in ushering in the "Atomic Age" in an oral history for the National World War II museum in New Orleans before he died at age 93 in 2011 at his home in Moscow, Idaho.

In a statement, Rob Wallace, of the WWII Museum's education team, said that Johnston "was the only person to see all three atomic detonations in 1945. He was at the Trinity Test, and he was part of the scientific team accompanying deployment over both Hiroshima and Nagasaki."

He studied physics at Los Angeles Community College and the University of California at Berkeley, and received a Bachelor's degree in 1940 from Berkeley, then a center for the study of atomic structure and the transformation of matter into energy.


It was at Berkeley that he came in contact with the brilliant polymath and eventual Nobel laureate Luis Alvarez, who would become his mentor, Wallace said.
Reconciling with pacifist daughter
National Archives

In the years after the war, his biggest critic for taking part in the use of nuclear weapons was his own daughter, Mary Virginia, Johnston said.

"My daughter was a pacifist, and she gave me a lot of criticism," he said. "I got a lot of flak from her, but we get along very well together now."

Mary Virginia "Ginger" Johnston would become pastor of a church in Oregon, he said.

After graduating from Berkeley in 1940, Johnston said he expected to continue his studies there for a doctorate under his mentor, but Alvarez was called East to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Radiation Laboratory to work on ground-controlled approach radar.

He brought Johnston along for his expertise in electronics, which Alvarez surmised from one of their conversations, Johnston said.

At one point, Alvarez asked him, "What do you like to do?"

Johnston said he replied, "Oh, I like to play with radios," and that was enough for Alvarez.

Alvarez was later called to Los Alamos to work with the fractious group of great minds and even greater egos brought together by theoretical physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer, director of the Manhattan Project.

The project was named for the office building that still stands at 270 Broadway in Manhattan, across the street from City Hall, where the original planning began.

Alvarez again summoned Johnston to come work with him. Upon arriving in the New Mexico desert, "I had no idea what they were doing except that it must be important to the war effort," he said.

Alvarez "put me to work on detonators," Johnston said, seeking to devise a precisely timed implosion of conventional explosives that would trigger the nuclear core of the bomb to a chain reaction.


He came up with what was called the "exploding-bridgewire detonator," a series of 32 detonators around the core that would go off within milliseconds of one another. The principles of the exploding-bridgewire detonator have since been used in automobile airbags, Johnston said.

3 B-29 flights into history
US Air Force via Wikimedia Commons

In the early morning hours of July 16, 1945, the world's first atomic bomb had been hoisted atop a tower in in what was then the US Army Air Forces Alamogordo Bombing and Gunnery Range, now part of the White Sands Missile Range, for the test that Oppenheimer christened "Trinity."

Oppenheimer was in a bunker about 5 miles away and had ordered all others beyond a select few to be at least 25 miles away, including Johnston and Alvarez. Nobody knew for sure how powerful the blast would be.

Alvarez was "mad as socks about that," Johnston said. He convinced Oppenheimer to let him commandeer a B-29 and took Johnston with him to work instruments measuring the force of the blast.

"We saw this big flash, and then we saw this column rising, the first mushroom cloud," he said. "I had developed all of the recording equipment that recorded the pressure wave."

Then, it was off to the island of Tinian in the Northern Marianas chain with Alvarez to prepare for the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

They were aboard a B-29 called the "Grand Artiste" that flew in formation with the B-29 called the "Enola Gay" that dropped the "Little Boy" atomic bomb on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945.

Johnston was again aboard the Grand Artiste when another atom bomb called "Fat Man" was dropped on Nagasaki on August 9, but Alvarez did not make that flight.

"Alvarez said, 'You will be the only one who saw all three of the A-bombs go off.' That made me oh so happy," Johnston said.

He returned to the States and completed his Ph.D. in physics in 1950. He would become an associate professor at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis and later worked at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center as head of the electronics department.

He was a professor at the University of Idaho in Moscow, Idaho, until his retirement. He died in Idaho in 2011.

Reflections on Hiroshima

A photograph of Hiroshima, Japan, shortly after the "Little Boy" atomic bomb detonated in 1945. Universal History Archive/UIG via Getty images

Aboard the Grand Artiste on August 6, 1945, Johnston and Alvarez had a 1,300-mile flight ahead of them from Tinian to the target area over Hiroshima

"On the long flight to Japan, I figured, 'Man, I don't know how big this explosion is going to be,'" Johnston said. Alvarez was asleep in the tunnel leading from the cockpit to the tailgunner's position, he said.

"Finally, I decided I better talk to him" about the recording equipment. He said, 'I don't care. Set it up wherever you think,'" Johnston said.

On the way back to Tinian, Alvarez sought to collect his thoughts on the immensity of what they had just witnessed. He jotted them down in a letter to his young son dated August 6 — "10 miles off the Jap coast at 28,000 feet."

"The story of our mission will probably be well known to everyone ... but at the moment, only the crews of our three B-29s and the unfortunate residents of the Hiroshima district of Japan are aware of what has happened to aerial warfare," Alvarez said in the letter, now in the National Archives.

"What regrets I have about being a party to maiming and killing thousands of people are tempered with the hope that this terrible weapon we have created may bring the countries of the world together and prevent further wars," he wrote.


— Richard Sisk can be reached at Richard.Sisk@Military.com.Read the original article on Military.com. Copyright 2020. Follow Military.com on Twitter.
Trump’s presidency is a death cult
The fact that Trump and his supporters want us to tolerate preventable deaths from COVID reveals their true nature

Trump supporters during a rally (Getty/Chip Somodevilla)


SONALI KOLHATKAR  SALON AUGUST 9, 2020

This article was produced by Economy for All, a project of the Independent Media Institute.

When President Donald Trump was challenged by Axios national political correspondent Jonathan Swan to respond to the fact that, "a thousand Americans are dying a day" due to COVID-19, the president responded as though the grim tally was perfectly acceptable, saying, "They are dying, that's true. And it is what it is." While observers were aghast at the callousness of his statement, it should not have surprised us. Trump had warned that the death toll would be high, and he had asked us months ago to get used to the idea. In late March, the White House Coronavirus Task Force had projected that 100,000 to 240,000 Americans would die from the virus. Rather than unveil an aggressive plan to tackle the spread and prevent the projected mortality figures, the president had said, "I want every American to be prepared for the hard days that lie ahead."

The New York Times saw this warning as a contradiction to Trump's stance in February and early March when he had said that "we have it totally under control" and "it's going to be just fine." The paper seemed to heave a sigh of relief that a few weeks later, "the president appeared to understand the severity of the potentially grave threat to the country." But the report's authors failed to grasp that Trump is willing to accept anything—including mass deaths—in service of his political career.
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In fact, mass death appears to be part of Trump's reelection strategy as per a July 30 Vanity Fair report on the administration's strategy to contain the pandemic. The investigative piece explained that Trump's adviser and son-in-law Jared Kushner was part of a group of White House staffers that corresponded frequently to discuss the rapidly spreading virus. According to a public health expert who was described as being "in frequent contact with the White House's official coronavirus task force," one of the members of Kushner's team had concluded that, "because the virus had hit blue states hardest, a national plan was unnecessary and would not make sense politically." The unnamed expert told Vanity Fair, "The political folks believed that because it was going to be relegated to Democratic states, that they could blame those governors, and that would be an effective political strategy."

If it is true that Kushner embraced the idea of COVID-19 deaths as part of a political strategy for Trump's reelection, there can be no clearer evidence that the Trump presidency fits the definition of a "death cult."

But Trump's team is also deeply inept, and its macabre tactics appear to have backfired. If Kushner expected a highly contagious virus to follow his political rules and relegate itself to Democratic-run states, he was proven very wrong, very quickly with Republican-run states like Florida, Texas, Alabama, Georgia, and Arizona being among the hardest hit.
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For years, the Republican Party has cast itself as a self-righteous force for morality, embraced the "pro-life" movement, and claimed to align with "Christian values." But just as Trump—arguably the most criminal of all U.S. presidents—has adopted a mantle of "law and order" with no hint of irony, the GOP as a whole has also shown time and again that its embrace of morality and law is a purely political tool. Now, as the nation grapples with mass deaths from a disease that a Republican president spectacularly and willfully failed to contain, conservative politicians appear willing to simply accept it. Their silence is deafening compared to the angry denunciations many Republican lawmakers hurled at President Barack Obama over his response to the Ebola epidemic—a crisis that resulted in a nationwide total of 11 infections and two deaths.

Ultimately it may be Trump's own base that suffers as it internalizes the president's mixed and confused messaging on ignoring social distancing guidelines, eschewing protective masks, swallowing hydroxychloroquine preventatively, and even accepting the inevitability of their own death (because "it is what it is" according to Trump). Even after more than 150,000 Americans have died from the virus, a majority of Republicans trust Trump's coronavirus comments.

When Trump loyalist and former presidential candidate Herman Cain died of COVID-19, testing positive 11 days after attending Trump's Tulsa, Oklahoma, rally without a mask on, his death did not change minds. The 74-year-old was reportedly on a ventilator during his last days, but conservatives are vehemently opposed to "politicizing" Cain's death. Right-wing commentator and talk show host Ben Shapiroslammed those who made a connection between Cain's refusal to take the virus seriously and his own infection and death. Shapiro said, "The kind of dunking on people after they die of COVID is pretty gross." Certainly, Cain did not deserve to be vilified for his own sad fate. But his death offers a cautionary tale about the dangers of the Trump death cult—a point Shapiro of course refused to acknowledge.
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We should hardly be surprised at this acceptance of death as inevitable. For years, conservatives have responded to gun violence with angry renunciations of any links to gun proliferation or lax gun control laws, offering instead "thoughts and prayers." The one exception where Republicans express outrage is over the "death" of fetal cells inside women's bodies—indicating that the fight is less about "murder," as the anti-abortionists like to call it, than it is about controlling women's bodies. By and large, the nation's right-wing factions have for years wanted us to accept mass deaths and preventable mortality as a price for our "freedom." They expect the same during a pandemic.

But we do not have to all be members of the death cult. According to a new study, states where people live the longest also have the strictest environmental laws, stronger gun control and stronger protections for minorities. These are also states that tend to be run by Democrats. California, for example, which has among the most stringent protections for minorities and the environment, also has one of the highest average life expectancy rates in the United States.

COVID-19 infections and deaths are hardly inevitable, and Americans are starting to see it. A Texas woman named Stacey Nagy penned an obituary for her late husband David that has garnered widespread attention. She wrote in her local paper that, "Family members believe David's death was needless. They blame his death and the deaths of all the other innocent people, on Trump, [Gov. Greg] Abbott and all the politicians who did not take this pandemic seriously and were more concerned with their popularity and votes than lives." Nagy also blamed "the many ignorant, self centered and selfish people who refused to follow the advice of the medical professionals, believing their 'right' not to wear a mask was more important than killing innocent people."

Perhaps the only way out of Trump's death cult is to speak out as Nagy has done.

The Washington Post, which interviewed Nagy, explained, "Feeling helpless, Stacey approached her husband's obituary as a chance to speak out about how she felt her country had failed her family." While Trump's most loyal supporters might choose death in his service, the rest of us need not be bound by their blind, cultish and suicidal ideology.
SOUTH KOREA
Local virus cases on high plateau due to rising church-traced infections
National 11:13 August 09, 2020
SEOUL, Aug. 9 (Yonhap) -- South Korea's new coronavirus cases hovered above 30 for the second straight day on Sunday, as local infections traced to religious gatherings continued to rise amid a fall in cases coming in from overseas.

The country identified 36 virus cases, including 30 local infections, raising the total caseload to 14,598, according to the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC).

The tally marked a fall from 43 additional cases reported Saturday.

The Seoul metropolitan area has accounted for most of the newly added virus cases this month.

Of the locally transmitted cases, 25 were reported in densely populated Seoul and nearby metropolitan areas, where around half of the country's 50-million population resides.

In particular, many cases were tied to church gatherings in Goyang, just northwest of Seoul.


Concertgoers at Olympic Park in eastern Seoul read precautions to prevent the spread of the coronavirus infections on Aug. 7, 2020. (Yonhap)hide caption

Two churches in Goyang have emerged as an epicenter of cluster infections that have spread to a day care center in the city.

South Korea had been banning church members from having gatherings other than regular worship services amid the soaring number of related patients, but it decided to lift the regulation on July 24.

Cases coming in from overseas fell to a single digit after increasing by double-digit numbers for 43 consecutive days. Among the 6 additional cases, one was detected at a quarantine checkpoint at an airport.

The country suffered a sharp increase in the number of such cases due to South Korean workers returning home from Iraq, along with sailors from Russian ships docked at its port.

Since June, 94 seafarers from nine Russia-flagged ships docked in Busan have tested positive for COVID-19.

The country reported one more virus death, keeping the number of fatalities at 305, according to the KCDC. The fatality rate reached 2.09 percent.

The number of patients fully cured of the virus reached 13,642, up 13 from the previous day. This indicates 93.45 percent of patients reported here have recovered.

ksnam@yna.co.kr
A new study suggests using animals to help predict earthquakes

Cheryl Santa Maria
Digital Reporter
Tuesday, July 7th 2020


 We still can't accurately predict quakes, but animals may be able to help with that.

Geologists can't forecast the strength of an earthquake or predict when one will occur, but studies suggest nature may be able to help us decipher when a tremor is on the way.

There is evidence that several types of animals -- from fish, to birds, to insects -- behave unusually before an earthquake. Now, researchers are taking a closer look at some animals to see if their insight can help develop better earthquake detectors.

In a new study, an international team of researchers from the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior in Konstanz/Radolfzell and the Cluster of Excellence Centre for the Advanced Study of Collective Behaviour at the University of Konstanz, attached motion sensors to cows, sheep, and dogs in earthquake-prone areas of Northern Italy and monitored their movements over several months.

Researchers found the animals were increasingly restless up to 20 hours before an earthquake, and the closer they were to the epicentre of the incoming quake, the earlier they began behaving unusually.

While experts still aren't sure if earthquakes can be accurately predicted, the study's authors believe animals could help provide some insight into the nature of tremors.

But study author Martin Wikelski, director at the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior and Principal Investigator at the Centre for the Advanced Study of Collective Behaviour, says the patterns only become evident when animals are analyzed collectively, rather than individually.

"Collectively, the animals seem to show abilities that are not so easily recognized on an individual level," he says in a statement.

 
File photo: Getty Images.


HOW DO ANIMALS PREDICT EARTHQUAKES?

\
Scientists aren't sure how animals can predict earthquakes, but they have a few theories.

For example, their fur may sense ionization of the air caused by large rock pressure in earthquake zones.

They may also be able to smell gases released by quartz crystals before an earthquake.


VIDEO: EARTHQUAKE SCIENCE

Before researchers can seriously start to consider using animal behaviour as a reliable earthquake predictor, a larger number of animals will need to be observed for a longer period of time, and over a larger geographical area.

The next phase of research will involve the global animal observation system Icarus, aborad the International Space Station, the study's authors s
CRYPTOZOOLOGY;RUSSIAN FAVORITE KIND OF NEWS


Another Nessie? Fishing trip footage appears to capture Canada’s legendary ‘60 ft-long’ lake monster Ogopogo 

(VIDEO AT THE END)

26 Jan, 2020 RT
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Main image: Lake Okanagan British Columbia © CHROMORANGE / Alexander Bernhard; inset: A statue of Ogopogo in Kelowna. © Wikimedia Commons

A father and son enjoying a fishing trip believe they captured footage of the mythical monster dubbed Ogopogo who, legend has it, lives in the murky depths of Canada’s beautiful Okanagan Lake.

Tales of the curious creature in the British Columbia lake date all the way back to the 19th century but no concrete evidence has ever been discovered.

Outdoor enthusiast Blake Neudorf believes he and his father finally found some while fishing off a dock in the town of Kelowna.

Neudorf captured video appearing to show a very long, snake-like figure slithering through the lake’s blue waters.

The pair can be heard reacting with shock as they watch the head-scratching scene unfold in front of their eyes.

The teen says the creature he saw was at least 60ft long and it could be seen rolling through the water. He uploaded the footage to YouTube earlier this month after recording it on July 10, 2018.

ALSO ON RT.COMMystery behind China’s ‘Loch Ness monster’ has finally been revealed… or has it? (VIDEOS)

Interestingly, there were several other apparent sightings of the beast in the months after the video was taken.

In September, Kelowna native David Halbauer believes he caught the legendary animal on camera while enjoying a day at the lake with his family.


UPDATE 
Lebanese Officials Resign as Protests Grow After the Massive Beirut Explosion

Words are written by Lebanese citizens in front of the scene of Tuesday's explosion that hit the seaport of Beirut, Lebanon, Aug. 9, 2020.
Hussein Malla—AP

BY SARAH EL DEEB / AP  AUGUST 9, 2020 

(BEIRUT) — Lebanon’s information minister resigned on Sunday as the country grapples with the aftermath of the devastating blast that ripped through the capital and raised public anger to new levels.

The resignation comes after a night of demonstrations against the ruling elite, blamed for the chronic mismanagement and corruption that is believed to be behind the explosion in a Beirut Port warehouse. Hundreds of tons of highly explosive material were stored in the waterfront hangar, and the blast sent a shock wave that killed at least 160 people, wounded nearly 6,000 and defaced the coastline of Beirut — destroying hundreds of buildings.

Manal Abdel-Samad said in her resignation letter that change remained “elusive” and she regrets failing to fulfill the aspirations of the Lebanese people.

Her resignation comes as about half a dozen lawmakers offered their resignation in protest over government performance. Local media also reported that another minister, and a close advisor to Prime Minister Hassan Diab, was also expected to resign. Diab met with his Cabinet reportedly to discuss the resignations Sunday, but there were no comments after the meeting.

“Given the magnitude of the catastrophe caused by the Beirut earthquake that shook the nation and hurt our hearts and minds, and in respect for the martyrs, and the pains of the wounded, missing and displaced, and in response to the public will for change, I resign from the government,” Abdel-Samad wrote.

In the country where civil war raged for 15 years, few, if any, have been held accountable for it and most of the warlords remain in power or leading powerful political factions.

On Sunday, France’s ambassador to Lebanon said his country is taking part in the investigation of the Aug. 4 blast. Bruno Foucher tweeted that 46 officers are operating as part of the judicial investigation. That probe was started by a French prosecutor after a national of France, Jean-Marc Bonfils, was killed in the blast and others injured.

It is “a guarantee of impartiality and speed” in the investigation, Foucher tweeted.

The disaster fueled angry demonstrations Saturday where protesters set up gallows and nooses in central Beirut and held mock hanging sessions of cut-out cardboard images of top Lebanese officials.

Demonstrators held signs that read “resign or hang.” The protests quickly turned violent when the demonstrators pelted stones at the security forces, who responded with heavy volleys of tear gas and rubber bullets. One police officer was killed and dozens of people were hurt in confrontations that lasted for hours.

Protesters also fanned out around the city, storming a couple of government ministries. They briefly took over the Foreign Ministry, saying it will be the headquarters of their movement. In the economy and energy ministries, the protesters ransacked offices and seized public documents claiming they would reveal how corruption has permeated successive governments.

Five of the parliament’s 128 members have also announced their resignation since Saturday — including three legislators of the Christian Kataeb party, a member of the Socialist Progressive Party and an independent.

The resignations add to the challenges facing Diab, who took over in January and has since been beset by crises.

The government, backed by the powerful militant Hezbollah group and its allies, announced it is defaulting on Lebanon’s sovereign debt and has since been engaged in difficult, internally divisive talks with the International Monetary Fund for assistance. The coronavirus restrictions deepened the impact of the economic and financial crisis and fueled public anger against the new government. Lebanese have criticized Diab’s government for being unable to tackle the challenges, saying it represents the deep-seated political class that has had a hold of the country’s politics since the end of the civil war in 1990.

Foreign Minister Nassif Hitti resigned even before the blast, citing an absence of “effective will to achieve comprehensive structural reform” and competing leadership.

In a televised speech Saturday evening, Diab said the only solution was to hold early elections. He called on all political parties to put aside their disagreements and said he was prepared to stay in the post for two months to allow time for politicians to work on structural reforms.

The offer is unlikely to soothe the escalating fury on the street. It is also expected to trigger lengthy discussions over the election law amid calls for introducing changes to the country’s sectarian-based representation system.

The information minister’s resignation comes ahead of an international conference co-hosted by French President Emmanuel Macron and United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres aimed at bringing donors together to supply emergency aid and equipment to Lebanon. Previous offers of aid have been contingent on carrying out significant government reforms to tackle corruption.

Britain and Germany pledged $28 million to help Lebanon in the wake of the blast. Britain said $26 million it is pledging will go to the World Food Program to provide food and medicine to the country’s most vulnerable. Britain is also sending specialist medics and a Royal Navy survey ship to Beirut, to help assess the damage from the blast.

Meanwhile, France is sending a helicopter carrier and a cargo ship loaded with aid and supplies to Beirut, in addition to eight flights that are bringing in experts and rescue workers as well as other supplies. The helicopter carrier has a hospital onboard and is carrying medical equipment and staff, engineering forces, construction materials and food aid.
UPDATE
Mauritius oil spill: Locals scramble to contain environmental damage

At least 1,000 tonnes of oil is thought to have leaked into waters near Mauritius

Volunteers in Mauritius are scrambling to create cordons to keep leaking oil from a tanker away from the island.

The MV Wakashio, believed be carrying 4,000 tonnes of oil, ran aground on a coral reef off the Indian Ocean island on 25 July.

Locals are making absorbent barriers of straw stuffed into fabric sacks in an attempt to contain and absorb the oil.

Mauritius is home to world-renowned coral reefs, and tourism is a crucial part of its economy.

Images posted online by local media show volunteers collecting straw from fields and filling sacks to make barriers. 
VIRTUAL TOUR OF MAURITIUS/REUTERS
The tanker has been leaking oil into surrounding waters

Others have been making their own tubes with tights and hair to add to the effort and some have been cleaning up the island's beaches.

Their actions go against an order from the government asking people to leave the clean-up to local authorities.

"People have realised that they need to take things into their hands. We are here to protect our fauna and flora," environmental activist Ashok Subron told AFP news agency.


Mitsui OSK Lines, the operator of the ship, said it had tried to place its own containment booms around the vessel but had not been successful owing to rough seas.

Helicopters are attempting to move some of the fuel and diesel off the ship.
EPA Volunteers are trying to limit the damage caused by the oil spill

It is thought that the ship, registered in Panama, had some 4,000 tonnes of fuel aboard when it ran aground. All crew were evacuated.

At least 1,000 tonnes of oil is thought to have leaked into the waters surrounding the island nation.

Mauritius country profile

Environmentalists are concerned about the impact on the country's ecosystem.

The ship ran aground at Pointe d'Esny, a known sanctuary for rare wildlife. The area also contains wetlands designated as a site of international importance by the Ramsar convention on wetlands.

Happy Khamule from Greenpeace Africa warned that "thousands" of animal species were "at risk of drowning in a sea of pollution, with dire consequences for Mauritius' economy, food security and health". 
MAXAR TECHNOLOGIES/REUTERS
Satellite images show the extent of the oil spill

In a news conference, Akihiko Ono, executive vice president of Mitsui OSK Lines "profusely" apologised for the spill and for "the great trouble we have caused".

He vowed that the company would do "everything in their power to resolve the issue".

Police in Mauritius say they have been granted a search warrant, allowing them to board the vessel take away items of interest such as the ship's log book in order to help with an investigation. The ship's captain will assist officers with their search.

On Friday, Mauritian Prime Minister Pravind Jugnauth declared a state of emergency and appealed for help.

France has sent a military aircraft with pollution control equipment from its nearby island of Réunion.

On Sunday, Japan announced it would dispatch a six-member team to assist the French efforts.

Mr Jugnauth is set to hold an emergency meeting later on Sunday amid fears that bad weather could further complicate efforts to hold back the oil.



SEE
https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/2020/08/locals-in-mauritius-are-going-to-great.html

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https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/2020/08/update-mauritius-battles-devastating.html

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