It’s possible that I shall make an ass of myself. But in that case one can always get out of it with a little dialectic. I have, of course, so worded my proposition as to be right either way (K.Marx, Letter to F.Engels on the Indian Mutiny)
Monday, July 05, 2021
Mon., July 5, 2021,
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — The silvery blue waters of the Great Salt Lake sprawl across the Utah desert, having covered an area nearly the size of Delaware for much of history. For years, though, the largest natural lake west of the Mississippi River has been shrinking. And a drought gripping the American West could make this year the worst yet.
The receding water is already affecting the nesting spot of pelicans that are among the millions of birds dependent on the lake. Sailboats have been hoisted out of the water to keep them from getting stuck in the mud. More dry lakebed getting exposed could send arsenic-laced dust into the air that millions breathe.
“A lot us have been talking about the lake as flatlining,” said Lynn de Freitas, executive director of Friends of the Great Salt Lake.
The lake's levels are expected to hit a 170-year low this year. It comes as the drought has the U.S. West bracing for a brutal wildfire season and coping with already low reservoirs. Utah Gov. Spencer Cox, a Republican, has begged people to cut back on lawn watering and “pray for rain.”
For the Great Salt Lake, though, it is only the latest challenge. People for years have been diverting water from rivers that flow into the lake to water crops and supply homes. Because the lake is shallow — about 35 feet (11 meters) at its deepest point — less water quickly translates to receding shorelines.
The water that remains stretches across a chunk of northern Utah, with highways on one end and remote land on the other. A resort — long since closed — once drew sunbathers who would float like corks in the extra salty waters. Picnic tables once a quick stroll from the shore are now a 10-minute walk away.
Robert Atkinson, 91, remembers that resort and the feeling of weightlessness in the water. When he returned this year to fly over the lake in a motorized paraglider, he found it changed.
“It's much shallower than I would have expected it to be,” he said.
The waves have been replaced by dry, gravelly lakebed that's grown to 750 square miles (1,942 square kilometers). Winds can whip up dust from the dry lakebed that is laced with naturally occurring arsenic, said Kevin Perry, a University of Utah atmospheric scientist.
It blows through a region that already has some of the dirtiest wintertime air in the country because of seasonal geographic conditions that trap pollution between the mountains.
Perry warns of what happened at California's Owens Lake, which was pumped dry to feed thirsty Los Angeles and created a dust bowl that cost millions of dollars to tamp down. The Great Salt Lake is much larger and closer to a populated area, Perry said.
Luckily, much of the bed of Utah's giant lake has a crust that makes it tougher for dust to blow. Perry is researching how long the protective crust will last and how dangerous the soil's arsenic might be to people.
This year is primed to be especially bleak. Utah is one of the driest states in the country, and most of its water comes from snowfall. The snowpack was below normal last winter and the soil was dry, meaning much of the melted snow that flowed down the mountains soaked into the ground.
Most years, the Great Salt Lake gains up to 2 feet (half a meter) from spring runoff. This year, it was just 6 inches (15 centimeters), Perry said.
“We’ve never had an April lake level that was as low as it was this year,” he said.
More exposed lakebed also means more people have ventured onto the crust, including off-road vehicles that damage it, Great Salt Lake coordinator Laura Vernon said.
“The more continued drought we have, the more of the salt crust will be weathered and more dust will become airborne because there’s less of that protective crust layer,” she said.
The swirling dust also could speed the melting of Utah’s snow, according to research by McKenzie Skiles, a snow hydrologist at the University of Utah. Her study showed that dust from one storm made the snow so much darker that it melted a week earlier than expected. While much of that dust came from other sources, an expansion of dry lakebed raises concerns about changes to the state's billon-dollar ski industry.
“No one wants to ski dirty snow,” she said.
While the lake's vast waters are too salty for most creatures except brine shrimp, for sailors like Marilyn Ross, 65, it’s a tranquil paradise with panoramas of distant peaks.
“You get out on this lake and it’s better than going to a psychiatrist, it’s really very calming,” she said.
But this year, the little red boat named Promiscuous that she and her husband have sailed for more than 20 years was hoisted out of the water with a massive crane just as the season got underway. Record-low lake levels were expected to leave the boats stuck in the mud rather than skimming the waves. Low water has kept the other main marina closed for years.
“Some people don’t think that we’re ever going to be able to get back in," Ross said.
Brine shrimp support a $57 million fish food industry in Utah but in the coming years, less water could make the salinity too great for even those tiny creatures to survive.
“We’re really coming to a critical time for the Great Salt Lake,” said Jaimi Butler, coordinator for Great Salt Lake Institute at Westminster College in Salt Lake City. She studies the American white pelican, one of the largest birds in North America.
They flock to Gunnison Island, a remote outpost in the lake where up to 20% of the bird’s population nests, with male and female birds cooperating to have one watch the eggs at all times.
“Mom goes fishing and dad stays at the nest,” Butler said.
But the falling lake levels have exposed a land bridge to the island, allowing foxes and coyotes to come across and hunt for rodents and other food. The activity frightens the shy birds accustomed to a quiet place to raise their young, so they flee the nests, leaving the eggs and baby birds to be eaten by gulls.
Pelicans aren’t the only birds dependent on the lake. It’s a stopover for many species to feed on their journey south.
A study from Utah State University says that to maintain lake levels, diverting water from rivers that flow into it would have to decrease by 30%. But for the state with the nation's fastest-growing population, addressing the problem will require a major shift in how water is allocated and perceptions of the lake, which has a strong odor in some places caused treated wastewater and is home to billions of brine flies.
“There’s a lot of people who believe that every drop that goes into the Great Salt Lake is wasted,” Perry said. “That’s the perspective I’m trying to change. The lake has needs, too. And they’re not being met.”
Lindsay Whitehurst, The Associated Press
Mon., July 5, 2021,
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico’s state-owned oil company said Monday that a bizarre chain of events, including a lightning storm and a simultaneous gas pipeline leak, set off a strange subaquatic fireball seen last week in the Gulf of Mexico.
Petroleos Mexicanos said an intense storm of rain and lightning on July 2 forced the company to shut off pumping stations serving the offshore rig near where the fire occurred.
Simultaneously, the leak in an underwater pipeline allowed natural gas to build up on the ocean floor and once it rose to the surface, it was probably ignited by a lightning bolt, the company said.
Pemex sent fire control boats to pump more water over the flames and no one was injured in the incident in the offshore Ku-Maloob-Zaap field. It said no crude oil was spilled. Pemex said it was repairing the pumps and investigating the cause of the gas leak.
The accident unleashed a subaquatic fireball that appeared to boil the waters of the Gulf of Mexico, and drew a hail of criticism from environmentalists.
Greenpeace Mexico said the fire, which took five hours to extinguish, “demonstrates the serious risks that Mexico’s fossil fuel model poses for the environment and people’s safety.”
President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has bet heavily on drilling more wells and buying or building oil refineries. He touts oil as “the best business in the world.”
Climate activist Greta Thunberg reposted a video clip of the fireball on her Twitter account.
“Meanwhile the people in power call themselves ‘climate leaders’ as they open up new oilfields, pipelines and coal power plants — granting new oil licenses exploring future oil drilling sites,” Thunberg wrote. “This is the world they are leaving for us.”
The Associated Press
Mon., July 5, 2021
FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP) — For thousands of years, an Arizona tribe relied on the Colorado River's natural flooding patterns to farm. Later, it hand-dug ditches and canals to route water to fields.
Now, gravity sends the river water from the north end of the Colorado River Indian Tribes reservation through 19th century canals to sustain alfalfa, cotton, wheat, onions and potatoes, mainly by flooding the fields.
Some of those fields haven't been producing lately as the tribe contributes water to prop up Lake Mead to help weather a historic drought in the American West. The reservoir serves as a barometer for how much water Arizona and other states will get under plans to protect the river serving 40 million people.
The Colorado River Indian Tribes and another tribe in Arizona played an outsized role in the drought contingency plans that had the state voluntarily give up water. As Arizona faces mandatory cuts next year in its Colorado River supply, the tribes see themselves as major players in the future of water.
“We were always told more or less what to do, and so now it’s taking shape where tribes have been involved and invited to the table to do negotiations, to have input into the issues about the river,” first-term Colorado River Indian Tribes Chairwoman Amelia Flores said.
Lake Mead on the Nevada-Arizona border has fallen to its lowest point since it was filled in the 1930s. Water experts say the situation would be worse had the tribe not agreed to store 150,000 acre-feet in the lake over three years. A single acre-foot is enough to serve one to two households per year. The Gila River Indian Community also contributed water.
The Colorado River Indian Tribes received $38 million in return, including $30 million from the state. Environmentalists, foundations and corporations fulfilled a pledge last month to chip in the rest.
Kevin Moran of the Environmental Defense Fund said the agreement signaled a new approach to combating drought, climate change and the demand from the river.
“The way we look at it, the Colorado River basin is ground zero for water-related impacts of climate change,” he said. “And we have to plan for the river and the watersheds that climate scientists tell us we’re probably going to have, not the one we might wish for.”
Tribal officials say the $38 million is more than what they would have made leasing the land. The Colorado River Indian Tribes stopped farming more than 15 square miles (39 square kilometers) to make water available, tribal attorney Margaret Vick said.
“There's an economic tradeoff as well as a conservation tradeoff,” she said.
While some fields are dry on the reservation, the tribe plans to use the money to invest in its water infrastructure. It has the oldest irrigation system built by the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs, dating to 1867, serving nearly 125 square miles (323 square kilometers) of tribal land.
The age of the irrigation system means it's in constant need of improvements. Flores, the tribal chairwoman, said some parts of the 232-mile (373-kilometer) concrete and earthen canal are lined and others aren't, so water is lost through seepage or cracks.
A 2016 study conducted by the tribe put the price tag to fix deficiencies at more than $75 million. It's leveraging grants, funding from previous conservation efforts and other money to put a dent in the repairs, Flores said.
“If we had all the dollars in the world to line all the canals that run through our reservation, that would be a great project to complete,” Flores said. “I don’t think that’s going to happen in our lifetime.”
The tribe is made up of four distinct groups of Native Americans — Chemehuevi, Mohave, Hopi and Navajo. The reservation includes more than 110 miles (177 kilometers) of Colorado River shoreline with some of the oldest and most secure rights to the river in both Arizona and California.
While much of the water goes to farming, it also sustains wildlife preserves and the tribe's culture.
“We can't forget about the spiritual, the cultural aspect to the tribes on the Colorado River,” Flores said. “Our songs, clan songs, river and other traditional rites that happen at the river.”
The tribe can't take full advantage of its right to divert 662,000 acre-feet per year from the Colorado River on the Arizona side because it lacks the infrastructure. It also has water rights in California.
An additional 46 square miles (121 square kilometers) of land could be developed for agriculture if the tribe had the infrastructure, according to a 2018 study on water use and development among tribes in the Colorado River basin.
“One day,” Flores said. “That’s the goal of our leaders who have come behind me, to use all of our water allocation and develop our lands that right now are not developed.”
___
Fonseca is a member of The Associated Press’ race and ethnicity team. Follow her on Twitter at https://twitter.com/FonsecaAP.
Mon., July 5, 2021,
Berta Cáceres had rallied indigenous Lenca people against the dam
A court in Honduras has found a former energy executive guilty of helping plan the murder of a high-profile environmental activist in 2016.
Berta Cáceres led protests against the Agua Zarca hydro-electric dam project before being shot dead in her home.
The court ruled that Roberto David Castillo, whose company had been awarded the contract, had planned the murder and hired the gunmen.
Castillo has denied any wrongdoing. He will be sentenced in August.
Seven men had already been convicted for their role in Ms Cáceres's killing and were sentenced to lengthy jail terms.
Ms Cáceres had faced years of threats over her opposition to the dam project being run by Mr Castillo's company, Desa.
The dam would have flooded large areas of land and cut off the supply of water, food and medicine for hundreds of the indigenous Lenca people.
As well as filing official complaints, Ms Cáceres organised a road block that prevented construction workers from reaching the site.
The Chinese state-owned company Sinohydro, which was jointly developing the project, eventually pulled out citing community resistance.
In 2015 Ms Cáceres was awarded the prestigious Goldman Prize for her role in stopping the building of the dam.
The indigenous rights organisation Ms Cáceres co-founded called the verdict a "victory" for the people of Honduras.
It is one of the world's most dangerous countries for environmental activists, according to advocacy group Global Witness.
In a blog post earlier this year, the group said "at least 40 land and environmental defenders" had been killed in the country since Ms Cáceres's death.
Covid-19: Pfizer vaccine efficacy declines by one third in Israel, says health ministry
A teenage girl receives a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine
Published date: 5 July 2021
The efficacy of one of the world's leading Covid-19 vaccines has declined by nearly a third in Israel due to the spread of the delta variant, the country's health ministry has said.
Ran Balicer, chairman of Israel's national expert panel on the coronavirus, said the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine had a 64 percent protection rate from early June until early July - a significant decrease from the 94 percent efficacy researchers had documented a month earlier.
Covid-19: Israel reintroduces mask requirements as cases spikeRead More »
The findings come as Israel reverses some Covid-19 restrictions that had been lifted out of concern for the uptick in delta variant cases.
The health ministry said on Monday that the Pfizer vaccine continued to provide strong protection against severe symptoms of the virus, with people avoiding hospitalisations by a rate of 93 percent from 6 June to 3 July, compared to a 98 percent rate in the previous period.
Nevertheless, Balicer warned that the rise in cases offers a "preliminary signal" that the vaccine may be less effective at preventing mild symptoms from the delta variant.
Delta, Israel's 'dominant strain'
While it remains "too early to precisely assess vaccine effectiveness against the variant", Balicer told AFP that "some decrease in vaccine effectiveness against mild illness - but not severe illness - is likely".
Later on Twitter, Balicer underlined the difficulty in compiling data about the delta variant from local outbreaks, describing the work as "very population-segment-specific, complex, & sensitive to significant bias".
The Covid-19 delta variant was first identified in India in October and has since spread to nearly 100 countries worldwide. It is more than twice as contagious as the original Covid-19 virus and has forced a number of governments, including the UK, to delay or rethink lifting pandemic restrictions.
The delta variant's emergence as the "dominant strain" in Israel has led to a "massive shift in the transmission dynamic", said Balicer.
On Monday, Israel reported the highest rate of new infections in three months, with the ministry recording 343 new cases over the past 24 hours. After a peak of over 10,000 new cases in one day in January, new daily cases had fallen to the single digits in June.
In the past fortnight 90 percent of new cases in Israel have been caused by the delta variant, AFP reported. About half of new cases have been detected in fully vaccinated patients, and about half in children, with a handful of returning travellers testing positive.
'It is encouraging'
Experts "remain hopeful that the vaccine effectiveness against serious illness will remain as high as it was for the Alpha strain", Balicer said.
The number of fully vaccinated Israelis experiencing severe symptoms after contracting the virus had increased from roughly one every other day up to five per day, Balicer estimated while also noting a lack of fatalities.
"It is encouraging that we still maintain zero deaths for the last twelve days," he said.
After recently reimposing an indoor mask rule for public spaces, Prime Minister Naftali Bennett was scheduled to meet Health Minister Nitzan Horowitz on Monday to discuss the latest outbreak and whether to advise a third booster shot for certain demographics.
'Dumping ground': Israel blasted for bid to swap expiring Covid-19 vaccines with PARead More »
Israel may also consider limiting the size of permitted gatherings and reintroducing the “Green Pass” system that limited access to certain spaces to vaccinated people, Bennett said on Sunday.
Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla has said people will "likely" need a third dose of a Covid-19 vaccine within 12 months of getting fully vaccinated.
A Pfizer spokesperson declined to comment on the data from Israel but told Bloomberg that other research suggested the vaccine provided ongoing protection against new mutations. Available evidence suggests the vaccine "will continue to protect against these variants", she said.
Israel originally lifted mask requirements on 15 June, reinstating them two weeks later.
Some 5.2 million people have received both doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine in Israel.
But Israel, which has vaccinated some 85 percent of its adult population, has faced criticism for not sharing its vaccines with the 4.5 million Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Under international law, occupying powers are responsible for the health care of the population they control.
Israel Sees Pfizer Vaccine Efficacy Decrease Against Delta Variant, Still Very Effective Against Severe COVID-19
By Dr Alfredo Carpineti05 JUL 2021
Israeli news site Ynet has reported that based on the number of cases of COVID-19 breakthrough infection reported by the Israeli Health Ministry, the efficacy of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine against mild cases caused by the Delta variant appears to have decreased. Fortunately, the vaccine appears to still be highly effective against the most serious cases.
The reported numbers suggested that between May 2 and June 5, the efficacy against the disease was around 94 percent. Since June 6, the efficacy appears to have decreased to 64 percent. When it comes to hospitalizations, the efficacy seems to drop only marginally from 98.2 percent to 93 percent.
While the drop in efficacy is concerning, it is important to state that there could be several factors at play here, and we should wait for more data to begin to build a complete picture. One possibility, also seen in other countries, it’s that the infections happened before a strong immune response might have developed. Fully vaccinated people are counted from the moment they get the second jab of the two-dose vaccines, but strong immunity doesn’t really kick in until at least two weeks later.
The Israeli government is considering reintroducing social distancing measures. These were lifted mid-June, but things like masks in closed spaces came back on June 25. They are also considering a booster vaccination campaign, although the percentage of vaccinated people, while high, remains below the threshold for herd immunity.
Breakthrough infections are to be expected simply because vaccines are not 100 percent effective. The danger lies in infections being allowed to propagate through a population uncurbed. A new variant of the disease could emerge, against which the vaccines are ineffective. Fortunately, this has not happened yet.
[h/t: Ynet/Bloomberg]
Switzerland’s largest bank, UBS, has advised investors to “stay clear” of cryptocurrencies and “build their portfolio around less risky assets.” The UBS analysts warned that “Regulators have demonstrated they can and will crack down on crypto.”
UBS’ Crypto Advice and Warning
The global wealth management team at UBS warned in a note published last week that regulators worldwide, particularly the U.S. and the U.K., will impose tougher cryptocurrency regulations. Citing that “China’s latest crackdown — extending to miners, banks, e-payment networks, and social media — hurt crypto prices and operators,” the UBS analysts wrote:
Regulators have demonstrated they can and will crack down on crypto … So we suggest investors stay clear, and build their portfolio around less risky assets.
“We’ve long warned that shifting investor sentiment or regulatory crackdowns could pop bubble-like crypto markets,” the analysts added. “We think investors should avoid crypto speculation, and consider risk-adjusted returns before buying alternative assets.”
The bank pointed out that a number of regulators worldwide have begun tightening their oversight of the crypto market. Recently, China has been cracking down on bitcoin mining and payments. Canada’s regulator has sent notices to crypto exchanges and the regulators in Japan, the U.K., Cayman Islands, and Thailand have targeted global crypto exchange Binance.
The U.K. has imposed tight registration requirements on crypto exchanges, causing 64 firms to withdraw their applications to register. In South Korea, most small exchanges are at risk of having to shut down operations due to strict regulatory and banking requirements.
The UBS analysts further described: “Crypto trading practices, such as extending 50x or 100x leverage, appear fundamentally at odds with mainstream finance regulation.” They warned:
While we can’t rule out future price gains in cryptos, we see this as a speculative market that poses significant risks to professional investors.
The bank, however, reportedly recognizes that some clients want exposure to cryptocurrency, particularly bitcoin, and is rumored to be considering offering crypto services to wealthy clients. A growing number of investment banks are already doing so, including Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, Standard Chartered, and DBS.
Friday, July 2, 2021
Kyle Rittenhouse, an Illinois teenager charged with shooting three people, two fatally, in Kenosha, Wis. makes his first in-person court appearance.
KENOSAH, Wis. -- Prosecutors in Wisconsin want a judge to allow evidence at Kyle Rittenhouse's trial that shows he had a previous violent encounter in Kenosha before he fatally shot two men and injured another during a police brutality protest last year.
The state's motion filed Thursday in Kenosha County Circuit Court also seeks to show Rittenhouse was associated with the far-right Proud Boys, a group linked to political violence.
Rittenhouse, 18, is charged with killing Joseph Rosenbaum, 36, and Anthony Huber, 26, and wounding Gaige Grosskreutz, 26, on Aug. 25 during protests in Kenosha over the police shooting two days earlier of Jacob Blake, a Black man who was left paralyzed when he was shot by a white police officer.
Prosecutors want to introduce a video from July 1, 2020, which they say shows Rittenhouse striking a teenage girl in the back at Kenosha's lakefront.
"In both the July 1, 2020 incident and the August 25, 2020 incident, the defendant, an Illinois resident, willingly and intentionally put himself in violent situations in Wisconsin that do not involve him in order to commit further acts of violence," the motion states.
Prosecutors also said Rittenhouse's association with the Proud Boys should be considered at the trial because it shows that he takes pride in violence.
Photos taken in January show Rittenhouse drinking inside a Mount Pleasant bar and gesturing with what appeared to be a white power symbol. The motion states that prosecutors have since learned that the people with Rittenhouse at the bar included the leader of the Wisconsin Proud Boys chapter and several of its highest-ranking members.
Prosecutors allege Rittenhouse, who is white, left his home in Antioch, Illinois, and traveled to Kenosha to answer a call for paramilitary groups to protect businesses during the protest.
Rittenhouse faces multiple charges, including two homicide counts. He has argued he fired in self-defense after protesters attacked him.
Black Lives Matter supporters have painted him as a trigger-happy white supremacist, but some conservatives see him as a symbol for gun rights and have rallied around him, generating $2 million for his bail in November.
Rittenhouse's defense attorney did not immediately respond to a message and email seeking comment on prosecutors' latest motion.
Rittenhouse's trial is scheduled to start Nov. 1.
A refusal to acknowledge US laws, belief in UFOs and selling fake passports to pay for their abandoned house HQ:
The inside story of the 'Rise of the Moors' militia who hit the headlines after stand-off with Massachusetts cops
- 11 'armed and dangerous' men who claimed to be part of an extremist group known as 'Rise of the Moors' were taken into custody on Saturday outside Boston
- The men were arrested after an nine-hour standoff with Massachusetts police
- They claimed to be part of 'a militia' group based in Pawtucket, Rhode Island that does 'does not recognize' US laws
- Rise of the Moors are an offshoot a rapidly growing, larger antigovernment group known as 'Moorish sovereign citizens' that began in the late 1990s
- They believe that a bogus US treaty with Morocco from 1787 allows them to belong to their own sovereign nation and therefore not subject to any US laws
- They also claim that its followers are the 'aboriginal people' of the US
- The group takes its teachings partly from a religious sect known as the Moorish Science Temple founded by Noble Drew Ali, dating back to 1913
- Rise of the Moors have a large social media presence, with more than 17,000 subscribers to the group's YouTube channel
By TATE DELLOYE FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
PUBLISHED: |
Eleven men were taken into custody early Saturday morning after a nine-hour standoff between Massachusetts police and heavily armed men in tactical gear who claimed to be part of a militia group called Rise of the Moors.
A Massachusetts State Police trooper saw two cars with their hazard lights on parked on the shoulder of Interstate-95, outside the town of Wakefield at about 1:30 a.m. The group of heavily armed men were refilling gas tanks with their own fuel and told law enforcement that they making were headed to Maine for 'training.'
After refusing to comply with an order to drop their weapons, several men took off into a nearby woodland area, prompting a shelter-in-place order for local communities.
They indicated to police that they were not carrying gun licenses and that they did not recognize US laws as members of a little-known group named 'Rise of the Moors.'
State law enforcement said the men referred to themselves 'as a militia' and that they 'adhere to 'Moorish Sovereign Ideology.''
Here's what we know about the group, which only formed in the late 1990s, but has recently exploded in popularity thanks to social media...
A group of heavily armed men were refusing to comply with police Saturday morning north of Boston, prompting Interstate 95 to be closed and a shelter-in-place order for nearby residents after several of the men fled to a nearby woodland area. The men were said to be members of a little-known extremist group called ‘Rise of the Moors,’ that believes they are not subject to US laws
Jahmal Latimer also known as ‘Talib Abdulla Bey’ cofounded the militia group which claims to be a non-profit educational group based out of Rhode Island. He identifies himself on the group webpage as the chief of the 'Rhode Island State Republic and Providence Plantations'
'Sovereign citizens' who claim they're not subject to US laws
Rise of the Moors are a 'Moorish sovereign citizens' group whose adherents say they are part of their own sovereign nation and therefore are not subject to any US law.
According to the group's website, Rise of the Moors is based in Pawtucket, Rhode Island and is one of 25 active antigovernmental sovereign-citizen groups identified by the Southern Poverty Law Center in 2020.
While the group's Facebook page has 1,100 followers and a YouTube channel with 17,000 subscribers, the total number of members is unknown.
Freddy Cruz, a research analyst with the Southern Poverty Law Center told the Washington Post: 'They have the idea that they have the authority to essentially detach themselves from the United States. So they do things like refusing to pay taxes, get driver's licenses, or register firearms, and they try to get their members to challenge those federal laws.'
The Rise of The Moors, which flies the Moroccan flag, is centered on the belief that its followers are the 'aboriginal people' of the US and takes its teachings partly from a religious sect known as the Moorish Science Temple, a religious movement that dates back to 1913.
It wasn't until the 1990s that the Moorish movement began merging their beliefs with 'the sovereign citizens movement.' Sovereign Citizens believe that individual citizens are independent of federal and state governments. Thus was the birth of the 'Moorish Sovereign Citizens.'
Jamhal Talib Abdullah Bey (pictured in the center wearing a turban) poses with fellow members of the Rise of the Moors group in January 2021
'Salad bar' group founded on a non-existent 1787 treated between the US and Morocco
Rise of the Moors (like other Moorish sovereign citizen groups), believe in a fictitious 1787 treaty between the United States and Morocco that grants them immunity from US law.
'There's no such treaty,' says Kenneth Gray, a retired FBI Agent who specialized in Counter-Terrorism. 'It's bogus. It's all part of their fraudulent historical claims.'
They use this perceived immunity to justify refusing to pay taxes, buy auto insurance, register their vehicles and to defraud banks and other lending institutions.
Rise of the Moors is just one offshoot of many different types of 'Moorish Sovereign Citizen' groups. Most groups tend to be small, with only a couple dozen followers.
JJ MacNab, a fellow at George Washington University's Program on Extremism described Moorish sovereign citizens on Twitter as 'a salad bar' group made up of different factions that have cobbled together their own ideology from a variety of sources.
'They rely on an alternative history that borrows from Moorish Science Temple, Black Hebrew Israelism, Nation of Islam, UFO theories, phony Native American tribes, and the pseudo-legal arguments crafted by white supremacist 'patriot' groups in the 1970s,' she says.
Some Moorish Sovereign Citizen groups believe that Black Moors were the first settlers in the United States and argue that slave ships were a fiction created by white historians to cover up their claim on the land. Others believe that a UFO mothership will soon descend to earth to collect the chosen people (Moors) and return them to their home galaxy.
The Rise of the Moor webpage states in no-uncertain terms: 'Moors are the organic or original sovereigns of this land — America.' It continues, 'When we declare our nationality as Moorish Americans we are taking back the position as the aboriginal people of the land, to which the sovereign power is vested in.'
They believe in the notion that all African-Americans (as well as Dominicans, Haitians and Tainos) were descended from African 'Moors' and therefore they do not, and should not 'identify as black.'
'The Moors of North America have been branded by European Colonial occupiers of our land in order to strip us of our illustrious history.'
The temple founded in 1913 that gives the group its Moroccan influences
Much of the dogma in Rise of the Moors is based in a religious sect known as the Moorish Science Temple.
The organization was founded by Noble Drew Ali (born as Timothy Drew) in 1913.
The Rise of the Moors pays tribute to the Noble Drew Ali on their website, calling him the 'first Patriot of the fallen Moors here in America' as well as the 'Savior of Humanity.'
Drew Ali taught that all blacks were of Moorish origins but had their Muslim identity taken away from them through slavery and racial segregation. He also encouraged use of the term 'Moor' rather than 'black' in self-identification. Many of the group’s formal practices were derived from Muslim observances.
He established new traditions that required all male members of the Temple to wear a fez or turban. They added the suffixes 'Bey' or 'El' to their last names as a way to signify their Moorish heritage and the new journey as Moorish Americans.
Unlike the Rise of the Moors, most adherents of the Moorish Science Temple are not 'sovereign citizens' nor do they shows an interest in paramilitary activity.
Jahmal Latimer, who also goes by the title Talib Abdulla Bey and identifies as the 'grand chief of Rhode Island. Rise of the Moors are an offshoot of the 'Moorish sovereign citizen movement' which is described by The Southern Poverty Law Center as a collection of independent organizations and lone individuals that emerged in the early 1990s who believe that individual citizens are independent from the authority of federal and state governments
Jahmal Latimer shared footage of him him racking a gun and bragging that he had three rifles to his 17,000 followers on YouTube
One clip shows several men dressed in camouflage clothing waving a Moroccan flag as they stand at the side of the I-95. The Rise of The Moors is centered on the belief that all African-Americans are Moorish descendants of Morocco. Its followers also claim that Moors are the 'aboriginal people' of the US
The ex-marine who declared himself leader after studying 'Moorish science'
Jahmal Latimer (who also goes by the title Talib Abdulla Bey) is listed on the group's website as their leader. He also identifies himself as the chief of the 'Rhode Island State Republic and Providence Plantations.'
According to the site, Bey served in the military for four years, some or all of that time in the Marines, after which he began studying 'Moorish Science.'
Income generated though illegal schemes including selling fake license plates and passports that funded abandoned Rhode Island house HQ
According to the Southern Poverty Law Center: 'Moorish sovereigns sustain themselves by selling bogus legal documents, fraudulent auto insurance forms, fake license plates, counterfeit passports and various other documents.'
They also save money by avoiding taxes. 'They have perpetrated large-scale financial fraud, including creating false money orders, fraudulent cashier’s checks, and bogus financial instruments.'
Members of Rise of Moors profit from selling various items through their webpage, such as online courses, e-readers and suspicious-looking financial schemes. One member named Sanchez Bey, hawks clothing apparel that 'that represents ancient knowledge' and their 'dominion and rulership over the universe.'
Another member by the name of Muris Sylfstr Mawal Bey claims to offer customers, 'the best shoes available online.' And Delvon al-Lanier Bey, provides 'Afrocentric-based spiritual and educational training.'
The Rise of the Moors' clubhouse in Rhode Island was an abandoned home which they acquired through 'adverse possession.' The property is owned by Midfirst Bank which has sued the militia group over it, reported the Globe.
Their website explains 'adverse possession' as 'simply taking what's yours and not waiting for anyone to give it to you.'
'As an example, our people have been waiting for reoperations, waiting to get access to our resources, waiting for better homes, waiting for better business and waiting for our freedom. Adverse possession puts an end to waiting.'
Their threaten to 'repeat the process' until 'every Moorish family has a home and a business.'
Much of the dogma in Rise of the Moors is based in a religious sect known as the Moorish Science Temple. The organization was founded by Noble Drew Ali (left) in 1913. The Rise of the Moors pays tribute to the Noble Drew Ali on their website, calling him the 'first Patriot of the fallen Moors here in America' as well as the 'Savior of Humanity.' They also state that Edward Mealy El (right) is the true successor of Noble Drew Ali, whose death lead to a schism in the religion
The Rise of the Moors clubhouse is based out of an abandoned home they said was acquired through 'adverse possession.' Their website explains that 'adverse possession' as 'simply taking whats yours and not waiting for anyone to give it to you.' The property is legally owned by Midfirst Bank which has sued the militia group over squatting
Many of the group’s formal practices were derived from Muslim observances. He established new traditions that required all male members of the Temple to wear a fez or turban. They added the suffixes 'Bey' or 'El' to their last names as a way to signify their Moorish heritage and the new journey as Moorish Americans
Saturday's police standoff - the Rise of the Moors hit the mainstream
The group were reportedly on their way from Rhode Island to Maine to conduct 'training' when the incident in Massachusetts occurred.
One clip shows several men dressed in camouflage clothing waving a Moroccan flag as they stand at the side of the I-95 and declare 'we are not anti-government'.
A separate video, filmed after daybreak, shows one of the camouflage-clad members speaking directly to the camera, stating: 'We're not anti- police, we're not sovereign citizens, we're not black identity extremists.
'The possession of a gun per se, constitutes no offence, so we haven't violated any laws.'
'The police saw us on the side of the road with our guns secured, we were afraid, so we got out with our arms, and I have a body camera that has been recording the whole time,' the Rise of the Moors member insisted.
'We reassured them multiple times that we are abiding by the federal laws as well as the judicial opinions of the United States Supreme Court, but they keep portraying us as being anti-government but we're not anti-government at all.'
The member did not specifically outline his group's goals or beliefs.
One of the camouflage-clad members speaking directly to the camera, stating: 'We're not anti- police, we're not sovereign citizens, we're not black identity extremists.
'The possession of a gun per se, constitutes no offence, so we haven't violated any laws.'
'The police saw us on the side of the road with our guns secured, we were afraid, so we got out with our arms, and I have a body camera that has been recording the whole time,' the Rise of the Moors member insisted.
'We reassured them multiple times that we are abiding by the federal laws as well as the judicial opinions of the United States Supreme Court, but they keep portraying us as being anti-government but we're not anti-government at all.'
The member did not specifically outline his group's goals or beliefs.
In a clip filmed during the standoff, leader Jamhal Talib Abdullah Bey told the camera: 'We're not anti- police, we're not sovereign citizens, we're not black identity extremists'
The Noble Drew Ali taught that all blacks were of Moorish origins but had their Muslim identity taken away from them through slavery and racial segregation. He also encouraged use of the term 'Moor' rather than 'black' in self-identification