Sunday, December 05, 2021

Earthquake shakes western North Carolina — the sixth quake in a year for this county



Maddie Capron
Sun, December 5, 2021

A small earthquake struck a county in western North Carolina on Sunday morning, Dec. 5, geologists said.

The 2.3-magnitude earthquake was reported right before 8 a.m. EST in Laurel Park in Henderson County, about 26 miles south of Asheville, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

The earthquake was too small for most people to feel it. Only two people reported the tremor to the USGS.


Henderson County isn’t known for earthquakes, McClatchy News previously reported. However, there have been six earthquakes in the past year in the county, according to Earthquake Track.

The largest was a 2.5-magnitude earthquake in Marshall on Sept. 25, Earthquake Track reported.

Earthquakes in North Carolina are typically smaller in magnitude. The strongest earthquake in recorded state history was a 5.2-magnitude quake in 1916 near Skyland, McClatchy News reported.

Since then, a 5.1-magnitude quake hit south of Sparta near the Virginia border last August. It caused extensive damage and was felt 100 miles away in Charlotte.

Magnitude measures the energy released at the source of the earthquake, the U.S. Geological Survey says. It replaces the old Richter scale.

Quakes between 2.5 and 5.4 magnitude are often felt but rarely cause much damage, according to Michigan Tech.

Sixth earthquake in a year recorded in mountain county in western North Carolina

Six small earthquakes reported in a week in North Carolina county, geologists say

2.4 magnitude earthquake rattles North Carolina near Winston-Salem, geologists say


NOT A FRACKQUAKE

Four NC earthquakes this week weren't caused by …
2018-06-14 · Fracking is not permitted anywhere in North Carolina at this time
. ... 
3.5 quake in Henderson County in 1981. 4.1 quake in McDowell County in 1957.



CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M
A former Netflix software engineer and his friend were sentenced to prison for conducting an insider trading scheme that made more than $3 million

ewalsh@insider.com (Emily Walsh) 
© Provided by Business Insider SOPA Images/Getty Images

A former Netflix software engineer and his friend were sentenced to prison for an insider trading scheme on Friday.

Sung Mo Jun and Junwoo Chon used private Netflix subscriber data to make more than $3 million.
Another software engineer at Netflix and Jun's brother were also involved and have pled guilty.

A former Netflix software engineer and his friend were sentenced to prison for an insider trading scheme where they used private subscriber data to make more than $3 million.


Sung Mo Jun, the former Netflix employee involved in the scheme, was sentenced to two years in prison while his friend, Junwoo Chon, was sentenced to 14 months on Friday, according to Seattle federal prosecutors. Jun and Chon were collectively fined $25,000 for their crimes.

Both Jun and Chon pled guilty to the charges in August. Another software engineer at Netflix and Jun's brother were also involved and have additionally pled guilty, according to a statement from the US Attorney's Office in the Western District of Washington.

"Insider trading undermines our capital markets, harms companies by misusing their confidential information, and causes investors to lose faith in the fairness of the system," Donald M. Voiret, the special agent in charge of the case, said in the statement. "The actions of this trusted employee and his friend were calculated and ongoing to reap a huge profit."

When Jun was a software engineer for Netflix, he gave private Netflix subscriber data to Chon and his brother, Joon Jun. They then profited by buying and selling Netflix securities based on the information.

After Jun left Netflix in 2017, another engineer that he mentored at the company, Ayden Lee, continued to give him private subscriber information, according to court documents. Joon Jun and Lee are scheduled for sentencing next year.

"What I did was foolish, wrong, illegal…. I have no excuse," Jun told the court, according to the press release. "I disappointed many people."

US Attorney Nick Brown said in a statement that the individuals involved were motivated by greed and will be required to face the consequences.

"Mr. Jun and Mr. Chon were both financially secure with good jobs and good salaries when greed drove them to break the law to increase their own wealth, at the expense of others," Brown said in a statement. "Such conduct, will not be tolerated."

The US Securities and Exchange Commission has filed a separate civil enforcement action against the defendants. Though Jun and Chon have entered into settlements with the SEC, but both men still face additional potential penalties.

"For people in the high tech industry, they will clearly know that there are consequences — including prison time — for this activity," Judge Richard Jones, who presided over the case, said in a press statement.
BEST PHOTO GRAPHICS
Newly unearthed dinosaur evolved 'large tail weapon' unlike any other

Monisha Ravisetti 
CNET


In a southern and sparsely populated region of Chile, scientists excavated the skeletal remains of a naturally armored dinosaur that lived over 70 million years ago, during the late Cretaceous period. Much to the team's surprise, they found it possessed a rather bizarre feature: a knife-like artillery in place of a tail.

© Provided by CNET Fossils found in Chile are from the bizarre dog-sized dinosaur species called Stegouros that had a unique slashing tail weapon. Lucas Jaymez

Although they echo beings straight out of fantasy novels, armored dinosaurs are a well-known crew. Ranging from the sharply adorned Kentosaurus to the curvy backed Hesperosaurus, paleontologists have already studied a long list of the physically shielded animals. But this new member of the warrior-like troop of beings piqued researchers' interest because of its specialized armament that could've once sliced through enemies.

The ancient herbivore "evolved a large tail weapon unlike any dinosaur," the team said about the discovery in a report published Wednesday in the journal Nature. The dinosaur's oddly shaped backside is decorated with a whopping seven pairs of bony deposits fused together, emulating actual blades.
© Provided by CNET A reconstruction of the newly unearthed dinosaur's tail. Lucas Jaymez

"It was an animal with a proportionally large head and a narrow snout with a beak," Sergio Soto Acuña, lead author of the study and a doctoral student at the University of Chile said. "However, the most notable feature is the caudal weapon: the posterior half of the tail is enclosed in a structure made up of fused bony plates that give the tail a very strange appearance."

© Mauricio Alvarez via AP

This illustration provided by Mauricio Alvarez shows a Stegouros. Fossils found in Chile are from the bizarre dog-sized dinosaur species that had a unique slashing tail weapon, scientists reported Wednesday, Dec. 1, 2021.

The team dubbed the 2-meter (about 6-foot-6-inch) long species Stegouros elengassen due to the rest of its body resembling the Stegosaurus genus -- aka Spike from The Land Before Time. Later, extensive DNA analysis and cranial examination revealed the animal to be more closely related to a dinosaur group called Ankylosaurs, but the team decided to keep the initial name.

"I think this finding radically changes what we thought about the evolution of armored dinosaurs in the southern hemisphere," Acuńa said. "Our results show that they were not simple dispersal events of northern Ankylosaurs, but rather that they were a very ancient branch of primitive Ankylosaurs that evolved in isolation from other armored dinosaurs."
© Provided by CNET The hips, legs and tails of the Chilean dinosaur's fossilized skeleton. University of Chile

He said that one of the most surprising outcomes about this discovery was the revelation of an entirely new lineage of Southern Hemisphere armored dinosaurs that had evolved its own posterior weaponry -- independently of plated dinosaurs, or Stegosaurs, and densely armored dinosaurs, or Euankylosaurs.

Presumably, the dangerous appendage was used to defend against predators. But either way, Acuña adds, "This shows us that the fossil record of the Gondwanan continents can still have unexpected surprises for us."

© Provided by CNET A stegouros chomping on some leaves. Lucas Jaymez


  • https://www.livescience.com/25222-ankylosaurus.html

    2017-05-10 · Speaking of spikes, a bizarre-looking ankylosaur, described May 10, 2017, in the journal Royal Society Open Science, had such an uncanny resemblance to the …

    • Estimated Reading Time: 9 mins
    • Mystery Cube Found on The Far Side of The Moon Is Probably Not an 'Alien Hut'

      Michelle Starr 1 hour ago

      There's something strange in the lunar neighborhood.
      © Our Space/CNSA Yutu-2's view of the distant mystery cube.

      In its exploration of the Von Kármán Crater on the far side of the Moon, China's Yutu 2 rover has spotted a peculiar object on the horizon. In a very blurry image, it appears to be a cube-shaped protrusion in an otherwise relatively featureless landscape.

      On a post on social network Weixin, China National Space Administration outreach program Our Space referred to it as a "mysterious hut".

      "Was it a home built by aliens after the crash landing?" the post playfully speculates. "Or is it the pioneer spacecraft of the predecessors to explore the Moon?"

      The answer is that it is likely neither of those things, but something that we know the Moon has in abundance: rocks. We won't know for sure, however, until Yutu 2 can close the intervening 80-meter (260-foot) distance to study it up close – a process that will take another two or three months.

      That's partially because the solar-powered rover needs to shut down for the duration of the lunar night, which lasts two weeks, as well as when the Sun is directly overhead, to prevent overheating; and partially because the rover needs to travel slowly, navigating the hazardous, rubble-strewn and crater-pocked lunar terrain.

      Even though we will have to wait, there are clues that offer possible hints as to the cube's identity – namely a relatively fresh impact crater nearby. This suggests the object could be a boulder excavated during the impact, a phenomenon previously observed on the Moon.

      It's not the first oddity Yutu 2 has uncovered on the side of the Moon perpetually facing away from Earth. In 2019, it came across a peculiar substance described as "gel-like"; that turned out to be lunar rock melted into glass, also due to an impact.

      The Moon, unprotected by an atmosphere, gets smacked into a lot.

      A closer look at the "mysterious hut" will be able to tell us something about the Moon, even if it's not the presence of aliens. If it's a boulder that has been excavated from below the lunar surface, we may be able to learn something about the composition of the Moon underneath the top layer of rock and rubble. So CNSA scientists are definitely keen to get a closer look.

      The rock was spotted during Yutu 2's 36th day of operations on the Moon. It's currently on its 37th lunar day, after landing in January 2019.

      Planned for an original duration of three months, Yutu 2 and spacecraft Chang'e 4 are now closing in on the end of their third year, and are still going strong.
      Military repairing cracks in the tails of most CH-148 Cyclone helicopters

      HALIFAX — The Canadian military has discovered cracks in the tails of 19 of its 23 Cyclone helicopters.

      Provided by The Canadian Press

      The Royal Canadian Air Force issued an emailed statement Sunday saying cracks had been detected in four helicopters, but that number jumped to 19 later in the day.

      The Air Force said the Sikorsky-made aircraft have not been grounded or placed on an operational pause. Engineering experts from the military are working with the company to repair the aircraft, the military said.

      "Sikorsky has a plan to address the cracking, with each aircraft requiring a unique approach to repair the affected components," a spokesperson said Sunday in an email.

      "The Royal Canadian Air Force expects that the first few aircraft affected by this issue will be repaired within the next few days."

      The office of Defence Minister Anita Anand wouldn't comment on the issue and forwarded queries to the military.

      Tail cracks were first detected in one of the maritime helicopters during a routine inspection on Nov. 26 at 443 Maritime Helicopter Squadron, based in Patricia Bay, B.C.

      The entire fleet is overseen by 12 Wing Shearwater, the Air Force base in the Halifax area that is home to 423 Maritime Helicopter Squadron, which also flies the CH-148 Cyclone.


      The military also confirmed Sunday that two Cyclones did not appear to have any tail defects, and the remaining two in the fleet were receiving longer-term maintenance and will be inspected at a later date.

      The "maintenance issue" has had an impact on Operation LENTUS, the military's effort to help those affected by the widespread flooding in British Columbia. The military, however, has deployed other aircraft to fill the gap, as has the province and other emergency response partners.

      Canada placed an order for 28 Cyclones in 2004, but the helicopters did not start flying missions until 2018.


      Cyclones are typically deployed on board Canadian frigates and used for search and rescue, surveillance and anti-submarine warfare.

      On April 29, 2020, a Cyclone carrying six military members crashed off the coast of Greece, killing all aboard.

      The crash marked the largest single-day loss of life for Canada's military since it took part in the war in Afghanistan. The crash also cast a spotlight on the Cyclone's long and problem-plagued development.

      Defence procurement documents released earlier this year show the $3.1-billion project is "facing financial challenges, increased procurement costs and some financial adjustments," and that officials plan to ask the government for more money to finish it.


      Canada's top military procurement official also warned at the time there would be no "quick fix" to the software issue identified as the primary cause of the crash last year. Troy Crosby, assistant deputy minister of materiel at the Department of National Defence, said officials were talking to Sikorsky to find ways to deal with the issue.


      Two separate internal reviews by the Canadian Armed Forces found the autopilot on the helicopter — code-named Stalker 22 — took control of the aircraft as the pilot was turning to land on HMCS Fredericton.


      A flight-safety review appeared to absolve Sikorsky of any responsibility, saying the type of manoeuvre that Stalker 22's pilot was attempting to perform was not spelled out in the military's documentation.

      The commander of the Royal Canadian Air Force , Lt.-Gen. Al Meinzinger, has expressed confidence in the helicopter.

      This report by The Canadian Press was first published Dec. 5, 2021.


      LIBERAL GOVT PAST & PRESENT
      Ombudsman says veterans struggling needlessly as Ottawa ignores her recommendations


      Sun., December 5, 2021



      OTTAWA — The veterans’ ombud says many ill and injured ex-soldiers and their families are needlessly fighting for access to federal support and services because the government is refusing to act on a growing number of recommendations from her office.

      In an interview with The Canadian Press, Nishika Jardine noted her office’s mandate is to identify systemic barriers and unfairness in how veterans are treated, and put forward solutions on how those problems can be fixed.

      Yet the retired army colonel says the government has acted on a shrinking number of the watchdog’s “well-considered” recommendations in recent years, to the detriment of disabled veterans and their loved ones.

      “It’s crystal clear that over the past four years, the government is falling behind in doing the work that’s required to address the inequities that we’ve highlighted,” said Jardine, who took over her current position in November 2020.

      The problems identified by the watchdog’s office since 2017 include long wait times for veterans to find out whether they qualify for disability benefits and assistance. Those waits have been especially long for women and francophones injured while in uniform.

      Jardine also called attention in June to what she says is the unfair treatment of veterans’ family members, who are unable to access mental-health services unless doing so is part and parcel of the veteran’s own treatment plan.

      “When a veteran serves or a military member serves, or even an RCMP member serves, their families also served and there’s an impact on their mental health,” she said. “The mental health of the families, some of those stories are heartbreaking.”

      Veterans Affairs Minister Lawrence MacAulay’s office said the government has accepted many of the watchdog’s recommendations, including her request in June that Veterans Affairs fund peer-support programs for victims of military sexual misconduct.

      “We have also implemented recommendations which improved mental health supports for veterans and their families, improved compensation for ill and injured veterans, and launched a veteran ID card,” spokesman Cameron McNeill said in an email.

      “We will continue to work with the ombud and her office to improve the services and supports we provide to our veterans and their families, including a further reduction in processing times for veterans, which is a top priority that both she and the minister share.”

      Jardine, who is the first woman to occupy the position and is transitioning the office's title from ombudsman to ombud, isn’t the first to express frustration about what she sees as the government’s lackadaisical response to the office’s concerns.

      Jardine's predecessor Craig Dalton quit in May 2020 after only 18 months in the job.

      Yet a report released by Jardine late last month said the past few years have seen that trend grow as fewer and fewer recommendations have been implemented.

      The government has implemented only six of 26 still-relevant recommendations made between April 2017 and March 2021.

      Those 26 recommendations focused on providing mental-health support to family members as well as more equitable access to financial assistance and compensation for all disabled veterans, and making sure veterans aren’t left waiting months and years for help.

      The report said those wait times accounted for 43 per cent of all complaints received by the office, making it the top issue raised by veterans. That is despite the government having hired hundreds of temporary staff to address a backlog of more than 40,000 claims.

      (The annual report did not include the government's move to implement peer support for sexual misconduct, which will be covered in next year's iteration.)

      Jardine, who previously told The Canadian Press that she endured the same long and frustrating wait for her own claim, during which time she was unable to access physiotherapy for injuries sustained while in uniform, said the issue remains a major concern for her.

      “Everything is dependent on getting that decision on your disability claim so that you can get well, so you can reintegrate into your civilian life and move on to new employment,” she said. “This is a struggle for a lot of veterans and my heart goes out to them and their families.”

      The Canadian Press in a series last month outlined some of the challenges facing today's veterans, including the backlog of claims that has left many waiting for federal assistance.

      This report by The Canadian Press was first published Dec. 5, 2021.

      Lee Berthiaume, The Canadian Press
      Dominican Republic expels, mistreats Haitians, activists say

      By DÁNICA COTO

      LONG READ

      1 of 28
      A man holds a rooster in a store that sells chickens in the Little Haiti neighborhood of Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, Sunday, Nov. 21, 2021. Hundreds of thousands of Haitians are believed to live in the Dominican Republic, even before many fled Haiti in recent months in the wake of a presidential assassination, a 7.2 magnitude earthquake, a severe shortage of fuel and a spike in gang-related violence and kidnappings. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)


      DAJABON, Dominican Republic (AP) — Bien-Aimé St. Clair frowned as the stream of older Haitian migrants pushed past him. Accused of living in the Dominican Republic illegally, they knew they had no choice but to go back across the border to Haiti.

      But St. Clair, 18, hesitated. He shouted at an immigration agent.

      “Boss! Hey! I don’t know anyone there,” he yelled in Spanish, motioning toward Haiti as he stood on the frontier that the two countries share on the island of Hispaniola.

      St. Clair was a child when his mother brought him to the Dominican Republic, and though his life has been hard -- his mom died when he was young, his father disappeared, and he was left alone to raise his disabled brother -- it’s the only life he has known.

      And now, he was being forced to leave, like more than 31,000 people deported by the Dominican Republic to Haiti this year, more than 12,000 of them in just the past three months -- a huge spike, observers say. As the rest of the world closes its doors to Haitian migrants, the country that shares an island with Haiti also is cracking down in a way that human rights activists say hasn’t been seen in decades.

      Men play a game of dominoes in their spare time in the Batey La Lima community, in La Romana, Dominican Republic. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)

      _____

      This story was produced with support from the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.

      ____

      The increasing mistreatment of the country’s Haitians, they say, coincided with the rise of Luis Abinader, who took office as president in August 2020.

      They accuse the government of targeting vulnerable populations, separating children from their parents and racial profiling -- Haiti is overwhelmingly Black, while the majority Dominicans identify as mixed race. Dominican authorities, they say, are not only seeking out Haitians who recently crossed illegally into the Dominican Republic, but also those who have long lived there.

      “We’ve never seen this,” said William Charpantier, national coordinator for the nonprofit National Roundtable for Migration and Refugees. “The government is acting like we’re at war.”

      Men bathe in the Massacre River on the border between Dominican Republic and Haiti, in Ouanaminthe, Dominican Republic. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)

      They’ve arrested Haitians who crossed illegally into the Dominican Republic; Haitians whose Dominican work permits have expired; those born in the DR to Haitian parents but denied citizenship; even, activists say, Black Dominicans born to Dominican parents whom authorities mistake for Haitians.

      Haitian officials and activists also say the government is violating laws and agreements by deporting pregnant women, separating children from parents and arresting people between 6 p.m. and 6 a.m.

      Meanwhile, activists say hostility against Haitians is spiraling as Abinader unleashed a flurry of anti-Haitian actions.

      He suspended a student-visa program for Haitians, prohibited companies from drawing more than 20% of their workforce from migrant workers and ordered Haitian migrants to register their whereabouts.

      He announced an audit of some 220,000 people previously awarded immigration status to determine if they still qualify, and he warned that anyone who provides transportation or housing to undocumented migrants will be fined. And he suspended pension payments owed to hundreds of former sugarcane workers -- most of them Haitian.

      A Haitian child carries a container filled with water across an improvised soccer field in the Batey La Lima community, in La Romana, Dominican Republic. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)

      The measures follow Abinader’s announcement in February that his administration would build a multimillion-dollar, 118-mile (190-kilometer) wall along the Haitian border.

      The construction has begun. Meanwhile, life has become ever more miserable for Haitians who remain in the Dominican Republic and those, like St. Clair, who have been deported.

      The teenager watched as the bus that dropped him off at the border pulled away, empty except for a machete, hammer and other work tools the other migrants were carrying when they were detained.

      “Hey!” he yelled.

      No response. St. Clair clicked his tongue and sighed.

      ___

      Haiti and the Dominican Republic have long had a wary and difficult relationship, stained by a 1937 massacre in which thousands of Haitians were killed under Dominican dictator Rafael Trujillo.

      Racism and rejection of Haitians is still palpable, with Dominicans cursing them or making disparaging comments when they see them on the street.

      Still, hundreds of thousands of Haitians were believed to live in the Dominican Republic, even before many fled Haiti in recent months in the wake of a presidential assassination, a 7.2 magnitude earthquake, a severe shortage of fuel and a spike in gang-related violence and kidnappings.


      An aerial view of the Batey La Lima community, an impoverished community surrounded by a massive sugarcane plantation in the southern coastal city of La Romana, Dominican Republic, Wednesday, Nov. 17, 2021. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)

      “We don’t come here to take over the country. We’re trying to survive,” said Gaetjens Thelusma of the nonprofit group We Will Save Haiti.

      The government has repeatedly said it treats migrants humanely. Abinader recently told the United Nations that his country had borne the burden of dealing with the ripples of Haiti’s crises on its own, without much help from the rest of the world.

      While his country has demonstrated solidarity and collaboration with Haiti and will keep doing so, he said, “I also reiterate that there is not and will never be a Dominican solution to the crisis in Haiti.”

      His own ministers have referred darkly to Haitians as invaders: Speaking in favor of the border wall, Dominican Migration Director Enrique García said in October that “we cannot lose our country.”

      “What option do you have when you can’t handle your neighbor any longer? Protect your house, your property and your family,” he told D’Agenda, a local TV news program.

      And in early November, Jesús Vázquez, Dominican minister of the interior and police, inaugurated the first of several dozen offices where foreigners will be required to register.

      He told reporters: “The main threat that the Dominican Republic faces nowadays is Haiti, and we are called upon to defend our homeland.”

      A woman, who is denied entry into the Dominican Republic, tries to put on her protective face mask as a soldier removes her from a line for not initially wearing the mask, at the border crossing in Dajabon, Dominican Republic. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)

      ___

      Rosemita Doreru was nine months pregnant when she was detained in early November inside a hospital in the capital of Santo Domingo. She was later deported, leaving behind three young children.

      “Every day they ask me, ‘When is Mom coming home? When is Mom coming home?’” said her partner, Guens Molière. “They cry almost daily.”

      She gave birth in Haiti; Molière remains angry that officials did not let him send her a suitcase with her clothes and items for their newborn before she was deported. And he does not know what will happen next -- he can’t afford the $260 that human smugglers are now charging to illegally cross pregnant women and those with young children into the Dominican Republic.

      Doreru is not alone in her misery. On a recent afternoon in Dajabón, authorities deported more than 40 unaccompanied children and dozens of lactating women, said Rolbert Félicien with the nonprofit Institute of Social Wellbeing and Research. If the children’s parents or relatives are not found, they are placed in an orphanage in Haiti.

      Dozens of Haitian migrants interviewed in other Dominican cities and towns accused Abinader’s administration of treating them “like dogs.”

      People, mostly Haitians, sell and buy goods at a market in the border town of Dajabon, Dominican Republic. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)

      The treatment is not reserved only for those who entered the country unlawfully; on a bustling market day in the dusty border town of Dajabon, at least one Dominican official used a stun gun on migrants who crossed the border legally to buy and sell goods.

      “Deportations exist in every country, but they are mistreating Haitians,” said 25-year-old Sabrina Bierre, a street vendor who sells used clothes and other items in a section of Santo Domingo known as Little Haiti. “They are undocumented, but they’re not animals.”

      Earlier this month, 26-year-old Véronique Louis gave birth to a daughter at a hospital in Santo Domingo. She returned days later for further treatment because they botched the cesarean, but medical staff denied her care, according to her husband, Wilner Rafael.

      “They said they weren’t treating Blacks, and that Haitians aren’t people,” he said. Louis nodded.

      Louis now has an open wound that is a couple of inches wide and winces in pain every time she moves. A Haitian doctor from the community stops by on occasion to treat Louis at their cramped room, tucked inside a maze of dilapidated homes covered in soot.


      These days, many Haitian migrants and those of Haitian descent stay home out of fear of the authorities, or leave the house one at a time to avoid abandoning a child if both parents are deported.

      On a recent morning at the country’s main migration office, dozens of Haitians clutching folders, papers and passports lined up in hopes of renewing work permits, something many said they’ve done repeatedly to no avail; activists accuse the government of refusing to process the paperwork so they have reason to arrest them.

      “Things are bad for us right now,” said Edouard Louis, who came to the Dominican Republic more than 30 years ago to work in sugarcane fields under a bilateral agreement. He now sells locks, chargers and USB cables at a small outdoor market in the outskirts of Santo Domingo, earning just enough to buy eggs and rice for sustenance.

      His work permit expired last year, and despite repeated attempts to renew it, he hasn’t received a response from the government. He still carries that permit along with older ones in a weathered black wallet in hopes that if he gets detained, he can prove to authorities that he crossed the border legally.

      Those born in the Dominican Republic to Haitian immigrants are in a similar situation. Tens of thousands of them were never awarded citizenship and don’t have the documents needed to work or attend university. The Dominican Republic awards citizenship only to those born to Dominican parents or legal residents as a result of a 2013 court ruling that the Organization of American States said “created a stateless situation never before seen in America.”

      The ruling was applied retroactively to those born between 1929 and 2010.

      A year later, the government approved another law that offered a path to citizenship if they were born in the Dominican Republic, but a large majority have still not been able to do so, especially those whose parents do not have the required documents.

      “I still cry about it,” said 16-year-old Erika Jean, who was born in the Dominican Republic to Haitian parents and lives in Batey La Lima, an impoverished community surrounded by a massive sugarcane plantation in the southern Dominican coastal city of La Romana.

      “I truly have an ugly future,” she said. “I’ve lost all hope of obtaining the documents.”

      Luis Batista, a 70-year-old retired sugarcane worker who came to the Dominican Republic in 1972 on a government-sponsored work permit that has since expired, said: “We have absolutely nothing here. No papers. No pension. No medical care,” he said.

      A handcuff secures the latch of a prisoner bus transporting undocumented Haitians to be deported to Haiti, in Dajabon, Dominican Republic. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)

      In his neighborhood, children fly kites made of plastic bags, make face masks out of discarded cartons, tie a string around a bucket to bounce it on nearby potholes. Some homes are made of corrugated metal, with discarded rice bags stuffed into the holes of rickety wooden doors to keep out pests.

      Batista said he is partially blind after spending years in burning sugar cane fields next to his wife, 68-year-old Ramonita Charles, whose father died while working in those fields and received no medical help from the company that employed him.

      “They don’t give us a pension. We don’t have a job. We can’t go out on the street,” said Charles, who grew up working in sugarcane fields and is illiterate. She now sells eggs, chips, cookies and other small items out of a tin shack to sustain her four siblings, three children and her mother, a former sugarcane worker who is in her early 90s.

      And now, there are the deportations.

      “You go out and you don’t know if you’re going to come back home,” she said.

      ___

      The raids, deportations and mistreatment by the government have dissuaded some Haitians from crossing into the Dominican Republic, according to a human smuggler who only gave his first name as Luis Fernando.

      He was born in Haiti but has lived in the Dominican Republic for 19 years. He paints and works in construction but also helps migrants cross illegally, paying Dominican officials anywhere from $35 to $90 to look the other way. In mid-November, he placed a group waiting to cross on hold.

      “For now, it’s best that they stay over there. Until things cool down,” he said.

      And yet, some still insist on making their way to the DR.


      Haitians wait to cross the border between Dominican Republic and Haiti in Dajabon, Dominican Republic.
      (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)

      St. Clair, the teenager marooned in Dajabon, looked around as immigration officials who had detained him left and authorities prepared to close the border for the night. Gone was the stream of border crossers, the rumble of trucks and roar of motorcycles carrying plantains, onions and other goods.

      Apologetic UNICEF workers had told him they couldn’t help -- he turned 18 in October and was now considered an adult.

      St. Clair began walking back toward the Dominican Republic. One concerned immigration official yelled after him, “Where are you going to sleep? You don’t have any money.”

      St. Clair didn’t respond. As the sun set, he slipped past authorities, sneaked into the Dominican Republic and disappeared down a quiet street.


      CANADA- DEPORTATION GUARD AND HAITIAN DEPORTEES





      1. https://libcom.org/files/charles-forsdick-the-black-jacobins-reader-1.pdf · PDF file

        The Black Jacobins on WFMT Radio (Chicago), 1970 329 Appendix 2. The Revolution in Theory c. l. r. james 353 Appendix 3. Translator’s Foreword by Pierre Naville to the 1949 / 1983 French Editions 367 Biobl gri aphy 383 Conbuttri ors 41 1 ndexI 451. . . It is of the West Indies West Indian. —C. L. R. James What an education it would be—whether as to the God of yesterday or today— were ...


      Violence as French far-right TV pundit holds campaign rally

      By SYLVIE CORBET

      1 of 15
      French far right presidential candidate Eric Zemmour, waves after his first rally, Sunday, Dec. 5, 2021 in Villepinte, north of Paris. Far-right former French TV pundit Eric Zemmour is holding his first campaign rally, a few days after he formally declared his candidacy for April's presidential election in a video relaying his anti-migrants, anti Islam views. A first round is to be held on April, 10, 2022 and should no candidate win a majority of the vote in the first round, a runoff will be held beteen the top two candidates on April 24, 2022. (AP Photo/Rafael Yaghobzadeh)


      VILLEPINTE, France (AP) — Anti-racism activists were beaten up Sunday as far-right former French TV pundit Eric Zemmour held his first presidential campaign rally near Paris, a few days after he formally declared his candidacy in a video that highlighted his anti-migrant and anti-Islam views.

      As his supporters cheered and waved French flags in a northern suburb of the capital, thousands of others took to the streets of Paris to denounce his xenophobic platform.

      France is holding its presidential election on April 10, with a runoff if needed on April 24. Zemmour has drawn comparisons in France to former U.S. President Donald Trump because of his rabble-rousing populism and ambitions of making the jump from the small screen to national leadership. The 63-year-old with multiple hate-speech convictions unveiled his campaign’s slogan: “Impossible is not French,” a quote attributed to Napoleon.

      “If I win that election, it won’t be one more (political) changeover, but the beginning of the reconquest of the most beautiful country in the world,” Zemmour said.

      Supporters at the rally sang France’s national anthem, shouted “Zemmour, president!” and “We will win!” while brandishing the tricolor French flag. AP reporters saw some activists dressed in black with “No to racism” on their sweaters being beaten up by people at the rally and brutally taken out of the room. The scuffles continued outside the room between anti-racism activists and security guards.

      “I’m not racist,” Zemmour said. “We are defending our country, our homeland, our ancestral heritage (to) ... transmit our children France as we have known it.”

      Reporters from a French television show were booed and insulted by Zemmour’s supporters ahead of his speech, leading them to be briefly escorted outside the room by security guards. They came back soon afterward but Zemmour harshly criticized the media in his speech.




      Protesters march during a demonstration against French presidential candidate Eric Zemmour, Sunday, Dec. 5, 2021 in Paris. French far right presidential candidate Eric Zemmour holds his first campaign rally in Villepinte, north of Paris. A first round is to be held on April, 10, 2022 and should no candidate win a majority of the vote in the first round, a runoff will be held between the top two candidates on April 24, 2022. (AP Photo/Michel Spingler)



      “They are making up polemics about books I wrote 15 years ago, they snoop into my private life, call me all sort of names... My adversaries want my political death, journalists want my social death and jihadists want my death,” he said.

      Zemmour wants foreigners to “assimilate” French culture rather than keeping their identities. He wants to ban parents from giving children foreign names and restrict choices to typical French names Zemmour also wants to end nationality being acquired by birth on French soil and to deport foreign criminals and foreign jobseekers who don’t find employment within six months.

      “France is back, because the French people stood up. The French people stand up against those who want to make it disappear,” he said.

      His campaign rally Sunday, which was initially supposed to be held in a Paris concert hall, was moved to a bigger exhibition center in Villepinte for security reasons due to the protest against him by over 50 groups, including far-left political parties, unions and anti-racist groups. Police had feared clashes with Zemmour’s far-right supporters.

      In the Paris neighborhood of Barbes, thousands took to the streets Sunday, marching behind a banner reading “Paris will silence the far-right.”

      Pauline Salingue, a spokeswoman for the head of the New Anti-Capitalist Party, said people “shouldn’t be seduced by these so-called anti-system profiles. Zemmour is a multi-millionaire. Zemmour earns tens of thousands of euros per month, so how can he pretend to represent the little people, as he likes to say? It is a very serious scam.”

      Zemmour has gained strength on France’s political scene in recent months, starting to siphon off supporters from far-right National Party leader Marine Le Pen, who has long said she would run for the French presidency next year.

      His rally came one day after France’s main conservative Republicans party on Saturday picked its presidential candidate. Valérie Pécresse, the head of the Paris region and a former minister from 2007 to 2012, as its presidential candidate.

      French President Emmanuel Macron, who defeated Le Pen in the 2017 presidential runoff, is expected to seek a second term but he has yet to declare his candidacy.




      Protesters march during a demonstration against French presidential candidate Eric Zemmour, Sunday, Dec. 5, 2021 in Paris. French far right presidential candidate Eric Zemmour holds his first campaign rally in Villepinte, north of Paris. A first round is to be held on April, 10, 2022 and should no candidate win a majority of the vote in the first round, a runoff will be held between the top two candidates on April 24, 2022. (AP Photo/Michel Spingler)

      The far-left leader of the Rebel France party, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, who is seeking the presidency for the third time, also staged a rally on Sunday, gathering several thousand supporters in Paris.

      Other presidential candidates on the left include Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo for the Socialist party and Yannick Jadot, a former Greenpeace activist, for the Greens.

      Those attending rallies for Zemmour and Mélenchon were not required to show French COVID-19 health passes, in line with a decision from the Constitutional Council that said the passes should not be used to restrict access to political meetings.

      Wearing a mask is mandatory in French public gatherings, yet many Zemmour supporters defied the restriction.

      Coronavirus infections have jumped in France over the last few weeks, with daily new cases getting close to 40,000 on average and virus-related hospitalizations and deaths rising again.

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      Associated Press journalists Boubkar Benzabat and Patrick Hermansen in Paris, Florian Brunet and Philippe Marion in Villepinte contributed to the story.

       

      China's research ship Tansuo-1 returns from deep-ocean expedition

      Xinhua | Updated: 2021-12-05 
      The deep-sea manned submersible Fendouzhe. [File photo/CCTV]

      SANYA -- China's scientific research ship Tansuo-1 returned to a port in the city of Sanya, in South China's Hainan province, on Sunday, after completing its deep-ocean expedition to the Mariana Trench.

      The vessel, which carries the deep-sea manned submersible Fendouzhe (Striver), berthed on Sunday morning, according to the Institute of Deep-sea Science and Engineering of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

      During the 53-day expedition, which started on Oct 14, the China-built Fendouzhe successfully completed 23 dives, six of which exceeded a depth of 10,000 meters.

      Scientific researchers collected several large organisms, in-situ micro-organisms, sediments and rock samples, accumulating valuable data for use in genetic research on the area and understanding its geological structure, according to the institute.

      During the voyage, Chinese research teams participating in the expedition jointly launched the Mariana Consensus. The consensus calls for the establishment of a standardized system for deep-sea expeditions to realize the long-term preservation and sharing of deep-ocean scientific samples and data, so as to achieve international cooperation on deep-sea expeditions.

      The team also launched the Mariana Trench Environment and Ecology Research Project (MEER) during the expedition. The project aims to invite more researchers from home and abroad to join in the MEER, so as to tackle major scientific issues together, such as the origins of life and environmental adaptation, biodiversity and climate change, among others.

      Reservations about robots remain, but abundant benefits seen
      By Harvey Morris | China Daily Global | Updated: 2021-12-06 
      Robot artist 'Ai-Da', described as "the world's first ultra-realistic AI humanoid robot artist" stands at the Great Pyramids of Giza, where she exhibits her sculpture during an international art show, on the outskirt of Cairo, on Oct 23, 2021. [Photo/Agencies]

      It is hard not to have some sympathy for the Egyptian customs officials who detained a human-like robot who arrived this month to take part in an art exhibition in the shadow of the pyramids.

      The would-be visitor, named Ai-Da, has the face, body and eyes of a young woman, although her clunky bionic arms are perhaps the first clue that she is not entirely human.

      The officials were particularly concerned about her camera eyes, which she uses to create convincing paintings but which they feared could also be used to operate as a spy.

      Over 10 days, the issue was resolved and Ai-Da was released to display her artistic skills at the exhibition.

      Despite her lifelike characteristics, Ai-Da is clearly not human. But what happens if advances in artificial intelligence technology render her robotic descendants indistinguishable from us? It's the stuff of many modern nightmares.

      "People fear robots, I understand that," said her British creator, Aidan Meller. Moreover, he said the aim of his project was to highlight and warn of the abuse of technological development.

      Use of robotics in industry, defense and other sectors is already an established and accepted reality. However, the prospect of the emergence of ever more lifelike and intelligent robots can be profoundly unsettling.

      Even the developers of super-robots are aware of the natural fear of the machines one day taking over. Unveiling the prototype of a humanoid robot designed to carry out some of the boring and repetitive tasks currently undertaken by humans, Tesla CEO Elon Musk has said this would not pose a threat.

      "We're setting it such that it is at a mechanical level, at a physical level, that you can run away from it and most likely overpower it," he told an audience in August, although that "most likely" phrase might have left some of them less than totally reassured.

      Musk has predicted that AI will overtake humans by the middle of the current decade. As a self-declared pioneer of so-called ethical AI, Musk has warned against the potential negative impact of the new technology. He once warned that AI might become "an immortal dictator from which we would never escape".

      Many people will accept the benefits of current robot technology as an extension of the mechanical age. Machines that harvest crops, assemble products or vacuum floors provide tangible benefits, except perhaps to those low-paid workers whose jobs they are replacing.

      In October, an Egyptian engineer revealed that he had developed an AI robot that could extract drinkable water from thin air, while an AI robot being rolled out in the agricultural sector can already distinguish between 50 tomato varieties and will only get better the more it practices.

      So far so good. But what of robots that might copy other human characteristics such as empathy? Researchers at Columbia University in New York City say they have developed a robot that displays glimmers of empathy by learning to predict the future behavior of a robot partner.

      Robot companions for the sick and elderly are being developed in the health sector to replace the soothing presence of the traditional nurse.

      More worrisome, however, is the fact that some nations are developing robot armies, raising the science fiction specter of future robot wars. A developer in the United States has refined so-called robot dogs by arming them with sniper rifles, while the US Army recently staged a mock battle between robot enemies in what was described as a historic first.

      At a more benign level, a so-called natural language chat bot, Xiaoice, has just had 139 of its Chinese poems published, although not all its human reviewers were impressed by the results. Aimless and superficial, lacking the inner logic for emotional expression-this was the judgment of poet Yu Jian.

      Despite such reservations, there is little doubt that robotics and AI are already delivering significant benefits to humanity, not least in the medical sector, where the new technology has helped to save lives.

      Elsewhere, progress in AI promises to relieve humans of the burden of sometimes backbreaking work that might just as well be done by a thinking machine.

      That, according to the tech pioneers, will free us up to undertake more rewarding tasks geared toward personal and societal development rather than wasting our days on the boringly routine. With thinking robots determining our big decisions, there might be more time to sit back and relax.

      The problem is that if the likes of Ai-Da take over our art and Xiaoice delivers our poetry, and robots take responsibility for the care of our ailing relatives, what exactly will there be left for us to do?

      Harvey Morris is a senior media consultant for China Daily UK.