Sunday, September 18, 2022

Erie Zoo's Amur tiger, Victor, dies. Second animal death in 6 days


Greg Wohlford, Erie Times-News

Viktor, a 17-year-old Amur tiger at the Erie Zoo, died Saturday morning.

Emily Smicker, marketing and event coordinator for the Erie Zoological Society, said Viktor underwent a procedure on Tuesday to remedy an ingrown claw, perform a general health exam and obtain diagnostics related to mild symptoms of lethargy and lack of appetite.

More: Nala, the African lion dubbed Queen of the Erie Zoo, was euthanized at age 24

Erie Zoo Head Veterinarian Jenna Epstein said the medical procedure was risky but necessary.

"As a geriatric animal, we had to weigh the risk of sedating Viktor," Epstein said in a news release. "But ultimately we determined it was best for his well-being and comfort to move forward with the procedure. Despite our best efforts, he ultimately succumbed to what appears to be a preexisting condition."

Epstein said Viktor recently exhibited mild but unusual behaviors including lethargy and discolored urine. She said further tests and a necropsy would be conducted to determine the cause of death.

According to the Association of Zoos and Aquariums species survival statistics, the median life expectancy for male Amur tigers is 16 years. Viktor, at age 17, spent six years at the Erie Zoo. He was nicknamed "Mr. Floofy" by his caretakers because of his fluffy coat and affectionate personality.

The death follows the loss of Nala, the oldest of three lions at the zoo, on Monday when zoo staff made the decision to euthanize the animal.

"This has been a very challenging time for our zoo family with the passing of both our elderly lioness and now Viktor, especially so close together," said Roo Kojancie, chief operations officer.

More: Erie Zoo's beloved orangutan Joe dies after battling illness

This article originally appeared on Erie Times-News: Viktor, Erie Zoo Amur tiger. Death 2nd to die in week, after Nala lion

Nanoracks cut a piece of metal in space for the first time



Aria Alamalhodaei
Fri, September 16, 2022 

Nanoracks just made space construction and manufacturing history with the first demonstration of cutting metal in orbit. The technique could be critical for the next generation of large-scale space stations and even lunar habitats.

The experiment was performed back in May by Nanoracks and its parent company Voyager Space, after getting to orbit aboard the SpaceX Transporter 5 launch. The company only recently released additional details on Friday.

The goal of Outpost Mars Demo-1 mission was to cut a piece of corrosion-resistant metal, similar to the outer shell of United Launch Alliance’s Vulcan Centaur and common in space debris, using a technique called friction milling.

Welding and metal-cutting is a messy operation on Earth, but all of that dust and debris simply falls to the ground. However, “when you're in space, in the vacuum, it doesn't really do that. It doesn't just float away necessarily either,” Marshall Smith, Nanoracks’ senior VP of space systems, explained to TechCrunch back in May. “What you want to do is to contain this debris, not necessarily because it might be a micrometeorites issue, which it could be as well, but mostly because you want to keep your work environment clean.”

The entire demonstration lasted around one minute. The main goal — to cut a single small sample of the steel — was successfully completed. Inside the spacecraft were two additional samples to cut as a “reach goal,” and Nanoracks is investigating why they weren’t cut as well.

It was conducted in partnership with Maxar Technologies, who developed the robotic arm that executed the cut. That arm used a commercially available friction milling end effector, and the entire structure was contained in the Outpost spacecraft to ensure that no debris escaped. Indeed, one of the main goals of the demonstration was to produce no debris — and it worked.

Nanoracks used a type of metal similar to an upper stage of a rocket precisely because the company’s long-term goal is to modify used upper stages and convert them into orbital platforms, or what it calls “outposts.”

“We are constantly launching upper stages,” Smith said. “Imagine long term, you could go collect one. two, three, four of these and push them around so that they're in contact with each other and you can join them together and create large structures that can be used for a number of options.”

According to Smith, this is just the beginning. In the future, Nanoracks will attempt cuts on a larger scale in its quest to eventually conduct larger construction efforts.

In addition to the Outpost program, Nanoracks and Voyager have partnered with Lockheed Martin to develop a commercial space station, which the group is calling Starlab. NASA selected the group to further develop its plans under the agency’s Commercial low Earth orbit Destinations program, for a contract valued at $160 million. Blue Origin and Northrop Grumman were also awarded contracts.
STATEHOOD OR INDEPENDENCE
First Hit by Privatization, Puerto Rico in 'Total Blackout' as Fiona Makes Landfall

First Hurricane Maria devastated the island in 2017. Then the power grid was privatized in 2020. Now this.

LUMA—a joint venture by Canada-based ATCO and Houston-based Quanta Services. 


NOAA satellite imagery as Hurricane Fiona, a Category 1 storm with sustained windspeeds of 85 mph, made landfall in Puerto Rico on Sunday, September 18, 2022. (Image: Satellite/NOAA)

JON QUEALLY
September 18, 2022

A "total blackout" was reported on the island of Puerto Rico on Sunday as heavy rainfall and powerful winds pounded the island before Hurricane Fiona made landfall just before 4:00 pm local time.

Weather forecasters said the rainfall is likely to produce devastating landslides and severe flooding, with up to 25 inches (64 cm) expected in some areas. A Category 1 storm, with sustained winds of 85 mph, Fiona is nowhere near as powerful as Hurricane Maria which slammed the island in 2017, nearly five years to the day, as a Category 4 monster.

It wasn't lost on many that the nation's sole power utility company, LUMA—granted control of the territory's electricity system in a 2020 privatization deal in the wake of Maria's devastation—is the institution now in charge as the entire island has lost power in the face of Fiona.



In July, major protests were organized by Puerto Ricans opposed to LUMA—a joint venture by Canada-based ATCO and Houston-based Quanta Services. 

Citing increased outages, unreliable service, and higher bills, opponents demanded the 15-year contract with the company be canceled.

As Reuters reported in July, "Power rates have gone up five times since LUMA began operating Puerto Rico's transmission and distribution system on June 1, 2020. The last rate hike, which took effect at the start of July, pushed rates up by 17.1%."

Earlier this month, protests again were again on display in San Juan and elsewhere condemning LUMA.

In a statement on its website Sunday, LUMA said "full power restoration could take several days" and asked for "support and patience" from its customers.

Carmen Yulín Cruz, who was the progressive mayor of San Juan when Maria hit the island in 2017, offered a sobering comment in response to news of the blackout:

"Puerto Rico is 100% without electrical power," she tweeted. "The cycle of death begins."

The National Hurricane Center warned Sunday that Fiona's rains "will produce life-threatening and catastrophic flash flooding and urban flooding across Puerto Rico and the eastern Dominican Republic, along with mudslides and landslides in areas of higher terrain."

The NHC said Fiona was likely to continue intensifying in power after it moves on from Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic, moving North.


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https://selforganizedseminar.files.wordpress.com/2011/07/naomi-klein-the-shock-doctrine.pdf

Shocking Times: The Rise of the Disaster Capitalism Complex. 14. Shock Therapy in the U.S.A.: The Homeland Security Bubble 283.


https://www.versobooks.com/books/2254-disaster-capitalism

Disaster has become big business. Best-selling journalist Antony Loewenstein travels across Afghanistan, Pakistan, Haiti, Papua New Guinea, ...

https://harpers.org/archive/2007/10/disaster-capitalism

Disaster Capitalism. Adjust. Share. The new economy of catastrophe. by Naomi Klein,. This article is only available as a PDF to subscribers. Download PDF ...

HUMAN TRAFFICKING GOP STYLE
Migrants sent to Martha's Vineyard say they were duped by a woman named 'Perla' who paid them $200 and promised a better life in Massachusetts



Azmi Haroun
Fri, September 16, 2022 


Migrants who were flown to Martha's Vineyard with little information say that they were conned.


According to Reuters, some of the migrants aboard the flights said a woman paid them $200 to go.


The woman did not give her last name and approached migrants outside a San Antonio shelter.

Some of the migrants who red state governors flew to Martha's Vineyard for political purposes said that they were duped by a woman who approached them outside of a San Antonio shelter and paid them to board an airplane with no information as to where it was headed.

On Wednesday, 50 undocumented migrants arrived on the island of Martha's Vineyard after the governors of Florida and Texas sent them to Massachusetts in a highly antagonized move. The Venezuelan and Colombian migrants boarded two planes in San Antonio, which stopped in Florida on their way to the east coast, and which the Florida governor confirmed that his administration paid for and chartered.

Some of the migrants told Reuters that a woman named "Perla" approached them, paid them $200, and helped put them up in a hotel the night before she led them to the chartered flights with promises of a better life.

Luis, a Venezuelan migrant who was approached by the woman after arriving in San Antonio, said that she also made them sign a liability waiver and did not share her last name.

"We are scared," Luis told Reuters, adding that the group felt like they were conned. "I hope they give us help."

Others told Reuters that they were promised jobs and help resettling once they arrived, but were not told where they were headed.

A spokesperson for DeSantis did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.

Florida has siphoned $12 million in public funds to coordinate the migrant flights, according to Reuters.

DeSantis' spokesperson told Fox News Digital on Thursday that the trips were related to Florida's "relocation program to transport illegal immigrants to sanctuary destinations," a similar policy that Abbott has pushed since April, busing migrants from Texas to blue states.

On Friday, Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker said that the migrants would be relocated to the Joint Base Cape Cod military base after it was determined that there were no adequate services on the island.

"The Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency (MEMA) is coordinating efforts among state and local officials to ensure access to food, shelter and essential services for these men, women and children," the statement said. "Governor Charlie Baker also plans to activate up to 125 members of the Massachusetts National Guard as part of this relief effort."


The migrants who crossed the southern U.S. border and were later flown in two planeloads to Martha’s Vineyard were given falsified addresses corresponding to “random homeless shelters” for their official paperwork, according to a Boston immigration attorney.

Rachel Self suggested Friday that this was done purposefully by Department of Homeland Security officials to make it more difficult for the migrants to stay in the country.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) took credit for arranging and funding the flights, which landed Wednesday afternoon at the wealthy island community off the coast of Massachusetts. He aimed to make a point about the surge in migration along the border with Mexico, even though his state does not abut the country.

The Miami Herald reported that Self is assisting with the migrants’ cases.

She told reporters that the group of 50 men, women and children ― largely from Venezuela ― were processed by DHS agents before leaving San Antonio.

Some of the migrants had specifically told the DHS agents that they had no mailing address in the United States, Self said.

They had allegedly been instructed to notify U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services ― the wrong agency ― once they changed addresses.

“This is especially troubling, as anyone with even the most basic understanding of the immigration proceedings knows that USCIS was not the agency with whom the migrants would have to record their addresses,” Self said during a press conference.

An underage migrant (center) is loaded onto a bus to be transported to Martha's Vineyard with dozens of other undocumented immigrants on Friday, Sept. 16. (Photo: Dominic Chavez for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

An underage migrant (center) is loaded onto a bus to be transported to Martha's Vineyard with dozens of other undocumented immigrants on Friday, Sept. 16. (Photo: Dominic Chavez for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

Some of the migrants told NPR that a woman named Perla said they could expect work papers after being flown to Massachusetts. But no one was waiting for them, and the group ended up walking around 2 miles to a community center to ask for help, according to Cape Cod Times, a local newspaper.

They were welcomed by islanders and given shelter, cell phones and other supplies, per The Washington Post.

The group was voluntarily relocated Friday to a military base on the mainland that is better equipped to house and feed people for weeks at a time, Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker (R) said.

Migrants reportedly put on a plane from Texas to Sacramento not knowing who purchased the tickets and had to walk barefoot from California airport to a local charity

Migrants wait to be processed by Border Patrol agents near the end of a border wall Tuesday, Aug. 23, 2022, near Yuma, Arizona.(AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
  • A group of migrants was reportedly flown for free to Sacramento from Texas.

  • They are unsure who purchased the tickets for them, KCRA reported.

  • Three men received assistance from a local advocacy group that helped them with food and shelter.

A group of migrants were reportedly flown to northern California from Texas, and are not clear who purchased their tickets — leaving many unanswered questions, per local news.

Eight people from Venezeula arrived in Sacramento on two different flights, KCRA reported on Saturday. Three of them had to walk barefoot from the Sacramento International Airport to a local charity after arriving in the city.

According to CBS News, the group was given paperwork directing them to a shelter that turned out to be an office building for Catholic Charities, which provides social services to people in need.

The men were eventually connected to a city food bank, which contacted NorCal Resist, a local grassroots advocacy group, CBS News reported.

A volunteer for the organization, Goya Gutierrez, picked them up and provided food and accommodations at a local hotel, according to KCRA.

One of the men, who was not named in the report, said that they had left their home country about 45 days before and was transported to a Migrant Resource Center in San Antonio, Texas.

Once there, the man claimed that someone offered them free plane tickets to Sacramento and they couldn't choose their desired destination, according to the report.

"They were really confused. Two of them said they wanted to go to Utah and one wanted to go to Manhattan and somehow they ended up in Sacramento," Gutierrez told KCRA, adding that they have no family in Sacramento.

This comes as GOP-led states are increasing the transport of migrants to sanctuary cities in response to President Joe Biden's border policies.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis recently flew dozens of migrants to Martha's Vineyard in Massachusetts. And Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has been sending busloads of migrants to other major cities across the country, including Washington, D.C. Their actions have been met with extreme backlash from Democratic leaders, including California Gov. Gavin Newsom.


Hillary Clinton condemned migrants 

being flown to Martha's Vineyard as 

being 'literally human trafficking'

Alia Shoaib

Sat, September 17, 2022 

Hillary Clinton speaks during the New York Democratic Convention

 at the Sheraton in Midtown Manhattan on Feb. 17, 2022.

Barry Williams/New York Daily News

  • Hillary Clinton said sending migrants to Martha's Vineyard is "literally human trafficking."

  • Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis sent 50 undocumented migrants to the Massachusetts island on plants.

  • Republican lawmakers are sending migrants to blue cities after blaming Democratic policies for a rise in migration.

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton condemned sending planeloads of migrants to Martha's Vineyard in Massachusetts.

They 50 migrants arrived in two planes, on Tuesday, seemingly at the direction of Florida's Republican governor, Ron DeSantis — unwittingly becoming pawns in a political game over U.S. immigration policy. 

"Some politicians would rather not only have an issue but exacerbate it to the extent of literally human trafficking," Clinton said while appearing on MSNBC's Morning Joe.

"I happen to believe still the majority of Americans are good-hearted and generous, and when people end up on their doorstep in need, they're going to respond. They'll feed them and house them, and the kids in the AP Spanish class will be let out of high school so they can go and translate."

Gov. DeSantis took credit for chartering planes to transport the undocumented migrants to the island in Massachusetts on Wednesday in an apparent bid to force authorities in another state to take responsibility for them. The migrants were primarily from Venezuela.

Martha's Vineyard is an exclusive vacation destination where former President Barack Obama has a holiday home, and Bill and Hillary Clinton often visit.

Taryn Fenske, DeSantis' communications director, told Fox News Digital that the move was part of Florida's "relocation program to transport illegal immigrants to sanctuary destinations."

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has similarly implemented a policy to send migrants from Texas to blue states.

Other Democratic politicians also condemned the Martha's Vineyard stunt, with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez saying it amounted to "crimes against humanity on refugees."

Martha's Vineyard residents appeared to pull together to welcome the migrants by quickly coordinating shelter, meals, and healthcare.

Massachusetts State Senator Julian Cyr told Martha's Vineyard Times that the move was "deeply disgusting."

"This is a cruel ruse that manipulates families seeking a better life," he said, describing them as "fundamentally racist tactics."

EPA official calls designating PFAS as hazardous substances 'huge step'

Jeff McMenemy, Portsmouth Herald 


Engineer Rob Singer gives a tour of the Airfield Interim Mitigation System (AIMS) at the site of the former Pease Air Force Base to Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-New Hampshire, and EPA Region 1 Administrator David Cash Friday, Sept. 16, 2022.

PORTSMOUTH — An EPA official called the agency’s efforts to designate two of the most common PFAS chemicals as hazardous substances under the Superfund law “a huge step.”

David Cash, EPA’s administrator for Region 1, said the designation of PFOS and PFOA as hazardous substances means “everywhere in the country is now going to respond the way you guys have responded in the last 10 years here.”

His comments came after he and U.S. Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-New Hampshire, toured the Airfield Interim Mitigation System (AIMS) at the Pease International Tradeport, which is the former home of the Pease Air Force Base, a site of PFAS water contamination that affected thousands, leading to the shutdown of a city well.

Engineer Rob Singer gives a tour of the Airfield Interim Mitigation System (AIMS) at the site of the former Pease Air Force Base to Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-New Hampshire, and EPA Region 1 Administrator David Cash Friday, Sept. 16, 2022.
Engineer Rob Singer gives a tour of the Airfield Interim Mitigation System (AIMS) at the site of the former Pease Air Force Base to Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-New Hampshire, and EPA Region 1 Administrator David Cash Friday, Sept. 16, 2022.

“You knew PFAS was a problem here, you knew it was something that had to be addressed in the way that you approached it,” Cash said during a press conference Friday. “What this allows is municipalities, states, private sector to pull the trigger, which then opens up the door to Superfund funding … community engagement, and it requires remedial action.”

More: Coakley Landfill Group hasn't cleaned up Berry's Brook 3 years after NH law required it

The EPA is seeking the designation under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA), which is better known as Superfund.

“When you think Superfund, you think PCBs, or you think lead, now PFAS is part of that family, that scary family,” Cash said. “But it’s a family that opens up federal funding and federal expertise.”

PFAS contamination at Pease

Clean water advocate Andrea Amico, co-founder of Testing at Pease, tours the Airfield Interim Mitigation System at Pease Friday, Sept. 16, 2022.
Clean water advocate Andrea Amico, co-founder of Testing at Pease, tours the Airfield Interim Mitigation System at Pease Friday, Sept. 16, 2022.

Cash and Shaheen were joined on Friday's tour by several city officials, including Portsmouth Mayor Deaglan McEachern and City Manager Karen Conard, where they learned about the pump and treatment system that is installed around the Haven well to remove water from the aquifer, treat it and reinject it into the aquifer.

NH Seacoast Greenway coming in 2023: Here's vision for Maine-Florida trail's local section

Thousands of people – including children and infants attending two day care facilities at the former Pease Air Force Base – were exposed to PFAS chemicals in the Haven well until it was shut down by the city in 2014.

The water was contaminated by firefighting foam used at the former Pease Air Force Base.

PFAS are man-made chemicals used in products worldwide since the 1950s, including firefighting foam, non-stick cookware and water-repellent fabrics. They also have a range of applications in the aerospace, aviation, automotive and electronics industries, among others.

In addition to being a suspected carcinogen, PFAS exposure can harm childhood development, increase cholesterol levels, hurt the immune system and interfere with human hormones, according to the Agency For Toxic Substances and Disease Registry.

Shaheen, Amico praise action

Shaheen, on Friday, said she was “glad the Biden administration is making this a real priority” and added she was “especially heartened by their proposal to designate PFOA and PFOS as hazardous substances under the law, which would trigger meaningful action to get these substances out of our communities.”

In Portsmouth: Historic downtown mansion getting big upgrade. Here's what it will look like.

Shaheen’s legislation created the first-ever national study on the health effects of exposure to PFAS in drinking water, which also involves a pilot health study at Pease.

Andrea Amico, the co-founder of community group Testing For Pease, said the hazardous substances designation is “a long overdue step that will help communities be able to hold polluters accountable.”

“As I mentioned, we’re very fortunate here, the Air Force has stepped up and paid for all the remediation efforts and we’re very fortunate for that,” Amico said. “In my work as a national advocate I can tell you that it’s not happening at many other sites across the country.”

“And there’s many communities suffering just as badly as us with no treatment facility, with no health studies, with no blood testing and so this hazardous substance designation will have real good consequences for communities across the country who need to hold polluters accountable,” Amico added.

MY KIND OF FESTIVAL

'Immoral' Uganda music festival draws sold-out crowds

Grace MATSIKO and Tina SMOLE

Sat, September 17, 2022 

As thousands of revellers grooved to the sounds of Uganda's sold-out Nyege Nyege music festival on the banks of the Nile, relieved organisers said an attempted "immorality" ban had only served to boost sales.

A public outcry forced Ugandan authorities to reverse the ban -- imposed over claims that the four-day extravaganza promoted sex, homosexuality and drug use -- but not before news of the prohibition made international headlines.

Some of the partygoers attending the festival, which brings together artists from across Africa, told AFP they had only heard about the event that ends on Sunday thanks to the ban announced earlier this month.

"I learnt about the festival when the government of Uganda banned it on claims it was promoting immorality", British engineer David Kempson told AFP.

The 31-year-old Londoner had never been to Africa but the news prompted him to book a flight and make his way to Uganda's scenic Itanda Falls, where he joined 12,000 revellers -- including 5,000 foreign tourists.

"It is my first time in Africa. I didn't expect this much, the huge fan presence, the greenery, the waterfalls and hospitality," he said.

It was the second ban slapped on the festival since 2018, when Uganda's former ethics minister Simon Lokodo, an outspoken homophobe, called the event an orgy of homosexuality, nudity and drugs akin to "devil worship".

Then too the ban failed to hold, following a social media outcry.

But this time, the prohibition proved to be an inadvertent publicity bonanza for the festival, organisers said.

"We are headed for a much bigger number (that) we never anticipated," the event's co-founder Arlen Dilsizian told AFP, referring to ticket sales.

The ban "increased vigour and interest in the festival", drawing visitors from the United States, China, Europe and the Middle East, he said.

- 'No evidence of orgies' -

The festival, which moved to a new, larger outdoor venue this year, began in 2015 but had been on a pandemic-induced hiatus since 2020.

Nyege Nyege means an irresistible urge to dance in the local Luganda language, but it can have a sexual connotation in other languages in the region.

Although Dilzanian insisted that "no evidence of sex orgies have been adduced by anybody making the allegations", the festival was held under tight security, following a government directive against "contraband, narcotic drugs, vulgar language, songs, expressions and gestures".

Information Minister Chris Baryomunsi earlier warned that if there were serious breaches such as "sex orgies and nudity", police would halt the event and clear the site.

Despite the presence of a police van outfitted with sensor cameras and remote-controlled drones, fans were unperturbed, determined to savour the buzz and the chance to see celebrated musicians such as 80-year old Cameroonian Eko Roosevelt.

"When I come for Nyege Nyege, I become free, I meet people from all over Africa and beyond, we laugh and dance, stress goes away," Pamela Nyinabangi, a 27-year-old beauty salon owner from the capital Kampala, told AFP.

Another attendee, Kenyan businessman Isaac Odwor, told AFP the festival was "the only event where African music is given prominence and we get to interact with the musicians and artists."

- 'One of a kind' -

This year's performance is taking place against the backdrop of an economic crisis as the prices of key commodities from fuel to food rise in the wake of the war in Ukraine.

From street food hawkers to makers of handmade jewelry, many Ugandans hoped the festival would lift their fortunes as tourists thronged the premises, listening to music, taking a dip in the Nile or going white water rafting.

After holding Nyege Nyege's first international edition in Paris earlier this year, organisers plan to take it to Cameroon next year.

"It is one of a kind festival," British visitor Tom Uragallo told AFP.

"You can go for a swim in the Nile in the morning and then dance the night away till the early hours."

gm/amu/yad