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"Time rotates..."

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Orioles game

The Orioles play the White Sox in an empty stadium at Oriole Park: photo  by Jon Meoli/Baltimore Sun, 29 April 2015

Time Rotates But There Is Only One Season

File:Coriolis effect16.gif

Coriolis effect (schematic representation of atmospheric inertial oscillation): image by Cleon Teunissen, 2005

The October light falls cold, and number 53
Steps across the infield toward his destiny.

The April light is sullen, and number 54
Walks to the mound once more. Now he knows the score.

Out beyond the stars the universe watches,
Counting beats of strange hearts between pitches.

File:Moving target.gif

Moving target (Coriolis effect): image by Cleon Teunissen, 2005

 
Unprecedented? The Orioles play the White Sox at an empty Camden Yards: photo by Shannon Stapleton/Reuters via the Guardian, 29 April 2015


A general view of Oriole Park at Camden Yards during the top of the first inning of the game between Chicago White Sox and Baltimore Orioles. Fans were not allowed to attend the game due to the current state of unrest in Baltimore
: photo by Tommy Gilligan/USA Today Sports via the Guardian, 29 April 2015


The attendance board in the press room notes the zero attendance: photo by Greg Fiume via the Guardian, 29 April 2015


A bar remains closed at an empty Oriole Park:
photo by Patrick Smith via the Guardian, 29 April 2015


Fans cram the balconies of a nearby hotel for a glimpse of the game:
photo by Gail Burton/AP via the Guardian, 29 April 2015


Chicago White Sox catcher Tyler Flowers sits in the dugout under rows of empty seats:
photo by Gail Burton/AP via the Guardian, 29 April 2015


A bar at the stadium is empty but the television still relays the action on the field: photo by Shannon Stapleton/Reuters via the Guardian, 29 April 2015


The ticket booths remain shuttered:
photo by Shannon Stapleton/Reuters via the Guardian, 29 April 2015


Alexei Ramirez of the Chicago White Sox sits in the stands before the game:
photo by Patrick Smith via the Guardian, 29 April 2015


Rows of seats remain empty at the stadium: photo by John Taggart/EPA via the Guardian, 29 April 2015


Brendan Hurson, of Baltimore, holds a sign reminding people of Freddie Gray as fans gather at the gates: photo by Matt Rourke/AP via the Guardian, 29 April 2015


 
Veil Nebula Detail (IC 340). This is a supernova remnant in the constellation Cygnus approximately 1,470 light years away. It formed from the debris of an star that exploded over 5,000 years ago: photo byJ P Metsävainio via The Guardian, 18 September 2014

Rudolph Jackson

""I'm not saying Fred was an angel; whatever he did is now in the past. But the police already have made up their minds about who we are," said Rudolph Jackson, 51. "They figure every black person with their pants hanging down is a suspect, and they stop them without probable cause.": photo by Barbara Haddock Taylor/Baltimore Sun, 21 April 2015
 
Raheem Gaither
"He was so funny. Any time you're looking for a laugh, you're going straight to Freddie," Raheem Gaither said. "We're all from the same neighborhood. All of us here are family.": photo by Barbara Haddock Taylor/Baltimore Sun, 21 April 2015

Alethea Booze

Alethea Booze, who lives near the scene where Freddie Gray was taken into police custody. She says she heard Mr. Gray's screams that Sunday morning.: photo by Barbara Haddock Taylor/Baltimore Sun, 21 April 2015

Ismail Wilson
This is Ismail Wilson, 21, who says he was a friend of Freddie Gray.: photo by Barbara Haddock Taylor/Baltimore Sun, 21 April 2015

Danielle Holloway
Danielle Holloway, 30, said she knew Gray as a "kindhearted" neighborhood guy who was "the life of the party.": photo by Barbara Haddock Taylor/Baltimore Sun, 21 April 2015

Darryl McCallum
Darryl McCallum said Gray "was a likeable guy. He wasn't a knucklehead." McCallum, 39, stays with his aunt next door to the home where Gray lived. "When I would see Freddie, he was always respectful, expecially to the older women. He always had a smile on his face.": photo by Algerina Perna/Baltimore Sun, 21 April 2015

Gilmor Homes neighborhood

A view of two buildings on Mount Street in the Gilmor Homes neighborhood, where many residents knew Freddie Gray: photo by Barbara Haddock Taylor/Baltimore Sun, 21 April 2015

Baltimore protests

The Family of Freddie Gray, who died after a fatal injury in police custody, pray inside a church after a news conference in Baltimore on Monday: John Taggart / EPA via Los Angeles Times, 27 April 2015

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Baltimore. #Freddie Gray
: image via ShordeeDooWhop @Nettaaaaaaa, 29 April 2015

Baltimore protests

Two protesters sit in front of riot police minutes before a citywide curfew took effect: photo by Andrew Burton via Los Angeles Times, 29 April 2015

Baltimore protests

A man stands in front of a line of police officers in riot gear ahead of a 10 p.m. curfew on Tuesday in Baltimore: photo by David Goldman / Associated Press via Los Angeles Times, 29 April 2015
 
After the Baltimore riot

Jayden Thorpe, 5, came with his mother to watch what was happening at West North and Pennsylvania avenues in Baltimore: photo by Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times, 29 April 2015

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And yea though I walk through the valley of the shadow... (Photo by Carolyn Cole) #Baltimore. #Freddie Gray: image via Unvirtuous Abbey @Unvirtuous Abbey, 29 April 2015

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"Black youth are not thugs." #Baltimore. #Freddie Gray: image via Kevin Rector @RectorSun, 29 April 2015

March

Freddie Gray protesters march along Calvert Street near the intersection with Centre Street in Baltimore: photo by Robert K. Hamilton / Baltimore Sun, 29 April 2015

Working

Hosa Anthony, who lives near Penn North station, cleans up garbage left on the sidewalk outside the Arch Social Club at about 10:45 p.m. tonight after most protesters have left the area. Tonight is the second night of the curfew that has been in effect because of wide spread riots and looting on last Saturday and Monday resulting from Freddie Gray protests: photo by Kenneth K. Lam / Baltimore Sun, 29 April 2015

Curfew
A police armoured vehicle drives past the intersection of North and Pennsylvania avenues with its back door open. The scene at North and Pennsylvania Avenues has been quiet on the second night since the 10 p.m. curfew been in effect because of wide spread riots and looting on last Saturday and Monday resulting from Freddie Gray protests: photo by Kenneth K. Lam / Baltimore Sun, 29 April 2015

Empty Camden Yards

Orioles players, coaches and manager stand for the national anthem. The Orioles played the Chicago White Sox to an empty Oriole Park at Camden Yards on Wednesday
: photo by Kenneth K. Lam/Baltimore Sun, 29 April 2015

Empty Camden Yards
The stands are seen empty before the Baltimore Orioles play the Chicago White Sox at Oriole Park at Camden Yards: photo by Patrick Smith via Baltimore Sun, 29 April 2015

Empty Camden Yards
 
Orioles center fielder Adam Jones runs to second base on a double in the seventh inning. The Orioles defeated the Chicago White Sox in an empty Oriole Park at Camden Yards on Wednesday: photo by Kenneth K. Lam / Baltimore Sun, 29 April 2015



NGC 3718 is found in the constellation of Ursa Major and known as a peculiar barred spiral galaxy. Gravitational interactions with its near neighbour NGC 3729 (the spiral galaxy below and to the left) are the probable reason for the galaxy’s warped spiral arm
: photo by Mark Hanson,
via The Guardian, 18 September 2014


Messier 81 (or Bode’s Galaxy) is a spiral galaxy in the constellation Ursa Major. The galaxy, similar to our own Milky Way, is 11.6 million light-years distant but Hubble’s view is so sharp it can resolve individual stars in the galaxy – along with open star clusters,
 globular star clusters, and even glowing regions of fluorescent gas: photo by NASA/ESA via The Observer, 28 February 2015


The Sombrero Galaxy. The galaxy, seen edge on, is made up of a brilliant white core encircled by a thick line of dust and is 50,000 light-years in diameter and 28m light years from Earth. Using Hubble observations, astronomers calculate that there is a supermassive black hole, with a mass one billion times the sun’s, at its core
: photo by NASA/ESA via The Observer, 28 February 2015

O-o-h Child

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Protesters march through the streets in support of Maryland state attorney Marilyn Mosby’s announcement that charges would be filed against Baltimore police officers in the death of Freddie Gray. Gray died in police custody after being arrested on 12 April
: photo by Andrew Burton via The Guardian, 2 May 2015

Police ignored an unresponsive Freddie Gray on wagon's floor: prosecutor: Medic wasn’t called until police arrived at the station to find Gray was ‘no longer breathing at all’, says Baltimore state’s attorney Marilyn Mosby: Jon Swaine in New York for The Guardian, 2 May 2015

Police officers failed to obtain medical care for Freddie Gray even when they found him unresponsive on the floor of their van after he had repeatedly appealed for help, 
Baltimore’s most senior prosecutor said on Friday.

In announcing criminal charges for the six officers involved in Gray’s arrest, state’s attorney Marilyn Mosby gave the most detailed account so far of the deadly 45 minutes after Gray was captured by officers on the streets of west Baltimore in an illegal arrest.

“Mr Gray suffered a severe and critical neck injury as a result of being handcuffed, shackled by his feet and unrestrained inside of the Baltimore police department wagon,” Mosby said at a press conference on Friday morning.

Gray was arrested on the morning of 12 April after catching the eye of Lieutenant Brian Rice and running away. Mosby on Friday declared the arrest by Rice, Officer Garrett Miller and Officer Edward Nero an illegal one, explaining that a knife found in Gray’s pocket, which he was charged with carrying, was in fact legal under Maryland law.

Mosby said that despite complaining he could not breathe and needed an asthma inhaler at 8.42am, three minutes into his arrest, Gray was ignored and loaded into the van. He had already been pinned down by Nero and placed in a so-called “leg lace” by Miller.

Gray was not seatbelted in the vehicle as is required by Baltimore police rules. Several prisoners in the past have been seriously injured by so-called “rough rides”.

The first stop made by Officer Caesar Goodson, the van’s driver, was four minutes later at Mount and Baker streets. Gray had his legs shackled while the arresting officers completed paperwork. He was then reloaded into the van by Rice, Miller and Nero “on his stomach, headfirst on to the floor”, again without being seatbelted, said Mosby.

About 10 minutes after this, Goodson’s van made a second stop outside a grocery shop at Fremont Avenue and Mosher Street, whose CCTV cameras captured footage of the vehicle. 
The existence of this stop was not disclosed by police until Thursday 30 April.

After getting out and checking on Gray, Goodson returned to the driver’s seat and resumed his journey, according to the prosecutor. Gray’s health and responsiveness at this point is not clear, apparently because Goodson has declined to cooperate with investigators.

Goodson radioed for support from other officers to “check on the status of his prisoner”, said Mosby. He then made a third stop at Druid Hill Avenue and Dolphin Street at 8.59am. 

He and Officer William Porter inspected Gray. Mosby said Porter asked the 25-year-old if he needed medical care, and Gray “indicated at least twice he was in need of a medic”.

Yet Goodson and Porter still did not request medical care, the state’s attorney said. 

Despite moving Gray from the floor of the van to the bench, Porter once again failed to restrain Gray with a seatbelt. And despite Gray’s obvious distress, Goodson chose -- “in a grossly negligent manner,” said Mosby -- to respond to a separate arrest nearby.

The van made a fourth stop to collect the second prisoner, Donta Allen, near the intersection of North Avenue and Pennsylvania Avenue. A CVS pharmacy at this spot was badly burned during rioting on Monday night. Protesters subsequently made the intersection their base in the following days.

At the second arrest site, Goodson and Porter again inspected Gray, this time with Sergeant Alicia White. They “observed Mr Gray unresponsive on the floor of the wagon”, yet did not act. White “spoke to the back of Mr Gray’s head” and when he did not respond “she did nothing further despite the fact that she was advised that he needed a medic,” said Mosby.

“She made no effort to look or assess or determine his condition,” said Mosby. Gray, laid out on the floor of the wagon and not answering, was ignored.

“Despite Mr Gray’s seriously deteriorating medical condition, no medical assistance was rendered or summoned for Mr Gray at that time by any officer,” said Mosby. He was once again not restrained with a seatbelt in the back of the van as Goodson made the last leg of his journey to the police department’s western district headquarters.

When the van finally arrived at the police station at 9.24am, White and officer Zachary Novak attempted to remove Gray only to find he was “no longer breathing at all”, Mosby said on Friday. Medics were finally called –- more than 40 minutes after Gray first complained of problems. He was found to be in cardiac arrest and severely injured.

Gray was taken to the University of Maryland’s Shock Trauma hospital and was operated on. However, he lapsed into a coma and never recovered. He was pronounced dead on the morning of 19 April, exactly a week after he caught the eye of Rice and fled. His family said his spine was “80% severed” at the neck and his voice box almost crushed.

The state medical examiner declared Gray’s death to be a homicide. “We have probable cause to file criminal charges,” said Mosby.


Twitter conservatives can't wrap their heads around Marilyn Mosby -- so they attack her instead

Marilyn Mosby: screen shot via Salon, 1 May 2015

Curfew

A group of demonstrators leave North and Pennsylvania Avenues before the 10 p.m. curfew. Hundreds of people gathered at North and Pennsylvania Avenues to celebrate that 6 Baltimore City police officers have been charged for the death of Freddie Gray
: photo by Kenneth K. Lam/Baltimore Sun, 1 May 2015

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My favorite shot of the day. protesters march up 14th St. in #Oakland toward Frank Ogawa Plaza @SFGate: image via Jessica Christian @jachristian, 1 May 2015
 
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Curious faces watch #mayday #oakland march at #CatTownOakland: image via Victoria B. @v_bogg, 1 May 2015

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If you build it we will burn it. 20th and telegraph #mayday #Oakland #mayday image via Charmaine Chua @ravellledfleeces, 1 May 2015

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#Oakland to Baltimore We won't take it anymore! #FreddieGray: image via Occupy Oakland @OccupyOakland 1 May 2015

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Fists raised at the #Oakland #Palestine Solidarity Mural: image via Dena Takruri @Dena 1 May 2015 Oakland, CA
 
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KFC got it tonight in Oakland. #FreddieGray: image via AJ Vicens @AJ Vicens, 1 May 2015
 

At this point, we now know that #FreddieGray was illegally assaulted & arrested without cause. Critically injured.: image via Shaun King @ShaunKing, 1 May 2015
 

At this point, we now know that #FreddieGray was illegally assaulted & arrested without cause. Critically injured.: image via Shaun King @ShaunKing, 1 May 2015
 

At this point, we now know that #FreddieGray was illegally assaulted & arrested without cause. Critically injured.: image via Shaun King @ShaunKing, 1 May 2015
 

At this point, we now know that #FreddieGray was illegally assaulted & arrested without cause. Critically injured.: image via Shaun King @ShaunKing, 1 May 2015
 
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New addition to #FreddieGray's memorial in Gilmor Homes #Baltimore: image via Colin Campbell @cmcampbell6, 1 May 2015
 
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 new art at #FreddieGray's shrine where he was arrested. image via Baynard Woods @baynardwoods, 1 May 2015
 
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This, the latest statement from the Baltimore City Police Union (@FOP3) re: the #FreddieGray officer arrests: image via deray mackesson @deray, 1 May 2015
 
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And here's why GoFundMe shut down the fundraiser for the officers who killed #FreddieGray (h/t @soniamoghe) officer arrests: image via deray mackesson @deray, 1 May 2015
 
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Thugs. The 6 @BaltimorePolice who killed #FreddieGray: image via deray mackesson @deray, 1 May 2015

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"Absolutely vital" truth of #FreddieGray's death uncovered - Barack Obama as officers charged: image via BBC Breaking News @BBCBreaking, 1 May 2015
 
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Yes last night was Bad it was Ugly :::: But today we Stand tall and proud WE WONT FOLD :::: #Baltimore | #DVNLLN"image via KnownNobodyBBC Breaking News @byDVNLN, 28 April 2015

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Yes last night was Bad it was Ugly :::: But today we Stand tall and proud WE WONT FOLD :::: #Baltimore | #DVNLLN: image via KnownNobodyBBC Breaking News @byDVNLN, 28 April 2015
 
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Yes last night was Bad it was Ugly :::: But today we Stand tall and proud WE WONT FOLD :::: #Baltimore | #DVNLLN: image via KnownNobodyBBC Breaking News @byDVNLN, 28 April 2015
 
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This how my city been looking :::: We are the forgotten ones ::: You wonder why we lashing out ::: #Weovebaltimoreimage via KnownNobody @byDVNLN, 29 April 2015

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[Time 11 May 2015 cover photo by Devin Allen]: image via KnownNobody @byDVNLN, 30 April 2015
 
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"To the youth of this city: Our time is now." #Baltimore's @amarilynmosbyesq / Pic @byDENLLN #BaltimoreUprising: image via MoveOn,orgVerifiedAccount @MoveOn, 1 May 2015
 
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 #Baltimore protesters rejoice over charges in '#FreddieGray's death: image via HuffPost BlackVoices @blackvoices, 1 May 2015


 #Here's the itemized list of charges against six #Baltimore police officers for the death of #FreddieGray's death: image via Breaking News @NewsOnTheMin, 1 May 2015
 

 #Here's the itemized list of charges against six #Baltimore police officers for the death of #FreddieGray's death: image via Breaking News @NewsOnTheMin, 1 May 2015
 
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"This is your best weapon against police"#KevinMoore, filmer of #FreddieGray explains need 4 CopWatch: image via Chuck_MODI@POPSspotSports, 1 May 2015

Kevin Moore, the ManWho Filmed Freddie Gray's Arrest: Colleen Moore, Vice News, 1 May 2015

The man who used his cellphone to record video of Freddie Gray's arrest by Baltimore police officers was himself arrested by officers after he left a protest on Thursday, in what he describes as a clear case of witness intimidation.

Baltimore police arrested Kevin Moore along with two friends of his from Ferguson, Missouri, who work with the group Copwatch, an activist organization that advocates for the filming of interactions with police. Police released Moore on Friday morning without charges being filed against him. His two companions, Chad Jackson and Tony White, remain in custody.

Moore told VICE News that, prior to his arrest, the police department's internal affairs division had already interviewed him for several hours about what he witnessed when Gray was arrested. His video showed the arresting officers lifting Gray from the ground where they had handcuffed him and carrying him limply to the back of a police van. Gray was later determined to have a severed spine and died a week after his arrest.

The Baltimore State's Attorney's Office announced on Friday that it had filed criminal charges against the six officers involved in Gray's arrest and subsequent death.

Moore described the circumstances of his arrest on Thursday to VICE News on video and in an off-camera interview.

"They waited until I got away from the protest and my people to protect me," he said.

Police arrested Moore, Jackson, and White after the three of them walked to Bruce Court, an area where Moore lives that is located not far from the site of the protest. The pretext for the arrest was not clear.

"They had assault weapons, rifles, they had everything -- their tank, two choppers," he recalled. "They took me to the Western District [police station], never gave me charging papers or anything."

"It's called witness intimidation," he added. "But if they hadn't let me go it would have been a whole lot of BS that they didn't want to deal with, so they decided it was in their best interest to let me go. But they still have my friends."

Chuck Modiano, a member of Copwatch, told VICE News that jail support informed the group that Jackson and White will probably be released sometime in the afternoon on Friday. To his knowledge, no formal charges are being filed. Modiano said that Copwatch did not know on what grounds police were holding the two activists.

The Baltimore Police Department did not answer inquiries from VICE News about their arrests.

"I have a feeling there's some foul play going on," Moore said, noting that the police did not give him even a citation.

Moore said he felt intimidated by the police when they earlier sought to question him about Gray's death, and particularly after they subsequently circulated his photo and personal information online, saying that he was wanted for questioning.

"They plastered my picture all over the internet hoping people would come forward and tell on me," Moore said. "I gave them that video... They asked me, like, 'You seem like you are a positive leader in your community.' And [I was like], 'Oh, so you know who I am?' I'm not hiding, I've never been hiding."

Moore praised the decision this morning by Baltimore State's Attorney Marilyn J. Mosby to press criminal charges on the officers involved in Gray's death, and said that he is determined to seek "justice for my man Freddie."


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"It's called witness intimidation" We spoke to the man who filmed #FreddieGray's arrest: image via VICE News @vicenews, 1 May 2015

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#BaltimoreUprising: Why everyone in #Baltimore hates the media: image via Anonymous @AnonyOps, 1 May 2015

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Yes last night was Bad it was Ugly :::: But today we Stand tall and proud WE WONT FOLD :::: #Baltimore | #DVNLLN: image via KnownNobodyBBC Breaking News @byDVNLN, 28 April 2015  

Lorenzo Thomas: Inauguration

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A man tries to board the last US helicopter to leave Saigon after the end of the Vietnam war in April 1975: photo by Hoang Van Cuong/Reuters via the Guardian, 20 April 2015


The land was there before us
Was the land. Then things
Began happening fast. Because
The bombs us have always work
Sometimes it makes me think
God must be one of us. Because
Us has saved the world. Us gave it
A particular set of regulations
Based on 1) undisputable acumen.
2) carnivorous fortunes, delicately
Referred to here as “bull market”
And (of course) other irrational factors
Deadly smoke thick over the icecaps,
Our man in Saigon   Lima   Tokyo   etc   etc

Lorenzo Thomas (1944-2005): Inauguration, from Chances are Few, 1979


irrational factors / thick over the ice caps


This undated photo courtesy of NASA shows Thwaites Glacier in Western Antarctica
: photo by AFP via The Guardian, 14 January 2015



Satellite view of a large iceberg separating from Antarctica’s Pine Island Glacier, where ice loss has doubled in speed over the last 20 years
: photo by MODIS/Aqua/NASA via the Guardian, 26 March 2015

The bombs us have always work

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US-led air strikes targeting #IS militants kill dozens of civilians in #Syria, activists say: image via BBC News (World) @ BBCWorld, 2 May 2015


1966: American F-102 interceptor fighters fly a dawn patrol: photo by Larry Burrows/Time & Life Pictures via The Guardian, 28 April 2015

delicately Referred to here as “bull market”

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Celebrating the Nasdaq all time highs with a nice Margaux from 2000 #BullMarket #DateNight: image via Jon Boorman @JBoorman, 25 April 2015

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And let's not forget the Dow, with Dow's 20 year Tawny. #BullMarket: image via Jon Boorman @JBoorman, 25 April 2015
 
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 #bullmarket even in this snow. #wallstreet #iloveny #nyse #newyork #travel #alphasigmarho : image via Kase Angela @KaseSwag1021, 20 March 2015

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Last Mon marked 6 yrs in a #BullMarket. Ask our advisors about preparing for what’s next.: image via Money Concepts @MoneyConcepts, 16 March 2015
 

It's time to #GrindNShine. The #BullMarket is near. Get prepared, for it is coming soon. #NuStudyingWays #ChompChomp: image via Ivan Law @Gator_Greatness, 24 March 2015


It's time to #GrindNShine. The #BullMarket is near. Get prepared, for it is coming soon. #NuStudyingWays #ChompChomp: image via Ivan Law @Gator_Greatness, 24 March 2015It's time to #GrindNShine. The #BullMarket is near. Get prepared, for it is coming soon. #NuStudyingWays #ChompChomp: image via Ivan Law @Gator_Greatness, 24 March 2015


It's time to #GrindNShine. The #BullMarket is near. Get prepared, for it is coming soon. #NuStudyingWays #ChompChomp: image via Ivan Law @Gator_Greatness, 24 March 2015


It's time to #GrindNShine. The #BullMarket is near. Get prepared, for it is coming soon. #NuStudyingWays #ChompChomp: image via Ivan Law @Gator_Greatness, 24 March 2015

God must be one of us


1962. A bayonet-wielding South Vietnamese paratrooper threatens a captured Việt Cộng suspect during an interrogation: photo by Larry Burrows/Time & Life Pictures via The Guardian, 28 April 2015
 

Exhausted South Vietnamese soldiers sleep on a US Navy troop carrier taking them back to the provincial capital of Ca Mau in August 1962. The infantry unit had been on a four-day operation against the Vietcong in swamplands at the southern tip of the country: photo by Horst Faas/AP via the Guardian,  23 April 2015


1962.A South Vietnamese soldier escorts a captured man and boy suspected of being Việt Cộng, having just flushed them out of a paddy field where they were hiding: photo by Larry Burrows/Time & Life Pictures via The Guardian, 28 April 2015
 
Our man in Saigon


In the first of a series of self-immolations by Buddhist monks, Thich Quang Duc burns himself to death on a Saigon street to protest persecution of Buddhists by the South Vietnamese government on 11 June 1963. The photograph aroused worldwide outrage and hastened the end of the Ngo Dinh Diem government. With the photograph on his Oval Office desk, President Kennedy remarked to his ambassador: “We’re going to have to do something about that regime."
: photo by Malcolm Browne/AP via the Guardian,  23 April 2015


Buddhist monks and women pull at a barbed-wire barricade that was set up in front of Saigon’s Giac Minh Pagoda to halt a demonstration on 17 July 1963. Police wielding clubs injured at least 50 people during the protest, one of many during this period by Buddhists opposed to the Diem regime. The following month, secret police raided temples throughout the country, an act that only heightened anger against the government: photo by Horst Faas/AP via the Guardian,  23 April 2015
 

1964.US and South Vietnamese forces evict prostitutes from a suspected Việt Cộng village after setting it alight: photo by Larry Burrows/Time & Life Pictures via The Guardian, 28 April 2015


A distraught father holds the body of his child as South Vietnamese rangers look down from their armoured vehicle on 19 March 1964. The child was killed as government forces pursued guerrillas into a village near the Cambodian border. From the portfolio by AP photographer Horst Faas that received the 1965 Pulitzer prize for photography: photo by Horst Faas/AP via the Guardian,  23 April 2015
 

1964.Tracer fire lights the night sky as US and South Vietnamese forces conduct operations: photo by Larry Burrows/Time & Life Pictures via The Guardian, 28 April 2015

BecauseUs has saved the world


Vietnamese troops and their US advisers resting in the jungle near the town of Binh Gia, 40 miles east of Saigon, in January 1965: photo by Horst Faas/AP via the Guardian, 20 April 2015
 

Hovering US Army helicopters pour machine-gun fire into the tree line to cover the advance of South Vietnamese ground troops as they attack a Vietcong camp 18 miles north of Tay Ninh, near the Cambodian border, in March 1965: photo by Horst Faas/AP via the Guardian,  23 April 2015
 

Under sniper fire, a Vietnamese woman carries a child to safety as US marines storm the village of My Son, near Da Nang, searching for Vietcong insurgents, 25 April 1965. As was typical in such situations, the men of the village had mostly disappeared, and the remaining villagers revealed little when questioned: photo by Eddie Adams/AP via the Guardian,  23 April 2015
 

An unidentified US soldier wears a hand-lettered slogan on his helmet in June 1965. The soldier was serving with the 173rd Airborne Brigade on defence duty at the Phuoc Vinh airfield: photo by Horst Faas/AP via the Guardian,  23 April 2015

The land was there before us


Bodies of US paratroopers lie near a command post during the battle of An Ninh, 18 September 1965. The paratroopers, of the 1st Brigade, 101st Airborne Division, were hit by heavy fire from guerrillas that began as soon as the first elements of the unit landed. The dead and wounded were later evacuated to An Khe, where the 101st was based. The battle was one of the first of the war between major units of US forces and the Vietcong: photo by Henri Huet/AP via the Guardian,  23 April 2015
 

US paratroopers of the 2nd Battalion, 173rd Airborne Brigade, hold their automatic weapons above water as they cross a river in the rain during a search for Vietcong positions in the jungle area of Ben Cat on 25 September 1965. The paratroopers had been combing the area for 12 days with no enemy contact: photo by Henri Huet/AP via the Guardian,  23 April 2015


A South Vietnamese stretcher-bearer wears a face mask to protect himself from the smell as he passes the bodies of US and South Vietnamese soldiers killed fighting the Vietcong in the Michelin rubber plantation, 27 November 1965. More than 100 bodies were recovered after the Vietcong overran South Vietnam’s 7th Regiment, 5th Division, killing most of the regiment and several US advisers. The plantation, situated midway between Saigon and the Cambodian border, was the scene of frequent fighting throughout the war.: photo by Horst Faas/AP via the Guardian,  23 April 2015


Actor Carroll Baker snaps her fingers at sailors cheering from the bridge as Bob Hope leads her across a stage on the flight deck of the USS Ticonderoga in December 1965. More than 2,500 sailors saw the Hope troupe’s show aboard the aircraft carrier. The comedian included South Vietnam in his annual holiday-season visits to troops from 1964 to 1972: photo by AP via the Guardian, 23 April 2015


Caught in a sudden monsoon rain, part of a company of about 130 South Vietnamese soldiers moves downriver in sampans during a dawn attack on a Vietcong camp on 10 January 1966. Several guerrillas were reported killed or wounded in the action 13 miles northeast of Can Tho, in the flooded Mekong Delta
: photo by Henri Huet/AP via the Guardian, 23 April 2015


Medic Thomas Cole looks up with his one unbandaged eye as he treats wounded Staff Sergeant Harrison Pell during a firefight on 30 January 1966. The men belonged to the 1st Cavalry Division, which was engaged in a battle at An Thi in the central highlands against combined Vietcong and North Vietnamese forces. This photograph appeared on the cover of Life magazine on 11 February 1966. Photographer Henri Huet’s coverage of An Thi received the Robert Capa Gold Medal from the Overseas Press Club: photo by Henri Huet/AP via the Guardian, 23 April 2015

Tokyo...etc...etc

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Shopping in #Harajuku #Tokyo: image via DIONYSUS @dionysusdreams, 27 April 2015
 
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Blonde hair don't care! #NewUpdate #KimKardashianHollywood #Tokyo: image via Kim Kardashian West Verified Account @KimKardashian, 28 April 2015

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A Godzilla hotel has opened in #Tokyo, obviously: image via Rough Guides @RoughGuides, 29 April 2015
 
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A room with a different kind of view #Tokyo #Godzilla: image via Travel + Leisure @TravlandLeisure, 30 April 2015

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 #tokyo My favorite building.: image via Shun @TOTALFAT @shun_TF, 2 May 2015
 

Taylor taking selfies with fans upon arrival at the airport in Japan! #2DaysTil1989WorldTour #Tokyo: image via Taylor Swift Updates @SimplySFans, 3 May 2015
 

Taylor taking selfies with fans upon arrival at the airport in Japan! #2DaysTil1989WorldTour #Tokyo: image via Taylor Swift Updates @SimplySFans, 3 May 2015
 

Taylor greeted by fans in Japan over the years! #Tokyo #1DayTil1989WorldTour: image via Taylor Swift Updates @SimplySFans, 4 May 2015
 

Taylor greeted by fans in Japan over the years! #Tokyo #1DayTil1989WorldTour: image via Taylor Swift Updates @SimplySFans, 4 May 2015
 

Taylor greeted by fans in Japan over the years! #Tokyo #1DayTil1989WorldTour: image via Taylor Swift Updates @SimplySFans, 4 May 2015
 

Taylor greeted by fans in Japan over the years! #Tokyo #1DayTil1989WorldTour: image via Taylor Swift Updates @SimplySFans, 4 May 2015

particular set of regulations


1966.The crew of a US AC-47 plane fire 7.62mm GE miniguns on a night mission: photo by Larry Burrows/Time & Life Pictures via The Guardian, 28 April 2015
 

1966. Reaching Out: wounded US marine Jeremiah Purdie (centre) is led past stricken comrades after a fierce firefight for control of Hill 484 in South Vietnam
: photo by Larry Burrows/Time & Life Pictures via The Guardian, 28 April 2015


Marines emerge from their foxholes south of the DMZ after a third night of fighting against North Vietnamese troops in September 1966. The helicopter on the left was shot down when it came in to resupply the unit: photo by Henri Huet/AP via the Guardian, 23 April 2015

carnivorous fortunes


A 1st Cavalry Division soldier throws a rice basket on to the flames as his unit sweeps through a village near Tam Ky, 350 miles north-east of Saigon, on 27 October 1967. A peasant woman had tried to salvage the basket from the burning house, but US troops were intent on destroying anything that might be of value to the Vietcong: photo by Dang Van Phuoc/AP via the Guardian, 23 April 2015


1968. A South Vietnamese soldier crouches beside a badly bleeding woman while awaiting medical aid during an attack by the Việt Cộng: photo by Larry Burrows/Time & Life Pictures via The Guardian, 28 April 2015
 

Gen Nguyen Ngoc Loan, South Vietnamese chief of the national police, fires his pistol into the head of suspected Vietcong official Nguyen Van Lem on a Saigon street early on in the Tet offensive, on 1 February 1968. Photographer Eddie Adams reported that after the shooting, Loan approached him and said: “They killed many of my people, and yours too,” then walked away. This photograph received the 1969 Pulitzer prize for spot news photography: photo by Eddie Adams/AP via the Guardian, 23 April 2015


Marines transport their seriously wounded atop a US army tank through the streets of Hue toward a helicopter evacuation point on 17 February 1968. Tanks were the only vehicles able to travel the streets because of rubble from buildings destroyed during the still-ongoing Tet offensive. The marines came under sniper fire several times on the journey: photo by AP via the Guardian, 23 April 2015


1968. US soldiers jump from a helicopter during Operation Pegasus, a failed attempt to lift the siege of Khe Sanh: photo by Larry Burrows/Time & Life Pictures via The Guardian, 28 April 2015
 

 
1968. Nguyen Thi Tron, who was wounded by gunfire from an American helicopter, tries out her new artificial leg in a game of hopscotch: photo by Larry Burrows/Time & Life Pictures via The Guardian, 28 April 2015


A woman mourns over the body of her husband after identifying him by his teeth and covering his head with her conical hat. The man’s body was found with 47 others in a mass grave near Hue on 11 April 1969. The victims were believed to be killed during the insurgent occupation of Hue as part of the Tet offensive: photo by Horst Faas/AP via the Guardian, 23 April 2015


1968.A grieving widow cries over a body bag containing the remains of her husband, found in a mass grave containing civilians killed by Việt Cộng during the Tet offensive of 1968: photo by Larry Burrows/Time & Life Pictures via The Guardian, 28 April 2015

Sometimes it makes me think


As fellow troopers aid wounded comrades, a paratrooper of A Company, 101st Airborne Division, guides a medevac helicopter through the jungle foliage to pick up casualties suffered during a five-day patrol near Hue in April 1968: photo by Art Greenspon/AP via The Guardian, 23 April 2015


A 6ft 5in machine gunner with the US 9th Infantry Division is submerged except for his rifle as he crosses a muddy stream in the Mekong delta south of Saigon on 10 September 1968: photo by Henri Huet/AP via the Guardian, 23 April 2015

:
A US paratrooper, wounded in the battle for Hamburger Hill, grimaces in pain as he awaits medical evacuation at base camp near the Laotian border on 19 May 1969: photo by Hugh Van Es/AP via the Guardian, 23 April 2015


1970.Half-dressed US soldiers of the 9th Infantry fire on enemy troops somewhere along the South Vietnamese-Cambodian border
: photo by Larry Burrows/Time & Life Pictures via The Guardian, 28 April 2015


GIs of the 3rd Brigade, 101st Airborne Division, launch into a rock session while surrounded by symbols of the war: wooden bunkers, helicopter and sandbags, in July 1970. The soldiers were dug in at Firebase Kathryn on a hill south of the DMZ: photo by Giancarlo Meyer/AP via the Guardian, 23 April 2015
 

1970. An exhausted US infantryman drinks from his canteen in the Fishhook area of Cambodia: photo by Larry Burrows/Time & Life Pictures via The Guardian, 28 April 2015


1971. Wounded South Vietnamese soldiers are evacuated during Operation Lam Son 719 in Laos: photo by Larry Burrows/Time & Life Pictures via The Guardian, 28 April 2015

Then things Began happening fast


1970.Larry Burrows (far left) struggles through elephant grass to help GIs carry a wounded soldier to an evacuation helicopter in Mimot, Cambodia. Burrows was killed on 10 February, 1971, along with the photographer who took this picture, Henri Huet, and two other photojournalists, Kent Potter of UPI and Keisaburo Shimamoto for Newsweek, when their helicopter was shot down over Laos: photo by Henri Huet/AP via The Guardian, 23 April 2015
 

Severely burned in an aerial napalm attack, children run screaming for help down Route 1 near Trang Bang, followed by soldiers of the South Vietnamese army’s 25th Division, on 8 June 1972. A South Vietnamese plane seeking Vietcong hiding places accidentally dropped its flaming napalm on civilians and government troops instead. Nine-year-old Kim Phuc had ripped off her burning clothes while fleeing. This photograph by Nick Ut received the 1973 Pulitzer prize for spot news photography: photo by Nick Ut/AP via the Guardian, 23 April 2015

Lima

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A beautiful #FullMoon illuminating the sky of #Lima Peru tonight.#MoonLight #moon: image via Cath @diabetesabordo, 4 May 2015


#FullMoon & #sunset 3rd May #Lima #hombredeltiempo: image via josepipogarcia, 4 May 2015
 

#FullMoon & #sunset 3rd May #Lima #hombredeltiempo: image via josepipogarcia, 4 May 2015
 

#FullMoon & #sunset 3rd May #Lima #hombredeltiempo: image via josepipogarcia, 4 May 2015
 

#FullMoon & #sunset 3rd May #Lima #hombredeltiempo: image via josepipogarcia, 4 May 2015

MUERTE AL ESTAD---


#Lima, #Peru, 28.04.15: Demonstration against the #TiaMaria copper mine in #Arequipa & against state repression.: image via Insurrection News @InsurrectionNews, 29 April 2015
 

#Lima, #Peru, 28.04.15: Demonstration against the #TiaMaria copper mine in #Arequipa & against state repression.: image via Insurrection News @InsurrectionNews, 29 April 2015
 

#Lima, #Peru, 28.04.15: Demonstration against the #TiaMaria copper mine in #Arequipa & against state repression.: image via Insurrection News @InsurrectionNews, 29 April 2015
 

#Lima, #Peru, 28.04.15: Demonstration against the #TiaMaria copper mine in #Arequipa & against state repression.: image via Insurrection News @InsurrectionNews, 29 April 2015

Based on 1) undisputable acumen


29 April 1975: US Navy personnel aboard the USS Blue Ridge push a helicopter into the sea off the coast of Vietnam in order to make room for more evacuation flights from Saigon: photo by AP via the Guardian, 20 April 2015
 

A CIA employee helps Vietnamese evacuees on to an US helicopter on a rooftop in Saigon on 29 April 1975: photo by Corbis/Bettmann/Reuters via the Guardian, 20 April 2015

Lorenzo Thomas: MMDCCXIII 1/2

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Washington, D.C. Mrs. Ella Watson, who has been a government charwoman for twenty-six years, with three of the five children she supports on her salary of one thousand eighty dollars per year: photo by Gordon Parks for the US Office of War Information, August 1942; image by C. Thomas Anderson/Verbatim Multimedia, 29 April 2013 (Farm Security Administration / Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)


The cruelty of ages past affects us now
Whoever it was who lived here lived a mean life
Each door has locks designed for keys unknown

Our living room was once somebody's home
Our bedroom, someone's only room
Our kitchen had a hasp upon its door.

Door to a kitchen?

And our lives are hasped and boundaried
Because of ancient locks and madnesses
Of slumlord greed and desperate privacies

Which one is madness? Depends on who you are.
We find we cannot stay, the both of us, in the same room
Dance, like electrons, out of each other's way.

The cruelties of ages past affect us now


Lorenzo Thomas (1944-2006): MMDCCXIII 1/2, from Chances are Few, 1979




Washington, D.C. Dinner time at the home of Mrs. Ella Watson, a government charwoman: photo by Gordon Parks for the US Office of War Information, August 1942; image by C. Thomas Anderson/Verbatim Multimedia, 29 April 2013 (Farm Security Administration / Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)


Washington, D.C. Government charwoman cleaning an office after regular working hours: photo by Gordon Parks for the US Office of War Information, August 1942; image by C. Thomas Anderson/Verbatim Multimedia, 29 April 2013 (Farm Security Administration / Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)


Washington, D.C. Mrs. Ella Watson, a government charwoman, with three grandchildren and her adopted daughter: photo by Gordon Parks for the US Office of War Information, August 1942; image by C. Thomas Anderson/Verbatim Multimedia, 3 January 2013 (Farm Security Administration / Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)


http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/pnp/fsa/8a00000/8a00100/8a00103v.jpg
 
Once with happier surroundings, this section now houses a large crowded Negro population living in most unsanitary conditions: photo by Carl Mydans for U.S. Resettlement Administration, September 1935 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)
 
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Slums near the Capitol, Washington, D.C. With the Capitol clearly in view, these houses exist under the most unsanitary conditions: outside privies, no inside water supply and overcrowding: photo by Carl Mydans for U.S. Resettlement Administration, September 1935 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/pnp/fsa/8a00000/8a00400/8a00438v.jpg
 


Slum front yard playground, Washington, D.C. Such is the front yard available to these two youngsters to play in: photo by Carl Mydans for U.S. Resettlement Administration, September 1935 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

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 Front of Negro home near Capitol, Washington, D.C. Interiors of these homes vary little. A chair or two and a table, a bed and perhaps an extra mattress on the floor to care for six to ten people: photo by Carl Mydans for U.S. Resettlement Administration, September 1935 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/pnp/fsa/8a00000/8a00100/8a00134v.jpg

 
Backyard of Negro dwelling in slum area near the House office building, Washington, D.C.: photo by Carl Mydans for U.S. Resettlement Administration, September 1935 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/pnp/fsa/8a00000/8a00100/8a00131v.jpg 

Kitchen of Negro dwelling in slum area near House office building, Washington, D. C.: photo by Carl Mydans for U.S. Resettlement Administration, September 1935 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/pnp/fsa/8a00000/8a00000/8a00097v.jpg


A once proud section, Washington, D.C. These houses now are overcrowded with a Negro population and greatly in need of more sanitary methods: photo by Carl Mydans for U.S. Resettlement Administration, September 1935 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

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Slum backyard Washington, D.C. These houses now are overcrowded with a Negro population and greatly in need of more sanitary methods: photo by Carl Mydans for U.S. Resettlement Administration, September 1935 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

Image, Source: digital file from intermediary roll film 


Slum area, Washington, D.C.: photo by JohnVachon, November 1937 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)
 
 Image, Source: digital file from intermediary roll film

Southwest Washington, D.C.: photo by John Vachon, May 1937 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)
 
Image, Source: digital file from intermediary roll film

Children's drawings on wall, Washington, D.C.: photo by John Vachon, April 1937 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

Image, Source: digital file from original neg.

 
Street scene, Washington, D.C.: photo by John Vachon, November 1937(Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

 Image, Source: digital file from intermediary roll film

Slums behind Metropolitan Police Department, Washington, D.C.: photo by John Vachon, April 1937 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

 Image, Source: intermediary roll film

Negro church, Washington, D.C.: photo by John Vachon, May 1937 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

 Image, Source: digital file from intermediary roll film

Spectator at fire, Washington, D.C.: photo by John Vachon, December 1937(Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

Image, Source: digital file from original transparency

Children in street at N and Union Streets SW, Washington, D.C.: Louise Rosskam, 1941 or 1942(Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

Louise Rosskam Car in front of Shulmans Market on N at Union St SW Washington DC 1941 1942

Car in front of Shulman's Market, on N at Union St. SW, Washington, D.C.: Louise Rosskam, 1941 or 1942(Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

Image, Source: digital file from original transparency

Shulman's Market, on N at Union St. SW, Washington, D.C.: Louise Rosskam, 1941 or 1942(Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)
   
 Image, Source: digital file from original transparency
   
House in Washington, D.C.: Louise Rosskam, 1941 or 1942(Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

http://rs16.loc.gov/service/pnp/ds/00700/00751v.jpg

Street in Baltimore, Maryland with rowhouses and building with sign "Neighborhood Housing Services": photo by Warren K. Leffler, 15 March 1976 (U.S. News & World Report Magazine Photograph Collection, Library of Congress)

http://rs16.loc.gov/service/pnp/ds/00700/00754v.jpg
 


Lines of people at the offices of the Baltimore City Welfare Office, Maryland
: photo by Thomas J. O'Halloran, 28 January 1975(U.S. News & World Report Magazine Photograph Collection, Library of Congress)




North Calhoun Street in Sandtown, Baltimore. The neighborhood is composed primarily of old rowhouses
: photo by Todd Heisler/The New York Times, 3 May 2015


Former Honda dealership turned to Gospel Church According to Jesus Christ, East Monument Ave. at East Ave., Baltimore, 2002

Former Honda dealership turned to Gospel Church According to Jesus Christ, East Monument Ave. at East Ave., Baltimore: photo by Camilo José Vergara, 2002 (Library of Congress)

1600 N. Bond St., Baltimore, 2002 

1600 N. Bond St., Baltimore: photo by Camilo José Vergara, 2002 (Library of Congress)

Former Broadway Trust Company, Broadway at Walnut St., Camden, 2003, The large classical building is now the St. James Apostolic Temple. It glows like a survivor from an ancient civilization

Former Broadway Trust Company, Broadway at Walnut St., Camden, New Jersey. The large classical building is now the St. James Apostolic Temple. It glows like a survivor from an ancient civilization: photo by Camilo José Vergara, 2003 (Library of Congress)

View north along 7th St. towards Florence, Camden, 2005

View north along 7th St. towards Florence, Camden, New Jersey: photo by Camilo José Vergara, 2005 (Library of Congress)


Children playing last week in Sandtown-Winchester, the Baltimore neighborhood where Freddie Gray was raised. One young resident called it “a tough community.”: photo by Todd Heisler/The New York Times, 3 May 2015


New York, New York. Three boys who live in the Harlem area: photo by Gordon Parks for the US Office of War Information, May-June 1943; image by C. Thomas Anderson/Verbatim Multimedia, 1 November 2011 (Farm Security Administration / Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)



Washington, D.C. Mrs. Ella Watson, a government charwoman, and her adopted daughter: photo by Gordon Parks for the US Office of War Information, August 1942; image by C. Thomas Anderson/Verbatim Multimedia, 29 April 2013 (Farm Security Administration / Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)



Washington, D.C. Mrs. Ella Watson, a government charwoman, and her adopted daughter: photo by Gordon Parks for the US Office of War Information, August 1942; image by C. Thomas Anderson/Verbatim Multimedia, 29 April 2013 (Farm Security Administration / Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

Say What You Will

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a lot to be said for traveling in the evening light #moon #allart #iphoneography @love_belfast @ArtPhotogRRaphy: image via Jonathan Murphy @ForMurPhoto, 1 May 2014

Say what you will.
No regrets
Beyond the necessary
Lies
A better tomorrow
All your yesterdays
Executive class
Mindfulness
And all the rest
Of the best of what's left
When the launch comes
Back down
As you're listening
For your heart beat
The numbers aren't moving
And nobody likes that.
The music plays
Even though the numbers are broken.
Stop looking
So disappointed.
Tonight, in the evil
Moonlight
The ancestors are with us.


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Tonight's waxing gibbous #Moon at 88% illumination. #Iowa: image via Epic Cosmos @EpicCosmos, 30 April 2015

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Beautiful #Moon this evening as seen from George Wyth State Park #Iowa: image via Epic Cosmos @EpicCosmos, 29 April 2015

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After a hard day of work, the #moon sets, and so do I. Good night from @space_station: image via Scott Kelly @StationCDRKelly, 5 May 2015
 
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Thunderclouds cast their shadows as the #Moon signals nightfall: image via Terry W. Virts @AstroTerry, 5 May 2015

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Say what you will about Soviet Russia, but they sure had plans for the #Moon #scifi: image via K.E.M. Lindblom @the_egghunter, 1 May 2014

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Downtown Morton, #Mississippi, c1970, William #Eggleston: image via catherine saidah @CatherineSaidah, 20 November 2014

Stuffed

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  • Yellow-crested cockatoo inserted in empty water bottles for illegal trade, found by police officials at Port of Tanjung Perak in Surabaya, Indonesia: photo by Jefta Images/Barcroft Media via The Guardian, 6 May 2015

    • Indonesian police have arrested a suspected wildlife smuggler after discovering nearly two dozen rare live birds, mostly yellow-crested cockatoos, jammed inside plastic water bottles in his luggage.

      The 37-year-old man was stopped by police on Monday as he alighted from a passenger ship in Surabaya, a city on the main island of Java.

      Photographs show the birds, with distinctive yellow plumage, peering out of the bottles after being found by officers. The bottoms of the bottles had been cut off to squeeze the birds inside.



    • Yellow-crested cockatoo, Cacatua sulphurea, is on the IUCN list of critically endangered species
      : photo by Age fotostock/Alamyvia The Guardian, 6 May 20155

    • The head of the criminal investigation unit at Tanjung Perak port, Aldy Sulaiman, said police found the birds stashed inside the man’s luggage.

      “We found 21 yellow-crested cockatoos and one green parrot,” he said.

      “All the birds were found inside water bottles, which were packed in a crate.”

    •   
      Yellow-crested cockatoo inserted in empty water bottles for illegal trade, are shown by police officials at Port of Tanjung Perak on May 4, 2015 in Surabaya, Indonesia. Indonesian Police rescued 24 Yellow-crested cockatoo which were inserted in empty bottles for illegal trade.

    • This yellow-crested cockatoo is one of 24 birds that were inserted in empty water bottles by smugglers in Indonesia. The consignment was spotted by police at Tanjung Perak in Surabaya, Indonesia: photo by Jefta Images/Barcroft via the Telegraph, 5 May 2015

    • The birds have since been sent to Indonesia’s natural resources conservation office, which deals with wildlife-trafficking cases.

      Sulaiman said the man -- whose identity was not disclosed in line with normal criminal procedure in Indonesia -- had admitted carrying two birds for a friend but claimed to know nothing about the other animals.

      If found guilty of smuggling, the man, from near Surabaya, could face up to five years in prison.

      Yellow-crested cockatoos are native to Indonesia and neighbouring East Timor and considered critically endangered, according to the International Union for the Conservation of Nature.

      They are different to the larger and more common sulphur-crested cockatoo which is mostly found in Australia and New Guinea.


       
      Flying: Yellow-crested cockatoo (Cacatua sulphurea), seen in a park in Hong Kong: photo by Charles Lam, 9 March 2015

    ©The Joseph and Robert Cornell Memorial Foundation/Licensed by VAGA, New York; used with permission - © The Joseph and Robert Cornell Memorial Foundation / Licensed by VAGA, New York

    Untitled (Cockatoo with Watch Faces)
    : Joseph Cornell (1903-1972), c. 1949, box construction with inoperable music box, 16 1/4 x 17 x 4 7/16 in. (41.3 x 43.2 x 11.3 cm) (The Lindy and Edwin Bergman Collection, Chicago; image by Michael Tropea)

    A yellow-crested cockatoo in a cage
    A yellow-crested cockatoo in a box
    A yellow-crested cockatoo in a plastic water bottle
    When there are no more boxes
    No more cages
    And no more plastic water bottles
    Where will the yellow-crested cockatoo be

    Will it be anywhere at all
    In this world
    When there is no forest
    When there is no memory
    Not digital
    And nowhere real left to be

    Will the yellow-crested cockatoo be anywhere at all


    http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/cornell/cornell.cockatoo-corks.jpg

    Untitled (Cockatoo and corks): Joseph Cornell (1903-1972),  c. 1948, box construction, 14 3/8 x 13 1/2 x 5 5/8 in (private collection)



    Desk of Death. The desk of an amateur taxidermist: photo by Tup Wanders, 3 February 2006



    Flying: Yellow-crested cockatoo (Cacatua suiphurea), seen in a park in Hong Kong: photo by Charles Lam, 9 March 2015



    Flying: Yellow-crested cockatoo (Cacatua suiphurea), seen in a park in Hong Kong: photo by Charles Lam, 9 March 2015



    Flying: Yellow-crested cockatoo (Cacatua suiphurea), seen in a park in Hong Kong: photo by Charles Lam, 18 May 2015

    Yellow-crested Cockatoo Cacatua sulphurea

    Current IUCN Red List category: Critically Endangered;
    This cockatoo has suffered (and may continue to suffer) an extremely rapid population decline, owing to unsustainable trapping for the cagebird trade. It therefore qualifies as Critically Endangered.


    Family Cacatuidae (Cockatoos)

    Species name: author (Gmelin, 1788)

    Population size: 1500-7000 mature individuals

    Population trend: Decreasing

    Distribution size (breeding/resident): 255,000 km2
     
    (Source: BirdLife)


    Yellow-crested #cockatoo-stuffed bottles caught by #Indonesian customs @MailOnline: image via Mohamoud Walaaleye @Ladhka, 5 May 2015

Marianne Moore: The Pangolin

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Three to four thousand frozen pangolins lie in a pit before being burnt in Medan, Indonesia. This huge seizure was a joint operation between the Indonesian National Police’s criminal investigation division and the Wildlife Conservation Society’s wildlife crimes unit, from a warehouse in Medan, the largest city on the island of Sumatra, on 23 April. A total of 96 live animals were found including five tonnes of frozen pangolins, 77kg of scales with an estimated street value of $1.8m (£1.2m), plus 24 bear paws: photo by Paul Hilton/WCS via The Guardian, 30 April 2015

Another armored animal -- scale
....lapping scale with spruce-cone regularity until they
form the uninterrupted central
..tail-row! This near artichoke with head and legs and grit-equipped gizzard,
..the night miniature artist engineer is,
........yes, Leonardo da Vinci's replica --
...........impressive animal and toiler of whom we seldom hear.
........Armor seems extra. But for him,
...........the closing ear-ridge --
.............or bare ear lacking even this small
.............eminence and similarly safe

contracting nose and eye apertures
....impenetrably closable, are not; a true ant-eater,
not cockroach eater, who endures
..exhausting solitary trips through unfamiliar ground at night,
..returning before sunrise, stepping in the moonlight,
........on the moonlight peculiarly, that the outside
...........edges of his hands may bear the weight and save the claws
........for digging. Serpentined about
...........the tree, he draws
.............away from danger unpugnaciously,
.............with no sound but a harmless hiss; keeping

the fragile grace of the Thomas-
....of-Leighton Buzzard Westminster Abbey wrought-iron vine, or
rolls himself into a ball that has
..power to defy all effort to unroll it; strongly intailed, neat
..head for core, on neck not breaking off, with curled-in-feet.
........Nevertheless he has sting-proof scales; and nest
...........of rocks closed with earth from inside, which can thus darken.
........Sun and moon and day and night and man and beast
...........each with a splendor
.............which man in all his vileness cannot
...........set aside; each with an excellence!

"Fearfull yet to be feared," the armored
....ant-eater met by the driver-ant does not turn back, but
engulfs what he can, the flattened sword-
..edged leafpoints on the tail and artichoke set leg- and body-plates
..quivering violently when it retaliates
.......and swarms on him. Compact like the furled fringed frill
.........on the hat-brim of Gargallo's hollow iron head of a
.......matador, he will drop and will
...........then walk away
.............unhurt, although if unintruded on,
.............he cautiously works down the tree, helped

by his tail. The giant-pangolin-
....tail, graceful tool, as a prop or hand or broom or ax, tipped like
an elephant's trunk with special skin,
..is not lost on this ant- and stone-swallowing uninjurable
..artichoke which simpletons thought a living fable
.........whom the stones had nourished, whereas ants had done
...........so. Pangolins are not aggressive animals; between
.........dusk and day they have not unchain-like machine-like
.............form and frictionless creep of a thing
.............made graceful by adversities, con-

versities. To explain grace requires
....a curious hand. If that which is at all were not forever,
why would those who graced the spires
..with animals and gathered there to rest, on cold luxurious
..low stone seats -- a monk and monk and monk -- between the thus
.........ingenious roof supports, have slaved to confuse
...........grace with a kindly manner, time in which to pay a debt,
.........the cure for sins, a graceful use
...........of what are yet
..............approved stone mullions branching out across
..............the perpendiculars? A sailboat

was the first machine. Pangolins, made
....for moving quietly also, are models of exactness,
on four legs; on hind feet plantigrade,
..with certain postures of a man. Beneath sun and moon, man slaving
..to make his life more sweet, leaves half the flowers worth having,
........needing to choose wisely how to use his strength;
...........a paper-maker like the wasp; a tractor of foodstuffs,
........like the ant; spidering a length
...........of web from bluffs
.............above a stream; in fighting, mechanicked
.............like the pangolin; capsizing in

disheartenment. Bedizened or stark
....naked, man, the self, the being we call human, writing-
masters to this world, griffons a dark
.."Like does not like like that is abnoxious"; and writes error with four
..r's. Among animals, one has sense of humor.
.........Humor saves a few steps, it saves years. Unignorant,
...........modest and unemotional, and all emotion,
.........he has everlasting vigor,
...........power to grow,
.............though there are few creatures who can make one
.............breathe faster and make one erecter.

Not afraid of anything is he,
....and then goes cowering forth, tread paced to meet an obstacle
at every step. Consistent with the
..formula -- warm blood, no gills, two pairs of hands and a few hairs -- that
..is a mammal; there he sits on his own habitat,
.......serge-clad, strong-shod. The prey of fear, he, always
...........curtailed, extinguished, thwarted by the dusk, work partly done,
.......says to the alternating blaze,
..........."Again the sun!
.............anew each day; and new and new and new,
.............that comes into and steadies my soul."

Marianne Moore (1887-1972): The Pangolin, from The Pangolin and Other Verse (1936)


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MT @TheWCS newsroom: Indonesian Nat'l Police Seize Major #Pangolin Shipment, Arrest Smuggler: image via Nat Moss, 27 April 2015


Sunda pangolin (Manis javanica) are among the most trafficked mammals in Asia.Sunda pangolin are critically endangered and IUCN reports that wild populations have halved in the past 15 years. They are in high demand both for their meat and for their scales, which are used in traditional medicine — and as love charms. Tens of thousands of Sunda pangolins have been poached from the wild, headed primarily to China where it is considered a luxury food: photo by Rungroj Yongrit/EPA via the Guardian, 5 February 2015


A mother and baby pangolin were part of a release effort on the outskirts of Medan, Indonesia. The mother later died: photo by Paul Hilton via the Guardian, 5 May 2015

94 pangolins released in Sumatra following huge illegal wildlife seizure: Trafficked pangolins are freed as Indonesian ministers urged harsher penalties to deter illegal wildlife trade, reports Mongabay: Ayat S. Karokaro for Mongabay,part of the Guardian Environment Network, 5 May 2015

Following a major seizure of illegal wildlife goods in North Sumatra, the Indonesian authorities released 94 pangolins into the wild last week, including a newborn whose mother died shortly after the authorities caught up with the traffickers.

Environment and Forestry Minister Siti Nurbaya flew to the provincial capital of Medan to witness the burning of five tons of pangolin meat which had been confiscated along with 77 kilograms (169 pounds) of pangolin scales and the live animals.

The minister urged judges to hand down harsher punishments to serve as a deterrent.

“In Palembang (the capital of Jambi province), the prosecutor demanded the maximum penalty of five years and Rp500 million ($38,000),” she said. “We expect the same for this network in Medan.”

At present, offenders get an average of eight months behind bars and Rp10 million. “That’s the reason illegal wildlife networks stay in business,” said Irma Hermawati, a legal advisor from the nonprofit Wildlife Conservation Society.

Besides the newborn’s mother, two other pangolins died in the wake of the raid. A team of veterinarians nevertheless decided that all of the animals, even the baby, were fit enough to return to the wild.

“If we keep [the baby] first, it’s not necessarily better,” said Tata Jati Rasa, an official from the provincial Natural Resources Conservation Agency (BBKSDA). “Let us release it. We believe it can survive. Let nature determine whether it will live.”

Pangolins are critically endangered and highly sought after in East Asia for use of their body parts in traditional medicine and cuisine. One of them can sell for Rp500,000-800,000, according to Didit Wijanardi, a deputy at the Indonesian National Police’s detectives’ unit (Bareskrim).

“This is the driving factor pushing people into the woods to hunt,” he said. “We need to fight this because pangolins are a protected species.”



Often known as scaly anteaters, pangolins are the only mammal with scales. Their closest relatives are anteaters, armadillos and sloths. These two will end up on a dinner table in Gunagzhou, southern China, one of the areas of the world where their flesh is considered a delicacy. The illegal trade in pangolins is estimated to be worth about $19bn (£12.7bn) a year
:photo by Paul Hilton for WildAid via the Guardian, 16 March 2015


A Sunda Pangolin (Manis javanica), one of two Asian species of pangolin listed as critically endangered on the IUNC red list
: photo by Paul Hilton for WildAid
via the Guardian, 16 March 2015


Pangolin are a bit like a friendly, flightless dragons. Many of them have no problem being around people.
:
photo by Paul Hilton for WildAid via the Guardian, 16 March 2015



An African white-bellied pangolin –- poachers are turning to African pangolins because Asian populations have been denuded: photo by IUCN/ZSL via The Guardian, 28 July 2014


A selection of two tons of pangolin scales, the largest seizure in five years, taken by Hong Kong customs in June 2014: photo by Alex Hofford/EPA via The Guardian, 28 July 2014


There are four African and four Asian species of pangolin, of the genus Manis in the family Manidae. These pictures are all taken in Indonesia. This image shows hunting dogs, used to catch the pangolins, surrounding a tree in Kalimantan where one is trying to hide.: photo by Paul Hilton for WildAid  via the Guardian 10 March 2015


A critically endangered pangolin curls up into a ball to resemble a giant pine cone as a poacher nears the tree where it is trying to hide: photo by Paul Hilton for WildAid  via the Guardian 10 March 2015


A poacher catches a juvenile sunda pangolin in Indonesia: photo by Paul Hilton for WildAid via the Guardian 10 March 2015


Poachers across Indonesia sell critically endangered live pangolins to middlemen for $28 (£18.70) to $31 per kilo; the average size of a pangolin is six to seven kg.: photo by Paul Hilton for WildAid via the Guardian 10 March 2015


Researchers at the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) say that over a million pangolins were caught in the last decade, which makes them the most illegally traded mammal in the world.: photo by Paul Hilton for WildAid via the Guardian 10 March 2015


The demand for pangolin meat, which is considered a delicacy, and scales, which are used in traditional medicine, particularly in China and Vietnam, is pushing the pangolin to extinction.: photo by Paul Hilton for WildAid via the Guardian 10 March 2015


A pangolin releases a foul smell when scared, like a skunk –- though it is not enough to ward off a pack of poacher’s dogs
: photo by Paul Hilton for WildAid via the Guardian 10 March 2015


Already this year 125kg of pangolin scales were intercepted by the Indonesian authorities en route to Hong Kong: photo by Paul Hilton for WildAid via the Guardian, 10 March 2015


A poacher holds up the skin of a pangolin with the scales still attached: photo by Paul Hilton for WildAid via the Guardian 10 March 2015


Detail of a pangolin’s skin. Their scales are made of keratin, which is also found in human hair and nails.: photo by Paul Hilton for WildAid via the Guardian 10 March 2015


A pangolin skin and, on the right, some scales: photo by Paul Hilton for WildAid via the Guardian 10 March 2015


The tip of the iceberg #illegal #wildlifetrade on #Burma #China #wildlife #ecocide: image via Peter Burton @peterburton @peteswildlife, 21 July 21 2015


The tip of the iceberg #illegal #wildlifetrade on #Burma #China #wildlife #ecocide: image via Peter Burton @peterburton @peteswildlife, 21 July 21 2015


The tip of the iceberg #illegal #wildlifetrade on #Burma #China #wildlife #ecocide: image via Peter Burton @peterburton @peteswildlife, 21 July 21 2015


The tip of the iceberg #illegal #wildlifetrade on #Burma #China #wildlife #ecocide: image via Peter Burton @peterburton @peteswildlife, 21 July 21 2015

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In 2014, 6.7 tons of African #pangolin scales were confiscated in Asia. In 2013, it was just over 600KG @THTZim: image via United for Wildlife @united4wildlife, 23 April 2015

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Pangolin scales for sale on Daluo market Illegal #wildlifetrade #Burma: image via calfune @calfune, 26 July 2015


 
A waitress in Hanoi, Vietnam, shows how pangolin is prepared. Pangolin sells for as much as $350 per kilo: photo by John D. Sutter for CNN, 2014



"You find pangolins, and I'll give you money." That's what Ruslan, 58, says he was told by a wildlife trader from out of town
: photo by John D. Sutter for CNN, 2014




 Pangolins are traded by the ton, frozen and alive. They're sometimes mixed with frozen fish or snakes as cover.: photo by John D. Sutter for CNN, 2014



Traditional medicine has a long history in Vietnam and China. Pangolin scales are made of the same material as fingernails but are claimed to help with lactation issues and other ailments.: photo by John D. Sutter for CNN, 2014



This hunting dog in Sumatra, Indonesia, has been trained on the scent of pangolins, which are difficult to find at night: photo by John D. Sutter for CNN, 2014



Pangolin scales are sold in traditional medicine shops like those found in an old quarter of Hanoi: photo by John D. Sutter for CNN, 2014



Pangolin fetus is an unproven aphrodisiac
: photo by John D. Sutter for CNN, 2014




Pangolin is easy to find on menus in Hanoi. Some restaurants slit its throat in front of customers.: photo by John D. Sutter for CNN, 2014

 

A restaurant in Hanoi kept this pangolin floating in rice wine. CNN reporter John Sutter was told it was removed after authorities were called: photo by John D. Sutter for CNN, 2014



Some pangolin hunters say they're just trying to support their families. They use the money to buy milk, not luxury items: photo by John D. Sutter for CNN, 2014



Ropi, a 29-year-old in Sumatra, Indonesia, said he has hunted pangolins to feed his kids; not to get rich
: photo by John D. Sutter for CNN, 2014



Lucky is the biggest and friendliest pangolin at Cuc Phuong National Park in Vietnam. He weighed only 4 pounds when he was seized from the wildlife trade. He now weighs 17 pounds: photo by John D. Sutter for CNN, 2014



Three to four thousand frozen pangolins lie in a pit before being burnt in Medan, Indonesia. This huge seizure was a joint operation between the Indonesian National Police’s criminal investigation division and the Wildlife Conservation Society’s wildlife crimes unit, from a warehouse in Medan, the largest city on the island of Sumatra, on 23 April. A total of 96 live animals were found including five tonnes of frozen pangolins, 77kg of scales with an estimated street value of $1.8m (£1.2m), plus 24 bear paws: photo by Paul Hilton/WCS via The Guardian, 30 April 2015

Michael Lally: Swing Theory: 2

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Swings Revisited: photo by Sara Björk, 17 December 2006

The mood swings unpredictable but
reliable, from affectionate to hostile,
from I want you to I hope you have
a heart attack and drop dead now.
From get the fuck out of my house
to please please don't go, from don't
ever talk to me again to unable to stop
talking, from let's play to don't touch
me, from you retard lazy liar to you're
so handsome stylish and cool.  From
cruel to caring.  Then react to insulting
jokes with anything but total accept-
ance or dare joke back in a similar
vein and: You'll never see me again.

Michael Lally: Swing Theory: 2, fromSwing Theory, 2015



swing: photo by takis katris, 4 April 2009

Edward Dorn: Bob Considine

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File:Bob Considine Crypt 2010 Gate of Heaven.jpg
 
The crypt of Bob Considine in Gate of Heaven Cemetery: photo by Anthony22, 13 April 2010

But I really hate band concerts
in the park and
...........Bob Considine
3000 Sundays ago
when half the world
was mopping up the fire storms

I hate them.
who can among men retain
.....their honor

praising such things
men, men are always put in chains
the world is just shit.
All of it.

Edward Dorn (1929-1999): Bob Considine, c. 1962, from Derelict Air, 2015
 



 Igor Gouzenko, the former Russian Embassy cipher clerk whose defection in 1945 broke up a Soviet atomic spying ring, warned the United States to be wary of the Soviet Union's new "soft line." His prediction that the U.S.S.R. would attack the United States "as soon as it gains enough confidence," came in an exclusive interview with an international news service correspondent, Bob Considine. Considine is shown taking notes as Gouzenko donned a hood when photographers entered the room, [and] spoke.: image by maru press, 11 March 2003

Its horn more precious than gold

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#Guangxi man seized for smuggling 7 pieces of #rhinohorn last April from #Vietnam to #China sentenced to 10 years: image via WCS China @WCSChina, 6 April 2015


Cardinal Richelieu would not
Have misunderstood

Beyond the doors of hell
Wait the gates of heaven

And the Chinese envoy was here
But left hastily

The doors of hell are open
The gates of heaven are closed

Beyond this place lies another place
That must be concealed from us
 
To save it





Mother and Calf, White Rhinos, Eastern Cape, South Africa. No geotags or details with this one folks. There are too many poachers out there ready to kill any Rhino for its horn, which is just hair, just because sad believers in Chinese medicine think it has magical powers. The same logic would suggest if you eat feathers you will be able to fly! Try grinding up your own hair and swallowing that instead. There might not be a single one left outside a zoo by 2020: photo by G Bayliss, 30 January 2014



It's In The Horns.Two rhinos, mother and child, in Ngorongoro Crater, Tanzania: photo by Allison Mickel, 1 January 2013


Rhino horns with other wild animal products for sale, outdoor market, Vientiane, Laos: photo by Tiger Trail Outdoor Adventures, 19 December 2014



Rhino horns. Horns from the critically endangered Sumatran Rhinoceros in the herb market at Talat Sao in Vientiane, Laos: photo by Dane Larsen, 9 January 2007



Example of a rhino horn and traditional medicine containing rhino horn: photo by International Fund for Animal Rescue Blog, 15 February 2008

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"Trading blows over trading #rhinohorn" Op-Ed via @dailymaverick #rhino image via Swahili Africa @SwahiliAfrica, 13 April 2015



Burn Horn, Save Rhinos Czech Republic. Ceremony. On Sunday, the 21st September 2014, at 11am at Dvůr Králové Zoo in the Czech Republic and Bratislava Zoo in Slovakia, Ministers for Environment for both countries set alight seized illegal and stockpiled rhino horns in a gesture symbolising the world has reached the 11th hour to save rhinosExample of a rhino horn and traditional medicine containing rhino horn: photo by International Fund for Animal Rescue Blog, 21 September 2014



Poached rhinoceros. Young recently poached male rhino in Chitwan national park, Nepal. The valuable horn is removed: photo by Knut-Erik Halle, 23 February 2003



Poached rhinoceros. Young recently poached male rhino in Chitwan national park, Nepal. The valuable horn is removed: photo by Knut-Erik Halle, 23 February 2003

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"@DSWT #DidYouKnow #rhinohorn is made of the same stuff as fingernails. Yet one is killed every 8 hrs for it.”: image via sapling @_sapling, 9 April 2015

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This is the result of primordial, fallacious 'medicine' and unpardonable decoration. #ExtinctionIsNow #rhinohorn: image via Dr.Stattos @zerospooky, 26 April 2015

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"@rhinowinessa @braammalherbe more than gold & platinum combined most valuable commodity per Kg #rhinohorn @ $90 00 ": image via SWANK @swank_ZA, 7 May 2015

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THIS IS THE SICK REALITY... Poaching KILLS!!... #SaveOurRhino @RhinoHornIsNotMedicine #BoycottChina: image via Desiree Laverne @Desiree_Laverne, 7 April 2015

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These people really are the scum of the earth. #Rhino #china #vietnam #scum #chewyournails #boycottchina: image via Gareth Preiss @Gareth1012, 2 May 2015

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RT "@luckynshi:" #Chewyournails #china #chinesescum#Rhino #savetherhino: image via Gareth Preiss @Gareth1012, 12 April 2015

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You will not be forgotten my girls. #chinachewyournails #chinesescum#Rhino #Rhinopoaching: image via Gareth Preiss @Gareth1012, 19 May 2015

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3 more #rhinos killed in #Hoedspruit yesterday #chinachewyournails #chinesescum #stoprhinopoaching: image via Gareth Preiss @Gareth1012, 14 December 2014

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Northern white rhino's death leaves just five alive in world #SaveOurRhino #StopRhinopoaching: image via Diana Romanos @romdia5, 28 December 2014

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A de-horned Rhino was found wandering with 12 bullets in it. #chinachewyournails #Rhino #stoprhinopoaching #boycottchina: image via Gareth Preiss @Gareth1012, 15 January 2015

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 #stopRhinopoaching: image via Onkgopotse OG Diseko @og_diseko, 1 February 2015

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 Why would you risk your life to kill what risks it life to save others life? #stoprhinopoaching @SANParksKNP: image via SMS 76 to 47052 @Jazzyhope_Sadc, 7 February 2015

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 Shocking news: Sumatran #rhino extinct in Sabah #Malaysia #PalmOil #Poaching: image via Rhino pentarou @pentarou_2010, 3 May 2015

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 #Rhino horn has absolute ZERO medicinal VALUE!  El CUERNO #rinoceronte NO tiene valor MEDICINAL, es como uñas o pelo: image via Isaac Vega  @saacBIOvega, 3 May 2015

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 Mother #Rhino and 3 month old baby killed last week Baby was shot as he was running around his mum via @Protect_Wildlife: image via Isaac Vega  @saacBIOvega, 5 May 2015
 
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Kruger National Park remains the hardest hit by poachers, having lost 286 #rhino since the beginning of 2015: image via Trevor Kolk @TrevorKolk, 10 May 2015

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#Death of a #NorthernWhiteRhino leaves just six remaining in existence.#SadReality #DoSomething: image via Katie Stark @littledevil147, 20 October 2014

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 If you must do something in your travels, as a Kenyan, take time to visit @OlPejeta and see a #NorthernWhiteRhino: image via Mutheu Mutua  @AKenyanGirl, 16 December 2014

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Only the best of science can save the #NorthernWhiteRhino from the worst of humanity image via TomWaselewski @PG_TomWas, 18 December 2014

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Should we try to halt extinction? #Science #Nature #BBC#NorthernWhiteRhino #Extinction image via Projects Magazine @ProjectsZine, 22 December 2014


Last of the species, can they be saved? #NorthernWhiteRhino #SaveTheRhinos via @Mashable: image via Mutheu Mutua  @AKenyanGirl, 1 April 2015


Last of the species, can they be saved? #NorthernWhiteRhino #SaveTheRhinos via @Mashable: image via Mutheu Mutua  @AKenyanGirl, 1 April 2015
 

Last of the species, can they be saved? #NorthernWhiteRhino #SaveTheRhinos via @Mashable: image via Mutheu Mutua  @AKenyanGirl, 1 April 2015


Last of the species, can they be saved? #NorthernWhiteRhino #SaveTheRhinos via @Mashable: image via Mutheu Mutua  @AKenyanGirl, 1 April 2015

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Crazy. Armed rangers must protect last male #northernwhiterhino left on Earth via @The_PlaidZebra: image via Maudlyne lhejirika @maudlynei, 16 April 2015


‘Sudan doesn’t know how precious he is. His eye is a sad black dot in his massive wrinkled face as he wanders the reserve with his guards.
Sudan is the last male northern white Rhino on the planet. It seems an image of human tenderness that Sudan is lovingly guarded by armed men who stand vigilantly and caringly with him. But of course it is an image of brutality. Even at this last desperate stage in the fate of the northern white rhino, poachers would kill Sudan if they could and hack off his horn to sell it on the Asian medicine market" [Jonathan Jones].: photo by CB2/ZOB/Brent Stirton/National Geographic via The Guardian, 12  May 2015


A rhino killed for its horn last month in Kruger National Park, South Africa
: photo by Salym Fayad/EPA via the Guardian, 21 March 2015




The Rhinoceros: Albrecht Dürer, 1515, woodcut (British Museum, London)


Rhinoceros: Albrecht Dürer, 1515, pen drawing, 274 x 420 mm (British Museum, London)


Asian rhino (Rhinocerotidae spp.). There are fewer than 4,000 wild rhinos in Asia. All three Asian species are highly targeted for their horns. Two, the Javan and Sumatran rhinos are critically endangered. The animals are killed and their horns sawn off and smuggled to their destination markets in Asia
: photo by STR/EPA via the Guardian, 5 February 2015



An Indian one horned rhino in the Kaziranga national park, Assam, India. The park is a rhino sanctuary and is helping to revive the species and protect them from poachers
: photo by Paul Hilton/HSI via The Guardian, 8 January 2015
 

Keeper Mohamed Doyo leans over to pat female northern white rhino Najin in her pen where she is being kept for observation at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Kenya, home to three of the last six northern white rhinos on Earth. Keepers say it is highly unlikely the three will ever reproduce naturally, meaning the species is doomed to extinction, unless science can help. One of the last six in the world has died in a San Diego safari park
: photo by Ben Curtis/AP via the Guardian, 15 December 2014



Orphaned baby rhino in Lewa Wildlife Conservancy, Ngare Ndare forest, Kenya. The conservancy is hand-raising three orphaned baby rhino: Nicky, Hope and Kilifi. Rhino are becoming extinct as a result of the brutal poaching fuelled by an illegal international market for their horns
: photo by Luca Ghidoni/Barcroft Media via The Guardian, 12 September 2014


A billboard in Hanoi, Vietnam, reads: ‘Rhino horns are just like buffalo horns, human hair and nail. Do not waste your money,’ to mark the World Rhino Day on 22 September. This year’s theme was ‘Five rhino species forever.’
: photo by Luong Thai Linh/EPA via The Guardian, 26 September 2014


Beijing, China.Girls wear costumes at the Global Mobile Internet Conference
: photo by Mark Schiefelbein/AP via The Guardian, 29 April 2015


Beijing, China.Girls Girls dressed as bumblebees make conversation at the conference: photo by Mark Schiefelbein/AP via The Guardian, 29 April 2015


Keeper Mohamed Doyo leans over to pat female northern white rhino Najin in her pen where she is being kept for observation at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Kenya, home to three of the last six northern white rhinos on Earth. Keepers say it is highly unlikely the three will ever reproduce naturally, meaning the species is doomed to extinction, unless science can help. One of the last six in the world has died in a San Diego safari park
: photo by Ben Curtis/AP via the Guardian, 15 December 2014

A seemingly insatiable demand

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Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone billboard, Laos. It's clear that it's the Chinese are the ones promoting this Golden Triangle SEZ between China, Laos, and Thailand. All contact information is in Chinese. Trade is one of the major reasons why China has been proactively investing and developing the northern region of Laos.: photo by Kaj17, 29 January 2013
I...Casino Infernale
 
High-end Laos resort serves up illegal wildlife for Chinese tourists: Shocking undercover investigation finds restaurants offering live bear cubs ‘to eat on request’ washed down with tiger bone wine in the ‘lawless playground’ of Laos’ Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone: Jeremy Hance for The Guardian, 19 March 2015 (updated 20 March 2015)

American social psychologist Paul Piff has built a career on studying how wealth and privilege affects moral behaviour. Through a wide variety of methods -- including rigged Monopoly games and monitoring luxury car drivers -- Piff has produced an intriguing, though controversial, collection of evidence that wealth and status makes a person more likely to act badly.


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interesting...verrrrry interesting #paul piff: image via homsectual sapien @atkittypause, 9 March 2014

The rich act more selfishly, break more rules, feel more entitled, and display less empathy and compassion, according to Piff and his colleague’s findings. Most of his research has occurred near his place of employment, the University of California, Berkeley, but Piff may want to consider conducting his next experiment in Laos’ Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone.

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Species loss and "intelligent life": image via Paul Piff @pkpiff. 29 March 2015

Lying on the banks of the Mekong River, the Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone is a large resort city catering especially to Chinese tourists and run by the Hong Kong-based Kings Romans Group. The luxury casino provides the main draw, as gambling is illegal in China; but the resort also includes a shooting range, more than 70 shops and restaurants, gardens, spas, and a bustling trade in endangered species’ parts, at least according to a new report by the Environment Investigation Agency (EIA) titled Sin City. 




Map showing location of the Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone (GT SEZ), Bokeo Province, Lao PDR: image via EIA
 
The report calls the zone a “lawless playground” with “not even a pretence of enforcement”. Indeed, even in a region of the world where wildlife trafficking is rampant and consumption of endangered species common, the report’s findings are shocking.



 
Chinese Casino in Tonpheung village, Bokeo, Laos: photo by Prince Roy, 8 March 2010

Eat a bear, drink a tiger

At the God of Fortune restaurant, for example, undercover investigators viewed a live, caged bear cub and python -– both of which were “available to eat on request,” according to the report. The menu also openly included such fare as bear paw, monitor lizards, pangolins, geckos, and a variety of snakes and turtles. And one could wash all that down with a jar of purported tiger bone wine. 



Caged bears in the the Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone, purportedly for eating:
photo by EIA via The Guardian, 19 March 2015


Two sun bears (Helarctos malayanus) at the Vietnam Bear rescue centre in Tam Dao national park, Vietnam. The bear’s gall bladders are used in traditional Chinese medicine and although bile is milked from commercially farmed bears, wild bears are often taken to stock or restock these small farms. Bear meat, particularly the paws, is considered a culinary delicacy. Killing bears is illegal in all bear range countries but is largely uncontrolled. The species is extinct in Singapore and has possibly become extinct in Bangladesh and China. They are banned from international commercial trade
: photo by Luong Thai Linh/EPA via the Guardian, 5 February 2015

At another restaurant, Fantasy Garrett, one can order something dubbed “sauté tiger meat”. The restaurant also displayed a large aquarium, but not filled with fish. Inside, was a fully mounted tiger skeleton with a sign advertising the restaurant’s tiger wine, where crushed tiger bones are added or steeped in rice wine.




A big cat skeleton -- allegedly a tiger -- in an aquarium of tiger bone wine
: photo by EIA via The Guardian, 19 March 2015

One could be sceptical, as tiger wine is sometimes faked.



A caged tiger bred for slaughter in the Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone:photo by EIA via The Guardian, 19 March 2015
 
But the Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone actually has the tigers to back up their claims of being able to consume and drink the great cats. Undercover investigators with the EIA and the Education for Nature Vietnam (ENV), visited a tiger and bear farm inside the zone housing a total of 38 Asiatic bears -– for eating –- and 35 tigers. In the case of the tigers, this captive population -– destined to be killed, defleshed, and mixed with rice wine -– represents a larger population than all of Laos’ wild tigers. The country is thought to be home to only a single population, no larger than 20 mature individuals. 
 


Tiger (Panthera tigris). A Sumatran tiger named Dara, trapped by tiger poachers. Indonesian conservationists have found 120 traps set up by poachers to snare critically endangered Sumatran tigers in Kerinci Seblat national park, according to officials. Poaching is the greatest immediate threat to this endangered species, of which there are as few as 3,200 in the wild.According to Traffic, parts from a minimum of 1,590 tigers were seized between January 2000 and April 2014 – an average of two animals per week. Every part of the tiger — from whisker to tail — is traded on the black market. Tigers are mounted as trophies, skins worn as status symbols, and their parts used in traditional medicine, as tonics and folk remedies
: photo by Kerinci Seblat National Park/AFP via The Guardian, 7 February 2015

The tiger-bear farm also plans to significantly expand operations.

“The keeper told investigators the plan is to acquire a total of 50 [female tigers] for breeding, with the aim of producing 500 tigers within three years and up to 1,000 tigers in the long term,” reads the report.

Across the zone’s shops, investigators found stuffed tigers and tiger skins, rhino horn shavings, beads and carvings from the helmeted hornbill, and a single leopard skin. 




'Massage' Parlor in Chinese Casino Concession.
  In the food court area of the Chinese casino concession area in Tonpheung Village
: photo by Prince Roy.7 March 2010


Even the casino brandishes wildlife products, namely ivory. Investigators found “carved whole tusks, bangles, beaded bracelets, pendants and other trinkets” openly-displayed where gamblers hoped for luck.



An ivory bust of former Chinese leader Mao Zedung for sale in Guangzhou, China. Chinese demand for ivory is stripping Tanzania of its elephant population
, photo by STR/EPA via The Guardian, 7 November 2014

Echoing Piff’s research, Debbie Banks, the Head of the EIA’s Tiger Campaign, said “wealth and status are definitely the drivers of demand”. 


Stuffed tiger in Laos

 
Stuffed tiger in Laos: photo courtesy of EIA via Mongabay.com, 20 March 2015

Experts are increasingly calling attention to the role of status in the illegal wildlife trade in this part of the world. As China -- and much of East Asia -- has experienced a runaway economic boom, snorting powdered rhino horn, displaying tiger skins, or purchasing ivory has become a way to flex one’s power and wealth.

“Stuffed tigers, tiger skins, carved ivory and helmeted hornbill casques are luxury products, purchased for vanity and increasingly as assets, just like gold or jade. The tiger bone wine that is openly for sale is marketed to men as a ‘strengthening tonic,’” Banks said, adding that “the open trade makes it feel like an illegal wildlife supermarket, where you can just browse, pick and choose without any fear of enforcement.”




Casino in Golden Triangle, Laos: photo by anacrisan, 4 October 2012

Golden Triangle: Drugs to wildlife trafficking

The Golden Triangle is a region in Southeast Asia criss-crossing three countries (Laos, Burma, and Thailand) and known for its massive opium and heroin production with a number of feuding drug lords to go with it. But the region has also become a tourist draw.



Dogbei Dogmeat Cold Noodles.
Foodcourt at
Tonpheung Village Chinese casino concession area: photo by Prince Roy, 7 March 2010

To take advantage of the region’s growing popularity, in 2007 Kings Romans Group entered into a 99-year lease for 10,000 hectares in the region. The company was granted 3,000 of these hectares as a duty-free zone, dubbed the Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone. 

A KingsRomans Group promo

A Kings Romans Group promo: image via EIA

“The stated aim of the agreement is to attract foreign investment in trade and tourism to drive local economic growth and alleviate poverty,” reads the EIA report.




 Chinese Hotel/Casino in Tonpheung Village. Wonder what it'll look like when it's finished: photo by Prince Roy.7 March 2010

Just a two-hour drive from China, tourists don’t have to feel like they’ve left home. Signs are in Mandarin, yuan is the main currency, and most workers are Chinese, according to the EIA. The place even runs on Beijing time.

The tax-free zone has also enjoyed political patronage from Laos. Both the president and prime minister of Laos have visited along with the local governor.

“The Chinese businesses and consumers are exploiting weak enforcement in Laos, but the Laos government can’t pretend they are ignorant of what is going on,” said Banks. 

And the EIA report that one of the major reasons why this border town has become a wildlife trafficking haven is Laos’ lax laws -– and little enforcement even for what is on the books.




 Laos Vegas (Casino): photo by JP Newell, 22 December 2014

Legal confusion

Laos’ 2007 Wildlife and Aquatic Law prohibits the use of some animals, such as tigers, elephants, rhinos, and bears. However, there is a loophole: one can use these animals so long as it has government permission. Furthermore, captive bred animals can be traded so long as they are at least second generation. But this requires registration with Laos’ government, something that the undercover investigators found was lacking in some of the zone.

The 2007 wildlife law, though, also bars government employees from either running a wildlife business or taking a share from one. This could be problematic, given that the government of Laos is also said to have a 20% financial stake in the Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone, further entangling domestic politicians with the resort.



Kings Roman Casino, the top draw to the special zone:photo by EIA via The Guardian, 19 March 2015

But Laos has international obligations as well. The country has been a signatory of Cites since 2004, making it illegal to export or import wild specimens (or their parts) of many of the species found in the Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone.

Most of the wildlife for sale at the [Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone] has been obtained in contravention of Cites,” argues the EIA report.

Banks said that “on paper, Laos authorities could walk into the [Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone], seize, arrest, prosecute and launch investigations into the criminals controlling the trade.”


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Terkesan berikutnya dengan #bokeo adalah kondisi pasar lokalnya. Bersih dan teratur. Belanjapun terasa nyaman. #laos: image via Vanda Lengkong @vhalhen123, 18 July 2014 Lao People's Democratic Republic

But no one is expecting a crackdown anytime soon.

“The track record of investigators and prosecutors elsewhere in the country to date suggests that is unlikely at the best of times, and would be a real challenge given the [political] connection,” noted Banks.

In order for the situation to change, Banks said action has to “come from the top”. She recommended “a clear message and direction from the prime minister to establish a special task force of investigators and prosecutors dedicated to wildlife crime. The law must also be strengthened, including revisions to end the breeding of tigers and trade in farmed tiger parts and products.”


 
Stuffed tigers for sale at the Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone:photo by EIA via The Guardian, 19 March 2015

But Laos is not the only country on the hook, according to the report. China also needs to act, given that the special economic zone is run by a Chinese company, visited by Chinese tourists, and made to resemble China as much as possible. 

And the Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone is not an aberration. There are also a number of other border towns with similar wildlife markets, also seemingly meant for wealthy Chinese tourists.



Menu at a restaurant in the special zone:photo by EIA via The Guardian, 19 March 2015

“There needs to be greater investment [by China] in intelligence-led enforcement to pursue the Chinese businesses and individuals who are running operations at the [Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone]... These shouldn’t be periodic operations that are co-ordinated once a year, but full-time, multi-agency operations,” said Banks. “If any country can put the resources into these specialised investigations, it is China.”




A female Amur Tiger, Iris, licks its 7-week-old cub during one of their first walks in an open-air cage at the Royev Ruchey zoo in Krasnoyarsk, Russia. The Amur Tiger is an endangered species: photo by Ilya Naymushin/Reuters, 2011

The profile of illegal wildlife trafficking has risen in the media and international politics in recent years, especially given the worsening poaching crisis of elephants and rhinos in Africa. The US government has issued new regulations on wildlife crime and launched new partnerships to combat the epidemic abroad, including funding. In the UK, Prince William has been passionately vocal on the subject, and last year, London hosted the first ever high-level meeting on wildlife trafficking. Finally, Interpol, the world’s police organisation, has launched an initiative to combat wildlife crime.



Vladimir Putin fixes a GPS-Argos satellite transmitter on to a tiger on 31 August 31, 2008
: photo by Alexey Druzhinin/AFP via the Guardian, 14 October 2014

Yet, Banks, said the actions by the international community still amount to “tip-toeing around.”

“International organised wildlife crime is not a new or emerging threat, the role of serious and organised criminal networks controlling illegal wildlife trade has been well documented for over 15 years,” said Banks, who argued that “it’s time to ramp up the pressure for faster action and the international community should not shy away from calling for trade suspensions under Cites.”



'Massage' Parlor in Chinese Casino Concession.  In the food court area of the Chinese casino concession area in Tonpheung Village: photo by Prince Roy.7 March 2010

Moral conundrums

But even if governments step up the fight against wildlife trafficking, there is still the problem of seemingly insatiable demand in the region. A demand so great that today China has more tigers in captive farms -– bred solely for killing -– than there are wild tigers on the planet: around 5,000 versus 3,200.




real and imaginary skins. store selling skins both real and imaginary (tiger with a wolf's tail} and fur clothing and hats. Shigatse, Tibet.: photo by cam17, 3 September 2013

“Promises to end illegal tiger trade are empty unless the law and policy in China is changed to end domestic trade in all tiger parts and products, and destroy stockpiles of tiger parts, including captive bred tiger parts,” said Banks, who argues that this trade is only fuelling poaching of wild tigers and other big cats as substitutes.




Tiger skin for sale, Yanji, Jilin, China.
On open display in a herbalist shop in downtown Yanji. The manager said it came from Changbaishan. Seems shocking but I sent these photos to the Environmental Investigation Agency and the wildlife trade monitoring network Traffic, and they agree that all the skins shown are fake - what a relief. Traffic say such fakes are very common. EIA said: "We’ve had a good look through and the good news is that all the skins appear to be fakes. It is quite common for skins to be painted in this way to look like tiger and leopard and we have come across quite a lot in China. It does of course indicate that there is perhaps demand for the real thing. One way to check if a skin is real or fake is to brush back the fur to see if the markings go right down the shaft of the hair. Texture of fur is also important and a gradual whitening of the fur under the belly of the animal. Some of the skins suggest the whitening has been attempted, but the actual markings (too uniform) are a giveaway. Also, the shape of the head, ears and tail where present, indicate they are not the skins of big cats."
: photo by Michael Rank, 9 September 2010

But it’s hardly just tigers. Experts estimate that somewhere between 22,000-35,000 elephants were slaughtered annually for their tusks in Africa in the last few years. Also, four of the world’s six rhino species are on the precipice of extinction, pushed, in part, by current or historic demand for their horn.



Thousands of elephants are still being killed for their ivory: photo by Sami Al Tokhais via The Guardian, 21 Match 2015

Indeed, ecosystems in Asia are literally being emptied of turtles, snakes, frogs, mammals, and even birds to feed demand for luxury foods, traditional medicine, and the newest pet craze, creating what’s been dubbed “empty forests” syndrome.



The Burmese star tortoise (Geochelone platynota), is a critically endangered species native to Burma. It is used for meat and traditional medicines in Asia and is highly sought after for the international pet trade, with collectors in Europe and North America willing to pay thousands of dollars for an individual. There are concerns that there may now be no viable wild populations. Commercial harvest and trade of this species is illegal under Burmese law, although export of captive specimens is permitted from one facility within the country, which also contributes to a future release program
: photo by Minden Pictures/Corbis via the Guardian, 5 February 2015

While poor people certainly do consume forest animals too -– especially in forest-dependent communities -– many of those in Asia’s black markets are actually going to rising middle and upper classes, i.e. those who can afford such seeming luxury.



Tiger [bone] wine, for sale in foreign tourists' souvenir shop, Rason, DPRK [North Korea]
: photo by Michael Rank, 7 September 2010

“What we’ve been finding across dozens of studies and thousands of participants across [the US] is that as a person’s levels of wealth increase, their feelings of compassion and empathy go down, and their feelings of entitlement, of deservingness, and their ideology of self-interest increases,” said Piff in a 2013 TED Talk. “In surveys, we found that it’s actually wealthier individuals who are more likely to moralise greed being good, and that the pursuit of self-interest is favourable and moral."


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Psychology studies suggest rising wealth means more jerks in S.F. #UC Berkeley #PaulPiff
: image via GamerGate Trends @Gamergatolizer, 29 January 2015

Piff has not studied whether wealth decreases compassion for non-humans, though it’s not a big stretch to assume it would. On the bright side, Piff has also found that change is possible and such behaviours are never fixed.

“In fact, we’ve been finding in our own laboratory research that small psychological interventions, small changes to people’s values, small nudges in certain directions, can restore levels of egalitarianism and empathy,” he said.

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Calvin got it right. #CalvinAndHobbes #awe #astronomy #stargazing: image via Paul Piff @pkpiff. 29 March 2015

A number of campaigns are now targeting people across East Asia with those psychological nudges through advertisements and celebrities. They hope to undercut the social prestige of displaying a tiger skin or eating bear paw or ordering pangolin soup. While social change is usually not rapid, it must come fast if it’s to be in time to save Asia’s vanishing natural heritage.



Tiger skins seized from a poacher on the outskirts of Delhi
: photo by Pallava Bagla/Corbis Sygma



Phet -- the Indochinese Tiger. Phet is a victim of illegal wildlife trade. Her mother was killed by poachers in February 2000. Her two brothers too did not survive. By the time she was just four days old, Phet had already been sold on four times by illegal traders. Capture stress, malnutrition, ringworm infestation and diarrhea had taken their toll on Phet. She was in extremely poor condition and had lost most of her hair when she was rescued. Phet has made a full recovery thanks to CWI's Tiger Adoption Programme. She will depend on human care for the rest of her life: photo by Mikhail Esteves, 15 October, 2007
II...The tigers and me



Captured tiger cub, Thailand. This poor guy was at the "Tiger Temple" in Kanchanaburi province, Thailand. I don't recommend this trip at all. Although it sounds nice touching the tigers and taking their pictures it's not as cool as you may think.The big tigers look as if on drugs and they just lie there sleeping all day. It looks sad and somehow you feel that these animals are used commercially just to bring money to the monks. Some other people in this region started capturing/buying/getting tigers and now they are happy to present those in cages for tourists -- for money of course. It's very different than in a Zoo, at least in a Zoo they have a relatively big area for the tigers to move and are being taken care by professionals. Here are approx 15 tigers in chains -- the big ones sleeping all the time (strange) and tons of people visiting every day putting money in this monastery. I understand it's hot and the tigers have to do this every day, probably are very bored, but not a single tiger moving from approx 10 adults? Second, you are not allowed to take pictures of the big tigers (Imagine my shock to hear that after traveling so much) . Some volunteer will take your hand and bring you behind the sleeping tigers and another volunteer will take your camera and take some snapshots of you touching the tiger. You do this for approx 5 big sleeping tigers, 2 photos per each tiger (one landscape and one portrait). Or you can buy the "Special Photo" treatment and they take the sleeping tiger head and put it in your lap and somebody takes a photo of that. My photos are with the tiger cubs, these have a different treatment than the adults. At least these seem like normal "alive" animals -- but still in chains.: photo by photo by Pavel, 9 September 2009



Tiger Temple, Kanchanaburi province, Thailand: photo by brett marlow, 22 February 2008



Captured Tiger Cub, Thailand: photo by Pavel, 9 September 2009


The tigers and me. At a zoo of sorts in Thailand -- it was billed as a Crocodile Farm, but there were two gorgeous tigers and some elephants that made the crocodiles seem boring: photo by Roberta Taylor, 9 May 2008.


Beautiful [Captive tiger, Thailand]: photo by Roberta Taylor, 9 May 2008


 
Tiger, Tiger Kingdom, Phuket, Thailand: photo by Nicholas Vollmer, 14 January 2014


 
sedated tiger, Chiang Mai, Thailand: photo by garycycles7, 3 May 2011


 
Tiger Temple 3 [Kanchanaburi Province, Thailand]: photo by audrey_sel, 2 January 2007



Baby Tiger (Tiger Temple, Kanchanaburi Province, Thailand)
: photo by rogoyski, 3 January 2008


 
Tiger Temple, Kanchanaburi Province, Thailand: photo by SB, 21 November 2005



Tiger Temple 7 [Kanchanaburi Province, Thailand]: photo by audrey_sel, 2 January 2007


Tigers, Samphran Elephant Ground and Zoo, Ban Phaeo, Samut Sakran, Thailand: photo by Sophia Lucero, 3 June 2011



outfits: photo by John Henry Mostyn, 3 June 2005



Pingyao Bicycle. Ancient City of Pingyao, Shanxi, China.: photo by ccdoh1, 16 April 2012
III...Tigerish
 


Epic Fireworks -- Hide It From the Wife [Batley, UK]: photo by Todd Lappin, 31 October 2007



Tigerskin star with band, gallery opening, Seattle: photo by Wonderlane, 9 December 2011


Untitled [Brick Lane, Shoreditch, London]: photo by Nick Anderson, 31 August 2008



The Way of the Tiger [Landen, Vlaams Brabant, Belgium]: photo by Yves Salmon, 24 December 2007habeebee, 24 July 2012



tiger, tiger [Psiri, Athens, Attica]: photo by René Mouton, 26 January 2015



Food for Thought. Tigerskin performer in discussion over lunch at event in Sydney
: photo by Louis Allen, 22 August 2010




Tiger Rag. MSU museum's annual Darwin Discovery Day [East Lansing, Michigan]: photo by Billl Harrison, 8 February 2015


Found photo. I am thinking hotel. California? Nevada?  [c. 1970s]: photo by habeebee, 24 July 2012


Cans and Tiger Skin Cap. Seen at London's Trafalgar Square.: photo by Garry Knight, 30 August 2014

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Handsome Petir is ready to be released into the wild #HarimauSumatera  #TamblingWildLife #sumatrantiger: image via Jaringan Pulsa @jaringanpulsa, 27 February 2015

IV...Is there a future for Handsome Petir and his kind?

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Mari kita jaga mereka #HarimauSumateraTWNC #HarimauSumatera #TamblingWildLife #SUMATRANTIGER: image via nansusanti1 @ nansusanti1, 2 March 2015

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 sayangi fauna #TamblingWildLife #HarimauSumatera #SumatranTiger: image via Tulusma Hutasoit @TulusmaH, 2 March 2015

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Save them! #HarimauSumateraTWNC #HarimauSumatera #TamblingWildLife#SumatranTiger: image via ahmadhai @hadi_AhmadAshor, 2 March 2015
 
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 menyayangi binatang liar #TamblingWildLife #HarimauSumatera #SumatranTiger: image via Dwi Rochadi, 2 March 2015

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 Save Sumatera Tigers... #TamblingWildLife #HarimauSumatera #SumatranTiger: image via feny lim @fenylimfeny, 2 March 2015

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 #Deforestation Drives 80% Of #Indonesia's Emissions, Making It World's 5th Biggest Emitter: image via Assaad Razzouk  @Assaad Razzouk, 8 May 2015

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/23/Tiger_2.jpg

Tiger (Panthera tigris), Frankfurt Zoo: photo by Moni Sertel, 15 April 2009

Rohingya: Adrift

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Journey through hell and beyond @AFPpix #Rohingya: image via The Star @staronline, 16 May 2015
Op-Ed: The Latest in a Long Line of Abuses Against the Rohingya: Mabrur Ahmed, Rohingya Project, for Restless Beings, 13 May 2015

Over time it's very easy to become desensitised to reports which relay 'the number of dead...' or 'the number of displaced...' etc when we face a barrage of humanitarian disasters, war torn communities and the like on a daily basis. But when you hear about the same community facing the same abuses but just on an increasing scale over the period of a generation, more than 50 years, and there is a general apathy towards their silent suffering, we must awaken our senses that we live in a world that readily bows down to fast cars, fast fashion and now seemingly fast news.

I oversimplified the latest scenario of the plight of the Burmese Rohingya earlier in a Facebook post to make the issue as easy to digest as possible. For context sake, this a copy:
 
Rohingya since June 2012 have been systematically moved towards IDP camps where the conditions are beyond appalling. As a last resort, the Rohingya have tried to flee these conditions and as Bangladesh has strictly denied access beyond its borders, they are faced with no alternative but to travel to Malaysia and Indonesia which have been typically receptive towards Rohingya migrants. In order to get there, though, they have to often pass Thailand. Many human traffickers have in the past intercepted the boats and then taken Rohingya captive in 'slave camps'. The traffickers then hold the captives' families to ransom; if they pay up they are passed to other traffckers who take them onward; if they don't pay, they are beaten, and many have been killed. A few days back mass graves were found of those killed by the traffickers. The Thai authorities are now stringently pushing boats on and not allowing them to come to Thailand. In previous months, Rohingya boats have then gone on to Malaysia and Indonesia. Over the weekend about 1500 or so landed in Aceh in Indonesia and Langkawi in Malaysia. As a result, Malaysia and Indonesia have now said they will not allow any boats of Rohingya in. This means those boats can't head back to Burma where the brutal leadership would punish unbearably, they can't risk being in the custody of the murderous traffickers in Thailand and they can't go to Bangladesh where they have been aggressively turned away for the past 2 years. So their fate? Almost certain death in the Andaman Sea.
And what is being done about it? Nothing. No international pressure, no regional political pressure, no mainstream media coverage. Nothing.
 
And the saddest thing about this latest crisis the Rohingya face is the absolute silence from political powers, media outlets and even global aid agencies. The reality is the Rohingya issue is simply not 'fast news' enough. It doesn't have an immediate threat on any Western powers. It doesn't have any resonance with petro-dollars. It doesn't even have any bearing on government within Burma. And because there is no monetary, geographical or political motivation, the lives of Rohingya are not controversial enough to report or to act upon or to rush to assistance.

But the reality is that there are approximately 6,000 Rohingya men, women and children stranded in the Andaman Sea who do not have enough space to lie down on the broken fishing boats where up to 500 are crammed. There is nowhere for them to use the toilet with dignity. There is no water to drink.  There is no food to eat. They can see the shores of Aceh and Langkawi. And they hear the Malaysian and Indonesian authorities say that are not welcome on shore, not even for medical attention.  There is no chatter or crying on these boats. There is just silence. And a realisation that they will lose their lives at sea. That their silence is reciprocated by the world, our political leaders and our media. The lives of these 6,000 will not change anything politically, monetarily or geographically.
But our silence will forever have an impact on their humanity.


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$90-370: Boat fare for #Rohngya  crossing the Bay of Bengal $2,000: Their freedom upon arrival: image via UN OCHA Asia Pacific @OCHAAsiaPac. 11 May 2015 


Rohingya migrants jump to collect food supplies dropped by a Thai army helicopter from a boat drifting off Koh Lipe in the Andaman Seas: photo by Christophe Archambault/AFP via the Guardian, 15 March 2015


Rohingya migrants collect supplies dropped by a Thai helicopter as their boat drifts in Thai waters in the Andaman Sea: photo by Christophe Archambault/AFP via the Guardian, 15 March 2015
 

Rohingya migrants pass food supplies dropped by a Thai army helicopter to others aboard a boat: photo by Christophe Archambault/AFP via the Guardian, 15 March 2015

Rohingya migrants on a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman Sea on Thursday.
Rohingya migrants on a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman Sea on Thursday. “Whoever you think you are, you forget it on the boats,” said a 23-year-old migrant who survived a brutal journey, at sea for weeks with barely any food or water, until his father raised enough money to pay off the smugglers and he was landed in Malaysia. “They will kick, punch and starve it out of you.”: photo by Agence France-Presse via Wall Street Journal, 15 May 2015
 
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Two More Suspected #Rohingya Trafficking Camps Found in #Thailand
: image via Khaosod English @Khaosod English, 5 May 2015

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Fossa comune con decine di profughi Rohingya scoperta in Thailandia #rohingya #StrageMigranti: image via Asia blog @Asiablog, 4 May 2015 

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Thai police make arrests after discovering a mass grave - #Muslims #Rohingya: image via Ultrascan HUMINT @ultrascanhumint, 4 May 2015
 
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@MarkGKirshner "@ajam: Six more suspected #Rohingya bodies found in Thai trafficking probe": image via petra 1054 @candanga, 6 May 2015 

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A line of coffins: How the #Rohingya crisis came to #Thailand: image via bangkokdave @bangkokdave, 6 May 2015


And we thought buddhist monks couldn't hurt a fly, but these do #Rohingya #Burma: image via aalzaid4 @aalzaid4, 2 May 2015
 

And we thought buddhist monks couldn't hurt a fly, but these do #Rohingya #Burma: image via aalzaid4 @aalzaid4, 2 May 2015


And we thought buddhist monks couldn't hurt a fly, but these do #Rohingya #Burma: image via aalzaid4 @aalzaid4, 2 May 2015

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 #Burma | Witness the condition of a #Rohingya Muslim child and her copy of the Noble Quran: image via LetteredOwl @ LetteredOwl, 2 May 2015

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“More suspected #Rohingya corpses discovered in Thai south via @anadoluagency": image via Voice of Rohingya @VoiceRohingya, 6 May 2015


More boat people camps been found by the detective not far from the first camp #Songkhai #Rohingya: image via Chutima Sidasathian @OiChutima, 2 May 2015


More boat people camps been found by the detective not far from the first camp #Songkhai #Rohingya: image via Chutima Sidasathian @OiChutima, 2 May 2015
 

In #Thailand: Mass Graves of #Rohingya Found in human-trafficker camp. @UN @hrw @amnesty: image via Hamidullah Babu @HamidullahBabu, 1 May 2015  Chittagong, Bangladesh


In #Thailand: Mass Graves of #Rohingya Found in human-trafficker camp. @UN @hrw @amnesty: image via Hamidullah Babu @HamidullahBabu, 1 May 2015  Chittagong, Bangladesh

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Burma’s #Rohingya Muslims Targeted by Buddhist Mob Violence: image via Dutch Muslims @Dutch Muslims, 24 April 2015

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#Rohingya trafficking route - presented by @BKK POST - @Burma #Myanmar #Thailand #Malaysia: image via Nay San Lwin @nslwin, 11 May 2015
 
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Stop playing political ping-pong with people's lives, bring them ashore. What century are we living in? #Rohingya: image via Aamir Yatoo KASHMIR @aamiryayoo, 14 May 2015


"Please give us water!" Hundreds of #Rohingya migrants on boat turned away by #Thailand: image via David Sim @davidsim, 14 May 2014


Migrants believed to have come from Burma and Bangladesh on an abandoned boat drifting in the Andaman Sea
: photo by STR/EPA via the Guardian, 15 March 2015


Migrants, believed to be from Burma and Bangladesh, left, receive food, water and other supplies from a Thai fishing boat in the Andaman Se
a: photo by EPA via The Guardian, 14 May 2015

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8000 #Rohingya refugees fleeing #Burma genocide forced to drift at sea to starve to death: image via Anonymous @YourAnonCentral, 14 May 2015

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What a Shame! Humanity? Photo: #Rohingya jump from boat to water to collect food supplies dropped by Thai army [photo by Christophe Archambault] #AFP: image via Dr. Imran H. Sarker @ImranHSarker, 16 May 2015


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Can anyone tell me which part of the refugee criteria the #Rohingya do not meet? #Refugees are not migrants: image via Jamila Hanan@JamilaHanan 16 May 2015

 
The #Rohingya are not migrants they are #refugees without refugee status or any status at all: image via Jamila Hanan@JamilaHanan 16 May 2015


These people are considered refugees, not illegal immigrants, and they need help! #Rohingya: image via Arman Fikri @ArmanFikriAdnan, 16 May 2015

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 @Rohingya Every human deserves a place on earth. Would other nations treat us the same if roles were reversed?: image via DR DHESI (M.D., MPH) @DhesiBajaRaja, 15 May 2015


"Please give us water!" Hundreds of #Rohingya migrants on boat turned away by #Thailand: image via David Sim @davidsim, 14 May 2014


More than 120,000 Rohingya have fled Burma in the past three years, according to estimates
: photo by AFP via The Guardian, 14 May 2015


This boat crammed with scores of Rohingya migrants, including many young children was found drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe. Passengers said that several people had died over the last few days
: photo by
Christophe Archambault/AFP via the Guardian, 15 March 2015


Rohingya migrants sit on a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe. The vessel is crammed with scores of people, including many young children.: photo by Christophe Archambault/AFP via The Guardian, 14 May 2015

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It's not about race, or religion. It's basic #HumanRights. Sending love and light for #Rohingya
: image via Natalie Kniese @NatalieKniese, 14 May 2015


The #Rohingya are not migrants they are #refugees without refugee status or any status at all: image via Jamila Hanan@JamilaHanan 16 May 2015

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~ 6,000 Bangladeshis and #Rohingya Muslims stranded on crowded, wooden boats at sea. Without food or water: image via Khaled Bey @KhaledBeydoun, 16 May 2015

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Hundreds of #Rohingya migrants having lunch inside a shelter in Lhoksukon, Aceh on May 11, 2015
: image via Ansharut Tawheed @ansharuttawheed, 16 May 2015

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 Re @TonyAbbottMHR'scomments on the #Rohingya being pushed-back from dry land: image via Crossborder Operational Matters @xBorderOps, 16 May 2015

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Far out in the sea stuck in a boat, the waves are rough and the wind is blowing hard. They cry out to Allah #Rohingya being pushed-back from dry land: image via Fairuz @RuzExtrodinaire, 76 May 2015  Nairobi, Kenya

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This sums up the situation for #Rohingya and I am ashamed to be from #Indonesia, world's 8th largest economy by GDP: image via Julia Macfarlane @juliamacfarlane, 16 May 2015


A rescued migrant now at the new confinement in Langsa, Indonesia on Friday. More than 750 Rohingya and Bangladeshi migrants were rescued off Indonesia, plus another 200 people off the Indonesian island of Aceh
: photo by Jefta Images/Barcroft Media via The Guardian, 16 May 2015


A Rohingya girl sits on a bus taking refugees to their new temporary shelter in Lhoksukon
: photo by
Ulet Ifansasti via the Guardian, 15 March 2015


A refugee tries to a help a friend who lies unconscious after being saved from the sea in Kuala Langsa, East Aceh, Indonesia
: photo by
Hotli Simanjuntak/EPA via the Guardian, 15 March 2015


 Bangladeshi migrants walk toward a temporary shelter upon arrival at Kuala Langsa port in Langsa, Aceh province, Indonesia: photo by Binsar Bakkara/AP via the Guardian, 15 March 2015


Migrants whose boats washed ashore on the island of Sumatra sit in lines for dinner at a sports stadium turned into temporary shelter, in Lhoksukon: photo by Binsar Bakkara/AP via the Guardian, 15 March 2015

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A #Rohingya boy looks on as he waits along with other refugees at a temporary detention centre in #Langkawi Pic @AFP: image via Nay San Lwin @nslwin, 12 May 2015


Myanmar's Rakhine State: different realities of displaced, confined and resettled communities. Rohingya camp: photo by EU/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection, 28 May 2014


Myanmar's Rakhine State: different realities of displaced, confined and resettled communities. Maramagyi camp: photo by EU/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection, 28 May 2014



Myanmar's Rohingya: uncertain future. In unofficial camps, some shelters are so low that only children can fully stand up.: photo by EU/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection, 28 May 2014


Myanmar's Rohingya: uncertain future. The start of the rainy season will make life even more difficult for the Rohingya IDPs.  Rakhine, Myanmar/Burma.: photo by Evangelos Petratos via EU Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection, 11 June 2014



Myanmar: Rohingya face a humanitarian crisis: photo by Evangelos Petratos via EU Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection, 11 June 2014



Myanmar's Rohingya: uncertain future. Elevated walkways have been built as water levels rise in the camps: photo by Evangelos Petratos via EU Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection, 11 June 2014



Myanmar's Rohingya: uncertain future. For many Internally Displaced Persons, these rain ponds are the only source of drinking water.: photo by Evangelos Petratos via EU Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection, 11 June 2014



In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015



In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015


In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015
 

In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015


In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015


In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015



In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015


In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015


In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015


In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015


In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015



In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015


In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015



In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015



In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015


In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015


In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015


In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015


In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015


In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015


In Kutupalong makeshift camp, Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, where thousands of undocumented Rohingya refugees from Myanmar have been living for years in dire conditions, around the official camp
: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015Myanmar's Rohingya: photo by European Commission DG ECHO / EU Humanitarian Aid, 31 March 2015

An Rohingya woman, Samsidah Begom binti Abdul Syukur, cries as make a phone call to her son in Malaysia at a shelter on Tuesday in Lhoksukon, Aceh province, Indonesia. Boats carrying over 500 of Myanmar's Rohingya refugees have arrived in Indonesia, many requiring medical attention. They have warned that thousands more are thought to be still at sea. Myanmar's Rohingya Muslim community have long been persecuted and marginalized by Myanmar's mostly Buddhist population

A Rohingya woman, Samsidah Begom binti Abdul Syukur, cries as she makes a phone call to her son in Malaysia at a shelter on Tuesday in Lhoksukon, Aceh province, Indonesia. Boats carrying over 500 of Myanmar’s Rohingya refugees have arrived in Indonesia, many requiring medical attention: photo by Ulet Ilfansasti via FT Photo Diary, 12 May 2015

The only moment we have is right now

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What are the benefits of #Mindfulness: image via Ekhart Yoga @EkhartYoga, 18 May 2015
 
I...Barbara Ehrenreich: Mind Your Own Business
 
Mind Your Own Business: Barbara Ehrenreich, The Baffler #27, 2015

At about the beginning of this decade, mass-market mindfulness rolled out of the Bay Area like a brand new app. Very much like an app, in fact, or a whole swarm of apps. 

Previous self-improvement trends had been transmitted via books, inspirational speakers, and CDs; now, mindfulness could be carried around on a smartphone.

There are hundreds of them, these mindfulness apps, bearing names like Smiling Mind and Buddhify. 

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A fantastic idea c/o the genius @rohan_21awake from @buddhify 'Cards for #Mindfulness'
: image via Sean PdeC @CaptainCrikey 18 May 2015

A typical example features timed stretches of meditation, as brief as one minute, accompanied by soothing voices, soporific music, and images of forests and waterfalls.


Mindfulness: photo by UW Health, 11 October 2013

This is Buddhism sliced up and commodified, and, in case the connection to the tech industry is unclear, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist blurbed a seminal mindfulness manual by calling it “the instruction manual that should come with our iPhones and BlackBerries.” It’s enough to make you think that the actual Buddha devoted all his time under the Bodhi Tree to product testing. In the mindfulness lexicon, the word “enlightenment” doesn’t have a place.

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Seen our brand spanking new #mindfulness website? It's called: bemindful and it's packed full of info!: image via Mental Health Fdn @MHF_tweets, 13 May 2015

In California, at least, mindfulness and other conveniently accessible derivatives of Buddhism flourished well before BlackBerries. I first heard the word in 1998 from a wealthy landlady in Berkeley, advising me to be “mindful” of the suffocating Martha Stewart-ish decor of the apartment I was renting from her, which of course I was doing everything possible to un-see. A possible connection between her “mindfulness” and Buddhism emerged only when I had to turn to a tenants’ rights group to collect my security deposit. She countered with a letter accusing people like me -- leftists, I suppose, or renters -- of oppressing Tibetans and disrespecting the Dalai Lama.



Mindfulness: photo by UW Health, 11 October 2013
 
During the same stint in the Bay Area, I learned that rich locals liked to unwind at Buddhist monasteries in the hills, where, for a few thousand dollars, they could spend a weekend doing manual labor for the monks. Buddhism, or some adaptation thereof, was becoming a class signifier, among a subset of Caucasians anyway, and nowhere was it more ostentatious than in Silicon Valley, where star player Steve Jobs had been a Buddhist or perhaps a Hindu-- he seems not to have made much of a distinction -- even before it was fashionable for CEOs to claim a spiritual life. Mindfulness guru and promoter Soren Gordhamer noticed in 2013 that tech leaders from Google, LinkedIn, Twitter, and other major tech companies seemed to be “tapped into an inner dimension that guides their work.” He called it “wisdom” and named his annual conferences Wisdom 2.0 -- helpful shorthand, as it happens, for describing the inner smugness of the Bay Area elite.

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The view from the Wisdom 2.0 stage on opening night (From Arturo Bejar) #wisdom2015: image via Soren Gordhamer @SorenG, 6 March 2015

Today, mindfulness has far outgrown Silicon Valley and its signature industry, becoming another numbingly ubiquitous feature of the verbal landscape, as “positive thinking” once was. While an earlier, more arduous, version of Buddhism attracted few celebrities other than Richard Gere, mindfulness boasts a host of prominent practitioners -- Arianna Huffington, Gwyneth Paltrow, and Anderson Cooper among them.

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Checking out venue for 20-something event on mindfulness and meaning in NYC with Arianna and Huff Post in October ...: image via Soren Gordhamer @SorenG, 14 May 2014

“Mindful leadership” debuted at Davos in 2013 to an overflow crowd, and Wisdom 2.0 conferences have taken place in New York and Dublin as well as San Francisco, with attendees fanning out to become missionaries for the new mind-set. This year’s event in San Francisco advertises not only familiar faces from Google and Facebook, but also speeches by corporate representatives of Starbucks and Eileen Fisher. Aetna, a Fortune 100 health insurance company, offers its 34,000 employees a twelve-week meditation class, and its CEO dreams of expanding the program to include all its customers, who will presumably be made healthier by clearing their minds. Even General Mills, which dates back to the nineteenth century, has added meditation rooms to its buildings, finding that a seven-week course produces striking results. According to the Financial Times,
83 percent of participants said they were “taking time each day to optimize my personal productivity” -- up from 23 percent before the course. Eighty-two percent said they now make time to eliminate tasks with limited productivity value -- up from 32 percent before the course.

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With LinkedIn CEO, Jeff Weiner recently at our lunch on Compassionate Management. Awesome day!: image via Soren Gordhamer @SorenG, 12 February 2014
Productivity is only one objective of the new miniaturized meditation; there are also the more profound-sounding goals of “wisdom” and “compassion,” which are not normally associated with Silicon Valley or American business in general. Just a few years ago, say in 2005, the tech industry exemplified a very different kind of corporate ideology, featuring multitasking and perpetually divided attention -- think an incoming call conducted while scanning a new product design, checking email, and deflecting the interruptions of subalterns. It was madness, but the business self-help literature encouraged people to “surf the chaos,” nourishing themselves on caffeine and adrenaline. If we needed to unclutter our minds, we were directed to the gym and an hour or so of intense physical activity. A trim muscular body, combined with an ever-flickering gaze, signified executive status.

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Buddha's Guide to Meditation #mindfulness #daily #zen #yoga #buddha #quotes #thesecret: image via Tao of GTD @taoofgtd, 9 May 2015

The backlash against chaos surfing came on quickly, as if The Wolf of Wall Street had been forced to drink a soothing bowl of milk. 

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I found the perfect spot to enjoy the life changing app #mindfulness
#meditation #wellness: image via Amy Synott@amysnnottptsdjedi @ptsdjedi, 9 May 2015

Studies were piling up to suggest that a lifestyle dependent on multiple devices and double-shot espressos might be toxic to the human mind, impeding concentration and undermining human connectedness.

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 #TechnologyWeek #TEDxAUEB technology #quote #sherryturkle: image via TEDxAUEB @TEDxAUEB, 20 February 2015
 
There was wild talk of “unplugging” and fleeing offline.

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The Psychology of Social Media - Real Simple - #sherryturkle #mindandtechnology: image via Body & Mind @quaeparvasunt, 9 February 2015

In Northern California in 2013, a group called Digital Detox began offering Camp Grounded, a well-publicized summer camp for adults, at which all devices (and alcohol and children and real names) were prohibited, the better to encourage “play” and conversation.

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#Mindfulness retreats like now other: image via adrian @conscious2, 9 May 2015

We had once imagined that human attention was infinitely divisible, with each particle of it potentially available to advertisers, entertainers, and employers. But it was turning out to be fragile, even endangered, and in need of constant repair.

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 #TechnologyWeek #TEDxAUEB technology #quoteMT @TED_ED #Good #Quote #sherryturkle #ParentingSkillz #parenting #kids #mom #dad #children #responsible: image via T.F. Hargret @T.F. Hargret, 22 February 2015

Where brilliance and creativity had formerly reigned, there were, by the turn of the millennium, suspicions of pathology. Child psychiatrists began to drop “bipolarity” as a default diagnosis and turn their attention to attention itself. Too many children were deficient in it, just as their plugged-in parents were often guilty of “distracted parenting.” The switch from bipolarity to attention deficit disorder is hard to date exactly, in part because these conditions are now said to be frequently “comorbid,” or overlapping.

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Take a moment and check in with yourself.#mindfulness #LoveConquersHate #loveyourselfie #LoveYourselfProject: image via LoveYourselfProject @LoveYourself, 9 May 2015 Brooklyn, NY

But as we began to spend more and more of our time interacting with mood-less programs and devices, psychiatry seems to have turned from emotional concerns like bipolarity, which is a “mood disorder,” to cognitive problems like ADD and ADHD.

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The world of 'wait, what?' and interrupted conversations, #flightfromconversation#sherryturkle: image via navit keren @navit keren, 3 April 2014
At the same time, diagnoses of autism and Asperger’s syndrome were skyrocketing -- especially, as a 2001 article in Wired pointed out, in Santa Clara County, home of Silicon Valley. Among the adult population, surely something was wrong with Steve Jobs, who alternated between obsessive attention to details and complete withdrawal into himself, between a spiritual aloofness and uncontrolled temper tantrums. Some observers thought they detected a hint of autism in the unblinking, almost affect-free Bill Gates, and the characters in HBO’s Silicon Valley are portrayed as well “within the spectrum.”

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How #Headspace made one sceptical Hongkonger a convert to #meditation via @SCMP News
: image via Headspace @GetHeadspace, 12 May 2015

So Silicon Valley embraced mindfulness with a twinge of contrition. Not only did its corporate culture encourage something called “geek syndrome,” but its products seemed to spread that same derangement to everyone else. The devices that were supposed to make us smarter and more connected to other humans were actually messing with our minds, causing “net brain” and “monkey mind,” as well as physical disorders associated with long hours of sitting. As we click between Twitter and Facebook, text and hypertext, one link and another, synapses are being formed and then broken with febrile inconstancy -- or so a growing number of experts, such as MIT’s Sherry Turkle, warn us -- leaving the neuronal scaffolding too fragile to house large thoughts.


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We r uncomfortable being alone w/out devices for 6 mins. After we pref electroshocks. #SherryTurkle #wisdom15 #MIT: image via Katrin Windsor @Katrinwindsor, 28 February 2015

A less arrogant industry might have settled for warning labels on its phones and pads, but Silicon Valley wanted an instant cure, preferably one that was hi-tech and marketable. The great advantage of mindfulness was that it seemed to be based firmly on science; no “hippie bullshit” or other “woo woo” was involved. A neuroscientist reported that Buddhist monks with about ten thousand hours of meditation under their belts had altered brain functions; shorter bouts of meditation seemed to work at least temporary changes in novices. The field of “contemplative neuroscience” was born, and Silicon Valley seized on it for a much-needed “neural hack.” Through meditation, monastic or app-guided, anyone could reach directly into their own moist brain tissue and “resculpt” it in a calmer, more attentive direction. Mindfulness, as its promoters put it, fosters “neuroplasticity.”

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 Rise Up With Mindfulness - by @ptsdjedi via @GoodMenProject #mindfulness #MHAW15 @mentalhealth: image via ptsdjedi @ptsdjedi, 18 May 2015

No one questions that the brain changes with the experiences the mind undergoes. If thought has a physical basis, as scientists assume, then it produces physical alterations in the brain. Trauma and addiction can lead to lasting problems; even fleeting events may leave the chemical changes in the brain that we experience as memory. In fact, “plasticity” is a pallid descriptor for the constant, ongoing transformation of brain tissue. Neurons reach out to each other through tiny membranous protusions, often forming new synapses. Synapses that fire frequently grow stronger, while the inactive ones wither. Well-connected neurons thrive, while neglected ones die. There is even some evidence that neurons in mature animals can reproduce.

"It's an app that teaches you how to meditate. It's kind of genius."
-- Emma Watson, actress
Headspace mobile app advert: via Headspace

What there is no evidence for, however, is any particularly salubrious effect of meditation, especially in byte-sized doses. This was established through a mammoth, federally sponsored “meta-analysis” of existing studies, published last year, which found that meditation programs can help treat stress-related symptoms but are no more effective in doing so than other interventions, such as muscle relaxation, medication, or psychotherapy. There is no excuse for ignoring this study, which achieved worldwide attention. So maybe meditation does have a calming, “centering” effect, but so does an hour of concentration on a math problem or a glass of wine with friends. As for Silicon Valley’s unique contribution, mindfulness apps, a recent study concluded that there is
an almost complete lack of evidence supporting the usefulness of those applications. We found no randomized clinical trials evaluating the impact of these applications on mindfulness training or health indicators, and the potential for mobile mindfulness applications remains largely unexplored.

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Being aware of life WHILE it's happening... yet we mostly WHILE our life away #mindfulness #awareness
: image viaMndfullness 24/7  @_Helen_Grain, 9 May 2015
For an industry based on empirical science and employing large numbers of engineers, Silicon Valley has been remarkably incurious about the scientific basis of mindfulness, probably because the “neuroplasticity” concept is just too alluring. If the brain can be resculpted through conscious effort, then mindfulness is as imperative as physical exercise; the brain is a “muscle” and, like any muscle, in need of training. Google’s chief motivator Chade-Meng Tan was an early adopter, setting up the company’s mindfulness training program, Search Inside Yourself, in 2007, and later telling the Guardian:
If you are a company leader who says employees should be encouraged to exercise, nobody looks at you funny. . . . The same thing is happening to meditation and mindfulness, because now that it’s become scientific, it has been demystified. It’s going to be seen as fitness for the mind.

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 #Mindfulness practice is scientifically proven to significantly improve productivity. #HeadspaceFacts #science: image via Headspace @Get_Headspace, 14 May 2015
One popular and highly rated mindfulness app, Get Some Headspace, advertises itself as a “gym membership for the mind.” Only it’s easier than working out, of course, or even yoga. As one enthusiastic software entrepreneur said of the Headspace app, “You don’t have to sit in a lotus position. You just press ‘play’ and chill out.”

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We followed 4 brand new Headspacers for a month. Find out what happened: #RadioHeadspace
: image via Headspace @Get_Headspace, 17 May 2015

Outside of meditation, which can take just a few minutes a day, the daily practice of mindfulness can be summarized as pay attention, or better yet, pay attention to one thing at a time. Take out the earphones when the children are trying to talk to you. Listen carefully to colleagues, look them in the eyes, and attempt to comprehend things from their point of view. Do not multitask; just sink yourself into “the moment,” one task at a time.


Louise Hay: The point of power is always in the present moment: image by BK, 3 January 2015
 
What could be simpler?

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 My meditation spot today #santacruz: image via Soren Gordhamer @SorenG, 5 January 2014

Left unanswered in all of this is the question of what to be mindful of. Yes, the children. But what do you do when one of them is trying to confide in you and the other one is screaming from the bedroom? 

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 You are enough. You are so enough. It is unbelievable how enough you are. -- true story #kindness #mindfulness: image via Carrie Elks Headspace @Carrie Elks, 18 May 2015
 
Or say you’re at a business lunch. You have to be mindful of your companion while simultaneously attempting to eat without spilling or choking -- and I say you would be remiss if you failed to notice the sad-eyed busboy who is refilling the water glasses. 

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Does multitasking make you more productive? #HeadspaceonTime: image via Headspace @ Get_Headspace, 15 May 2015

Divided attention far predates the advent of smartphones and is intrinsic to many human activities, such as child-raising, cooking a large meal, and waiting on tables. Or take one of the most ancient human occupations -- war -- which is relevant because the mindfulness promoters are beginning to market their product to the U.S. military. 

Incoming fire can come from any direction, at unexpected times and speeds. Morale must be considered, as well as changing instructions from the strategists in command. There is no danger of soldiers distractedly checking their Facebook pages; the issue is whether they have the mental bandwidth demanded by the exigencies of battle.

Silicon Valley got its own tiny taste of combat at the 2014 Wisdom 2.0 conference in San Francisco. The panel on “3 Steps to Build Corporate Mindfulness the Google Way” had just begun when a small group of protesters walked on stage and unfurled a banner saying “Eviction-Free San Francisco,” a reference to the savage gentrification that Google, among others, has inflicted on the city. After security pushed the protesters offstage and started a tug-of-war for the banner, a Google mindfulness representative intoned, “We can use this as a moment of practice. Check in with your body and see what’s happening, what it’s like to be around conflict and people with heartfelt ideas that may be different than what we’re thinking.” Zen-like, the panel rolled on, undistracted by the brief glimpse of mass evictions and homelessness.



Mindfulness Movie at the Rio Theatre!: photo by Kyle Pearce, 18 March 2014

II...Wisdom 2.0: The only moment we have is right now
 
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At google Dublin getting ready for the kickoff tomorrow...: image via Soren Gordhamer @SorenG, 15 September 2014
Wisdom2.0: it came for our heartbeats, now Google wants our souls: Tech companies are embracing mindfulness to help staff deal with stress -- and help seize back control from the gadgets that have taken over our lives: Carole Cadwalladr in Dublin for The Guardian, 19 September 2014

Dublin’s Google headquarters bears all the hallmarks of the modern tech workplace: an industrial chic aesthetic, endless free snacks, designer furniture in primary colours that looks like it’s been hijacked from a children’s playground, and, this week, the advanced forces of what may or may not be the Next Big Thing: not a new mobile phone, or a really super fancy watch, but something even more radically cutting-edge: “wisdom”.

Because for three days this week, in an auditorium at the heart of the city’s hi-tech cluster, an unholy alliance of Googlers, Buddhist monks, techies, HR directors, MPs and recovering CEOs bandied around words like “compassion”, “empathy”, “communion” and “consciousness”.

This was Wisdom2.0, a Californian conference that grew out of the west coast’s twin obsessions of technology and self-actualisation, and that came to Europe for the first time this week.

It has already held events in Google’s Mountain View office and at Facebook and since its inception six years ago, it’s been enthusiastically taken up by the tech industry. More than 2,000 people attended Wisdom2.0’s main event in San Francisco this year, and it’s attracted high-profile supporters like Arianna Huffington and Jeff Weiner, CEO of LinkedIn, and now it’s looking to take the message to a global audience.


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 Almost there .... #wisdom2conf: image via Soren Gordhamer @SorenG, 14 February 2014

It might be called a conference, but to the uninitiated it looked more like a revival meeting or religious gathering -- just without the religion bit getting in the way. Prayer bells called the delegates back to session, regular “stillness” breaks were built into the agenda, and at one point participants were told to put their arm around the person next to them, softly stroke them “and feel the connection”.

It’s technology that’s at the heart of this, or at least what technology is doing to our lives. 

And Wisdom2.0’s mission is to address this, “the great challenge of our age”: how to “live connected to one another through technology … in ways that are beneficial to our own well-being.”

Another take on it is that the tech industry having captured our attention, our time and our bank accounts with their endlessly distracting devices, and created apps that measure our heartbeats and quantify our physical health, has taken the next logical step: it is now after our souls. 




Intel engineers meditating: photo by Intel Free Press via The Guardian, 19 September 2014

Soren Gordhamer, Wisdom2.0’s founder, explained to the delegates who had paid up to €600 each, that at its heart it represented an attempt “to bring ancient wisdom into the modern age”. And at the vanguard of the movement is mindfulness, the secular version of meditation that is said to do everything from slowing ageing to improving your sex life.

It’s currently vying to overtake yoga as the must-do metropolitan leisure activity but it’s also had proven clinical results –- to reduce stress, aid sleep, and improve both physical and mental well-being –- and Chris Ruane, the Labour MP for the Vale of Clwyd, told the audience about how, having introduced mindfulness to the House of Commons, an all-party parliamentary group is now trying to roll it out into wider public life after the next general election.

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 A Listen deeply to yourself. We make decisions all the time. #mindfulness: image via Cards for Mindfulness @mindfulcards, 9 May 2015

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Where is my mind now? Life trains our attention to be dragged from here to there. #mindfulness: image via Cards for Mindfulness @mindfulcards, 9 May 2015

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Touch Screen Cards for #Mindfulness #kickstarter: image via Cards for Mindfulness @mindfulcards, 18 May 2015

But that is just the beginning. Alfred Tolle, a senior sales manager at Google who was the host for the event, went even further. It was, he said, about trying to create “a collective consciousness” that would hopefully “make the world a better place”.
 
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This is it my friends.. Prevents sicknesses of the mind #mindfulness #brainhealth: image via Wellness Mindfulness 911 @well, 12 May 2015

“Ten years ago, if you’d said this sort of thing, people would have said ‘Put the hippy in the ground’,” he said later. “But today, people are starting to get it. Even in management meetings, I talk about connecting inner and outer worlds and people look at me suspiciously, but they sort of get it.” 

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Is #mindfulness worth the hype? Find out by reading our top 12 research blogs #mhaw15: image via The Mental Elf @Mental_Elf, 11 May 2015
 
Tolle has been practising Zen meditation for 25 years and on top of his sales remit, he seems to have taken it upon himself to become Google’s unofficial chief soul officer. He said he wanted to hold the event because “we have to reconnect to our souls and ourselves in order to use technology wisely. I see it as my job to drive Google in that direction.”

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Mindfulness for Geeks: the 7 Best Meditation Apps #mindfulness #meditation #apps #stressrelief: image via Business O Féminin @bizzofemininINT, 9 May 2015

There is, said one of the participants, a Dublin-based technologist called Frazer McKimm who studies human and machine interaction, “an increasing sense of disquiet. There’s a sense that our relationship with technology has become something that even the creators of it can’t control. Even the dominators are being dominated. It’s infantilising us in a way.”

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#Mindfulness in schools: Is this the cure-all for anxiety, student stress and bullying?: image via Today's Parent @Todaysparent, 12 May 2015

The challenge, according to a Scottish app developer, Rohan Gunatillake, is to deal with it without “pathologising our relationship to technology”. He proposed that mindfulness should be built into all technology, and suggests solutions including a traffic system warning for websites and nutrition information-style labels that detail what they do to our mental health; he singled out newspaper comment sections, which should carrying a big red flag. “Technology is not the problem,” he told the conference. “Bad technology is the problem.”

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Embrace the journey: #mindfulness #daily #zen #yoga #buddha #quotes #thesecret: image via Tao of GTD @taoofgtd, 9 May 2015

In fact, says Gordhamer, it’s no surprise that questions about meaning and purpose have been embraced so enthusiastically by the tech industry. “If you look at the tech founders they all found success so young that it’s only natural that they should now be asking, ‘What else is there?’” 


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Beginner's Guide to Meditation #mindfulness #daily #zen #yoga #buddha #quotes #thesecret: image via Tao of GTD @taoofgtd, 9 May 2015

And, it’s that question -- what else is there? -- that had drawn participants from as far afield as Australia. Katrin Bauer, a 46-year-old consultant radiologist from Dundee, said that she’d discovered meditation as a means of coping with the stress of technology.

“I work on a computer all day and they break, they go wrong, we don’t have the most up-to-date software. I didn’t tell my colleagues at first. These eastern practices are seen as a bit of a taboo in the NHS but so many of my colleagues are off sick -- very capable, talented people who just burn out. And there is an absolute clinical benefit to mindfulness that goes far beyond just churning out more pills. There is so much more that could be done to improve people’s well-being.”
 
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Before you respond or react, choose #mindfulness and silence. Ask your heart, "is this the right thing for me?"<3: i=""> image via Wendy Sue Noah @3:>WendySueNoah, 18 May 2015

Just as mindfulness secularised an ancient spiritual practice that’s been used for thousands of years, so the new wisdom industry has taken other concepts, more usually associated with religious practice, and given them a fresh new spin, foremost among them “compassion”, the buzzword of Wisdom2.0.

Tania Singer, a neuroscientist at the Max Planck Institute, who has led the biggest research study so far in to the effect of mindfulness on the brain, gave a talk in which she showed her research into neuroplasticity and “affective training”. Compassion, she claimed, is distinct from empathy. It can be taught. And it had the effect of making new areas of the brain light up: in effect, it made its subjects happier.

Kelly Palmer, head of “talent transformation and inclusion” at LinkedIn made in her talk entitled “Fostering empathetic connection: lessons from compassion Efforts at LinkedIn” which included the information that “sometimes the most compassionate thing you can do is to let an employee go.” 

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The crowd that gathered to hear @jeffweiner share about the importance of Compassionate Management ... #wisdomweek: image via Soren Gordhamer @SorenG, 12 February 2014

The cynical take on all this is that it’s big business trying to create a new generation of happy worker drones. The chief people officer -– or what used to be called the head of HR -- for Zynga had come to look for new ideas to take into the workplace and she explained that it was not enough to provide industrial chic furnishings and a free lunch any more: “Millennials want more than that. They want meaning.”

There has been “a convergence of work and personal life,” she said. “People are never really off so we have to address the whole person. And if we can help people, it helps employee retention. Anything that helps people personally has benefits that apply to the whole company.”

But for all the corporate talk, there was, at times, more than a touch of the Timothy Leary to the event. 

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Your thoughts can be ur best friend or your worst enemy -- Good news U CAN LEARN TO CONTROL YOUR THOUGHTS #mindfulness: image via Wellness Mindfulness 911 @well, 17 May 2015

“What is money?” asked Google’s Alfred Tolle, at one point. “It’s just a bunch of zeros.” And a significant proportion of the audience had already tuned in, turned on and dropped out. Participants included the former CEO of a Norwegian TV station, a former barrister, 

Neil Seligman, who now teaches lawyers at big City firms how to be more “conscious”. Friedhelm Boschert, former CEO of major European bank, Volksbank International, said that he used to do weekly Zen meditation with his top managers and is now teaching it to other bankers as part of something he calls “New Banking” - top-down old banking apparently having got us into the current financial mess.

Is it the start of the push back? Or simply corporate America’s latest initiative to bend the world to its will? “We don’t check people at the door,” said Soren Gordhamer.

“My work is to show up and be present for people who care. The only moment we ever have is right now. Life is more fulfilling when we show up without an agenda.”

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 Want to step up your #conscious evolution #mindfulness? This is a great resource: image via Art of Forgetting @ArtForgetting, 18 May 2015

III...Mindfulness and Genocide

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Una moschea distrutta a #Sittwe #Myanmar Memento degli scontri con la minoranza musulmana #Rohingya @alice_miranda1: image via Isola di Lipari @isoladilipari, 15 May 2015

Saffron Terror: an audience with Burma's 'Buddhist Bin Laden’ Ashin Wirathu: The UN claims that Burma's Muslim Rohingya are among the most persecuted minorities in the world. Their most vocal enemy is Ashin Wirathu, an influential Buddhist monk who is calling for the expulsion of the "Bengali" few. GQ enters a hellish world of ethnic massacres, vicious reprisals and concentration camps: Alex Preston, British GQ, 11 February 2015

I'm in a tuk-tuk heading through the city centre, bouncing over potholed roads past trees in which fruit bats hang like giant seedpods. Gun-toting guards appear out of the heavy littoral haze and I shrink back into the damp canvas of the tuk-tuk's sunshade, pulling my cap down over my eyes.

I'm in Sittwe, Rakhine State, western Burma, the site of one of the most devastating humanitarian crises on the planet, called by many a genocide.

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A displaced #Rohingya woman carries her severely malnourished twins in #Sittwe, west #Myanmar. Reuters/Minzayar: image via Pouria Moradi @moradipouria, 4 May 2014

Sittwe, formerly home to 200,000 people but now decimated by ethnic violence, wears an air of terminal neglect, the once-grand colonial buildings green, mildewed and crumbling. Halfway down the high street, next to the picturesque but non-functioning clock tower, police officers swing low-slung machine guns in front of the city's main mosque, now a blackened shell.

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Police stand guard outside the destroyed offices of an international aid group in #Sittwe #Myanmar March 28, 2014: image via Hamidullah Babu @Hamidullah BabuIsola di Lipari @isoladilipari, 25 April 2014Bangladesh 2015

During religious riots in the summer of 2012, the majority of Sittwe's mosques were torched and left open to the creeping ravages of the sea air. 

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#Rohingya #Myanmar #Wirathu
: image via farhat @farhatkibachi, 18 May 2015

Around them, where once Muslims and Buddhists lived side by side, whole blocks stand empty, ghost towns, islands within the city.

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#Myanmar Gov are trying to drive out the Rohingya from the Rakhine Soil using gun point and harassment. #UN and #EU: image via mohmmadibrahim @mohmmadibrahim3, 13 January 2015

The security forces are everywhere, with guard huts every few hundred metres, blockades across all major roads, a dusk-to-dawn curfew for all of the city's inhabitants.

End of the road
End of the road. A mosque and surrounding houses burn following a riot in Meiktila, Burma, March 2013: photo via British GQ, 11 February 2015

I have come to Sittwe to meet the Rohingya people, whom the UN call "one of the most persecuted minorities in the world".

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Rosheda, 20, holds her malnourished child, 2 months old, in front of her hut in #Sittwe: image via Nay San Lwin @nslwin, 9 May 2014

The Rohingya, a Muslim ethnic group in this Buddhist-dominated country, were already a marginalised minority during Burma's half-century-long military dictatorship. But since 2011, when the junta began its tentative steps towards democracy, the plight of these stateless people has taken a desperate dive for the worse. Subjected to punitive laws by the new "civilian" government (still, in fact, dominated by the military), which limits everything from marriage to education to the number of children they may have (a two-child policy), the Rohingya have suffered regular and bloody attacks from local Buddhists.

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#burma #Rohingya #RohingyaGenocide @AungSanSuuKyi #wirathu #UN @UNrightswire @hrw #LetItBe...: image via Mohamed Hamdouni @HamdouniMohamed, 18 May 2015

Often these attacks have been spearheaded by the same orange-robed monks who led a series of demonstrations against the junta in 2007, known as the "Saffron Revolution". A warped and violent version of Buddhism has grasped hold of many monasteries in Burma, with hate-speech directed against Muslims across the country, and particularly the Rohingya.

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@Sthumoe We are Blocked ##Sittwe #Kyauktaw #Minbya #MraukOo #Myebon #HelpTheRohingya @HonJohnBaird: image via Abbie @Abbie _0019, 10 August 2014

Mosques have been attacked, villages set on fire and thousands chased from their homes. Massacres have leapt from village to village in Rakhine State, with machetes the weapon of choice.

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#Rohingya under #genocidal blockage faced whirlwind and heavy rain, need urgent help. #Sittwe, #Arakan, #Burma: image via Sung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 16 July 2014

In May 2012, the rape and murder of a woman in the village of Tha Pri Chaung unleashed a wave of violence against the Rohingya. In the subsequent months more than 600 were murdered, with scores of villages looted and burned. Then in March 2013, an argument in a jeweller's shop in the town of Meiktila sparked an orgy of violence. A Buddhist mob rampaged through the town's Muslim quarter, killing dozens, most of them women and children. Muslim youths retaliated, pulling a monk from his bicycle, dousing him in petrol and burning him alive. Then Buddhists attacked the Islamic boarding school of Mingalar Zayone, dragging students and teachers out onto the street and hacking 32 to death as the security services looked on.

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@drzami Could u pl share it on FB, mine blocked
: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 13 April 2015


Before my visit, Matthew Smith, founder of human-rights organisation Fortify Rights, sent me a video of the Meiktila massacre. Burmese police officers stand by as, like a scene from Mad Max, an already bruised and bleeding middle-aged Muslim man is tied by his ankles behind a motorbike by Buddhist youths. 

End of the road
 
End of the road. A mosque and surrounding houses burn following a riot in Meiktila, Burma, March 2013: photo via British GQ, 11 February 2015

There is cheering as the bike roars off down the rock-strewn road, flaying skin from the bouncing body as it goes.

The scene in Meiktila during the March 2013 riots

The scene in Meiktila during the March 2013 riots,  A disagreement in a jeweller's shop between Muslim staff and Buddhist customers is believed to have triggered the violence.: photo via British GQ, 11 February 2015

Until 2012, Sittwe was home to the largest concentration of Rohingya in the country -- 40 per cent of the population. Now almost a quarter of a million Rohingya have been rounded up into concentration camps along Rakhine's low-lying coastline, with only a handful remaining in central Sittwe, trapped in a heavily guarded ghetto called Aung Mingalar.

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WritingOnTheWall -- Saw this great graffiti yesterday on a perimeter wall near an IDP camp in #Sittwe: image via Fred Ndaga @fndaga, 9 May 2014

The Rohingya camps lie to the west of town, past barbed-wire barricades, an army barracks and Sittwe university campus, which has been taken over by the security services -- six Black Marias stand in the central forecourt as I pass. The camps are supposedly off limits to foreigners but, with the help of Fortify Rights, I've managed to find a local who will, for a price, get me inside. I keep my head down as we move through the police blockade, past another burnt-out mosque and into the camps.

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#Burma government and Rakhine Extremists pushed #Desperate and lonely #Rohingya kids to flee by boat #AljazeeraEnglish image via mohmmadibrahim @mohmmadibrahim3, 28 April 2014

The horrors of the Rohingya camps stay with a man. International aid agencies were expelled from Rakhine State in early 2014, driven out by a mixture of localised violence and co-ordinated political pressure.

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Rosheda, 20, holds her malnourished child, 2 months old, in front of her hut in #Sittwe: image via Nay San Lwin @nslwin, 9 May 2014

I come across a makeshift clinic set up by a local volunteer and his wife in an attempt to make up for the lack of health care in the camps.

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@BurmaTaskForce There is no hospital fr 1 million #Rohingya, we use this leaves fr diarrhea or stomach problems: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 11 May 2015

The Burmese government has shamefully neglected to fill the hole it helped to create, so the sick in the camps flock to shacks like this one, where out-of-date medicines are piled on a table in the shadowy interior and the harried health worker -- he stresses that he's not a qualified doctor -- attempts to help many of those who, by now, are beyond help. I sit beside a man in his sixties with a lacerating cough that sends out a spray of fine red mist. The health worker, portly, sweating, introduces me to his wife. She's the only midwife in this section of the camp, looking after a population of many tens of thousands. There is a difficult labour across the river, she tells me, hefting herself onto the back of a motorbike.

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 #Myanmar has made master plan to send #Rohingya 3 places during one year @UN Council, @hrws: image via mohmmadibrahim @mohmmadibrahim3, 19 April 2014
 
We continue deeper into the camps. The huts and shacks look frighteningly flimsy, all the more so when you remember that Cyclone Nargis battered Burma in 2008, killing around 138,000. I meet babies blind and bloated from hunger, HIV patients who, now the aid agencies have gone, are unable to receive antiretroviral drugs. "I can maybe get treatment outside of the camp," one of them tells me, "but I'm scared. They will kill me quicker than the disease." A six-year-old boy, the age of my son, stands with his mother in front of their shack. He has TB and coughs every few minutes, his eyes bulging. He spits red at my feet. Tumours cluster around the skin of his neck and under his arms. His mother strokes his hair, sobbing.

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#Rohingya in IDP Camp in Sittwe have no permission to go out to take Medicine and treatment No Hospital @UNrightswire: image via mohmmadibrahim @mohmmadibrahim3, 19 April 2014

By the end of the day, I've spoken to dozens within the camps. I've seen the clinics built by the government but left locked and unstaffed, as if taunting the desperate and dying around them. I've seen so many lying out on their deathbeds, so many clearly suffering the effects of malnutrition, so many crushed by the poverty and drudgery and hunger.

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#Rohingya will disappear soon in Rakhine State if the @UNrightswire is slow in taking action against Myanmar Government: image via mohmmadibrahim @mohmmadibrahim3, 19 April 2014

That these camps exist anywhere in the world is a shock, worse still that they exist in a country which is currently receiving a flood of foreign investment in the wake of the military junta's tentative steps towards democracy. That evening, the tuk-tuk rattling through the rising mist, we leave over a bridge built by the British in the Second World War. As we wait for our turn to cross, a young man leans into the tuk-tuk. "Go to see Aung Mingalar," he says. "It is worse for them there."

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Life of #Rohingya under genocidal blockage of #Arakan #Burma #Sittwe #Myanmar: image via Adnan Kiani @makiani2005, 20 April 2014

Aung Mingalar is a ghetto under siege, wrapped behind ribbons of tangled barbed wire, heavily armed guards blocking every road leading in or out. I know several journalists who've tried to get in and failed. Aid agencies were allowed in until the end of 2013. Since then, no one really knows how bad things are for those living in the ghetto. In my efforts to get inside, I'm introduced to a tuk-tuk driver who used to work for French NGO (non-governmental organisation) Action Contre la Faim. He tells me he knows one of the guards. We pull up to the gatepost and the driver gets out. There is a moment when I think we've succeeded, but the driver's shoulders sag and comes back to me shaking his head.

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@akyabsittwe: #Rohingyas R under the rain #plz help us *AungMinGalar #Sittwe #Burma": image via Abbie @Abbie_019, 11 May 2014dnan Kiani @makiani2005, 20 April 2014

I decide to try a more direct route. I get the driver to drop me a hundred yards from the western entrance to the ghetto. I can see six guards watching me approach, four on one side, two on the other. They hold their AK-47s across their chests. I can feel my pulse behind my eyes and force myself to take slow breaths. Ignoring the guards, I march forward, hurrying into something between a walk and a run when I pass the barricades. I make it 30 yards or so before the guards catch up with me. In that time I'm able to see wide, empty streets, a group of skinny youths breaking rocks by the roadside, a baby with his hands wrapped around a bulging belly. 

The guards have their machine guns pointing at me, one is shouting in Burmese. I hold up my hands, smiling and allow myself to be led into the barracks beside the gatehouse. I'm forced down into a chair and offered a cigarette. I don't smoke, but I take it anyway. The guards look at me closely and, for want of anything better to do, I hold out a photocopy of my passport. They pass it around, speaking animatedly. "Tourist," I say, smiling dumbly. "Just a tourist." Finally one of them gets on his motorcycle and heads off, not, as I'd thought, into Sittwe, but towards the centre of Aung Mingalar. I smoke the cigarette down as I wait. More guards arrive, a senior-looking police officer who's been awoken from a nap and is in his vest.

Finally the guard comes back on his motorbike with, riding pillion, a young Rohingya man. "I speak English," he says. "My name is Myo Win. You can't be here." I ask him why not and sudden, surprising tears spring to his eyes. "Because of the attacks, because of what it's like inside. They have told me to tell you that if you leave now, you can go. Otherwise..." He looks towards the police officer in the vest and shakes his head. I take him by the hand and say goodbye, wave buffoonishly to the guards and make my way back through the barricades, to freedom.


Burnt pages of the Quran after religious riots
: photo via British GQ, 11 February 2015

"As a monk I shouldn't say this, but there is only one way to solve the problem: we must fight back. We must fight violence with violence." The chief monk of the village temple is in his early forties, a heavyset man in orange-gold robes, his bald head glistening with sweat in the fierce heat of early summer. He won't give me his name. "Monks are still men," he continues, "and as men, we won't stand by and watch our villages being taken over, our women raped."


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@bbcburmese USDP party of terrorist leader #Thein Sein has started using #Buddhist #Dhammaryun for 2015 election as they did B4: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 26 March 2015
 
We are sitting on a raised bamboo platform at the back of the dilapidated monastery in a village in the western outskirts of Sittwe, just outside of the Rohingya camps. Surrounded by barbed wire, the monastery is a battered brick shell, fluttering bunting strung across its prayer hall, the roof open to the elements. Towards the ocean, whose distant roar can be heard above the chirping of crickets and the crying of village children, dark-leafed mango trees droop their heavy green fruit. 

It has taken a while to find the monastery. We'd stopped to ask directions at a village house. While a man made vague gestures westwards, his wife ran inside. As we walked away, my photographer, Kaung Htet, told me that he'd heard her phoning the secret services, warning them that "Americans" were poking around a place off limits to foreigners. We'd have to be quick.

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#969 terrorist leader #Wirathu and #Rakhine Army: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 13 April 2015

The road outside the monastery bore the scars of the vicious fighting that has rolled unchecked through the region since 2012 -- broken glass, blackened hedges. We were ushered inside the monastery compound and onto the platform, where the chief monk sat cross-legged and stately, a line of wicked-looking machetes laid out to one side of the bamboo lean-to. Novices in robes of deep burgundy stood watching. 

The chief monk sees himself as a frontline warrior in the battle to stop his country being invaded by the people he calls "Bengalis" -- the Rohingya. He is one of the Buddhist monks who, in the face of what they see as an international conspiracy funded by Muslim countries from Saudi Arabia to Malaysia, are taking up arms against Islam. He points to white-lipped scars running across his arms, dark burns on his wrists and fingers. "I got these fighting the Bengalis," he says. "Danger is always here for us. There are Bengali houses just there." He gestures to a group of makeshift huts on the horizon, part of the Rohingya camps which stretch for mile after mile down the coast. "During the violence, hundreds of Bengalis attacked us and tried to set the village houses on fire. We caught a group of them with bottles of gasoline and lighters. They told us their imam had ordered them to set the village on fire." In June 2012, he tells me, more than a thousand Rohingya launched an assault on the village. "At first we thought it was a Muslim funeral, there were so many of them. Then we realised it was an attack. We had to fight for our lives." Witness reports paint a much murkier picture, suggesting that the Rohingya were merely fighting off Buddhist attackers.

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@JamilaHanan Look at this car, 969 #Buddhist programs of #Sitagu, head of 969, teacher of #Wirathu going around and spreading hate: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 9 March 2015

I ask the chief monk about Ashin Wirathu, the monk who dubs himself the "Burmese bin Laden" and leads the viciously anti-Muslim 969 Movement. Wirathu had recently visited Rakhine State, giving hate-filled speeches to crowds of thousands about the wickedness of the "kalars" (a highly offensive term for Muslims) and the need for Rakhine Buddhists to defend themselves at all costs. "Wirathu is a good man," the chief monk says. "He's just trying to prevent bad things happening, to protect the integrity of Buddhism. 

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An interview with Ashin #Wirathu and a glimpse into #Rohingya camps #Religion #Burma #Myanmar: image via Andrew Bateman @Andrew_Bateman, 9 March 2015

"The media are all owned by Muslims, and they paint only negative pictures of him." At the mention of Wirathu, the chief monk's temper seems to snap. His voice rises, his words coming out fast and jumbled. One of the novice monks begins to smack a hammer into his hand just behind me. "The media accuse us of having put the Bengalis in concentration camps. But there are no gas chambers here. The NGOs like Médecins Sans Frontières and Malteser International were all helping the Bengalis. They were training the Bengalis to attack our country. We found explosives and ammunition in the NGOs' warehouses." 

His voice has pitched to a shriek. All of a sudden, he stands, lifting his heavy body remarkably quickly, and orders us from the monastery. When Kaung Htet tries to take his picture, he holds up a hand and gestures again for us to leave, marching us out of the gates and back into the village. He is there, watching, arms crossed, as we walk back along the dusty road towards town.


Demonstrators against Burmese ethnic cleansing and Islamophobic genocide
: PA photo via British GQ, 11 February 2015

Four days later, I'm at Mandalay airport to meet Ashin Wirathu. Wirathu's 969 Movement has been the vanguard of Burma's anti-Muslim feeling, with the monk leading rallies in which he calls for Muslims to be expelled from the country, for a crackdown on the Muslim men he accuses of forcing Buddhist females into polygamy and apostasy. 

Wirathu has been an extraordinary beneficiary of the country's recent reforms. Arrested with four of his followers in 2003 for inciting anti-Muslim violence, he was originally sentenced to 25 years in jail. He was released in 2011 as the government liberated the vast majority of political prisoners. Since then, Wirathu has seized upon the huge growth of social media in a country where Facebook was banned until three years ago. Every day, Wirathu's Facebook page is updated with the details of alleged new Muslim atrocities - murders, bomb attacks and, above all, rape, which he claims is used by Muslims not only as an instrument of terror, but as a way of carrying out a sub rosa colonisation of the country. He tours Burma constantly, his vituperative speeches swiftly disseminated on YouTube.

GQ has been granted a rare audience with Wirathu; better still, he's invited me to come and spend two days in the compound from which he runs the 969 Movement. It's an unprecedented glimpse into the activities of this charismatic monk, one of the key players in the rapidly evolving Burmese political scene. 

The next day, having caught only a brief glimpse of the monk as he was shuttled from the airport to a late-night 969 rally, I set off for our meeting. We drive through Mandalay's sprawling grid of streets, past the vast, walled palace, once the home of the royal family, now headquarters of the Tatmadaw, Burma's mighty military. Still, signs adorn the walls cheerily proclaiming that "Tatmadaw [will] crush all those harming the union."


Can such #intolerant words come from a #buddhist? '#Wirathu calls UN envoy a ‘whore’: image via Maharani Frangipani @MaharanMyanmar, 23 January 2015

Wirathu's compound sits within the New Masoeyein Monastery, over the brackish waters of the Irrawaddy River from the town's huge jade market. In the stillness of the morning, as we step from the car, the cries of market traders can be heard across the river. 

A novice sweeps the ground in front of the building in which Wirathu lives and works, a three-storey wooden block. Clouds of dust whip up around the huge billboard pinned to the side of the building. It is a grisly collage of alleged Muslim atrocities: a beheaded baby, blue and green gore spewing from the dark hole of his neck; murdered monks lying in a road; machete-hacked women; a group of men in Muslim garb burning bodies outside a pagoda. 

Wirathu arrives in his SUV and we stand talking for a moment in the cool morning air. I notice that a hair protrudes from a follicle in his neck. It is thick and dark and at least eight inches long. We make our way into the building, where a group of 969 members stand around. Others sit eating breakfast in the refectory that seems to double as a dormitory. Wirathu eases himself into a wicker chair and gestures for me to sit at his feet. I do so, reaching to stroke the dog that patters in and out of the building, searching for titbits. 

Noises echo around us as we talk: the shriek of brainfever birds outside, a monk hawking and spitting in an upper room, the clatter of plates. Behind Wirathu stands a monk who introduces himself as 969's press officer. He records our discussion and, every time Wirathu uses the word "kalar" (as loaded and abhorrent as "nigger"), he leans respectfully forwards and intones, "Muslim." Wirathu ignores the correction.

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 #Wirathu "Certains disent que je suis le nouvel Hitler" #Birmanie: image via Emilie Gougache @MilieGgch, 22 February 2015

I ask Wirathu about the situation in Rakhine. There is a serious threat from terrorists, he tells me, with Muslims looking to carry out attacks across the state. The blame lies firmly with the international community. "You should go there and see the terrible things the NGOs have done," he tells me. "Most of the money from the Muslim world that is supporting the Bengalis [the Rohingya] is being channelled through the NGOs. Saudi Arabia is funnelling money through the NGOs. The NGOs are all working for the Rohingya; they are discriminating against the native Rakhine."

He tells me how Muslims have taken over the country, flooding across the border from Bangladesh, snapping up jobs, seizing control of key industries. "In Yangon," he says, "most of the construction companies are owned by Muslims. You can rarely find Buddhists there. They have contacts within government that allow them to do business more easily in Burma than Buddhists."

We move on to speak about Wirathu's Facebook campaign to spread news of alleged Muslim crimes in the country. I question whether the small number of Muslims in the country -- at last count less than five per cent of the population -- could really carry out attacks on the scale that Wirathu claims.

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#UN Urged, #US Calls on #BurmaMyanmar
to stop the on going one sided Violence in @Rakhine State, #Burma has no such intention: image via mohmmadibrahim @mohmmadibrahim3, 23 April 2014

"Rape by Muslims of Buddhist girls is a very frequent event in Burma," he tells me. "An everyday occurrence. I post as many of them as I can on my Facebook page, just to let people know how common it is. Today I'll post a case on my site that happened last month and the man has just been sentenced."
 
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#MyanmarArmy used gunpoint to collect wrong census Data village to Village, by force: image via mohmmadibrahim @mohmmadibrahim3, 22 April 2014

He goes on to say that one of 969's key roles is supporting the families of those attacked by Muslims. "There was a case in Mandalay," he says. "A six-year-old Burmese girl was raped by a 55-year-old 'kalar' landlord. I supported the family of the girl. I found them another place to stay during the trial. There was another rape case in Yangon, a similar situation, where I supported the family with money from my own pocket."

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#TSein #Wirathu #ASSK #Silence on tue en @BIRMANIE @VoiceRohingya @Islametinfo @ccif @InfoBirmanie: image via Collectif HAMEB @Collectif HAMEB, 6 March 2015

It feels strange to come this far in an article about Burma without mention of the country's great human-rights heroine, Aung San Suu Kyi, but this is symptomatic of her stance on anti-Muslim violence in general and the plight of the Rohingya in particular. She has been silent in the face of the bloodshed, trying to explain it away as the natural result of the country's move towards democracy. More charitable commentators suggest that Daw Suu, as she's known, is playing a political game. 

Others, such as Mark Farmaner of Burma Campaign UK, are more critical. "I think she has seriously miscalculated her response to anti-Muslim violence in Burma," he tells me. "She has ended up with the worst of both worlds. On the one hand, she hasn't spoken up for an oppressed and endangered minority, on the other hand, she's still being attacked by the 969 Movement and losing support because there remains a perception that she's friendly to Muslims. Because she didn't take a firm moral stance against anti-Muslim feeling from the start, using her moral authority, she has opened the way for people like Wirathu to act with absolute impunity."

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#HyperCacher #bouddhisme #bouddha @pizzahut #birmanie #wirathu #islam #genocide @benladen @hyper_casher @Vincennes_9...: image via Renaud Bizart @renaudbizart, 16 March 2015

I notice that Wirathu wears a deep-blue tattoo of a peacock on his inner arm -- symbol of Aung San Suu Kyi's National League For Democracy party. He gives a little chuckle and makes as if to scrub it away. "As a political leader, I used to really admire her, but from a nationalist point of view, I don't think she should be president. There's no way she should run the country. She is inefficient in terms of national security, but more than this, she has opposed the 969 Movement, publicly criticised us. For example, she said that the two-child policy and interfaith marriage law were against human rights. This means she is against us." 

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An interview with Ashin #Wirathu and a glimpse into #Rohingya camps #Religion #Burma #Myanmar: image via Andrew Bateman @Andrew_Bateman, 9 March 2015

I finally touch on Wirathu's closeness to the very same military that imprisoned him. From external commentators to the people I meet on the streets of Mandalay to members of Wirathu's own inner circle, I hear repeated claims of government support of 969 and, particularly, of Wirathu's relationship with a member of Burma's lower house by the name of Aung Thaung. The monk bristles visibly when I say the name, his voice dropping into a deep growl, his eyes fixing themselves upon me. "I've only met Aung Thaung once in my life, after my release from prison after the amnesty in 2012. The minister came here and sat exactly where you are now and I offered him some robes. That's the extent of our relationship. I've had no contact with him by phone, or email or letter. Nothing. Not with him, nor with his followers." 

Wirathu stands up. It is clear that the interview is over.


Buddhist mobs attack Muslim businesses: PA photo via British GQ, 11 February 2015

Barack Obama has held up Burma as an avatar of global democratic meliorism. He speaks of offering the "hand of friendship" to President Thein Sein and was swift to remove most of the US sanctions against the regime in the wake of 2011's reforms. 

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@endgenocide#Democratic #Human #Right #Violation of #TheinSein Government #Myanmar #Rohingya: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 24 March 2015

Obama and the majority of the Western world want to put their faith in a narrative that sees Burma -- previously lumped with North Korea and Iran as an "outpost of tyranny" -- as a rehabilitated pupil, won over to the benefits of political and economic liberalism. The truth, alas, is far murkier and much more sinister.

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The enumerators entering Basara (Sanpya) village in #Sittwe to conduct census but left as didn't accept #Rohingya: image via Nay San Lwin @nslwin, 20 March 2014

Certainly the government has released the vast majority of its political prisoners, although many still remain in jail, including a number of Rohingya arrested only for voicing their anger at the treatment of their friends and family. The press has theoretical freedom of speech, although, again, to speak of the Rohingya is a risky business, with several journalists locked up for reporting on life in the camps. 

With elections in 2015, it is too soon to know whether the military will truly let the opposition contest freely. Aung San Suu Kyi is still banned from taking office due to a line in the constitution that forbids those married to foreigners becoming president (her late husband was the Oxford academic Michael Aris).

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#Aung San Suu Kyi's 'silence' on the #Rohingya: Has 'The Lady' lost her voice? She fear upcoming elections in #Burma: image via mohmmadibrahim @mohmmadibrahim3, 20 April 2014

Burma is of enormous importance for both China and India as the great eastern economic migration continues. As Thant Myint-U, one of Burma's leading intellectuals, has said, "What China is lacking is its California, another coast that would provide its remote interior provinces with an outlet to the sea." Burma, Thant Myint-U says, is seen by China "as the bridge to the Bay of Bengal and the waters beyond". And yet, colouring everything, is the stain of the "slow-burning genocide" taking place in Rakhine State, the violence against Muslims across the rest of the country. Some try to paint this as a sad but understandable corollary of the coming of democracy, others claim that the Rohingya are recent arrivals from Bangladesh and ought to be sent back.

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@cnnbrk #Democratic #Human #Right #Violation of #TheinSein Government #Myanmar #Rohingya: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 24 March 2015

The clamour for action grows louder. Many now argue that the government of Burma should be held responsible for the horrors being perpetrated. As Tomás Ojea Quintana, the UN's special rapporteur on Burma, put it to me when I spoke to him on my return from Sittwe, "There has been a history of systematic discrimination against Rohingyas in Rakhine State. This has been aggravated by the government, with the conditions in IDP [internally displaced people] camps becoming dire and the police being accomplices in some of the massacres carried out against the Rohingya."

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#Burma
cannot convert #Rohingya to #Bengali by force, we are dying for sake of our ethnic name and our Identity: image via mohmmadibrahim @mohmmadibrahim3, 24 April 2014

Another staunch defender of the Rohingya, former US senator Tom Andrews, now head of human-rights organisation United To End Genocide, sees in Burma the victory of "the politics of hate, the politics of fear [led by] a few bitter, radical monks". He views the plight of the Rohingya as a crucial test, not only of Burma's emerging democracy, but of the West's willingness to intervene in humanitarian crises. "There's no one domestically to stand up and speak out for the Rohingya. This makes it all the more important for the international community to exert power and make it count."

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@JamilaHanan Look at this car, 969 #Buddhist programs of #Sitagu, head of 969, teacher of #Wirathu going around and spreading hate: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 9 March 2015

IV...Monks with Guns

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#Wirathu and two Rakhine Nationalists discussing how to drive Rohingya out from Arakan? #PriorityRohingya: image via Aung Aung #Aungaungsittwe, 16 July 2013
 
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old pic from #Burma #Myanmar at the #ShwedagonPaya hopefully this is not what #Wirathu will preach - #Monks and #Guns: image via ayeshas @ayeshasitara, 11 September 2013

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#Wirathu deployed monks to a #Mandalay court in defense of an official accused of rape: image via OpRohingya @OpRohingya, 13 July 2013
 
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Nazis et bouddhistes, bienvenue en #Birmanie | #Wirathu #Myanmar #Burma #Rohingya #buddhism: image via Rémy Fayon @rfayon, 27 June 2013

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Known #Myanmar monk #Wirathu in protest agst #UN special rapporteur Yanghee Lee's visit 2 Myanmar@ChannelNewsAsia: image via May Wong @maywongcna, 16 January 2015

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 #Myanmar #Burma Where's #Wirathu? Monk Says He’s Blocked on Social Media Hashtag sad face: image via Richard Potter @RichardSP86, 28 October 2014
 
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Um.. that's my photo you are using illegally without licensing. Please remove it. RT @969Movement #Wirathu quote: image via Adam Dean @adamjdean, 7 August 2013
 
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#Wirathu is back! Radical Monk in #Myanmar Pledges to Protect Global #Buddhism via @nytimes: image via Ruom @RuomCollective, 29 September 2014
 
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Hope @anadoluagency report the prominence given to terrorist #wirathu in #SriLanka @AsedBaig: image via HudHud @FathimaTL, 28 September 2014

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 #Wirathu meets #Gnanasara -- the axis of Buddhist extremism in #Burma #SriLanka: image via Liam Allmark @allmark21, 9 March 2014

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 #Burmese monk #Wirathu is a disgrace to his country.: image via James Williams Liam Allmark @jlwilliamsjrallmark21, 19 January 2015

The Jews of Asia

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Rohingya woman in the rain, refugee camp, Myanmar: photo by Steve Gumaer, 14 May 2013
 
Rohingya boat people are becoming the Jews of Asia: David Pilling, FT.com, 20 May, 2015

On May 13 1939 the SS St Louis, a German ocean liner, set sail from Hamburg. On board were 915 Jewish refugees hoping to escape gathering oppression in Europe. There were dances and concerts aboard the luxury vessel and the indulgent captain permitted passengers to throw a tablecloth over an offending bust of Adolf Hitler. Two weeks later, the ship dropped anchor in Havana, pending what passengers, who had purchased Cuban visas, fully expected to be a warm reception. It was not to be. The Cuban authorities turned them away as, subsequently, did those of the US and Canada. The St Louis was obliged to return to Europe. An estimated quarter of its passengers ended up perishing in Nazi concentration camps.The St Louis story is served up as a shameful indictment of our forefathers. Yet 75 years later,  something just as grotesque is playing out on the azure waters of the Andaman Sea (not to mention the Mediterranean). In the past few weeks, at least 6,000 refugees have been cut adrift in the ocean, refused entry by Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia. Some 300 have died this year, according to the UN. Dehydrated, emaciated and desperate, unless the situation changes rapidly, many more lives will be lost.

The St Louis story is served up as a shameful indictment of our forefathers. Yet 75 years later, something just as grotesque is playing out on the azure waters of the Andaman Sea (not to mention the Mediterranean). In the past few weeks, at least 6,000 refugees have been cut adrift in the ocean, refused entry by Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia. Some 300 have died this year, according to the UN. Dehydrated, emaciated and desperate, unless the situation changes rapidly, many more lives will be lost.

For the Rohingya, the bulk of the refugees, there are echoes of the treatment of Jews in Europe. Many are fleeing refugee centres that have been compared to concentration camps. They are a Muslim minority in Myanmar and Bangladesh. In March the Simon-Skjodt Center for the Prevention of Genocide sent a mission to Myanmar, where up to 1m Rohingya live in Rakhine state. It found they had been “subject to dehumanisation through rampant hate speech, the denial of citizenship, and restrictions on freedom of movement”. Its report concluded that the Rohingya, at least 170 of whom died in mob violence in 2012, were at “grave risk of additional mass atrocities and even genocide”.

This conclusion may be premature. As Richard Horsey, a political analyst, points out, an organisation whose raison d’être is the prevention of genocide will tend to see things through that lens. Still, the conditions of the Rohingya -- most of whom are denied citizenship by both Myanmar and Bangladesh -- are deplorable and getting worse.

Who are the Rohingya? Like any ethnically charged question, that is fiercely disputed. To the Buddhists who are the majority in Rakhine state, the dark-skinned Rohingya are interlopers from Bangladesh, referred to pejoratively as “Bengalis”. The Rakhine, who have a proud history of independence, are themselves a persecuted minority. Rohingya trace their origins in Rakhine back to the 15th century. Many others arrived in the British colonial period from 1825 when both Rakhine and Bengal were part of British India. In the second world war, the Rohingya fought with the British, while the Rakhine supported the Japanese who were fleetingly regarded as liberators. Bitterness from that period has lasted until this day.

Anti-Rohingya and anti-Muslim sentiment more generally has hardened since 2010 when the generals who had run Myanmar for decades slowly lifted their oppressive boot. More free speech has meant more hate speech, much of it directed at Muslims. In April, the government withdrew temporary identity cards after a backlash from Buddhists who did not want the Rohingya to vote. Now, without an official identity, most Rohingya are even more exposed to arbitrary arrest and curbs on movement that imperil their ability to make a living. The sense of hopelessness has pushed increasing numbers to flee.

The boats on which the Rohingya have escaped offer no dances or on-board entertainment. Now, cut adrift at sea, like the Jews on board the St Louis, the Rohingya have been refused entry to potential safe havens -- although Malaysia and Indonesia have announced an offer of temporary shelter. With smuggling routes cut off -- at least for the time being -- it ought to be a relatively simple matter to rescue the 6,000 or so refugees still at sea and to find them a home.

That, of course, leaves the more intractable problem of whether Myanmar can reverse its blatantly discriminatory policies. When even Aung San Suu Kyi, the country’s democratic icon, hesitates to use the term Rohingya for fear of offending her Buddhist constituents, there seems little prospect of that. Yet if nothing is done to alleviate the suffering of this blighted minority, comparisons with the Jews of 1930s Europe will look evermore apt.




Rohingya girl in the rain, refugee camp, Myanmar: photo by Steve Gumaer, 14 May 2013


Serious Rohingya girl, Myanmar. She served tea in her family shop at the market: photo by Steve Gumaer, 12 May 2013


Sophisticated Rohingya girl, Myanmar: photo by Steve Gumaer, 12 May 2013


Tarp compound, Rohingya refugee camp, Myanmar. The green tarps were all donated b Partners Relief and Development.: photo by Steve Gumaer, 14 May 2013


Evacuation, Rohingya refugee camp, Myanmar: photo by Steve Gumaer, 17 May 2013


Rohingya makeshift camp, Bangladesh: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection, 20 May 2013



Rohingya makeshift camp, Bangladesh: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection, 20 May 2013



Rohingya makeshift camp, Bangladesh
: photo by
Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection, 20 May 2013



Rohingya makeshift camp, Bangladesh: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection, 20 May 2013



Rohingya girl, makeshift camp, Bangladesh: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection, 20 May 2013



Rohingya people, makeshift camp, Bangladesh: photo by Pierre Prakash/EC/ECHO via EU Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection, 19 May 2013

Jamila Hanan: Long Night


Rohingya no more
Rwanda once more
Never again
Over and over again
Sit and contemplate
Can we change fate?

The advice we received
During this hour of need:
Avoid the word genocide
When you plead
That would oblige them to act
They don't like that

A long night
Of extreme fright
All you can do is pray
They said
My children in bed
May all soon be dead

Take my tears
My fears
Save us
We have nothing left
Heart aches
Heaven shakes
Morning breaks
World wakes

Jamila Hanan: Long Night, via Save the Rohingya, 23 January 2014

Rohingya women and children were brutally slaughtered by Burmese security forces and armed thugs following a raid on their village at Du Char Yar Tan on January 14th 2014.

I tweeted this poem last night from bed, as I lay there waiting for news from my Rohingya friends who I knew had been awake all night, wondering if their homes were to be raided following an order to arrest all Rohingya men and boys over the age of ten.

We feared that the men would be taken away to be killed, and that the women left would be raped and their children hacked to pieces, as had happened the week before at the village of Duchiradan (also known as Du Char Yar Tan as well as Kiladong). Indeed all the warning signs were there for an imminent massacre following a period of propaganda, visits by the infamous 969 group to the area, a call for militias who were understood to now be in training, and an official meeting where Rohingya village leaders had been warned of the fragility of their existence.

The last line I wrote with hesitation. Should I have put a question mark at the end? This morning, my Rohingya friends are still alive, and people are coming together it appears. Officials behind the scenes are holding urgent meetings and in the media today we have official confirmation from Fortify Rights of the massacre we know took place. Pressure is on to stop the genocide. I am hopeful.

Jamila Hanan, 23 January 2014


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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012 #Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012#Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012 #Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012#Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012 #Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012 #Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012 #Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012 #Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012 #Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012 #Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012 #Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012 #Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012
#Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012#Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012 #Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012 #Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012 #Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012#Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012
#Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012 #Rohingya #Genocide: image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

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Memory of #Thein Sein government's preplanned violence in 2012#Rohingya #Genocide : image via Aung Aung @Aungaungsittwe, 18 May 2015

Rohingya migrants sit on a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015. A boat crammed with scores of Rohingya migrants -- including many young children -- was found drifting in Thai waters on May 14, with passengers saying several people had died over the last few days. AFP PHOTO / Christophe ARCHAMBAULT

In the past few weeks, at least 6,000 refugees have been cut adrift in the ocean: photo by AFP via FT.com, 20 May 2015

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Acehnese fishermen (R in boats) tow a boat of #Rohingya migrants in their boat (L) off the coast near Geulumpang #AFP: photo via AFP Photo Department @AFP photo, 23 May 2015

Black Wave (Pacific Melt)

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Sad sights from the #SantaBarbaraOilSpill: image via Polly Mosendz @polly, 21 May 2015
 

A close look at Betelgeuse

Image of the supergiant star Betelgeuse obtained with the NACO adaptive optics instrument on ESO’s Very Large Telescope. The use of NACO combined with a so-called “lucky imaging” technique, allowed the astronomers to obtain the sharpest ever image of Betelgeuse, even with Earth’s turbulent, image-distorting atmosphere in the way. The resolution is as fine as 37 milliarcseconds, which is roughly the size of a tennis ball on the International Space Station (ISS), as seen from the ground. The image is based on data obtained in the near-infrared, through different filters. The field of view is about half an arcsecond wide, North is up, East is left: image by ESO / P. Kervella. 29 July 2009 (ESO)
 
File:Cluster M15.jpg

Hot blue stars at the core of Globular Cluster M15: photo by NASA, 2006(NASA/HST)
 
Wild form, deep form, form out of the
Arabic night

God your conspicuous discrete
desert stars are trucks of light
on very distant highway 101's
over which
I am hitchhiking tonight

The waves feathering out in ink
beyond Obispo, toward Conception
toward Surf, a black like blue
jello out of Jules Verne's star-bowls

the world a crushed grape to
someone on Betelgeuse
 
TC: Pacific Melt, from Paradise Resisted, 1984
 
File:Aerial-PtConceptionLight.jpg
 
Point Conception Lighthouse, Santa Barbara County, California: photo by Jv4nvc, 2009
 
Oil spill off Santa Barbara coast

Oil spill off Santa Barbara coast. A pelican glides over oil-soaked kelp and oil sheen as a cleanup effort continues on the beaches in Santa Barbara County: photo by Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times, 20 May 2015

Oil spill off Santa Barbara coast

Oil spill off Santa Barbara coast. An oil sheen is visible in a kelp forest offshore as the cleanup effort continues along the coast in Santa Barbara County: photo by Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times, 20 May 2015

Oil spill off Santa Barbara coast

Oil spill off Santa Barbara coast. The oil spill fouls the waters and a kelp forest as a cleanup effort continues along the coast in Santa Barbara County: photo by Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times, 20 May 2015

Oil spill off Santa Barbara coast

Oil spill off Santa Barbara coast. The oil spill fouls the waters and a kelp forest as a cleanup effort continues along the coast in Santa Barbara County: photo by Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times, 20 May 2015

Oil spill off Santa Barbara coast

Oil spill off Santa Barbara coast. Point of origin where the oil pipeline ruptured.: photo by Al Seib / Los Angeles Times, 20 May 2015

Oil spill off Santa Barbara coast

Oil spill off Santa Barbara coast. Point of origin where the oil pipeline ruptured.: photo by Al Seib / Los Angeles Times, 20 May 2015

Oil spill cleanup

Oil spill off Santa Barbara coast. Oil spill cleanup. Oil-stained rocks at Refugio State Beach on Wednesday morning.: photo by Al Seib / Los Angeles Times, 20 May 2015

Refugio State Beach

Refugio State Beach. Oil-stained rocks at Refugio State Beach on Wednesday morning.: photo by Al Seib / Los Angeles Times, 20 May 2015
 
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This is the view from the beach where the oil spilled down into the ocean #SantaBarbara: image via Javier Panzar @jpanzar, 21 May 2015

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#California #oilspill 5x larger than 1st thought #climate #cdnpoli #bcpoli #defendthecoast: image via Mike Hudema, 21 May 2015

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#SantaBarbaraOilSpill: Dramatic Images -- via @ABC: image via Elissa Harrington @EHarringtonNews, 21 May 2015

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This is how oil breaks down in water after a disaster like the #SantaBarbaraOilSpill: image via Popular Mechanics @PopMech, 21 May 2015

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 Very small percentage of oil spilled in #RefugioOilSpill recovered by cleanup workers: image via Rachel Richardson @rquared, 21 May 2015

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"As the sun rises, the environmental impacts of the oil spill. Dead fish" #refugiooilspill #sad v@Rae_Christensen: image via reported.ly, 21 May 2015

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#RefugioOilSpil Governor declares Emergency in pictures via @Telegraph Pic Lucy Nicholson: image via Telegraph Pictures @TelegraphPics, 21 May 2015

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#SantaBarbaraOilSpill is 5X worse than originally thought, from 21,000 gal to now 105,000 gal>: image via Earthjustice @Earthjustice, 21 May 2015

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Oiled seabird: Red-throated Loon? caught in #oilspill today near Santa Barbara: by Lara Cooper/Noozhawk.com: image via BirdRescue.org @IntBirdRescue, 19 May 2015

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Happened upon this seal struggling on the beach. We have called it in. #SantaBarbaraOilSpill: image via Bethany Mollenkof @FancyBethany, 21 May 2015

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She is lying with her head on a rock. Heartbreaking. Reported to Fish and Wildlife. Waiting. #SantaBarbaraOilSpill: image via Javier Panzar @jpanzar, 21 May 2015

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Sea lions normally run off w/ humans around, marine biologist tells me. This one looks too tired #SantaBarbaraOilSpill: image via Javier Panzar @jpanzar, 21 May 2015

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105k gallons of oil spilled in #SantaBarbara. Devastating environmental damage to our coastline. Sad #RefugioOilSpill: image via iration @iration, 21 May 2015

Crude

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Oil spill on Santa Barbara County coast
 
Oil spill on Santa Barbara County coast. A sea lion covered in oil lies on the beach near Refugio State Beach, about 100 feet from where the oil spill flowed into the ocean off the Santa Barbara County coast: photo by Bethany Mollenkof / Los Angeles Times 22 May 2015

Santa Barbara County oil spill: Toll on marine life begins to show: Monte Morin and Javier Panzar for Los Angeles Times, 22 May 2015

Crews are working around the clock to clean up the site of an oil spill in Santa Barbara County that has sent tens of thousands of crude into the Pacific Ocean and left even more saturating the soil.

About 100 feet from where the rupture occurred, a sea lion raised its oil-covered head to the sky and collapsed on the beach. It rested its head on a rock and rolled onto its back, exposing a shiny, oil-stained belly.

UC Santa Barbara marine sciences doctoral student Anna James stopped collecting water samples and looked over at the struggling animal.

"That poor sea lion really puts it all into perspective," she said.

Sea lions normally run off when humans are near, she said. The sea lion was too tired to move.

The sea lion, which appeared to be female, wallowed in the sand just below a rocky cliffside covered almost entirely in black oil.

Marine mammals and fish are turning up on shore both dead and alive. A pair of cleanup workers in protective suits walked up the beach with nets and boxes. They were ready to capture and clean birds, not sea lions.

California Department of Fish and Wildlife Environmental scientist Colleen Young stopped several yards short of the sea lion and scribbled down notes.

She said they would have to wait for a special team trained to deal with sea lions. Just then, the sea lion rose up on its oil-stained flippers and began shuffling to the water. It went into the surf and disappeared into the water.

Young said that even though it was not good for the sea lion to be back in the polluted water, it does not necessarily spell disaster for the animal.

The sea lion's blubber will protect it and provide warmth, she said, unlike a sea otter that can suffer with oil in its fur.

"Sea lions can cope with it quite a bit better than sea otters," she said.


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Marine biologist collecting water samples looks over:"That poor sea lion really puts it all into perspective": image via Javier Panzar @jpanzar, 21 May 2015

Oil spill on Santa Barbara County coast

A sea lion covered in oil struggles on the beach just west of Refugio State Beach, about 100 feet from where the oil spill flowed into the ocean: photo by Bethany Mollenkof / Los Angeles Times, 21 May 2015

With all of the perils and risks involved in living in the littoral, there is, as in all natural communities, a marvelous balance of success and failure. Take success to mean the ability of the individual to reproduce itself and the species to continue. California shares, with other shore-fronting lands, the oldest natural communities on earth. Life which we assume to have begun in ancient seas has changed less in this environment than any other. We look back a hundred million years when we investigate tidal rocks and shores.
 
Elna Bakker: from An Island Called California: An Ecological Introduction to Its Natural Communities, 1971


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The sea lion has oil in its eyes and its flippers. Marine biologist here thinks it is a female. #SantaBarbaraOilSpill: image via Javier Panzar @jpanzar, 21 May 2015


Layers of crude oil coat the rocks of Refugio State Beach: photo by Lucy Nicholson / Reuters via Buzzfeed, 22 May 2015

Santa Barbara oil beach

A California sea lion hunts in the oil-contaminated water as a brown pelican flies over, near Refugio State Beach: photo by David McNew via IBT, 21 May 2015

Joseph Ceravolo: Ocean Body

The ocean like an open butterfly
is immobile but still pulsating a little.
The color of the sea
is like a blue butterfly
in the primordial future.
The swell of the body
is like a mammoth butterfly
about to take off from earth
and leave this desert of
a faraway planet
spread before us like a desolate tune.
 
Joseph Ceravolo (1934-1988): Ocean Body, from Millenium Dust, 1982


Santa Barbara oil beach

Globules of oil can be seen in the waves as the tide rises near Refugio State Beach: photo by David McNew via IBT, 21 May 2015

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#PlainsAllAmerican in #Texas responsible for spill in #SantaBarbara.
We need to tell Texas to stay out of #California: image via Charlotte Williams @charluv2011, 20 May 2015 

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The sea lion went back into the water: image via Javier Panzar @jpanzar, 21 May 2015

crab-oil-spill-getty2.jpg

An oil-covered crab died while trying to crawl on the beach in Santa Barbara County
: photo by David McNew via LAist, 22 May 2015


California mussels and a crab are covered in oil at Refugio state beach on Thursday
: photo by Jae C Hong/AP via the Guardian, 21 May 2015
 


 An octopus spattered in oil lies on Refugio State Beach on Wednesday: photo by Lucy Nicholson / Reuters via Buzzfeed, 22 May 2015
 
Oiled Shrimp in California

A shrimp covered in oil at Refugio State Beach: photo byLucy Nicholson/Reuters via Newsweek, 21 May 2015
 


 A shrimp is covered in oil on the beach on Wednesday: photo by Lucy Nicholson / Reuters via Buzzfeed, 22 May 2015
 


A fish covered in oil lies on the sand at Refugio State Beach: photo by Lucy Nicholson / Reuters via Buzzfeed, 22 May 2015

Lobster in California Oil Spill

A lobster covered in oil at Refugio State Beach: photo byLucy Nicholson/Reuters via Newsweek, 21 May 2015
 
Santa Barbara oil beach

A pelican covered in oil flies over an oil slick along the coast of Refugio State Beach: photo by Lucy Nicholson/Reuters via IBT, 21 May 2015

Robinson Jeffers: Phenomena

Great-enough both accepts and subdues; the great frame takes all creatures;
From the greatness of their element they all take beauty.
Gulls; and the dingy freightship lurching south in the eye of a rain-wind;
The airplane dipping over the hill; hawks hovering
The white grass of the headland; cormorants roosting upon the guano-
Whitened skerries; pelicans awind; sea-slime
Shining at night in the wave-stir like drowned men's lanterns; smugglers signaling
A cargo to land; or the old Point Pinos lighthouse
Lawfully winking over dark water; the flight of the twilight herons,
Lonely wings and a cry; or with motor-vibrations
That hum in the rock like a new storm-tone of the ocean's to turn eyes westward
The navy's new-bought Zeppelin going by in the twilight,
Far out seaward; relative only to the evening star and the ocean
It slides into a cloud over Point Lobos.

 
Robinson Jeffers (1887-1962): Phenomena, from Roan Stallion, Tamar, and Other Poems, 1925



Lone pelican. Mount Tamalpais in background. Taken from Bolinas beach.: photo by Yana Edwin Murphy, 24 July 2007

Santa Barbara oil beach

A pelican covered in oil is seen along the coast of Refugio State Beach in Goleta, California: photo by Lucy Nicholson/Reuters via IBT, 21 May 2015

Embedded image permalink

An oil-covered pelican is loaded into a box by California Fish and Wildlife Department workers Wednesday at Refugio State Beach [photo by David Yamamoto]:
image via Ventura County Star @vcstar, 21 May 2015

Embedded image permalink

Reeve Woolpert carries an oil-covered pelican he rescued near Refugio State Beach on Wednesday [photo by David Yamamoto]: image via Ventura County Star @vcstar, 21 May 2015

A dead ray, fish, and shellfish lie on Refugio State Beach on Wednesday, May 20, 2015. Photo credit: Jonathan Alcorn/Greenpeace.

A dead ray, fish, and shellfish lie on Refugio State Beach on Wednesday 20 May 2015: photo  by Jonathan Alcorn / Greenpeace. via Mongabay, 21 May 2015

Oil spill on Santa Barbara County coast
Crews use shovels and rakes to pile oil-contaminated sand on the shoreline at Refugio State Beach near Santa Barbara: photo by Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times, 22 May 2015

The spill took place Tuesday afternoon, after a pipeline owned by Plains All American ruptured.

A remote worker noticed abnormalities in the Plains All America pipeline’s flow around 11:30 a.m. Tuesday and shut it off, according to the company. The cause of the rupture won’t be known until the area can be excavated.rews use shovels and rakes to pile oil-contaminated sand on the shoreline at Refugio State Beach near Santa Barbara: photo by Lucy Nicholson / Reuters via Buzzfeed, 22 May 2015

Investor Fact Sheet Map

Placement of Plains All American Pipelines Major Assets: Image via Plains All American Pipelines LP

Oil spill on Santa Barbara County coast

Oil spill on Santa Barbara County coast. Oil-contaminated sand makes an interesting pattern on the shoreline at Refugio State Beach near Santa Barbara: photo by Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times, 22 May 2015

Robinson Jeffers: Pelicans

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File:Pelicans diving.JPG

Pelicans at Turtle Beach: photo by Coveredinsevindust, 23 March 2013


Four pelicans went over the house,
Sculled their worn oars over the courtyard: I saw that ungainliness
Magnifies the idea of strength.
A lifting gale of sea-gulls followed them; slim yachts of the element,
Natural growths of the sky, no wonder
Light wings to leave the sea; but those grave weights toil, and are powerful,
And the wings torn with old storms remember
The cone that the oldest redwood dropped from, the tilting of continents,
The dinosaur’s day, the lift of new sea-lines.
The omnisecular spirit keeps the old with the new also.
Nothing at all has suffered erasure.
There is life not of our time. He calls ungainly bodies
As beautiful as the grace of horses.
He is weary of nothing; he watches air-planes; he watches pelicans.

Robinson Jeffers (1887-1962): Pelicans, November 1925, from American Poetry: A Miscellany, ed. Lewis Untermeyer, 1927


File:Diving pelican.JPG

Pelican in a dive: photo by Coveredinsevindust, 23 March 2013
 


Brown Pelicans and seagull, UCSB Lagoon, Goleta, California: photo by Steve Voght, 16 August 2009
 


Brown Pelican, Goleta, California: photo by Jon Sullivan, 28 July 2013



Brown Pelicans in flight, Goleta, California: photo by Jon Sullivan, 28 July 2013
 


Pelicans in flight, Goleta, California: photo by Jon Sullivan, 28 July 2013
 

 
 Pelicans skimming, Goleta, California: photo by Jon Sullivan, 28 July 2013
 


Petroleum pipeline signals future development off Mulholland Drive in the Santa Monica Mountains on the western edge of Los Angeles. The mountains contain the last semi-wilderness in Los Angeles County. Some 84 percent of the state's residents live within 30 miles of the coast, and this concentration has resulted in increased land use pressure. Of the 1,072 mile of mainland shoreline (excluding San Francisco Bay), 61 percent is privately owned: photo by Charles O'Rear (1941-), May 1975, from the DOCUMERICA series, an Environmental Protection Agency program to photographicallydocument subjects of environmental concern, compiled 1972-1977 (U.S. National Archives)


 Oil covers rocks near Refugio state beach on Frida
y: photo by Justin Sullivan via the Guardian, 22 May 2015


A bird covered in oil spreads its wings as it sits on a rock near Refugio state beach on Friday
: photo by Justin Sullivan via the Guardian, 22 May 2015

Oil spill on Santa Barbara County coast

A bird covered in oil spreads its wings as it sits on a rock near Refugio State Beach in Goleta: photo by Justin Sullivan via Los Angeles Times, 21 May 2015

"Get oil out!

Oil-covered pelican
Workers at the Los Angeles Oiled Bird Care and Education Center work to clean an oil-covered pelican rescued from the spill at Refugio State Beach: photo by Irfan Khan via Los Angeles Times, 21 May 2015

Lesson of Santa Barbara oil spill: Leave petroleum in the ground: David Helvarg, Los Angeles Times, 22 May 2015

The 2015 oil spill near Santa Barbara is a reminder of 1969 and this message: Get oil out
Memorial Day marks the beginning of high beach season, but there are miles of coastline near Santa Barbara that will be out of commission this weekend thanks to a pipeline oil spill.

This is how most offshore oil works: You drill miles off the coast, pump the oil onshore to be processed and pipe it along the coast. On Tuesday, an underground pipeline that runs between Gaviota and Refugio State Beach ruptured, and the oil followed gravity into a culvert and back out to sea.

More than 100,000 gallons of oil may have spilled, including an estimated 20,000 on the beach and in an oil slick in one of our nation's richest marine habitats. The pipeline company has apologized for the “inconvenience” all this will cause. What's particularly troubling is that compared with drilling rigs, pipelines are supposed to be the safe part of offshore oil operations.

California was the site of the world's first offshore drilling, from piers in Summerland in the late 19th century. By 1901, the San Jose Mercury News reported, “The whole face of the townsite is aslime with oil leakages,” and Santa Barbara banned oil piers. It took the federal government more than 60 years to convince the locals that drilling technology had advanced enough that spills would be a thing of the past. Then, in 1969, a Union Oil rig experienced a blowout and more than 3 million gallons of oil coated 35 miles of Santa Barbara County beaches six inches thick. Seabirds, fish and mammals died in droves.

The sight of dying, oil-covered birds in the same year that the polluted Cuyahoga River caught fire in Cleveland gave birth to the modern environmental movement. When President Nixon made an appearance in Santa Barbara, he was met by thousands of angry residents and the rallying cry “Get oil out!”


Oil-covered pelican

A pelican covered in oil sits on a beach about a mile west of Refugio State Beach on Wednesday, May 20: photo by Kenneth Song / Associated Press via Los Angeles Times, 20 May 2015

As the cleanup continues this week at Refugio State Beach, President Obama should make his own pilgrimage to the West Coast to check out the results of offshore drilling. He seems to have learned little from the BP blowout five years ago in the Gulf of Mexico. That disaster killed 11 workers and spilled 500 million gallons of oil, the result of gross negligence on the part of BP, according to a federal court ruling. The BP spill is still rippling through the gulf. On Wednesday, a new study reported that hundreds of bottlenose dolphins continue to die every year as a result of the spill.

Despite the steep costs of BP's negligence, the Obama administration proposes to open up new drilling sites along much of the Atlantic seaboard, and in the remote Arctic Ocean off Alaska, beginning in 2017.

Last week, in the largest citizen lobby for ocean conservation in U.S. history, nonpartisan delegations from 24 states held 163 meetings on Capitol Hill to oppose any new offshore drilling, among other issues. Along the Eastern Seaboard, more than 60 towns and cities, under Democratic and Republican leadership, have passed resolutions against oil surveys and drilling that might threaten their coastal economies and way of life.

On May 16 in Seattle, hundreds of protesters in kayaks surrounded Shell Oil's Arctic exploratory rig, the Polar Pioneer, hoping to keep it away from Alaska's Chukchi Sea during the brief upcoming Arctic summer. Coast Guard Commandant Paul Zukunft has pulled no punches about the risks of drilling and shipping in the Arctic, warning of a “black swan” incident -- a disaster of historic proportion -- if something like a major oil spill were to occur, because there would be no way to effectively respond to it.

On Wednesday, President Obama told the graduating class at the Coast Guard Academy in New London, Conn., that the science on climate change is clear and U.S. national security is threatened by global warming. What he didn't mention was the rest of the science, the part that indicates that leaving petroleum reserves in the ground -- and under the sea bed -- is the best way to avoid the most catastrophic effects of climate change.

The 1969 oil spill in Santa Barbara galvanized a movement and effectively ended additional drilling leases off California's coast. The 2015 spill is a reminder that the work of that movement is far from finished. The dangerous prospect of offshore leases will be a factor in the presidential primaries on the East Coast. The protests against dangerous drilling for Arctic oil will continue. It's past time to “Get oil out.”

David Helvarg is executive director of Blue Frontier, an ocean conservation and policy group. His latest book is "Saved by the Sea — Hope, Heartbreak and Wonder in the Blue World".


Oil-covered-pelican

Workers at the Los Angeles Oiled Bird Care and Education Center work to clean an oil-covered pelican rescued from the spill at Refugio State Beach: photo by Irfan Khan via Los Angeles Times, 21 May 2015

Oil spill on Santa Barbara County coast

Oil spill on Santa Barbara County coast. A "Beach Closed" sign is posted at Coal Oil Point in Isla Vista. Many state beaches have been closed in the area, but some people still made their way to the shore: photo by Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times, 23 May 2015

Great blue heron

A great blue heron hides behind a rock on the beach at Coal Oil Point in Isla Vista. The beach was closed because of the oil spill.: photo by Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times, 23 May 2015




Brown Pelican in a dive, Goleta, California: photo by Jon Sullivan, 28 July 2013

File:In a dive.JPG

Brown Pelican in a dive: photo by Coveredinsevindust, 11 March 2014

Robert Creeley: For Debora

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This photo taken on May 21, 201...TOPSHOTS This photo taken on May 21, 2015 shows an ethnic Rohingya Muslim woman looking back as she rides a tuk tuk near a camp set up outside the city of Sittwe in Myanmar's Rakhine state. Malaysia ordered search and rescue missions on May 22 for thousands of boatpeople stranded at sea, as Myanmar hosted talks with US and Southeast Asian envoys on the migrant exodus from its shores.  AFP PHOTO / YE AUNG THUYe Aung Thu/AFP/Getty Images

An ethnic Rohingya Muslim woman looking back as she rides a tuk tuk near a camp set up outside the city of Sittwe in Myanmar’s Rakhine state. Malaysia ordered search and rescue missions Friday for thousands of boatpeople stranded at sea, as Myanmar hosted talks with US and Southeast Asian envoys on the migrant exodus from its shores: photo by Ye Aung Thu/AFP via FT Photo Diary, 22 May 2015

"I have forgotten all 
human relations, but not

poetry." I have for- 
gotten all that seemed

significant but not 
the consequence. I have
 
never seen this before 
this I have wanted to
 
make this trip many 
times but got lost getting
 
there I have had many 
sorrows in my literal
 
life but much happiness
also I have forgotten
 
what it was they thought 
to remember. I have forgotten.

Robert Creeley (1927-2005): For Debora, from Places, 1990


A Palestinian boy rests on an old armcha...A Palestinian boy rests on an old armchair in front of a dilapidated house on May 22, 2015 in Gaza City
 
A Palestinian boy rests on an old armchair in front of a dilapidated house on Friday in Gaza City: photo by Mohammed Abed/AFP via FT Photo Diary, 22 May 2015

Walt Whitman / John Neubauer: By Broad Potomac's Shore

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Sunset On The Potomac, September 1973 | by The U.S. National Archives

Sunset on the polluted Potomac: photo by John Neubauer for the Environmental Protection Agency's DOCUMERICA project, September 1972 (U.S. National Archives)

By broad Potomac's shore -- again old tongue!
(Still uttering -- still ejaculating -- canst never cease this babble?)
Again, old heart so gay -- again to you, your sense, the full flush spring returning;
Again the freshness and the odors -- again Virginia's summer sky, pellucid blue and silver,
Again the forenoon purple of the hills,
Again the deathless grass, so noiseless soft and green,
Again the blood-red roses blooming.

Perfume this book of mine O blood-red roses!
Lave subtly with your waters every line Potomac!
Give me of you, O spring, before I close, to put between its pages!
O forenoon purple of the hills, before I close, of you!
O smiling earth -- O summer sun, give me of you!
O deathless grass, of you!
 
Walt Whitman (1819-1892): By Broad Potomac's Shore, from Leaves of Grass (fifth edition, 1871)
 
Fishing The Potomac For Catfish, April 1973 | by The U.S. National Archives 
 Fishing the polluted Potomac for catfish: photo by John Neubauer for the Environmental Protection Agency's DOCUMERICA project, April 1973 (U.S. National Archives)

Fishing The Muddied Potomac Near Mt. Vernon, April 1973 | by The U.S. National Archives
 
Fishing the muddied Potomac near Mt. Vernon: photo by John Neubauer for the Environmental Protection Agency's DOCUMERICA project, April 1973 (U.S. National Archives)

A Small Power Boat Makes A U-turn On The Potomac Just Above Mt. Vernon, April 1973 | by The U.S. National Archives

A small power boat makes a U-turn on the Potomac just above Mt. Vernon: photo by John Neubauer for the Environmental Protection Agency's DOCUMERICA project, April 1973(U.S. National Archives)

Small Powerboat On Potomac River Above Mt. Vernon Churns Up Silt, April 1973 | by The U.S. National Archives

A small power boat on the Potomac River above Mt. Vernon churns up silt: photo by John Neubauer for the Environmental Protection Agency's DOCUMERICA project, April 1973(U.S. National Archives)

Small Powerboat On The Potomac River Above Mt. Vernon Virginia Stirs Up Silt, April 1973 | by The U.S. National Archives

A small power boat on the Potomac River above Mt. Vernon stirs up silt: photo by John Neubauer for the Environmental Protection Agency's DOCUMERICA project, April 1973(U.S. National Archives)

Power Boats On The Polluted Potomac, September 1972 | by The U.S. National Archives

Power boats on the polluted Potomac: photo by John Neubauer for the Environmental Protection Agency's DOCUMERICA project, September 1972 (U.S. National Archives)

Sunset On The Polluted Potomac, September 1973 | by The U.S. National Archives

Sunset on the polluted Potomac
: photo by John Neubauer for the Environmental Protection Agency's DOCUMERICA project, September 1972 (U.S. National Archives)

Raw Sewage Flows Into The Potomac At Georgetown Gap, April 1973 | by The U.S. National Archives
 
Raw sewage flows into the Potomac at Georgetown Gap. The Watergate complex and the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts are nearby: photo by John Neubauer for the Environmental Protection Agency's DOCUMERICA project, April 1973 (U.S. National Archives)

The Georgetown Gap, Through Which Raw Sewage Flows Into The Potomac. Watergate Complex In The Rear, April 1973 | by The U.S. National Archives
 
Raw sewage flows into the Potomac at Georgetown Gap. Watergate complex in the background: photo by John Neubauer for the Environmental Protection Agency's DOCUMERICA project, April 1973 (U.S. National Archives)

Wallace Stevens: Thinking of a Relation between the Images of Metaphors

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Perkiomen Bridge | by Montgomery County Planning Commission

Schuylkill River Trail Bridge over the Perkiomen Creek: photo by Montgomery County Planning Commission, 2 November 2013


The wood-doves are singing along the Perkiomen.
The bass lie deep, still afraid of the Indians.


In the one ear of the fisherman, who is all
One ear, the wood-doves are singing a single song.


The bass keep looking ahead, upstream, in one
Direction, shrinking from the spit and splash


Of waterish spears. The fisherman is all
One eye, in which the dove resembles a dove.


There is one dove, one bass, one fisherman.
Yet coo becomes rou-coo, rou-coo. How close


To the unstated theme each variation comes . . .
In that one ear it might strike perfectly:


State the disclosure. In that one eye the dove
Might spring to sight and yet remain a dove.


The fisherman might be the single man
In whose breast, the dove, alighting, would grow still.


Wallace Stevens (1879-1955): Thinking of a Relation between the Images of Metaphors, from Transport to Summer, 1947


Snyder Road Bridge | by Montgomery County Planning Commission

Snyder Road Bridge. Great iron truss in Green Lane Park. It has been closed for years. A calm Perkiomen Creek on an early Saturday morning: photo by Montgomery County Planning Commission, 5 October 2013 

Along the East Branch Perkiomen Creek | by brainwise

Along the East Branch Perkiomen Creek: photo by brainwise, 27 September 2014

Perkiomen Creek | by Montgomery County Planning Commission

Perkiomen Creek. Perkiomen Creek fly fishing above Church Road: photo by Montgomery County Planning Commission, 22 September 2013

East Branch | by Montgomery County Planning Commission

East Branch. View of the East Branch of the Perkiomen Creek on an early Sunday morning: photo by Montgomery County Planning Commission, 6 July 2014
 
East_Branch_V | by Montgomery County Planning Commission

East Branch V. East Branch of the Perkiomen Creek about a mile above the confluence with Perkiomen Creek: photo by Montgomery County Planning Commission, 23 March 2013
 
Day 249 - Dinner | by MissTessmacher

Juvenile Green Heron carrying of a crayfish for dinner. At the dam along the Perkiomen Creek:
photo by MissTessmacher, 6 September 2010

Green Heron | by MissTessmacher

Green Heron at the dam along the Perkiomen Creek: photo by MissTessmacher, 11 September 2010

Oil Spill On Schuykill River, July 1972 | by The U.S. National Archives

Oil spill on the Schuylkill River, 5 July 1972, following Hurricane Agnes: oil-covered greenery on the river bank: photo by Dick Swanson for the Environmental Protection Agency's Documerica project, July 1972 (U.S. National Archives)

File:Schuylkillmap.png 

Map of the Schuylkill River watershed in eastern Pennsylvania (based on USGS data): image by Karl Musser, 26 December 2006

Thinking of a Relation is one of several poems in Transport to Summer that consciously evoke the poet's origins and early life in eastern Pennsylvania, where he was belatedly locating a central site of autobiographical reminiscence and reflection. In the construction of a poetic mythos, this landscape, at once experienced and endeared, became fantastic, loomed over by shadows, sometimes "shadows of friends" ("A Completely New Set of Objects"), sometimes shadows more ominous -- here, unseen but imagined figures "upstream", round the next bend of the Perkiomen, representing the now absent "Indians", whose "waterish spears" are still feared by the ahistorical bass in the creek.

"Neshaminy is a little place seven or eight miles from Doylestown," Stevens wrote to genealogist Lila James Roney on 2 November 1942, naming a small Pennsylvania community that was for him the locus of a now half-imaginal personal/paternal/pastoral arcadia recalled from boyhood. "To the west of it lies the country through which the Perkiomen Creek flows. This creek, when I was a boy was famous for its bass. It almost amounts to a genealogical fact that all his life long my father used to fish in [the Perkiomen], and this can only mean that he did it as a boy."

Stevens came from Holland Dutch stock; his native region had a strong Moravian Dutch presence. Over time, under British colonial influence and thereafter, the native Lenape people of the region -- the departed but not-forgot-by-the-bass "Indians" -- were "removed" to the west; they are remembered now only in place-names, many of which are inscribed in Stevens' poems of this period. 

Perkiomen Creek is a 37.7-mile-long (60.7 km.) tributary of the Schuylkill River in Berks, Lehigh and Montgomery counties, Pennsylvania.
The name Perkiomen derives from the Lenape term Pakhim Unk [Pah-Keym-Unk] -- in English, "cranberry place".

A historical scholar has held up the "removal" of the Lenape of the North American Middle Atlantic as a paradigmatic instance of the progress of Western imperialism in the age of expansion:

"This study explores how changing power relations influenced communication and exchange across cultural boundaries in the early to mid-eighteenth century -- the period that set the stage for Western imperialism. The focus is on two areas -- Tanjavur and Lenape country. Though quite distant from each other culturally and geographically -- the former was located in South India, the latter in the North American Middle Atlantic -- their histories followed similar trajectories. Both underwent dramatic changes. They experienced a period of peace and stability in the early eighteenth century. From the 1730s, geopolitical changes brought about political destabilization, militarization, and violence that culminated in the Seven Years' War (1756-1763).

"Accelerated British expansion was the major cause of these developments, since it violated earlier arrangements. In South India, the British East India company tightened its control of maritime trade and textile production. The state of Tanjavur was heavily affected because much of its tax income depended on rice and textile exports. In the Middle Atlantic, British expansion was accompanied by increasingly aggressive land acquisitions. Lenape polities were confronted with Pennsylvania's changing land policies from the 1720s. When the French state tried to curtail British expansion from the late 1730s, conflicts escalated. In the process, the rationality of empires began to dominate communication and exchange across cultural boundaries. Local concerns were muted.

"This study is predominantly based on sources produced by Central European missionaries -- Lutheran Pietists in Tanjavur and Moravians in Lenape country. Both sets of sources are extensive and unique. Pietists communicated with hundreds of local informants who represented a cross-section of society in Tanjavur. Moravians were the only contemporaries who lived in Lenape communities for extended periods of time and recorded their experiences in detail. Initially, neither Pietist nor Moravian missionaries identified with the British empire. The state of Tanjavur and Lenape polities integrated the two religious groups with a certain degree of success. Yet, their European ritual leaders belonged to global networks that depended on the infrastructure of empires. Their dependence on British means of transport and communication increased as British maritime dominance grew. Their views became aligned with British interests."

Axel Utz: Cultural exchange, imperialist violence, and pious missions: Local perspectives from Tanjavur and Lenape country, 1720--1760 (2011, Abstract)

Fig. 1: The Delaware Westward Migration


The Delaware Westward Migration: image via Rees, Mark A., Gina S. Powell, and Neal H. Lopinot. Delaware Town Archaeological Survey and site assessment in the James River Valley of Christian County, Missouri, Center for Archaeological Research Report (2000)

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