Author: SeniorWomenWeb

  • Ferida Wolff’s Backyard: The Hibiscus Family Tree and Puzzling Times

    Hibiscus

    The Hibiscus Family Tree

    Each year the hibiscus plants in our yard seem to be finished. Other flowers come and go and still, no hint of the hibiscus coming back. And then…

    The leaves start to pop up from the seemingly non-fertile earth. And once they do, the plants are on their way to growing the most amazing blossoms!

    The brittle, white stems from last year’s plants provided good roosts for the birds who came to drink at the bird bath in the winter months. They also had an artistic appeal as they reached out and up in their irregular formations. But now, I’m suddenly aware of a deeper picture. They seem to be embracing the upcoming growth, like the older generation supporting the younger ones coming into the family. There will come a time when the new flowers will burst forth and the brittle branches will snap off but the family connection remains.   

    At this time, it is important to remember that we are part of a larger family connection. Yes, people are diverse in many ways but share our human heritage. And even when times seem bleak, let’s try to remember that like the hibiscus we can, we will, blossom again.

    The Beginner’s Guide to Growing Hibiscus: https://www.geraniumrozanne.com/beginners-guide-growing-hibiscus/

     

    Puzzling Times

    puzzles
    I love to travel. There are so many places in this world that are amazing. Nature offers a look at different plants and animals, birds and landscapes. And there are so many people to connect with who are willing to share their lives and perspectives. I see the whole world as part of Ferida’s Backyard, a place to explore and enjoy.
     
    Unfortunately, foreign travel is not an option right now. We are mostly staying at home, though we have discovered an interesting diversion; we occasionally drive around local areas that we haven’t been to. We stay in our car and explore housing developments, farmlands, small town centers. We often come upon nature paths that one day we will go back to.
     
    Meanwhile, I am into jigsaw puzzles. This one keeps me hopeful that I will one day be able to travel again. It is called “Safe Travels” (Masterpieces Puzzle Co.) and it reminds me of what traveling is all about. It shows snippets of other countries and their residents, some foreign currency, photos that were taken, a journal, and other travel details. It isn’t an easy puzzle but its 1,000 pieces provide a meditative process that helps me focus on the now and not obsess on the “what’s next?” 
     
    I hope I get to travel soon again but meanwhile, I am peaceful where I am and hope you are, too.
     
    Puzzles are beneficial for many things:
     
     
    Editor’s Note: We, too, are particularly fond of doing 1000 piece puzzles as a diversion from some current country and world-wide situations. Some of the companies and shops that we’re particularly fond of:  Art Institute Chicago ShopEducaNew York Puzzle Company, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Galison, Pomegranate Artpiece Puzzles, The Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy, Miller’s Antiques, Editions Ricordi, Springbok, Eurographics
     
    In addition, the following National Institutes of Health article highlighted beneficial aspects to jigsaw puzzling: 

    “However, the cognitive benefits of many other frequently performed leisure activities have not been investigated so far. One example is jigsaw puzzling: alone in Germany, it is estimated that almost 7 million JPs were sold in 2016, resulting in a market of €75 million (Npdgroup Deutschland GmbH, 2016). The jigsaw puzzle (JP) market in Europe and the United States was in total more than €400 million in 2016 (The Npd Group, Inc, 2016The Npd Group Inc, 2017)1, almost twice as much as the worldwide cognitive training market in 2013 (about $220 million; Simons et al., 2016).”

    “Jigsaw puzzling may provide two active ingredients (i.e., effective features) that benefit cognition: first, process-specific cognitive demands of jigsaw puzzling could contribute to an increased brain reserve (Gelfo et al., 2018), and second, regulation of distressing emotions through jigsaw puzzling could prevent chronic stress states that can exert a negative impact on cognitive aging and dementia in the long term (Lupien et al., 2009Wilson et al., 2011).” 

  • Jo Freeman Writes: Anti-Lynching Bill Still Can’t Pass Congress

    Jacob Lawrence's Migration series

    One Way Ticket,  Jacob Lawrence’s Migration Series, Museum of Modern Art

    by Jo Freeman 

    As thousands march daily to demonstrate their support for Black Lives Matter, an anti-lynching bill still can’t get out of Congress. It is currently being held up by Sen. Rand Paul (R KY) who claims that it is too broad in that it would include minor injuries.

    The first anti-lynching bill to get out of committee was introduced in April 1918. Known as the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill, it passed the House in 1922 but was filibustered by Southern Senators. For the next forty years nearly 200 anti-lynching bills were introduced into almost every Congress and occasionally passed by the House. In the Senate, Southern Senators kept them from coming to a vote.

    The current bill was introduced by Rep. Bobby Rush (D IL), a founder of the Illinois Black Panther Party in 1968. H. R. 35 passed the House by 410 to 4 in February, 2020. It had already passed the Senate but came before it again due to a small change in the House version. That’s when Sen. Paul put his hold on the bill.

    Lynching has a long and complicated history. Essentially an extra-judicial execution, it was a product of the frontier when institutions for enforcing the law were weak. Only after the Civil War ended did it become primarily a vehicle aimed at persons of African descent. The number of white victims dropped to roughly ten percent.

    In the years before African-Americans were disenfranchised they were often the victims of lynch mobs. Those who were seen as prosperous, or who acted impudently, were also frequent targets. Lynching shifted from a form of extra-judicial law enforcement to one of social control and political suppression. Numbers peaked during the Populist Movement of the late 1890s when white elites feared that blacks and poor whites might jointly vote for populist candidates for public office. unc.edu

    Anti-lynching banner flew outside NAACP headquarters in midtown Manhattan from the early 1900s until 1938. 

    Urban riots, aimed at decimating the Negro sections of town, were less frequent than lynching but more destructive. In 1898 whites in Wilmington, NC executed a coup d’etat. They attacked Negro neighborhoods and burned the only Negro newspaper in the state in order to depose the duly elected bi-racial Republican city government and replace it with the defeated white Democrats.

    Right, UNC. Chapel Hill

    Opposition to white violence took many forms, including migration and organization. In the late 1890s and early 1900s more and more of the most productive African Americans — the ones mostly likely to be lynched for doing well — left the South, at least the rural South. They foretold what became the Great Migration. A few national organizations formed but the only one to survive was the NAACP. It was founded in 1909/10 after black neighborhoods in Springfield, IL were burned by white rioters in one of the most destructive invasions.

    For two decades, stopping white attacks on blacks was at the top of the NAACP’s agenda. It petitioned Congress, organized marches and wrote letters. 

    Southern lynching began to decline in the 1920s as white elites feared the loss of their labor force which was emigrating north. It was slowly replaced by itinerant terrorism as small groups of whites singled out blacks for physical assault, often for sport and sometimes for politics. Unlike lynching, incidents not resulting in death were rarely reported to the police and seldom reported in the newspapers. Instead of data, we have a lot of anecdotes. 

    © 2020 by Jo Freeman for SeniorWomen.com

    This article is based on research by Jo for her forthcoming book Tell It Like It Is: Living History in the Southern Civil Rights Movement, 1965-66.

     

     

     

     

  • Supreme Court Surprises The Public in LGBTQ Ruling: What is Sex Discrimination?

     supreme court
     
    Jo Freeman: ‘Eight months after the Supreme Court heard oral argument on the scope of the prohibition against sex discrimination in the 1964 Civil Rights Act, the conservative court reached a decision lauded by liberals all over the country.  Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Neil Gorsuch joined the four liberals to hold that an employer who fires an individual merely for being gay or transgender violates Title II of that Act.  With this decision it answered the question raised in October on What Is Sex Discrimination?
    BOSTOCK v. CLAYTON COUNTY, GEORGIA CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT No. 17 – 1618. Argued October 8, 2019 — Decided June 15, 2020*  
     
    In each of these cases, an employer allegedly fired a long-time employee simply for being homosexual or transgender. Clayton County, Georgia, fired Gerald Bostock for conduct “unbecoming” a county employee shortly after he began participating in a gay recreational softball league. Altitude Express fired Donald Zarda days after he mentioned being gay. And R. G. & G. R. Harris Funeral Homes fired Aimee Stephens, who presented as a male when she was hired, after she informed her employer that she planned to “live and work full-time as a woman.” Each employee sued, alleging sex discrimination under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The Eleventh Circuit held that Title VII does not prohibit employers from firing employees for being gay and so Mr. Bostock’s suit could be dismissed as a matter of law. The Second and Sixth Circuits, however, allowed the claims of Mr. Zarda and Ms. Stephens, respectively, to proceed.
     
    Held: An employer who fires an individual merely for being gay or transgender violates Title VII. Pp. 4–33. (a) Title VII makes it “unlawful . . . for an employer to fail or refuse to hire or to discharge any individual, or otherwise to discriminate against any individual . . . because of such individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.” 42 U. S. C. §2000e–2(a)(1). The straightforward application of Title VII’s terms interpreted in accord ——————
    *Together with No. 17–1623, Altitude Express, Inc., et al. v. Zarda et al., as Co-Independent Executors of the Estate of Zarda, on certiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, and No. 18– 107, R. G. & G. R. Harris Funeral Homes, Inc. v. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission et al., on certiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. 2 BOSTOCK v. CLAYTON COUNTY Syllabus with their ordinary public meaning at the time of their enactment resolves these cases. Pp. 4–12.
    (1) The parties concede that the term “sex” in 1964 referred to the biological distinctions between male and female. And “the ordinary meaning of ‘because of’ is ‘by reason of’ or ‘on account of,’ ” University of Tex. Southwestern Medical Center v. Nassar, 570 U. S. 338, 350. That term incorporates the but-for causation standard, id., at 346, 360, which, for Title VII, means that a defendant cannot avoid liability just by citing some other factor that contributed to its challenged employment action. The term “discriminate” meant “[t]o make a difference in treatment or favor (of one as compared with others).” Webster’s New International Dictionary 745. In so-called “disparate treatment” cases, this Court has held that the difference in treatment based on sex must be intentional. See, e.g., Watson v. Fort Worth Bank & Trust, 487 U. S. 977, 986. And the statute’s repeated use of the term “individual” means that the focus is on “[a] particular being as distinguished from a class.” Webster’s New International Dictionary, at 1267. Pp. 4–9.
    (2) These terms generate the following rule: An employer violates Title VII when it intentionally fires an individual employee based in part on sex. It makes no difference if other factors besides the plaintiff’s sex contributed to the decision or that the employer treated women as a group the same when compared to men as a group. A statutory violation occurs if an employer intentionally relies in part on an individual employee’s sex when deciding to discharge the employee. Because discrimination on the basis of homosexuality or transgender status requires an employer to intentionally treat individual employees differently because of their sex, an employer who intentionally penalizes an employee for being homosexual or transgender also violates Title VII. There is no escaping the role intent plays: Just as sex is necessarily a but-for cause when an employer discriminates against homosexual or transgender employees, an employer who discriminates on these grounds inescapably intends to rely on sex in its decisionmaking. Pp. 9–12.
    (b) Three leading precedents confirm what the statute’s plain terms suggest. In Phillips v. Martin Marietta Corp., 400 U. S. 542, a company was held to have violated Title VII by refusing to hire women with young children, despite the fact that the discrimination also depended on being a parent of young children and the fact that the company favored hiring women over men. In Los Angeles Dept. of Water and Power v. Manhart, 435 U. S. 702, an employer’s policy of requiring women to make larger pension fund contributions than men because women tend to live longer was held to violate Title VII, notwithstanding the policy’s evenhandedness between men and women as groups.
     
    Editor’s Note: (1) Read the rest of the ruling at: https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/19pdf/17-1618_hfci.pdf; read Jo Freeman’s 2019 article:  What is Sex Discrimination? That Was the Question Before the Supreme Court On October 8

    Several hundred people protested in front of the Supreme Court on October 8 as it heard oral argument on the issue of exactly what is sex discrimination in employment. At the end of the rally 132 people were arrested for blocking the street in planned civil disobedience.

    “Sex” is one of the protected categories in Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which prohibits discrimination in employment. At that time, same-sex relations were a crime in every state except Illinois. Transgender wasn’t even a word. Much has happened in 55 years.

    The Court agreed to hear three cases on whether Title VII protects gay, lesbian and transgender employees after three Circuit Courts of Appeal made conflicting decisions. 

  • While Rising Carbon Dioxide Levels in the Atmosphere Cause Great Concern Worldwide, Most of Us Pay Little Attention to Risks Posed by CO2 Changes Indoors

    Miniature Sensors Can Detect Potential Dangers of CO2, Berkeley Research

    June 11, 2020
    By: Wallace Ravven

    While rising carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere cause great concern worldwide, most of us pay little attention to risks posed by CO2 changes indoors.

    CO2 concentration in fresh air is about 400 parts per million (ppm). But get a group of people packed in a closed indoor space, and CO2 concentration can rise quickly.  Recent studies suggest that as levels increase above 1,000 ppm, decision-making and other cognitive abilities decline.

    Roya Maboudian

    Roya Maboudian’s lab develops nanomaterials to create small and inexpensive chemical sensors.  (Photo: Mark Joseph Hanson)

    Roya Maboudian, Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Bakar Fellow, studies the properties of nano-materials, including how their surfaces affect their performance. As a 2019-2020 Bakar Fellow, she is developing small, inexpensive and sensitive CO2 sensors. She described her research and its potential.

    Q. Before people start having cognitive problems from high indoor CO2 levels, how else are they affected?

    A. When concentrations in a room are too high, people become drowsy and their attention starts to lag. High CO2 levels are suspected to play a role in “sick building syndrome,” which includes symptoms like shortness of breath, dizziness, headaches and more.

    Q. What causes the CO2 levels to increase in-doors? 

    A. We naturally produce CO2 as we breathe. Exhaled breath contains about 40,000 ppm of CO2 (1000 times higher than in outside air).  So, without adequate ventilation, the CO2 concentration increases indoors.

    Q. How are CO2 levels detected now? 

    A.  The most commonly used device is called a nondispersive infrared sensor, or NDIR.  They’re accurate, but they are difficult to miniaturize, they require electrical power to operate, and they’re expensive – hundreds to thousands of dollars.  

    Q. How do the sensors you are developing address that problem?

    A. They are small and don’t require electrical power. Each person could wear an individual sensor in the form of a small badge. They would be very useful in areas where many people congregate or work together, like in an office or a classroom. 

    Q. How do the new sensors work?

    A. They’re easy to operate — in fact there is nothing to operate. They indicate changing CO2 levels by changing color, like pH strips we are familiar with.  If the color indicates a high level of CO2 the person would know that they need to open a window, go outside or adjust the building HVAC.

  • Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi And Donald Trump Last Year

    Nancy Pelosi and Donald Trump

    Washington, DC, May 15, 2019 —

    The 38th Annual National Peace Officers’ Memorial Service was held  on the West Front of the US Capitol to honor 158 law enforcement officers killed in the line of duty in 2018. The families of two deputy US marshals — Chase White, killed Nov. 29 in Arizona, and Chris Hill, killed Jan. 18 in Pennsylvania — were in attendance to place red carnations in the memorial wreath and receive medals in honor of their lost family members.

    President Donald Trump gave the keynote address. In attendance were House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, US Attorney General William Barr and heads of federal law enforcement agencies, including U.S. Marshals Director Donald Washington.

    Photo: Shane T. McCoy/U.S. Marshals Date 15 May 2019, 15:38 Source NPOMS 2019-128 Author Office of Public Affairs from Washington DC.

    Editor’s Note: Honoring Fallen Law Enforcement During COVID-19 Pandemic

    “I am saddened that we cannot come together this year to grieve with our survivor families and draw strength from one another on the grounds of the US Capitol, but given the national crisis we must, as we always have, put the safety of the public first.” – From National FOP President Pat Yoes 

     — Tam Martinides Gray 

  • Stateline: Many Faithful Say It’s Time to Gather. Some Governors Disagree

    Temple Church London, England 

    Yet many governors and city leaders still prohibit large religious gatherings, angering some clergy — even those who backed pandemic-related restrictions imposed months ago — who see the continuing curbs on services as an attack on their civil rights.

    Religious leaders, congregations and individuals have filed lawsuits against governors, mayors and other officials in at least 30 states.

    President Donald Trump poured fuel on the fire two weeks ago. “I call on governors to allow places of worship to open right now,” he told reporters, calling the entities essential. “These are places that hold our society together and keep our people united.”

    In late April, roughly 2 in 3 states had restricted or prohibited religious gatherings, according to the Pew Research Center. (The Pew Charitable Trusts funds the center and Stateline.) By early June, that number had declined to 20 states, according to the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, a Washington, D.C. – based nonprofit law firm.

    Any gathering could lead to the spread of the coronavirus, including church services, as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has shown. In March, about a third of 62 worshippers at an Arkansas church tested positive for COVID-19. Three people died after two symptomatic people attended a service.

    The CDC called a mid-March choir practice at a Washington state church a superspreading event after an asymptomatic attendee transmitted the disease to 52 of 61 people. The highly contagious gathering led to two deaths.

    Courts have ruled that the government can restrict meetings to protect the public — but under the narrowest restrictions and for the shortest time necessary, said Gene Policinski, CEO of the Freedom Forum Institute and its First Amendment Center, in an interview.

    “Any time government restricts our rights for any reason, it bears attention from all of us,” he said. “The government better have a pretty darn good reason.”

  • GAO Report: Veterans Affairs’ Acquisition Management: Supply Chain Management and COVID-19 Response

    AO-20-638T: Published: Jun 9, 2020. Publicly Released: Jun 9, 2020.

    We testified on the Department of Veterans Affairs’ ability to provide its medical centers with critical medical supplies during its response to the COVID-19 pandemic.—could oversee the stock of critical medical supplies — such as N95 facemasks and isolation gowns — at its medical centers.

    Supply Point in a Veterans Affairs Medical Center

    Supplies in a shelving unit

    What GAO Found

    The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has taken some steps in recent years to modernize its processes to acquire hundreds of millions of dollars-worth of medical supplies annually. However, implementation delays for key initiatives, including a new, enterprise-wide inventory management system, limit VA’s ability to have an agile, responsive supply chain. Prior to the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, in November 2017 and in GAO’s High-Risk report in March 2019, GAO reported on weaknesses in VA’s acquisition management. For example, GAO reported that VA’s implementation of its Medical-Surgical Prime Vendor-Next Generation (MSPV-NG) program — VA’s primary means for purchasing medical supplies —lacked an effective medical supply procurement strategy, clinician involvement, and reliable data systems. GAO also found that several of VA’s medical supply management practices were not in line with those employed by private sector leading hospital networks.

    VA is developing another iteration of its MSPV program, called MSPV 2.0, which GAO’s preliminary observations show is intended to address some of the shortfalls GAO has identified in its past and ongoing program reviews. In November 2017, GAO recommended that VA develop, document and communicate an overarching MSPV-NG strategy — to include how the program office will prioritize categories of supplies and increase clinician involvement in this process. Preliminary observations from GAO’s ongoing work indicate that VA has taken some steps, as it implements MSPV 2.0, to address this priority recommendation. However, GAO’s preliminary observations also indicate that the MSPV 2.0 program implementation is delayed and some of these existing program challenges may not be remedied.

    Based on preliminary observations from GAO’s ongoing work, VA’s implementation of a new supply and inventory management system is delayed. As a result, VA had to rely on an antiquated inventory management system, and initial, manual spreadsheets to oversee the stock of critical medical supplies at its medical centers. This limited the ability of VA management to have real-time information on its pandemic response supplies, ranging from N95 face masks to isolation gowns, to make key decisions. As of April 2020, VA has an automated tool to manage its reporting process, but the information must be gathered and manually reported by each of VA’s 170 medical centers on a daily basis.

    GAO’s preliminary observations also show that in response to COVID-19, VA is using various contracting organizations and mechanisms to meet its critical medical supply needs. These include using national and regional contracting offices to obtain supplies from existing contract vehicles, new contracts and agreements, and the Federal Emergency Management Administration’s Strategic National Stockpile to respond to the pandemic.

    Why GAO Did This Study

    VA spends hundreds of millions of dollars annually to meet the health care needs of about 9 million veterans. In March 2019, GAO added VA Acquisition Management to its High Risk list due to longstanding problems such as ineffective purchasing of medical supplies and lack of reliable data systems.

    This statement summarizes findings from GAO’s 2017 MSPV-NG report and 2019 High Risk report and preliminary observations from two ongoing GAO performance audits to discuss VA’s progress in building a more resilient supply chain. For the ongoing work, GAO reviewed VA documentation and interviewed VA officials, and VA medical center staff. Finally, GAO met with senior VA officials on June 5, 2020, to obtain agency views on the new observations GAO discusses in this statement.

    What GAO Recommends

    GAO has made 40 recommendations since 2015 to improve acquisition management at the VA. VA agreed with those recommendations and has implemented 22 of them. Further actions are needed to implement the remaining recommendations, such as GAO’s recommendation that VA implement an overarching MSPV strategy, and demonstrate progress toward removing this area from GAO’s High-Risk list.

    For more information, contact Shelby S. Oakley at (202) 512-4841 or oakleys@gao.gov.

  • June 8, 2020: Daily Updates On the Emerging Novel Coronavirus From the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security

     Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security
    COVID-19

    Update: 

     

    BREAKING NEWS from The New York Times, June 9th …

    The W.H.O. walked back an earlier assertion that asymptomatic transmission of the coronavirus is “very rare,” saying it was a “misunderstanding.”

    Tuesday, June 9, 2020 11:17 AM EST

    Scientists had sharply criticized the World Health Organization for creating confusion on the issue, given the far-ranging public policy implications. They also said the comments did not reflect the current scientific research.

     

     
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    Daily updates on the emerging novel coronavirus from the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security.
     
    The Center for Health Security is analyzing and providing updateon the emerging novel coronavirus. If you would like to receive these daily updates, please sign up below and select COVID-19. Additional resources are also available on our website.
     
    June 8, 2020
     
    EPI UPDATE The WHO COVID-19 Situation Report for June 7 reports 6.80 million confirmed cases (136,409 new) and 397,388 deaths (4,586 new). This appears to be the highest global daily incidence* to date. The global totals could reach 7 million cases by tomorrow’s WHO Situation Report and 400,000 deaths by today’s update.
    *This analysis uses data from the European CDC, not the WHO.
     
    We continue to observe shifts in the geographic distribution of COVID-19 incidence. Since the end of May, Europe has reported fewer than 15% of the new COVID-19 cases each day, and North America has reported approximately 20-25% of new cases over the past week. Asia’s contribution to the global incidence continues to increase, now reporting more than 25% of new cases each day since the beginning of June. With the exception of June 6, South America’s proportion of COVID-19 cases continues to grow as well, now up to approximately 30-35% of the global total. The relative contribution by Africa continues to increase as well, but more slowly. Africa is now reporting approximately 5% of the global daily incidence.
     
    India’s COVID-19 epidemic continues to accelerate, setting a new high for daily incidence today, 9,983 new cases. India has now reported more than 250,000 total cases nationwide. India’s COVID-19 incidence has leveled off over the past few days, just shy of 10,000 new cases per day, but it is still increasing slightly from day to day.
     
    Iran reported 2,389 new cases, down from more than 3,500 new daily cases last week. Iran is now #11 globally in terms of daily incidence.
     
    Brazil updated its COVID-19 dashboard, removing cumulative incidence and deaths as well as figures displaying various epidemiological trends. Brazil reported 18,912 new cases, which would be its lowest daily total since late May. Other sources, however, indicate that the daily incidence is considerably higher, in the range of 27,000 new cases. The source of this discrepancy is not clear. Depending on which daily incidence value is used, Brazil could be #11-13 globally in terms of per capita daily incidence, but it is still #1 or #2 in terms of total daily incidence. Brazil is also currently #3 globally in terms of cumulative COVID-19 deaths, but recent trends put it on track to surpass the United Kingdom in the coming days. Chile’s epidemic continues to exhibit a concerning acceleration, and it remains #3 in the world in terms of per capita daily incidence and #5 for total daily incidence.
     
    UNITED STATES
    The US CDC reported 1.92 million total cases (29,214 new) and 109,901 deaths (709 new). Over the weekend, the United States reported its 2 highest daily totals since May 16, and the United States could potentially surpass 2 million cases in the next 3-5 days. In total, 14 states (no change) and New York City reported more than 40,000 total cases, including New York City with more than 200,000; New Jersey and New York state with more than 150,000; and California and Illinois with more than 125,000.
     
    The New York Times continues to track state- and local-level COVID-19 incidence in a variety of forms. A number of states began to relax social distancing measures—including resuming operations at restaurants, retail stores, and barbershops/salons—at the end of April and in early May. Increased social interaction as well as mass gatherings associated with the Memorial Day holiday weekend and ongoing large-scale protests against racial injustice could potentially contribute to transmission. We will continue monitoring these trends over the coming weeks.
     
    New York continues to exhibit encouraging progress in containing COVID-19. In its most recent update, the statewide test positivity was 1.3%. In New York City it was 1.8%. New York reported 781 new cases statewide, its lowest daily total since March 17, and New York City reported 56 new cases, it lowest since March 14.
     
    Florida continues to report elevated and increasing daily incidence. In fact, its 7-day average is approximately equal to its peak in early April and is still increasing. Georgia appears to have passed a second peak in mid-May; however, its recent incidence data, which may not yet be complete, already indicate another increase in the 7-day average. California’s daily incidence continues to increase, with 3 of its 5 highest daily totals reported in the last 3 days. While the number of tests conducted in Utah is holding steady or possibly decreasing slightly, the COVID-19 incidence has increased dramatically over the past 2 weeks, up from 150-200 new cases per day to 447 and 547 new cases on June 4 and 5, respectively. Arizona continues to report increasing COVID-19 incidence as well. Arizona reports its cases by specimen collection date (which means that data from the past 7 days may be incomplete) and it reported its 2 highest daily totals on June 1 and 2, both more than 1,000 new cases per day. Arizona’s daily incidence has more than doubled since early May.
     
    The Johns Hopkins CSSE dashboard reported 1.95 million US cases and 110,734 deaths as of 1:30pm on June 8.

  • Jo Freeman: A Tale of Three Protests – in Brooklyn

    by Jo Freeman

    The press has been full of news about protests over the cop-killing of George Floyd.Sign at Brooklyn PUblic Library

    I only went to three, largely because I could get to them from my Brooklyn home without taking public transportation. If I had been in Washington, DC, I would have gone to the White House. But I’m in Brooklyn for the duration of the Covid crisis.

    Since I don’t do social media, just finding out where people were protesting has been challenging. Late Saturday afternoon I heard that a crowd was in Flatbush, specifically at Bedford and Tilden near the Sears parking where Covid testing has been conducted for several weeks.

    When I got there about 5:30 I saw two to three hundred people milling in the street, with the police blocking their way south on Bedford. I gather that they had started near the Barclay Center, about five miles away. I don’t know why the police didn’t just let them march down Bedford to the bottom of the borough, which was the logical thing to do. The Sears parking lot is surrounded by a tall chain-link fence protected by the Air Force; the protestors were not a threat.

    Many wore masks, but not all. No one was distancing. That was the most frequent illegal activity. Pursuant to Governor  Cuomo’s Executive Order everyone could have been fined $1000 for not keeping their distance; that was pretty much everyone. The cops were just as close and fewer wore masks. Imagine fining them all $1000 – cops and protestors alike. Might have filled the hole in the city budget caused by closing all non-essential businesses.

    Right, rally in Grand Army Plaza after the death of George Floyd, May 30, 2020; photo by Rhododendrites

    I saw multiple confrontations and took photos of some of them. Since we were all in the street it was hard to find a high spot from which to get a broad view. The stoops were occupied by local residents cheering on the protestors. The few signs were homemade, indicating that not much planning went into this march. A lot only had acronyms. I know what BLM means; I had a little trouble with FTP and ACAB.

    I always count race and sex. Both groups were very diverse. There were more white protestors than there were white cops. The white shirt NYPDs were mostly white and the blue shirts were mostly non-white (but diverse non-white). The former are the older generation, who have risen to positions of authority. I saw the top cop of the NYPD, Chief of Department (i.e. Chief of Police) Terence A. Monahan, his four stars gleaming in the sun.

    There were a lot of women on both sides. In the eighties, a time when I dealt with a lot of NYPD officers who were not thrilled about women joining the force, the men told me that women weren’t big enough or strong enough to be effective police officers. At that time cops had to be a minimum height of 5″6′ – which eliminated most women without really trying. Last Saturday, I was impressed with the sheer number of short women of all colors, facing down the protestors along with the men. I only saw one woman white-shirt.

    Around 7:00 I followed the crowd as it ran back up Bedford. When I got close to Snyder, I saw a cop car smoldering. I found out later that it had been left unguarded on that street. Someone had smashed the side window and tossed something inside which caused a fire. Soon FDNY came and put it out. Those were the best photos I took all night. Across Bedford, the Youth for Christ Ministry Inc. was singing and praying into a very loud microphone. If they had been protestors the NYPD would have taken the megaphone away, but they were just doing their usual Saturday night preaching.

    I saw bottles flying through the air and a couple fire crackers. I didn’t see any actual violence, but I saw the results. Several people were pepper sprayed. People poured milk on their faces to reduce the pain. Milk is slightly acidic. Pepper is alkaline. Although three public busses were present to haul off arrestees, they weren’t used. Arrestees were put into cop cars. I didn’t see what prompted the pepper sprays or the arrests so I don’t know who provoked whom.

    I went home when it got too dark to take photos. The next day (Sunday afternoon ) I went to a protest at Grand Army Plaza that was advertised as “family friendly.” There were many children among the thousand people who gathered at an entrance to Prospect Park and walked through the park to the Park Side of the Plaza. They were 99 percent white. As they walked through the park carrying their BLM signs, picnicers clapped.

    They hung out for an hour before a PA system was set up and speaking began. Cars sweeping around the Plaza honked their horns in support. There was a little more distancing and a few more masks than Saturday night, but only a little. I saw only one cop car and no uniformed police. Now we know the key to keeping protests peaceful: bring the children, not the police.

    Tuesday evening I went to my third protest in the streets northwest of Prospect Park. The participants were about 95 percent white. As was true on Sunday, most were twenty-somethings, but there were only a few children. I didn’t see much gray hair; us old geezers were scarce. Signs were plentiful, mostly written on cardboard. Different people passed out bottles of water and granola bars. Social distancing was among the missing. As far as I know, there were no flying objects and no arrests.

  • Small Asteroid Flew by Earth …at a Distance of Approximately 3.2 million Miles

     asteroid coverage

    Small Asteroid to Safely Fly by Earth

    NASA Editor’s note, June 5, 2020: Asteroid 2002 NN4 will safely pass by the Earth on June 6 at a distance of approximately 3.2 million miles (5.1 milliion kilometers), about 13 times further away from the Earth than the Moon is. There is no danger the asteroid will hit the Earth. 

    Close Approaches

    As they orbit the Sun, Near-Earth Objects occasionally approach close to Earth. CNEOS calculates the motion of all NEOs forwards to 2200 A.D. and backwards to 1900 A.D., and determines the times and distances of the Earth close approaches.

    Jennifer Chu | MIT News Office

    February 18, 2020

    On April 13, 2029, an icy chunk of space rock, wider than the Eiffel Tower is tall, will streak by Earth at 30 kilometers per second, grazing the planet’s sphere of geostationary satellites. It will be the closest approach by one of the largest asteroids crossing Earth’s orbit in the next decade.

    Observations of the asteroid, known as 99942 Apophis, for the Egyptian god of chaos, once suggested that its 2029 flyby would take it through a gravitational keyhole — a location in Earth’s gravity field that would tug the asteroid’s trajectory such that on its next flyby, in the year 2036, it would likely make a devastating impact.

    Thankfully, more recent observations have confirmed that the asteroid will sling by Earth without incident in both 2029 and 2036. Nevertheless, most scientists believe it is never too early to consider strategies for deflecting an asteroid if one were ever on a crash course with our home planet.

    Now MIT researchers have devised a framework for deciding which type of mission would be most successful in deflecting an incoming asteroid. Their decision method takes into account an asteroid’s mass and momentum, its proximity to a gravitational keyhole, and the amount of warning time that scientists have of an impending collision — all of which have degrees of uncertainty, which the researchers also factor in to identify the most successful mission for a given asteroid.

    The researchers applied their method to Apophis, and Bennu, another near-Earth asteroid which is the target of OSIRIS-REx, an operational NASA mission that plans to return a sample of Bennu’s surface material to Earth in 2023. REXIS, an instrument designed and built by students at MIT, is also part of this mission and its task is to characterize the abundance of chemical elements at the surface.

    In a paper appearing this month in the journal Acta Astronautica, the researchers use their decision map to lay out the type of mission that would likely have the most success in deflecting Apophis and Bennu, in various scenarios in which the asteroids may be headed toward a gravitational keyhole. They say the method could be used to design the optimal mission configuration and campaign to deflect a potentially hazardous near-Earth asteroid.

    “People have mostly considered strategies of last-minute deflection, when the asteroid has already passed through a keyhole and is heading toward a collision with Earth,” says Sung Wook Paek, lead author of the study and a former graduate student in MIT’s Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics. “I’m interested in preventing keyhole passage well before Earth impact. It’s like a preemptive strike, with less mess.”

    Paek’s co-authors at MIT are Olivier de Weck, Jeffrey Hoffman, Richard Binzel, and David Miller.

    Deflecting a planet-killer

    In 2007, NASA concluded in a report submitted to the U.S. Congress that in the event that an asteroid were headed toward Earth, the most effective way to deflect it would be to launch a nuclear bomb into space. The force of its detonation would blast the asteroid away, though the planet would then have to contend with any nuclear fallout. The use of nuclear weapons to mitigate asteroid impacts remains a controversial issue in the planetary defense community.

    The second best option was to send up a “kinetic impactor” — a spacecraft, rocket, or other projectile that, if aimed at just the right direction, with adequate speed, should collide with the asteroid, transfer some fraction of its momentum, and veer it off course.

    “The basic physics principle is sort of like playing billiards,” Paek explains.

    For any kinetic impactor to be successful, however, de Weck, a professor of aeronautics and astronautics and engineering systems, says the properties of the asteroid, such as its mass, momentum, trajectory, and surface composition must be known “as precisely as possible.” That means that, in designing a deflection mission, scientists and mission managers need to take uncertainty into account.

    “Does it matter if the probability of success of a mission is 99.9 percent or only 90 percent? When it comes to deflecting a potential planet-killer, you bet it does,” de Weck says. “Therefore we have to be smarter when we design missions as a function of the level of uncertainty. No one has looked at the problem this way before.”

    Closing a keyhole

    Paek and his colleagues developed a simulation code to identify the type of asteroid deflection mission that would have the best possibility of success, given an asteroid’s set of uncertain properties.

    The missions they considered include a basic kinetic impactor, in which a projectile is shot into space to nudge an asteroid off course. Other variations involved sending a scout to first measure the asteroid to hone the specs of a projectile that would be sent up later, or sending two scouts, one to measure the asteroid and the other to push the asteroid slightly off course before a larger projectile is subsequently launched to make the asteroid miss Earth with near certainty.

    The researchers fed into the simulation specific variables such as the asteroid’s mass, momentum, and trajectory, as well as the range of uncertainty in each of these variables. Most importantly, they factored in an asteroid’s proximity to a gravitational keyhole, as well as the amount of time scientists have before an asteroid passes through the keyhole.

    “A keyhole is like a door — once it’s open, the asteroid will impact Earth soon after, with high probability,” Paek says.

    The researchers tested their simulation on Apophis and Bennu, two of only a handful of asteroids for which the locations of their gravitational keyholes with respect to Earth are known. They simulated various distances between each asteroid and their respective keyhole, and also calculated for each distance a “safe harbor” region where an asteroid would have to be deflected so that it would avoid both an impact with Earth and passing through any other nearby keyhole.

    They then evaluated which of the three main mission types would be most successful at deflecting the asteroid into a safe harbor, depending on the amount of time scientists have to prepare.

    For instance, if Apophis will pass through a keyhole in five years or more, then there is enough time to send two scouts — one to measure the asteroid’s dimensions and the other to nudge it slightly off track as a test — before sending a main impactor. If keyhole passage occurs within two to five years, there may be time to send one scout to measure the asteroid and tune the parameters of a larger projectile before sending the impactor up to divert the asteroid. If Apophis passes through its keyhole within one Earth year or less, Paek says it may be too late.

    “Even a main impactor may not be able to reach the asteroid within this timeframe,” Paek says.

    Bennu is a similar case, although scientists know a bit more about its material composition, which means that it may not be necessary to send up investigatory scouts before launching a projectile.

    With the team’s new simulation tool, Peak plans to estimate the success of other deflection missions in the future.

    “Instead of changing the size of a projectile, we may be able to change the number of launches and send up multiple smaller spacecraft to collide with an asteroid, one by one. Or we could launch projectiles from the moon or use defunct satellites as kinetic impactors,” Paek says. “We’ve created a decision map which can help in prototyping a mission.”

    Close Approaches – CNEOS – NASA

    cneos.jpl.nasa.gov › intro