Monthly Archives: April 2021

Police Convictions Are Not the Goal. Abolitionists Have Bigger Dreams. – Truthout

Posted: April 29, 2021 at 12:47 pm

Demonstrators calling to defund the Minneapolis Police Department march on University Avenue on June 6, 2020, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Stephen Maturen / Getty Images

After a year of upheaval and pandemic, and the unlikely conviction of a police officer, Minneapolis organizers Jonathan Stegall and D.A. Bullock talk with Truthouts Kelly Hayes about what they have built and learned in the last year, what Derek Chauvins conviction does not accomplish, and what they hope people will do now as the struggle against policing continues.

Note: This a rush transcript and has been lightly edited for clarity. Copy may not be in its final form.

Kelly Hayes: Welcome to Movement Memos, a Truthout podcast about things you should know, if you want to change the world. Im your host, Kelly Hayes.

One day after a jury in Minneapolis found Derek Chauvin guilty of the murder of George Floyd, officials in Washington were expressing relief that the convictions have lessened pressure for change, according to a report in Axios. Relieved Republican and Democratic officials privately acknowledged that an acquittal could have led to another wave of mass protest and created bipartisan pressure for police reform. Even those in Washington who are still enthusiastic about reform are pushing legislation like the George Floyd Act, which, as author and attorney Derecka Purnell has pointed out, would not have saved George Floyds life. The bill would, instead, direct $750 million in federal funding to local police departments, to better investigate the murders they commit. In the grand tradition of police reform in the United States, the bill would offer more guidelines to ignore, more funding to exploit, and more legitimacy for a fundamentally racist and murderous institution.

Order is the primary concern of this government, which is why officials reliably conflate order with words like justice and safety. Sadly, decades of reform have only made injustice and the violent disposal of human beings more efficient and sophisticated, and more richly funded.

Fortunately, activists at the local level are offering a different vision, including in Minneapolis, where efforts to divert funding from the police department, in favor of life-giving services, significantly predate last summers protests. Those efforts saw a surge in support in the last year, as local organizers with groups like Reclaim the Block grappled with the realities of upheaval and the pandemic, the complications of visibility, and the pursuit of the long term goal of redirecting funds from the Minneapolis Police Department. In December, they saw a major victory when the Minneapolis City Council voted to cut $8 million from the citys $170 million police budget and divert the funds to mental health and violence prevention. This was a major victory for the movement to defund police, and the product of fierce and committed organizing. So what can we learn from what they accomplished?

In todays episode, we will be hearing from two organizers with Reclaim the Block, a grassroots coalition that has been pressuring the city of Minneapolis to divest from policing and invest in alternatives since 2018. Those organizers, Jonathan Stegall and D.A. Bullock, will share their reflections on the verdict, and their journey during the last year, and talk about what they hope will happen next. I was able to speak with Jonathan and D.A. only a couple of days after the verdict last week, and I am grateful they were able to make the time, amid everything theyve been up against. I hope you all will hear what they have to say, and contemplate what we need to do in the coming days and weeks, because officials are counting on our complacency. They are betting that this verdict will slow our momentum and quiet our cries for justice. But what happens next isnt up to them. Its up to us.

[musical interlude]

KH: Todays guests are Minneapolis organizers Jonathan Stegall and D.A. Bullock. Jonathan is a designer, a coder, and a faith-rooted organizer and abolitionist. He is a core team member of Reclaim the Block; and a board member of the Center for Prophetic Imagination, an organization that integrates spiritual formation, political action, and education. D.A. Bullock is a writer, an award winning filmmaker, and a member of the Reclaim the Block communications team. Jonathan and D.A., thanks so much for joining us today.

Jonathan Stegall: Thank you for having us.

D.A. Bullock: Yes. Thank you.

KH: So this has been a momentous week. How are you both doing?

DAB: Im feeling, I still feel the tension of the moment. I know we had a lot of ebb and flow, so Im literally sitting in a studio across the street from Daunte Wrights funeral. So Im also feeling a great deal of weight around that.

JS: Yeah. I resonate with that and Im doing, you know, Im doing okay. My daughter has been home the last couple of days because Minneapolis closed the public schools, or moved the public schools to virtual learning at home, so Ive been dealing with that. And then just the weird tension of how everybody wants to feel in the city and how different everyones feelings are and, you know, wanting to validate those but also, as Mariame [Kaba] says, abolition is not about our feelings.

KH: And yet they are important.

JS: Yes.

KH: I do want to ask how your team and your community are doing, in the wake of the Chauvin verdict. I know this has been a heavy time, and that while a lot of people are satisfied with the outcome of the trial, theres still a lot of complexity, grief and unaddressed harm to work through, not to mention exhaustion.

DAB: Yeah. I think were still resolute and really focused on the ultimate goal and know that there is quite a bit of work to do, and quite a bit of work to do in the short term and the term. So I feel like our team is certainly focused, but Ive found that I think the community at large is still focused as well, which I think is encouraging.

JS: Yeah, I think thats true. I feel like, you know, for us as a group, I think that having kind of abolitionist values at our core, it gives us something to hold on to, I think, that at least I dont think I would have otherwise in these types of moments.

KH: Well, I am so glad that you all have each other and that your community has groups like Reclaim the Block and Black Visions Collective, who are attending to this moment. Now, I want to briefly take us back in time, because I want to talk about where we go from here, but to do that, I think people need to understand a little bit more about the journey you all have been on. I know Reclaim the Block kicked off its work back in 2018, organizing to move money from the Minneapolis police department into other areas of the citys budget. And I know you all had some success with that in 2019, when the City Council voted to move $242,000 from the police budget and into the Office of Violence Prevention, which is a broad-reaching office that has the ability to fund community services in the name of violence prevention. Then, when the pandemic hit, I know you joined with other abolitionist organizations like The Red Nation, Black Visions Collective who I know are a major anchor for you all, Survived and Punished, and the National Lawyers Guild, and many others, in endorsing a platform created by Critical Resistance, that I think everyone should check out, thats called an Abolitionist Platform Toward Healthy Communities Now and Beyond COVID-19. So this was a time when many of us were trying to adapt our organizing, to make demands that made sense for our communities, amid a pandemic, to get mutual aid off the ground, and then George Floyds murder was caught on film, and there was an uprising in your community, and people across the country also felt called to action. And in the middle of that, as people were trying to figure out how to join in or show support, a whole lot of people were suddenly looking to you all. Can you say a bit about what that was like?

JS: Yeah, we had a lot of visibility at that point. And then we made some demands, like, Hey, City Council, youre gonna make a budget cut from the pandemic and your police department just killed George Floyd in front of the world. Lets take some money out of that police budget again. And you know, we released a set of demands, we did a I dont even remember what kind of direct action small thing. And then the city just, as you know, it kind of arose around us. And, you know, we werent organizing direct actions en masse at that point. A lot of us were out in the streets with our community, but we werent doing that type of organizing; we were trying to push the City Council and trying to figure out what kind of things we could win in an abolitionist lens at that point. But just being in that contest, we think, made that demand to defund MPD, to abolish MPD, stick in a way that it hadnt in previous you know, certainly George Floyd wasnt the first person MPD has publicly killed. And it wasnt the first time that people have risen up in significant ways, but the demand has always been something different.

And so that was how things really shifted for us, at that point. We got a lot of local attention, a lot of national attention, a lot of donations and resources, and we had to figure out what to do with those things and how to, I think, how to handle those things in ways that were in accordance with our values. And then we had to figure out, are we going to hire people or whatever, how are we going to do that? How are we going to become something other than this group of, you know, 10 to 15 or however many people sitting in the living room into something else?

DAB: Yeah, and I would say, you know, for me, it was before I was officially part of the team. So during that time I was still relying, because Im a filmmaker first and foremost, I was using a story-based strategy to sort of bring people along in political education about the possibility of defunding our police department and the ultimate possibility of abolition. But bringing people along through story form and relying a lot on sort of the activity and information that Reclaim the Block was putting out and Black Visions was putting out and developing a sensibility, you know, a story sensibility in the city itself, not necessarily knowing that something would happen like this, but kind of knowing that something would happen like this, just because we have a really distinct history of seeing police violence play out in a really dramatic way within our communities. So, I think, you know, a lot of my work being a storyteller was about tying those stories together, those histories, those past stories together, but also, you know, tying that to the imagination of what was possible. And I think that was feeding into a lot of the work that was going on before George Floyd was killed. And I think that was part of the thing that made the spark so instantaneous, that made it so combustible, that made it so powerful, that, you know, people were ready to go in the streets and make themselves heard. And I think thats a powerful thing that was happening around the country, but it was certainly happening here.

KH: And all of this, of course, happening amid the pandemic, which had created a huge need for mutual aid and organizing specific to that crisis as well. So having been vouched for online by a number of abolitionist groups, you all saw a lot of donations. How did you all handle getting that influx of resources at such a time of great need? And how did you decide how to disperse and deploy those resources?

JS: Yeah, at first, I dont think any of us expected any of that, anything like that to happen. And so, you know, it took us to, I think, a couple of weeks, and then we were like, We should turn off our donation link. And so we turned off all of our donation links and we made a list of local places that we wanted people to donate to instead. That was kind of the first, I think the first action that we took and we put, I think at least we tried to focus a lot on, you know, people that were doing emergency crisis response right in that time period. Some of them would be protest support groups. Some of them were helping Black businesses recover, and anything in between really. Whether we ideologically agree with them or not, we put them on the list if they were doing direct mutual aid or relief support. And that link, you know, it was just a Google Doc. [Editors note: An updated version of that document can be found here]. We didnt make a website before we got internet famous. And so we just made a Google Doc and it kind of got everywhere. It was on the daily show. Trevor Noah said it, it got a lot of attention and we dont know anything, certainly dont know what people got out of it, but we put it out there as much as we could.

And then we started, you know, trying to make a plan for what to do with the money that we had and how to be accountable with it. And you know, we worked with Black Visions, you know. The way it worked was all of the money was kind of separate buckets, but it ultimately went to the same fiscal sponsor that Black Visions has. And so we made kind of an immediate term plan to just give away mutual aid requests to anybody I mean, first come first serve basically to people who needed, especially if it was from things that happened during the uprising or I guess pandemic related. And I dont remember exactly how much we distributed from that. It was more than a million dollars within a few weeks, maybe a month.

KH: And at that point, as I understand it, Black Visions Collective partnered with the non-profit Nexus to create the Transformative Black Led Movement Fund to determine how to distribute $3.1 million that your groups had raised to Black people and Black-led groups in Minneapolis, and I was really moved, when I learned about this process, because I have seen what happens, many times, in these sort of highly energetic movement moments, where the public becomes passionate, and a lot of donations come in, and the money gets concentrated in one or two places. And there are always questions among people in communities about where it should go, and how it should be deconsolidated. Oftentimes, the money does not get deconsolidated, and some organizations just wind up with very large sums of money, while other groups, that people maybe hadnt heard about, dont get funding. And sometimes, money does get redistributed, but only after a lot of extended drama, and on very acrimonious terms. What you all did here, and the process that Black Visions sort of co-led here, of creating a container for decisions about a just redistribution, led by Black people, without any gatekeeping from your group, I just find it very powerful.

DAB: Yeah. And I was on the committee that was formed out of just community members, Black community members who were willing to come together and sort of talk about how we its basically how we would do philanthropy if we just had money at our disposal. And that was what the committee was. And that was actually my first sort of teaming or partnering with Reclaim the Block and Black Visions. And so I saw it from a community member standpoint, was this extraordinary opportunity to just give away money, like to really give it directly to folks and not have them jumping through hoops. A great, I dont even know if it was, about half of the money, or close to half of the money was direct mutual aid, again to anyone who needed it, especially around issues around the uprising. And so, you know, I think it was like a real time ability for us as members of the Black community to create our own sort of redistribution of resources. And, you know, it was extraordinary. Ive never been a part of anything quite like that before in my lifetime. And they actually made me think about a lot of the ways that the philanthropic and non-profit industry are built in Black communities, where they keep you beholden to a certain way of accessing resources and continually having to go back to that ask, and refining that ask, and making yourself worthy and all those kinds of things, whereas this was really just about seeing each other as neighbors, as community members and saying like, What do you need? What do you need to be whole, and lets try to do our best to take care of that.

KH: Well, I hope other groups are paying attention to that experiment, and that we see more experiments like it in these moments. I was also really impressed with Reclaim the Blocks train the trainers effort around your most recent budget battle to reduce the Minneapolis Police Department budget. Can you say a bit about that effort?

JS: We were just like, If youre a group, you know, whether youre official in some way or not, you want to come to these things? You know, well train you on how to testify for budget demands that you have that align with ours. How do you get your people to show up to these hearings, especially since theyre virtual? How do you get around the accessibility barriers that may exist? And how do you craft a testimony so that you dont get cut off in the middle of a call or whatever? Just trying to bring people into that process in a way that made it transparent and accessible, as much as we could. And also, from that, at least my understanding was, we also used a lot of those connections to build, last year we called it The Peoples Budget. And that was kind of what we were having people testifying in favor of. And our hope for the 2021 budget was that the city would adopt that. And it was, I dont know, it was probably a $50 million MPD cut, and we worked together with those other folks to decide where that money would go. And, you know, of course we didnt get that. That was our big push. And then the city ended up taking $8 million or whatever it was.

But that was kind of how we built, how we did those train the trainers. We would hold them over Zoom, then people would come and we teach them how to support those things and how to craft their own demands and then kind of ultimately, hopefully bring them back into what we were all advocating for together.

DAB: And I would say, you know, I think its resonant because its a simple iterative process, meaning like the steps to get involved, whether you have been doing this work forever, or it just came across your consciousness, you can plug into it and be assured that, you know, you can feel strongly about your sense of how you want to express yourself and how you want to do that engagement process with the city. Cause I think thats been one of the impediments of normal everyday residents just getting involved is they feel like its all something that happens over there with experts and lobbyists and people who know what theyre doing. And I would say, you know, even from my own personal experience, it wasnt any of that. It was very accessible. It was very much like, Yeah, this is easy for me to plug into, and then its easy for me to even evolve it to fit, sort of the way I want to make my own statement and that kind of thing, so.

JS: And then from there, our hope was that those organizations that came, you know, have sent representatives to those trainings we did, would take it back to their bases, you know the, lets say tools. And even Black Visions would take up to their larger base. And the SURJ Chapter would take it to the larger base and, you know, the various, whatever organizations would come would bring that information to their bases and make it more accessible to those folks.

KH: I love that. And I love that you all were arming people up with a skill that can continue to be unpacked in various fights and in various efforts that folks will be enacting in your city. I just think thats beautiful. And in this case, you all saw a huge victory, with the City Council voting in December to divert nearly $8 million from the proposed police budget, toward the citys Office of Violence Prevention, which is just such a phenomenal win, and I am looking forward to seeing how that plays out.

Circling back to the moment were in, theres been a lot of talk about how this verdict was not justice. Some people are saying its not justice, but it is accountability, and I strongly disagree with that because accountability is active and participatory, and even potentially transformational, and I dont think we should pretend the state offers people that via the carceral system. We offer people that, when we organize peace circles and other processes and containers for accountability in our communities, and I think its dangerous anytime we allow the state to co-opt the work we do in community, and claim that restoration, or transformation, or accountability is what they are offering us, when they cage, punish and surveil people. I think thats dangerous. Because those co-options are real, and they have real world consequences, and they will take us up on the opportunity to co-opt every time. What we have here, to whatever extent it plays out, is punishment. And people have varying opinions about how valuable or satisfying that is people may find solace in it but we seem to have consensus among like-minded people that this punishment is not justice, and that justice is what the public deserves, so what does justice look like?

JS: You want to go first D.A.?

DAB: Oh, sure. So, you know, Ive been talking to a lot of people who are not very well versed in this movement. So, you know, they dont necessarily parse terms, but I kind of break it down in a common sense way and ask them what justice looks like to them. And Im talking about people who live in my neighborhood. Im talking about other Black folks that Ive been having this conversation with. And the thing that comes up for them time and time again is, I want a guarantee that this will never happen to me, my son, to anybody I know, anybody that looks like me, ever again. And then, you know, ultimately we walk down that path and come to the conclusion that the only way we can guarantee justice is to remove ourselves from this entire system as it exists right now. And so a couple of things happen in those conversations for me and for the person Im having that conversation with is, it becomes more of a logical step and its not a radical, sort of, unimaginable thing. Its actually the logical step toward what we want, which is justice, which is we dont want to deal with this police system. We dont want to be a victim of it ever again, which means we cannot interact with it. We cannot try to figure out a way to work with it around the margins and make it marginally different. We have to remove ourselves from that system and, you know, then we start to think about, like all the ways that carceral system, or that police system, is intertwined into our lives and thinking about all the ways that really influences our quality of life.

So I think, you know, terms like justice, I think, because theyre used so much by the system, we have a criminal justice system. I try to move away from them almost immediately anyway, and start talking to people about like, What is your hearts desire about how your son is being raised and hes going to come up? And what do you see for his future? Like, if youre painting the picture of his future, what does that look like? It doesnt look like somebody, some armed person having control over you and him and your movements. It looks like freedom. It looks like ability to thrive. It looks like having all your needs met. It looks like a lot of things, but it never looks like, Yeah, I want to have a slightly better way to call somebody with a gun to come to my house. Somebody I dont know. So thats a long-winded way of saying, I think we all know what real justice looks like, cause were all, you know, human beings living in this social contract. And I think thats where Im generally trying to have most of my conversations, not keeping them really locked in nuances around terminologies. Cause thats where I think people got all in a bunch about defund or abolition or whatever that is. And I, you know, Im having these conversations with people and Im like, Whatever out. Lets not even talk about that. Like, what do you want for your sons future? Tell me, paint the picture for me. And then when they paint that picture for me, Im saying, Yeah, you know what, thats an abolitionists future. Were talking about the same thing. So lets get down to this work of it. So I feel the same way about justice. We know that, you know, my neighbors, we know were not going to find that in any system that exists right now. So we start immediately talking about, Well, what are we building towards?

JS: I really appreciate that a lot, D.A. I think I tend to, I do end up in different conversations and I do end up a lot of times trying to get people to be precise about which thing that it is that theyre talking about, you know. There were a lot of those memes that were like, you know, This isnt justice. This is accountability. And I wanted to kind of, for those folks who are in my life, who are really into that, I wanted to kind of validate that like, you know, a year ago I think a lot more people would have said, Oh, we got some justice. And so its not insignificant that they didnt want to use that word for what happened with the verdict. So, I did want to recognize that, but also say, No, that youve kind of just shifted this punishment thing over to the word accountability, and these are three different words that were talking about and thats important. Yeah, I found, obviously, things that you have to say, things that Mariame [Kaba] has to say, super helpful in helping parse through those things. And I think, you know, in my personal conversations, I think a lot of people found that helpful, at least to wrestle with what it is that theyre feeling, you know. What is it that, even if we do feel like punishment is a good thing, what do we do with that information? I dont think most of us like to think of ourselves as punishing people, although we live in a very, we live in a punishment full society. And I think theres a lot of ways we try to cover over that and I wanted to kind of get at that. I feel like Mariame [Kaba] does a really good job at that when she talks about, you know, our community. If we have a set of communal values that are based in justice, then they can hold us up when we cant hold ourselves up. I dont know if those are the exact types of words that she uses, but thats kind of how I hear them.

And so thats kind of how I take it when Im in those conversations. I think, as Reclaim the Block, weve always tried to put forward the idea that justice is when people have things that they need, when they have housing that is safe, that they can afford, when they have a clean environment that they can be in relationship with, when they have worker protection, when theyre not getting wage theft, when they, you know, all the other things that weve often had people organize with us to say, Yes, we would like the money from the police because it will make us safe if we have the things that we build.

And I guess the only other thing I would say is, I dont remember how late into 2020 it was, but we were on a call, a group call, and we were watching, I think it was with Mimi Kim, and we were watching this video that The Intercept had put out, it was called A Message from the Future II: The Years of Repair. And, you know, whoever was facilitating was like, Yall, dont get the chance to think very much about 20 years in the future or, you know, further into the future than like, two weeks. And you know, the video was just kind of creating this picture, literally an animated picture, youve probably, maybe seen it, of just like, Heres what happens when, you know, the last prison closes or when the pollinators come back. There were all these images of the world that movements could build. And then we got through, Heres how all the movements got repressed, and heres how they rose up. And heres how the essential workers rose up. You know, and all of these images that were very beautiful, and I literally cried in the Zoom call watching this video. And I think about it often still, when I think about that.

KH: I would agree that its a very positive development, that a lot of people dont consider this verdict justice, and that while a lot of people may have found some solace in this moment, they are not satisfied with this outcome, and I do think thats progress. I also loved what you had to say D.A., because I like the idea of talking to people about what they want, and about what their hearts desire, for their families, for their communities, as a way of centering that conversation, because the word justice is very tied up in punishment and in the system, for a lot of people. And I was just talking with Ruthie Gilmore the other day about how even the word freedom is really mixed up with the system in ways that can be really damaging sometimes. That sometimes we say freedom when what we mean is access to the ability to harm other people in the ways that weve been harmed, or access to forms of state violence being enacted in ways that we want them enacted. So I really like this idea of talking to people about what it is they need, and what it is it would take for people to live freely and safely, and create safety in their communities, and absolutely that calls for abolition.

One thing that I have seen that I find really unfortunate lately is some people using George Floyd as a new standard by which to judge people who are killed by the police. In cases like Adam Toledos, I see people saying, This was not a George Floyd situation. Because the murder of George Floyd, they argue, was a clean cut case of police brutality, and the kind of thing we should all clearly object to, whereas other cases, like Adams, they say, are just the police doing their jobs. We also see that kind of exceptionalization happening among public officials, like Nancy Pelosi, who in the wake of the verdict said, Thank you, George Floyd, for sacrificing your life for justice. Now, as many people have pointed out, George Floyd did not sacrifice himself for anything, because he did not choose his fate. It was chosen for him by a cop who murdered him. But this valorization, in my mind, is part of a larger effort to divide the George Floyd case from the everyday violence of policing. And I think they are pushing the idea, as a matter of structural maintenance, that hes not like Adam Toledo, or MaKhia Bryant, or others who are killed by police. Hes a hallowed saint, who sacrificed himself for our sins, allowing us to punish his killer, making our country magically a more just place. What are your thoughts on this exceptionalization we are witnessing?

DAB: I think it plays right into the vast mythological, magical thinking of how people form their vision of what policing actually is versus what it actually practically is, in our lifetime. And what I mean by that is, its easy for people, at this point, to play into the mythology, to play into the magical thinking that, like you said, George Floyd was an exceptional case. Derek Chauvin was an exceptionally evil individual. And then it absolves everybody from really looking at practically, what is right in front of their face. Again, so thats why I always try to bring people back from the theoretical to actually what they actually experienced in their own lifetime, right? I talk to people and ask them all the time like, You think about the times when you were most in peril in your lifetime. And this for me, personally as well, I grew up on the South Side of Chicago and I thought back at the times when I was in peril. I was robbed at gunpoint at one point on the South Side of Chicago.

And at no point, did some heroic figure in a uniform come and save me. So, thats the first stripping down of this mythology and asking ourselves, is there any instance where the introduction of that force has actually been helpful in our lives? Saving us in a time of peril or changing the trajectory of a bad situation. And most often when I talk to people from their personal experience, nobody has ever had that experience of the mythology. Nobodys had the experience of that magical thinking that aligns you with an idea that you need them to come in and make these split second decisions because theyre always under this constant danger, and theyre always facing these extraordinary threats. And then you start to just relate it to, again, the practical nature of what they see in front of them which is mostly police officers who show up after something happens and they tape off the block and they stand around, they kibitz to one another and they get on their phone.

And when you see this, you see this in the community, and you realize all these exceptions that are being made to keep that structure in place are based on a myth. Theyre not based on the reality. Theyre based on a magical thinking that, this thing is somehow valuable, that its going to save your life one day. When actually, its not.

And I think thats a hard thing for people to face when that has just been the standard to believe in the magic, all your life. So, I feel obviously systems use that to their advantage and as self-preservation and were seeing that here. Theres nothing exceptional about the violence that was perpetrated on George Floyd. It happens all the time. In fact, MPD does it all the time. They did it during the trial on tape. MPD officers put their knees on the neck of a resident who was trying to stand up for a houseless encampment, here near where I live. So, I think, if people really took an honest look at the practical way they live their lives and what they see right in front of them, it has to conflict with that magical thinking. It has to conflict with that exceptionalism that is trying to be sold to them.

JS: Yeah, I think thats right. I think weve always tried to use that narrative that what happened at George Floyd is not exceptional. Like D.A. said, MPD does this, all the time. Even the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, wouldnt have saved George Floyd. The things that they think are so exceptional to get rid of, wouldnt have helped him. And this also brings me back. I remember, a few years ago, there was an online conversation around, What if Black Lives Matter as a movement had focused more on Tamir Rice than Michael Brown? Maybe it would have had a better public perception or something. And then, the man who killed Tamir Rice got off as well. Or almost never, has anybody exceptionally enough to make that work unless theres a massive uprising. And then maybe the system will decide, Yeah, we can throw away that one, that cop, even though the practices are not exceptional.

KH: I see the state really trying to reinforce the standards of innocence. During the trial, I remember people making a big deal about how we needed to call it the Chauvin trial and not the George Floyd trial, because it was Derek Chauvin who was on trial and not George Floyd. And I remember thinking like, Yes, lets call it that. But also lets name that George Floyd really is on trial because the victims of police shootings are always on trial. And I dont think we should pretend that the system operates outside that reality. In truth, this society puts people on trial in the news and in popular discourse, the moment they are killed by a cop. Its always a question of whether they were innocent enough to live. Which is appalling because we are usually talking about people who live in a context where they have already been deemed disposable, for the sake of order. Because people do all kinds of things in the disaster zone of late capitalism, like, good, bad, and indifferent.

Some people, like police, get to act with relative impunity. Some people, like affluent white people, get to act with a low degree of consequence. And some people, like Black people, are subject to execution for virtually any offense or even no offense at all. So of course, people living within zones of disposability and organized abandonment are sometimes going to do things that we find troubling, and even cause very real harm.

But when we position the police who enforce the very inequality that generates so much harm as fundamentally legitimate in their actions, unless there is a nine minute and 29 second video of them slowly killing a completely helpless unarmed person, we are maintaining those dynamics. And I dont think we should be structural maintenance workers. I think when people say, But Adam Toledo was running from the cops at 2:00 a.m. and he had been armed that night. I think we should ask, But why? And not let neoliberal mayors like Lori Lightfoot get away with saying things like, The social safety net failed this child, when she is the one refusing to fund that safety net and instead shuffling millions of dollars into the hands of the police department, that killed that child, every chance she gets.

DAB: Absolutely, I couldnt agree more. And it makes me think about, what are our ultimate goals? Is it to have more distinctions between what is so-called justified killings of people or to just not have killings of people, right? I think people need to always be able to take a step back and ask them, when theyre steadily trying to find those, carve out those exceptions for police to continue their activity, Im always asking them, Why? Like, Why do you need them to have a justified reason for killing someone? Like, Why is that your desire? Or is your desire that people are not getting killed anymore? So, there are some distinct choices that we need to make as people who are living together about, like you said, we dont want maintenance of a system where were all at each others throat potentially, mistrusting of one another in a fight for limited things. Right? Is that our desire? Or is our desire that everybodys feeling pretty good about their life, their potential, the things that could happen, theyre feeling hopeful and theyre ready to do things to help one another, and theyre ready to do things to support one another because theyre not in that competition for survival, right? And then ask ourselves, how do the police, what part do they play in that? Do they alleviate and eliminate that dog-eat-dog thing? Or do they exacerbate that? Or maintain it, in order to keep themselves in their position of getting that budget every year? And those questions, theyre pretty straight forward. You dont have to know a lot about the philosophy of, you dont have to know a lot about economics, or a lot of these other things that you may learn in the higher education institutions, to answer common sense questions about how youre living, and why youre making the decisions.

I had a conversation with one of our council members and she had to admit to me that police dont keep us safe. But her admission of that was after a long conversation. And we had to talk through it, and it was begrudgingly, to admit a certain thing that was pretty much common sense and common knowledge in our community. And I just found that fascinating that she did so much work, in order to support that non-common sense. So, it just fascinates me how much we put into supporting something that wouldnt support itself without all our buttress that we put up with our thought process.

JS: Yeah. I think thats great. I dont know that I have anything to add to that.

KH: Absolutely. I think one of our biggest stumbling blocks is this baseline legitimacy that we lend to the police, in spite of all that evidence, right? Like in Chicago, its not just activists who have documented the hell out of the fact that the Chicago Police are racist and sexually abusive, and that they murder and torture people. The United Nations has spoken to this. The Department of Justice has documented this thoroughly. And yet, people feel they have to lend them this baseline legitimacy when they show up and intercede in a situation.

Its been heartbreaking to watch that conversation around the case of MaKhia Bryant, because we have people watching this tape en masse, and critiquing this situation, the death of this child, as though what she was doing in those moments decided her fate. When in reality, a whole confluence of violent structural forces, all of them anti-Black, led to that cop gunning her down. And I hope thats something that people are willing to explore and think about in this moment. We dont have to assume the legitimacy of the police. We dont have to critique videos and narratives according to their prescribed set of policies that supposedly make it okay for them to hurt people. We can imagine how things should be, and build demands around that. We can ask what would have actually given someone a chance to survive and to thrive, and we can demand that. So, all of that said, in an immediate, strategic sense, what are you hoping people will do in the wake of this verdict? And do you have any asks for our listeners?

JS: You want to go first, D.A.?

DAB: I was going to ask you the same thing. I think immediately, like I said, Im right across the street from Daunte Wrights funeral as we speak. So, I cant help but just ask that the people not its okay to have the human sensibility of just breathing and exhaling, and I understand that because I did it myself once this verdict happened, but pretty soon after that, I was thinking about Daunte Wright, I was thinking about everyone who we need to just not allow for the system to just offer us this up as something that it is not. And we dont have to accept that. We know what we know, and we know that there is nothing that happened in this particular case, guilt or innocence, verdict or not, Derek Chauvin going to be punished off somewhere, that is going to change our material condition of living tomorrow with these police departments in our cities. We know that for a fact.

So, our next steps should be appropriate to that fact. Not appropriate, again, to the romanticism of, Wow, we have this conviction, now the world has changed. Now, we have a new path forward. Which a lot people are trying to sell that to you currently. They took that first opportunity to make sure you knew that were in a brave new world now, which is a lie. You know what I mean? We know that. Again, we know what we know, we know what is right in front of us. And we know the history. The conviction of Van Dyke for Laquan McDonalds murder, the next day in Chicago, everybody you could talk to, all the brothers on the South Side and the West Side and they would tell you, It was business as usual with the police.

And we know that, again, from our own experiences. So, I would say on the short term, the first step is to just make sure you are guarded and just aware against the forces, the rhetorical forces, that are going to come to tell you, Dont believe your lying eyes and your lying experience. Believe what were telling you that, this is a new day. Its not a new day. Were back to work on the next day. And there are some distinct things that are happening within our city that we know can really change the potential of how we are taking this step process and removing the Minneapolis Police Department from our midst. And one of them is, we have a charter, we have a constitution of our city that mandates that we have them amongst us. So, we know one of the first steps that we have to do in the short term is to change that constitution of our city, change that charter. And I know that thats something a lot of people are focused on and dedicated to because without that, obviously we cant shift certain structural things without that very start. Its like the key opening up the lock that allows us to open up the door.

JS: Yeah. I think thats right. Yeah, the immediate thing, I feel like, is to remember that this system isnt going to reform itself. Its not going to give us a new possibility. We have to create that together, ourselves. Yeah, and in Minneapolis, one of the next immediate steps is in November that ballot amendment to take MPD out of the charter. Hopefully get it before the voters and hopefully well have done enough work by then, that they understand why this is a good thing, and the kind of possibilities that it does open up. And even that, it doesnt necessarily do anything on its own. It takes away some barriers within it. It puts that possibility in our hands, again, as organizers, as people that care about what a just, safe city looks like, who are able to see that safety and policing are not the safe things. And then to figure out what that means.

KH: Well, this has been a great conversation and I want to thank you both, with my whole heart, for joining us today. And to really thank you for all that you do.

JS: Thank you for having us. I never miss an episode. So, its an honor to hear you.

DAB: Yes. Thank you, Kelly. Thank you for everything you do. Im a big fan and supporter and Im so happy that were all out here together as fam, doing this work.

KH: Absolutely. I also want to thank our listeners for joining us today. And remember, our best defense against cynicism is to do good and to remember that the good we do matters. Until next time, Ill see you in the streets.

Show Notes:

If you havent yet, we recommend you check out last weeks episode of Movement Memos, You Cannot Divorce Murder From Policing, a discussion with author Alex Vitale about the history and current state of policing in the U.S.

Further reading:

Minneapolis Activists Ask Local Leaders to Invest in Communities, Not Cops by Isabella Garcia

Minneapolis Defunds Its Police. Organizers Made It Happen. by Malaika Jabali

We Are Fighting for a World Where MaKhia Bryant Would Have Lived by Amna A. Akbar & Treva B. Lindsey

Uncaging Humanity: Rethinking Accountability in the Age of Abolition by Mariame Kaba, Josie Duffy Rice, and Reina Sultan

A World Where George Floyd And MaKhia Bryant Would Still Be Here Is A World Without Police by Mariame Kaba and Andrea J. Ritchie

Resources:

Critical Resistances Abolitionist Platform Toward Healthy Communities Now and Beyond COVID-19

#DefundPolice Toolkit: Concrete Steps Toward Divestment from Policing & Investment in Community Safety (toolkit)

Defund Police (This short explainer video collaboration from Project Nia and Blue Seat Studios.)

Police Abolition 101: Messages When Facing Doubts (zine)

One Million Experiments offers snapshots of community-based safety strategies that expand our ideas about what keeps us safe.

The Demand Is Still #DefundPolice (a toolkit)

Whats Next: Safer and More Justice Communities Without Policing (guide)

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ONE Gas and Vanguard Renewables Partner to Develop Farm-Based Renewable Natural Gas Solutions – PRNewswire

Posted: at 12:45 pm

"We are excited to partner with Vanguard Renewables to provide more sustainable and carbon-neutral energy solutions for our communities and customers," said Jason Ketchum, vice president of Commercial Activities for ONE Gas. "RNG is a vital part of a sustainable energy future as it provides a reliable path to reduce emissions."

RNG projects capture methane from organic materials like food waste and animal manure, redirecting it away from the environment and removing harmful contaminants from the atmosphere. Vanguard Renewables' network of farm-based anaerobic digesters across the U.S. offer a circular solution to food waste recycling and decarbonization while supporting the American farmer.

"Our Farm Powered program provides a circular solution diverting greenhouse gas-producing food waste from landfills and incineration and recycling it into renewable energy and low carbon fertilizer using farm-based anaerobic digestion," said John Hanselman, co-founder and chief executive officer for Vanguard Renewables. "The ONE Gas alliance will help us further expand our national network of anaerobic digesters, which will benefit the environment, farm owners, customers and the food industry."

"We are actively participating in the research, development and deployment of new emissions mitigation, delivery and end-use technologies that help both our company and our customers have a positive impact on the environment," said Ketchum.

According to an American Gas Foundation study, prepared by ICF International, renewable natural gas could lead to a 95% reduction in natural gas emissions from the residential sector and dramatically lower emissions from the agricultural sector by 2040.

"Our relationship with ONE Gas can lead to increased RNG availability across Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas and beyond as we hope this is the first of many similar relationships with natural gas distribution companies across the United States," Hanselman adds.

About ONE GasONE Gas, Inc. (NYSE: OGS) is a 100-percent regulated natural gas utility, and trades on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol "OGS." ONE Gas is included in the S&PMidCap400 Index and is one of the largest natural gas utilities in the United States.

Headquartered in Tulsa, Oklahoma, ONE Gas provides a reliable and affordable energy choice to more than2.2 million customers in Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas. Its divisions include Kansas Gas Service, the largest natural gas distributor in Kansas; Oklahoma Natural Gas, the largest in Oklahoma; and Texas Gas Service, the third largest in Texas, in terms of customers.

For more information and the latest news about ONE Gas, visit onegas.comand follow its social channels: @ONEGas, Facebook, LinkedInand YouTube.

ONE Gas ContactLeah Harper(918) 947-7123[emailprotected]

About Vanguard RenewablesVanguard Renewables is the U.S. leader in organics to renewable energy. The company collects and recycles food and beverage waste into renewable energy at its farm-based anaerobic digesters. The Farm Poweredprocess significantly reduces greenhouse gas emissions and provides a diversified income stream for the host farm. Vanguard also operates Organics Recycling Facilities to depackage and pre-process organic waste streams including expired goods and off-spec batches before sending them to an anaerobic digester to be recycled. Alongside Unilever, Starbucks, and Dairy Farmers of America, the Company recently founded the Farm Powered Strategic Alliance, a pre-competitive movement to further a circular solution to food waste reduction and recycling from manufacturing and supply chain and decarbonization strategies.Vanguard received the 2020 Energy Vision Leadership Award and was named 2018 Organics Recycler of the Year by the National Waste & Recycling Association. Please visit http://www.vanguardrenewables.comto learn more.

Vanguard Renewables Contact:Jennifer Forbes (617) 275-8257[emailprotected]

SOURCE ONE Gas, Inc.

http://www.onegas.com

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Antonio D. Tillis, Noted Scholar and Higher Education Leader, to Become Chancellor of Rutgers UniversityCamden – Rutgers Today

Posted: at 12:45 pm

Rutgers University President Jonathan Holloway today announced that Antonio D. Tillis will assume the post of chancellor of Rutgers UniversityCamden on July 1.

Antonio Tillis is a brilliant scholar and gifted administrator whose commitment to the transformative power of higher education presents an exceptional opportunity for both Rutgers and New Jersey. We are proud that he will lead Rutgers UniversityCamden, Holloway said.

Rutgers is deeply invested in bringing opportunity and growth to Camden. Antonio Tillis will be a driving force in helping Rutgers University and the City of Camden reach new heights, Holloway added.

Tillis, 55, will lead Rutgers UniversityCamden, the southernmost campus of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, with more than 7,200 undergraduate and graduate students enrolled in 39 undergraduate and 29 graduate programs. Nationally recognized for its commitment to access for first-generation students, as well as its innovative civic engagement programs, RutgersCamden recently achieved status as a Carnegie National R2 Research University.

Tillis recently served as interim president of the University of HoustonDowntown, a comprehensive urban institution offering more than 50 degree-granting programs and serving more than 15,000 students. In this capacity, he worked collaboratively to promote student and faculty development, engage the community, and advance the strategic vision for the second-largest campus in the University of Houston system.

Also at the University of Houston, he served as dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences, the largest of the 15 academic and professional colleges at the university. Under his leadership, the reputation and resources of that school grew significantly. He successfully led a $60 million fundraising campaign while developing new opportunities for student learning experiences and creating partnerships with community organizations in the city and throughout the region. He increased student scholarships, recruited and retained nationally known faculty, created an infrastructure to nurture the research profile of the school, and greatly expanded outreach to the city by launching such programs as the Deans Mayoral Summer Internship and a mobile unit to deliver social and health-related services in the community.

In 2017, the University of Houston named Tillis as the M.D. Anderson Professor in Hispanic Studies. He is fluent in Spanish and Portuguese.

Tillis previously served as dean of the School of Languages, Culture, and World Affairs at the College of Charleston in South Carolina, where he instituted numerous initiatives, including the Wells Fargo International Scholarship for Study Abroad for low-income, in-state students; the Deans Collaborative Interdisciplinary Summer Research Award for International Engagement; and the Summer International Internships for students in India, Brazil, and Ghana.

Tillis additionally chaired the Department of African and African American Studies at Dartmouth College and served as the inaugural director of the Latin American and Latino Studies Program at Purdue University, where he received the 2007 Faculty Scholar Award.

Houston mayor Sylvester Turner declared March 7, 2017, as Dr. Antonio D. Tillis Day. In 2018, Tillis was selected as one of 30 national participants for the Joint Civilian Orientation Conference hosted by the U.S. Secretary of Defense.

A noted scholar in the field of Afro-Hispanic studies, Tillis is the coeditor of several books, including Trayvon Martin in US: An American Tragedy (Peter Lang, 2015), The Afro-Hispanic Reader and Anthology (Randal Publishing, 2018), and Critical Perspectives on Afro-Latin American Literature (Routledge, 2012). He has served as editor of the journal Publication of the Afro-Latin/American Research Association, as coeditor of the Afro-Hispanic Review, and as associate editor of the International Journal of Comparative Literature and Translation Studies.

In 2009, he received a Fulbright Fellowship to Brazil. He has presented his scholarship at lectures and conferences across the United States and around the world.

It is an honor to be given the opportunity to lead an institution as engaged, diverse, and student-centered as Rutgers UniversityCamden, he said. This is an outstanding university that clearly demonstrates its commitment to public values and to building upon its tradition as a place of access for first-generation college students seeking a world-class Rutgers degree, and the opportunities that come with that degree.

I am a first-generation college student. I understand what drives RutgersCamden students. Its not just about them their success also is about the elevation of their families and their communities, he said. I look forward to working with these students to help them take full advantage of the opportunities before them and to make sure that they are supported.

It is especially important that RutgersCamden students learn with, and are mentored by, a truly impressive faculty who consistently are at the vanguard of generating new ideas to improve our society, added Tillis. I am very excited to work with the academic enterprise to cultivate the support it needs to thrive as a research institution, which will provide our students with unparalleled learning opportunity while firmly defining both Camden and southern New Jersey as a nexus for innovation.

I am very excited to welcome Dr. Antonio Tillis to the Rutgers-Camden community, said Frank Hundley, chair of the Rutgers UniversityCamden Board of Directors and a member of the Rutgers University Board of Governors. Dr. Tillis is a scholar who brings a wealth of knowledge, talent, and excitement to our campus and will take Rutgers presence in South Jersey and the Philadelphia region to unprecedented heights.

Tillis has served on numerous boards, including Houston Habitat for Humanity, the Houston Arts Alliance, the International African American Museum in Charleston and the Hemispheric Institute for Performance Studies. He is a founding board member of the International Institute of Critical Pedagogy and Transformative Leadership.

Tillis holds a bachelors degree in Spanish from Vanderbilt University and a masters degree in Spanish literature from Howard University. He earned his Ph.D. in Latin American literature (with an Afro-Hispanic emphasis) from the University of Missouri at Columbia.

He enjoys performing as a lyric baritone and collecting contemporary art from West Africa, Cuba, Brazil and the United States.

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Russia wants to build its own space station to replace the ISS, state officials say – Space.com

Posted: at 12:45 pm

The 23-year partnership between the United States and Russia that has kept the International Space Station (ISS) in orbit could soon come to an end, Russian officials suggested this week.

Yury Borisov, the Russian Deputy Prime Minister, reportedly said in a government meeting that the nation might withdraw from the ISS in 2025, according to a state TV news report on April 18. Borisov cited the deteriorating condition of the space station which was launched in 1998 by NASA and the Russian space agency Roscosmos as the primary reason for the potential departure.

"We can't risk the lives [of our cosmonauts]," Borisov said, according to the BBC. "The structure and the metal [are] getting old, [and] it can lead to irreversible consequences to catastrophe."

Related: Space oddity: 10 bizarre things Earthlings launched into space

Later that day, Borisov released a statement partially walking back the 2025 departure date, saying, "a technical inspection is needed, and then we can make a decision and inform our partners," according to Science magazine.

Meanwhile officials with Roscosmos announced that work has already begun on a national space station, which would serve as a successor to the country's Salyut and Mir stations, launched into low Earth orbit in the 1970s and 80s. Dmitry Rogozin, head of Roscosmos, posted a video to the messaging app Telegram saying, "the first core module of the new Russian orbital station is in the works" and could be complete by 2025, the BBC reported.

Rogozin added that Russian would not depart from the ISS until that potential new station was completed. Still, even with ample notice Russia's potential departure could put a hefty strain on NASA and the other agencies that rely on the ISS.

"ISS partners would have a really hard time keeping the station functional without Russia," Vitaly Egorov, an industry observer and former spokesperson for Russia's Dauria Aerospace company, told Science magazine. Cargo and crew services provided by SpaceX could potentially help fill the gaps left behind by Roscosmos, the magazine added.

Originally published on Live Science.

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First element of Chinese space station ready for liftoff Spaceflight Now – Spaceflight Now

Posted: at 12:45 pm

The core module of Chinas space station undergoes a vacuum test to simulate the conditions it will see in orbit.

The core module of Chinas space station is packaged inside the nose cone of a heavy-lift Long March 5B rocket for liftoff late Wednesday (U.S. time), the first of 11 launches to deliver astronauts, supplies, experiments, and new laboratory modules to build out the orbiting complex before the end of 2022.

The massive Tianhe, or Heavenly Harmony, core module will be the keystone of the Chinese space station in low Earth orbit a few hundred miles above the planet, serving as astronaut living quarters, a command and control element, an airlock for spacewalks, and a docking port for attachment of future crew and cargo vehicles.

The fully-assembled outpost will be around 66 metric tons, about one-sixth the mass of the International Space Station, and is closer in size to Russias retired Mir station than the ISS.China will add two research modules to the space station in 2022.

The launch is scheduled for a one-hour period beginning at 11 p.m. EDT Wednesday (0300 GMT; 11 a.m. Beijing time Thursday), according to publicly-released airspace warning notices. Several sources suggest the launch is scheduled for approximately 11:18 p.m. EDT (0318 GMT), although the Chinese government has not disclosed an exact liftoff time.

China has not announced any plans to broadcast the launch live on state-run television.

The liftoff of the Tianhe core module begins the most ambitious project in the history of Chinas human spaceflight program, which seeks to create its own space station after being shut out of the International Space Station, led by U.S. and Russian space agencies.

The core element of the space station will blast off on Chinas most powerful launcher, the Long March 5B, with 10 engines burning liquid hydrogen and kerosene fuel. The 176-foot-tall (53.7-meter) Long March 5B rocket rolled out to its launch pad Friday at the Wenchang spaceport on Hainan Island, Chinas southernmost province.

Gantry arms folded into position around the rocket to allow ground teams to finish preparations for liftoff. Liquid hydrogen, kerosene, and liquid oxygen propellants will begin loading into the Long March 5B a few hours before launch.

The fully-fueled Long March 5B rocket will weigh more than 1.8 million pounds (849 metric tons) at launch. The rockets liquid-fueled engines will power the launcher off the pad with about 2.4 million pounds of thrust, guiding the rocket toward the southeast from Wenchang over the South China Sea.

The Long March 5B will shed its four expendable strap-on boosters about three minutes after liftoff, and the rockets payload fairing will jettison about 3 minutes, 40 seconds, into the mission. The rockets cryogenic center stage will place the Tianhe spacecraft into orbit and deploy the space station module about eight minutes after launch.

The Long March 5B is a variant of Chinas heavy-lift Long March 5 rocket specially designed to haul heavy elements of Chinas space station into orbit. The Long March 5B flies without the Long March 5s second stage, making room for a large spacecraft to fit inside the rockets payload shroud.

China demonstrated the Long March 5B rocket on a successful test flight in May 2020, proving the rockets readiness to launch components of the Chinese space station. Six Long March 5 rockets have launched in various configurations, and the last four Long March 5 missions have been successful, with five successes overall.

The Tianhe module measuresmore than 54.4 feet (16.6 meters) long, has a maximum diameter of around 13.8 feet (4.2 meters), and has a launch weight of roughly 49,600 pounds (22.5 metric tons), according to Chinas state-run Xinhua news agency. Its the largest and heaviest spacecraft ever built in China.

The core module resembles the first section of Russias Mir space station, but the Tianhe spacecraft is longer and heavier.

The 11 missions to kick off assembly of Chinas space station include the the launch of three pressurized modules on Long March 5B rockets and resupply flights using Tianzhou cargo freighters launched on Long March 7 rockets from Wenchang. The flights will also include Shenzhou crew capsules launched on Long March 2F rockets from Jiuquan, an inland spaceport in the Gobi Desert in Chinas Inner Mongolia region.

China launched two Tiangong prototype space labs in 2011 and 2016 to test out technologies for the permanently-occupied space station.

The Tiangong 1 space lab hosted two Shenzhou crew in 2012 and 2013, and Chinas most recent human spaceflight mission Shenzhou 11 docked with the Tiangong 2 module in 2016.

In total, China has launched six astronaut missions on Shenzhou capsules since 2003.

China also launched a test flight of the Tianzhou supply ship, similar in function to Russias Progress or SpaceXs Cargo Dragon capsule supporting the International Space Station. The first Tianzhou freighter took off on a Long March 7 rocket in 2017 and docked with the Tiangong 2 space lab, proving out automated docking and in-orbit refueling technology.

After the Tiangong pathfinders verified key technologies for the Chinese space station, officials are moving ahead with integrating the complex in low Earth orbit between 210 miles (340 kilometers) and 280 miles (450 kilometers) above Earth.

Once the Tianhe module is in orbit, Chinese space officials will complete preparations for launch of a Long March 7 rocket in May carrying the Tianzhou 2 resupply ship. The cargo freighter will automatically dock with the Tianhe module a few days after launch, setting the stage for liftoff of a Long March 2F from the Jiuquan space base as soon as June with the first astronaut crew to visit the nascent space station.

Chinese officials have said they have selected crew members for the Shenzhou 12 mission, and astronaut training is underway. The astronauts will carry out multiple spacewalks on their mission to link up with the Tianhe module in orbit.

The Tianhe core module has handrails to assist astronauts moving around outside the space station on spacewalks.

Chinese officials say the space station is designed to operate for more than 10 years. Once assembly is complete, the station will be able to permanently host three astronauts, with short-term stays of six astronauts possible during crew changeovers.

The core module has an internal living volume of about 1,765 cubic feet (50 cubic meters), according to Xinhua. With all three modules, the living space will grow to 3,884 cubic feet (110 cubic meters). For comparison, NASA says the International Space Station has a habitable volume of13,696 cubic feet (388 cubic meters).

One of the two research modules scheduled for launch next year, named Wentian, will have a larger airlock than the Tianhe core module to support spacewalks, plus a robotic arm to move payloads and science experiments outside the space station.

The other research module, named Mengtian, is similar to Wentian but has a special airlock to transfer cargo and instruments between the interior and exterior of the space station, Xinhua said.

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Follow Stephen Clark on Twitter: @StephenClark1.

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International Space Station Cruises Across the Moon, Caught in Sunlight: Watch the Video – Gadgets 360

Posted: at 12:45 pm

Astrophotography enthusiast Andrew McCarthy shared a three-slide post showing the transit of the International Space Station (ISS) against the Moon caught in a sunbeam that is going viral. The post will delight space and astronomy enthusiasts as it shows a truly amazing sight as the ISS crosses the Moon, lit up in amazing detail.

The second slide in the post shows a fascinating view of the ISS against the crescent, while the third one is a video in which the station can be seen briskly moving past the Moon. This was a transit captured from my backyard this morning, and a difficult shot to capture since the moon was practically invisible against the glare of the sun. The transit against the lit portion of the moon lasted just a few hundredths of a second, shown here in a video slowed down roughly 6x, McCarthy wrote in his post, dated two weeks ago.

On April 10, McCarthy had shared a thread about the same on Twitter as well. The California-based photographer said it was the most difficult transit that he had ever attempted to capture.

"Today, the @Space_Station briefly transited the 5.6% crescent moon. This was the most difficult transit I've ever attempted to capture. It required taking over 150 pictures per second to make sure I got it lined up properly," he had tweeted.

Reacting to the transition video of ISS against the Moon, a Twitter user, @mailutkarsh97, asked if the station looked like TIE fighter ship from Star Wars.

Here are more reactions to McCarthy's brilliance.

So, did you like the pictures and video captured by McCarthy? Do let us know in the comments.

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China is about to start building a space station in orbit – New Scientist News

Posted: at 12:45 pm

By Leah Crane

An artists impression of the completed Chinese Space Station

Xia Yuan/Getty Images

China is about to launch the first section of a new space station, beginning an orbital construction project that is expected to end in 2022 with an outpost about a quarter of the size of the International Space Station (ISS).

While the exact date hasnt been announced, China is expected to launch its 18-metre-long core module, called Tianhe, this week. Tianhe will contain living quarters for up to three astronauts, along with the stations control centre, power, propulsion and life-support systems. It will be followed by two other main modules, both designed to house scientific experiments.

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The Chinese Space Station (CSS) will be the 11th crewed space station ever built. It is Chinas third station, although the previous two were significantly smaller. The CSS will be slightly larger than Mir, the Soviet space station that preceded the ISS.

China, in a sense, is trying to catch up with capabilities that other space powers that have already done, says space analyst Laura Forczyk. One of the things that helps China here is that their government is not democratic, so there isnt the infighting that we have in the US about what the priorities are and how to fund them.

That has allowed the nation to develop this technology relatively quickly, but Charles Bolden, who served as NASA administrator under President Barack Obama, says China will struggle to match US capabilities in space. Technologically, I dont think theyre going to catch up as long as we keep up with the pace that were going in terms of human space flight.

Another boon to the Chinese space programme has been a growing partnership with Roscosmos, Russias space agency, which comes while NASAs historically strong cooperation with Roscosmos in space is waning. For the past decade, NASA has been reliant on purchasing seats on the Russian Soyuz spacecraft to reach the ISS, but now the US has its own crewed launch capabilities through SpaceX. In April, Dmitry Rogozin, chief of Roscosmos, said that the country plans to end its participation in the ISS in 2025, and will build its own space station to be launched in 2030.

Weve seen China and Russia partnering quite a bit recently, because Russia has significant expertise in space and with space stations, says Forczyk. China is capitalising on the expertise and experience of the Russian space sector while also providing a significant amount of funds, which Russia does not have.

However, to some in the Western world, this partnership and the rapid growth of Chinas space capabilities have caused concern about military ambitions. A recent report by the US Office of the Director of National Intelligence on global threats includes a mention of the new space station. It warns that China is working to gain the military, economic, and prestige benefits of matching the USs capabilities in space.

Nevertheless, historically, these space stations have been for the purpose of increasing human understanding, and we have no reason to suspect that China is using its space station for anything different, says Forczyk.

The China National Space Administration has already selected several experiments to be run onboard the CSS, including work with ultracold atoms to research quantum mechanics, materials science research and work on medicine in microgravity. It has several international partners that will send experiments onto the space station, including the Italian Space Agency and the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs.

NASA, on the other hand, wont be a partner the US has laws restricting the agency from collaborating with China, which Bolden sees as a mistake because commercial and international partners could choose to work with China instead.

Wed end up on the outside looking in. Thats why I think we should be collaborating with the Chinese I think the smaller nations look for the best offer, he says. I think a pretty savvy commercial entrepreneur might in fact blaze a trail, might be able to work collaboratively with the Chinese, the Russians and the Americans and pull us together. That might not happen, but Im the eternal optimist.

While this utopian vision of space collaboration may be unlikely, the launch of the CSS will almost certainly have an effect on the USs stance in Earth orbit because of its potential geopolitical implications.

It will cause a reaction what that reaction is remains to be seen, says Forczyk. I dont know if we can say that this will provoke American politicians to fund the ISS for longer or to encourage commercial space stations or some third option.

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Its Dinner Time on the Space Station. Lobster or Beef Bourguignon? – The New York Times

Posted: at 12:45 pm

A French astronaut who leaves Earth these days does not leave French food behind.

Here are some of the foods that Thomas Pesquet, a French astronaut who launched on a SpaceX rocket to the International Space Station on Friday, will enjoy during his six-month stay in orbit: lobster, beef bourguignon, cod with black rice, potato cakes with wild mushrooms and almond tarts with caramelized pears.

Theres a lot of expectations when you send a Frenchman into space, Mr. Pesquet said during a European Space Agency news conference last month. Im a terrible cook myself, but its OK if people are doing it for me.

Space cuisine has come a long way since Yuri Gagarin, the Soviet astronaut who in 1961 was the first to reach space, squeezed pured beef and chocolate sauce from toothpaste-like tubes. The food for John Glenn, who 10 months later became the first American in orbit, was not any tastier. He swallowed some apple sauce.

Nowadays, astronauts get to share the culinary creations of their countries, and the worlds space agencies are showing that while life in space is hectic, an astronaut should at least be able to enjoy a quality meal now and then.

Thats why Mr. Pesquet and his crewmates aboard the station will get to dine on dishes prepared by three separate French culinary institutions. Obviously, all my colleagues are expecting good food, he said.

Alain Ducasse, a chef who operates renowned restaurants around the world including Benoit in Manhattan, has collaborated for years with the French space agency to create menu items available to astronauts aboard the space station.

In addition, another Michelin-starred chef, Thierry Marx, and Raphal Haumont, a physical chemistry professor at the University of Paris-Saclay, have created some dishes specifically for Mr. Pesquet. The two run the universitys French Centre of Culinary Innovation and had cooked some meals for Mr. Pesquets first trip to the space station in 2016. (Mr. Pesquet and Mr. Marx had met by chance at a judo conference a few years earlier. Both are black belts.)

Mr. Pesquet, a former Air France pilot, also asked Servair, a catering company for Air France and other airlines, to devise some dishes for him.

Ive enjoyed their food for a long time, he said.

Mr. Pesquet will not be dining on lobster and beef bourguignon every day. These meticulously prepared dishes are intended for celebrations of special occasions like birthdays, with enough servings for Mr. Pesquet to share.

But even everyday space cuisine that NASA now provides for astronauts these days is pretty fantastic, said Shane Kimbrough, the NASA astronaut who is the commander of Fridays SpaceX mission.

Ryan Dowdy, who just left NASA after managing food on the space station for more than two years, says there are some 200 items on the menu to ward off monotony. Theres no grocery store, he said. You cant DoorDash anything. You got to make do with whats there.

He touts the pulled beef brisket and the macaroni and cheese as particularly scrumptious.

It needs to remind people of their experiences of eating food on Earth, he said. It reminds them of all those good things in this really stressful spaceflight environment.

Still, food in space cannot be exactly like food on Earth. Much of it is freeze-dried, with the water extracted, to reduce its size and volume. Other foods are heated to high temperatures to kill off germs so that they can sit around at room temperature, sealed in cans and plastic bags, for a couple of years before being eaten. Space food should also not be crumbly, disintegrating into bits that could be inhaled or float into sensitive equipment.

Astronauts inject water into the plastic bags to rehydrate dried foods. A forced-air convection oven heats other dishes.

For the health of the astronauts, the foods are usually low in sodium, sugar and fat.

They are high-performance athletes, Mr. Marx said.

Alcohol is also prohibited a particular challenge for French cuisine that prizes wine. Mr. Marx did not leave out the wine from the mushroom sauce accompanying an entree of slow-cooked beef and vegetables. But then the alcohol was extracted through a spinning evaporator without removing the flavor. The sauce was then verified to be alcohol-free via a nuclear magnetic resonance instrument.

The flavors also have to survive the sterilization process what food scientists call thermo-stabilization. That usually means heating the food to 140 degrees Celsius, or 285 degrees Fahrenheit, for an hour, Dr. Haumont said. Can you imagine a cake or a piece of chicken or something like that on Earth? he said. More than an hour of cooking at 140 destroyed the structure. So, we have to rework the cooking techniques.

But instead of frustration, Dr. Haumont described the process as exciting playing with spices and ingredients not traditionally found in French food, like seaweed.

There are small tricks like this to produce umami that will reveal certain flavors, he said.

Mr. Marxs dishes were assembled in the cans by hand to offer the visual flare of fine dining.

Franois Adamski, the corporate chef of Servair, also had to experiment with his recipes. A risotto-like dish used einkorn, an ancient wheat grain, instead of rice, to add some crunchiness, and sauces were thickened so droplets were less likely to float away.

The history of French chefs cooking for astronauts goes back to 1993 when a French astronaut, Jean-Pierre Haigner, returned from a visit to Russias Mir space station and said everything in space went well except the food.

Richard Filippi, a chef and cooking instructor in southwest France, heard Mr. Haigners complaints on the radio and contacted the National Centre for Space Studies Frances equivalent of NASA offering to help. Mr. Filippi and his students then cooked up beef daube, quail, tuna and lemon confit and other foods that accompanied French astronauts on subsequent missions to Mir in the 1990s.

When the French space agency looked to restart the program in 2004 for the International Space Station, Mr. Filippi had retired and suggested Mr. Ducasse.

The first of Mr. Ducasses food for the agency was eaten in space in 2007. Mr. Ducasses team has now come up with more than 40 recipes for astronauts, including recent additions like flourless, gluten-free chocolate cake and vegetarian options like carrot clafoutis with smoked paprika and quinoa cooked with saffron broth and vegetables.

We have a lovely lobster, with some quinoa, with a lemon condiment, said Jrme Lacressonnire, the chef director of Mr. Ducasses consulting company, which is producing the space food. That is despite having to cook it longer and hotter than would be acceptable at a Ducasse restaurant on Earth.

Despite the best efforts of the chefs and scientists, some things do not work. At the beginning we were trying to do a croissant, said Alain Maillet, a French space agency scientist who works with Mr. Ducasses cooks. The result, he said, was awful.

It was not working at all, Dr. Maillet said. It was not possible to put a croissant in a can and have it thermo-stabilized.

NASA continues to add to its space menu too. Perhaps befitting an agency of rocket engineers, the processes for creating the foods are recorded not as recipes, but as specifications. The food is produced a few hundred pounds at a time and it has to be manufactured the same way each time.

Just like any other piece of a rocket engine or a spacesuit, our food is a government-certified spaceflight hardware that fulfills a specific function, Dr. Dowdy said.

One of the newest pieces of NASA edible spaceflight hardware is a sweet and savory kale salad. With advances in food science, the kale, after adding 75 milliliters of hot water and waiting five to 10 minutes, retains some crunch and texture.

Its not like eating straight-up raw kale, Dr. Dowdy said. We developed a specific cooking and freeze-drying process that doesnt completely turn it to mush.

The astronauts at the space station do eat ice cream on occasion. There are freezers on both the spacecraft taking cargo to the space station and the space station itself.

If there ends up being a little extra space in a cold stowage area, then well try to fill that with a frozen dessert for the crew members, Dr. Dowdy said.

With real ice cream available, there is no need in space for those blocks of chalky Neapolitan astronaut ice cream parents buy for their children at museum gift shops. Indeed, in the 60 years of the space age, no astronaut has ever eaten astronaut ice cream, at least not in space.

The freeze-dried ice cream was indeed developed in 1974 for NASA for the gift shop in the agencys Ames Research Center in California. The company that makes it, Outdoor Products of Boulder, Colo., now sells a couple million of them a year.

Cargo missions to the space station also take up fresh produce like apples, oranges and tomatoes.

Recently, refrigerated cheese has started going to space too, a request by Shannon Walker, a NASA astronaut currently at the station. Dr. Dowdy worked with a Houston cheesemonger to find a Belgian Gouda.

We actually developed a way to send refrigerated cheese as Class 1 government-certified spaceflight hardware, Dr. Dowdy said. The crew members absolutely loved it.

Future food challenges in space will include cooking and growing crops. That will become crucial on longer missions like trips to Mars where there will not be a continual arrival of supply ships. Already, astronauts have grown and eaten small harvests of lettuce and radishes grown on the space station.

Using an experimental zero-gravity oven, astronauts in 2019 also baked pouches of raw chocolate cookie dough, producing five cookies in all. The astronauts did not eat the cookies, which were sent back to Earth for safety testing.

But without gravity, ovens cannot work the same way. Other common cooking techniques like sauting and stir-frying would not only be messy, with ingredients floating all around, but potentially catastrophic if the flames spread out of control. The physics is also different, with heat transmitted through radiation and direct physical contact instead of the flow of hot air like in ovens on Earth.

I cant wait to see what sort of innovative solutions we come up with to tackle that challenge, Dr. Dowdy said.

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Georgia native blasts off to International Space Station aboard SpaceX rocket – WSB Atlanta

Posted: at 12:45 pm

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. A Georgia native is one of four astronauts aboard a rocket headed to the International Space Station Friday morning.

SpaceX and NASA launched the Falcon 9 Rocket at 5:49 a.m. from Cape Canaveral in Florida. This is the second time NASA has partnered with SpaceX to send a crew to the space station.

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Four astronauts are inside the Dragon capsule, including Shane Kimbrough, a Lovett School and Georgia Tech graduate.

The crew will spend six months at the orbiting lab, replacing another SpaceX crew thats close to coming home.

This will be the first crew flight using a recycled Falcon rocket and Dragon spacecraft. Both were designed for reuse.

The rocket was used to launch the current station crew last November from NASAs Kennedy Space Center. The capsule, dubbed Endeavour, also will be making a repeat performance; it carried two test pilots to the space station on SpaceXs first crew flight last spring.

For nearly a decade, the only route to the space station for astronauts was on Russian rockets. NASA turned to private companies for taxi service after the space shuttles retired in 2011. SpaceX has been shipping cargo to the space station since 2012, using the same kind of rocket and similar capsules, and recycling those parts as well.

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Native Tribes Should Have More Say in the Psychedelic Movement – Green Entrepreneur

Posted: at 12:44 pm

April28, 20216 min read

As activists and scientists work toward a post-prohibition paradigm, with entheogenic plants and compounds on the path to becoming decriminalized, FDA-approved, or legal in therapeutic contexts, theres a demographic voice missing from the center of the conversation: that of Native American tribes, who carry a tradition and wisdom around using psychedelics that historically predate any legislative or research-oriented movement.

RELATED:These Are the Female Pioneers of Psychedelics

At thePsychedelic Liberty Summit(PLS), what originally was a San Francisco-based conference that went digital this past April, organizer Bia Labate anthropologist and executive director of Chacruna was careful to include indigineous perspectives at the forefront of the agenda: If psychedelics are to become more mainstream, how can the space remain, or rather become increasingly accessible to, those who have been operating in it from the get-go? Like withcannabis legalization, which has set a foreboding tone for psychedelics many of those who built the cannabis industry were eventually squeezed out of it due to regulations that were difficult to comply with and made it even more difficult to compete in the newly legal market many activists fear a similar trajectory for psilocybin or other plant medicines. Indeed, even with regard to cannabis, government regulations in essenceblockedNative tribes, who had hoped to enter the legally regulated industry.

But with psychedelics, the issues are more nuanced than simply facilitating access to the marketplace. At PLS, many voiced concerns about peyote land conservation amidst decriminalization efforts, some perceive athreatto the sacredness of the sacramental cactus religious legal exemption when it comes to entheogens, ethical sourcing of psychedelic plants, indigenous perspectives in the globalization ofayahuasca, Amazon rainforest defense, and so on.

Its crucial to acknowledge and truly hear that there is no monolithic tribal position, says attorney Ariel Clark, general counsel to Chacruna, a member of the Council for the Protection of Sacred plants, and a partner at Clark Howell LLP, which focuses on business, corporate, and regulatory law around cannabis, hemp, and psychedelics. There are many tribes and indigenous communities in many countries and geographies and correspondingly, a huge diversity of opinions amongst tribes about these initiatives. With regard to any of the above-listed issues, policy is at the core of inscribing equity but before even passing, let alone implementing progressive policies, tribal representatives need a seat at the table in co-crafting the conversation.

RELATED:How Psychedelics Helped Me Find Safety

From the outset, any initiative has to recognize indigenous tribes as vital stakeholders, says Clark. For tribes that are interested in entering the legal frameworks being developed, whether its a commercial, therapeutic, and/or other model, first, initiatives must recognize tribal sovereignty, which includes sovereignty with respect to certain ancestral medicines; and second that, at the outset, there has to be a very clear, articulated path to integrating regulatory systems if that is what the tribe wants.

Moreover, Clark adds, while the psychedelic space should be accessible to the tribes, they dont necessarily want to compete in a market system. In fact, what weve often heard in conversations up to this point is that its less about competition and more about preservation of ancestral lands, cultural knowledge, and the protection of sacred plant medicine for religious and spiritual purposes, she says. We really need to step back from the canned capitalist paradigm and look to an intersectional and more hybrid approach.

TheDecriminalize Naturemodel to decriminalize all entheogenic plants for instance, excludes an explicitly commercial approach, instead focusing on a grow, gather, gift model for distributing plant medicines. The Washington D.C. branch of the group, however, went one step further, removing specific mention of peyote, following requests from the Native American Church. Peyote is at a complex intersection of Native American rights, conservation and ecology issues, and drug policy reform, and we need to continue unpacking and discussing the issues, says Clark. It may be that the best answer [to avoiding issues like that brought up inthisLA Timesarticle], is the simplest one: Dont include peyote in legalization measures. Set it aside. Given the terrible history of colonization, maybe just leave that one alone and, instead, use it as an opportunity to ask indigenous leaders if theres any way your measure can be of service to (or at least hot harm) efforts to preserve land, sacred medicine, and cultural and religious knowledge.

At the very least, those who have a personal stake in a policy should be crafting the conversation, if not at the very least consulted, says Labate. In her home country of Brazil, for example, when ayahuasca was regulated, she says, there was a conversation between the government and the Brazilian ayahuasca religions (which are Christian syncretic churches), not to mention medical researchers, anthropologists, policy makers, and other kinds of experts.

RELATED:What's in the Future for Cannabis and Psychedelics? Industry Leaders Weigh In

Making sure this conversation is fair is the minimum we can do, she says. When were talking about liberty, were talking about dear concepts think about freedom, autonomy, rights, etc. but also about obligations: ethics, sustainability conservation, solidarity, reciprocity.

When philanthropists come to the psychedelic field, Labate suggests, they should ask the people who are in the field already what they need rather than trying to invent something from the top down. On the topic of reciprocity, she says, what are we doing to give back to the traditional people who have brought the sacraments to us in the first place? How are we excluding them not taking into account their perspectives when we regulate their own sacraments? The idea that people immediately affected by a policy should be consulted is obvious, but unfortunately rarely done.

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