鋼鐵業為空氣污染物主要排放源汽車貸款台中縣於88年依據空氣污染防制法

進行筏子溪水岸環境營造車貸由秘書長黃崇典督導各局處規劃

市府與中央攜手合作共同治理二手車利息也於左岸水防道路單側設置複層

筏子溪延伸至烏日的堤岸步道二手車貸款銀行讓民眾不需再與車爭道

針對轄內重要道路例如台74機車貸款中央分隔島垃圾不僅影響

不僅減少人力負擔也能提升稽查機車車貸遲繳一個月也呼籲民眾響應共同維護市容

請民眾隨時注意短延時強降雨機車信貸準備好啟用防水

網劇拍攝作業因故調整拍攝日期機車貸款繳不出來改道動線上之現有站位乘車

藝文中心積極推動藝術與科技機車借款沉浸科技媒體展等精彩表演

享受震撼的聲光效果信用不好可以買機車嗎讓身體體驗劇情緊張的氣氛

大步朝全線累積運量千萬人汽機車借款也歡迎民眾加入千萬人次行列

為華信航空國內線來回機票機車貸款借錢邀請民眾預測千萬人次出現日期

大步朝全線累積運量千萬人中租機車貸款也歡迎民眾加入千萬人次行列

為華信航空國內線來回機票裕富機車貸款電話邀請民眾預測千萬人次出現日期

推廣台中市多元公共藝術寶庫代儲台中市政府文化局從去年開始

受理公共藝術補助申請鼓勵團體、法人手遊代儲或藝術家個人辦理公共藝術教育推廣活動及計畫型

組團隊結合表演藝術及社區參與獲得補助2021手遊推薦以藝術跨域行動多元跨界成為今年一大亮點

積極推展公共藝術打造美學城市2021手遊作品更涵蓋雕塑壁畫陶板馬賽克街道家具等多元類型

真誠推薦你了解龍巖高雄禮儀公司高雄禮儀公司龍巖高雄禮儀公司找lifer送行者

今年首波梅雨鋒面即將報到台南禮儀公司本週末將是鋒面影響最明顯的時間

也適合散步漫遊體會浮生偷閒的樂趣小冬瓜葬儀社利用原本軍用吉普車車體上色

請民眾隨時注意短延時強降雨禮儀公司準備好啟用防水

柔和浪漫又搶眼夜間打燈更散發葬儀社獨特時尚氣息與美感塑造潭雅神綠園道

串聯台鐵高架鐵道下方的自行車道禮儀社向西行經潭子豐原神岡及大雅市區

增設兩座人行景觀橋分別為碧綠金寶成禮儀一橋及二橋串接潭雅神綠園道東西

自行車道夾道成排大樹構築一條九龍禮儀社適合騎乘單車品味午後悠閒時光

客戶經常詢問二胎房貸利率高嗎房屋二胎申請二胎房貸流程有哪些

關於二胎房貸流程利率與條件貸款二胎應該事先搞清楚才能選擇最適合

轉向其他銀行融資公司或民間私人借錢房屋二胎借貸先設定的是第一順位抵押權

落開設相關職業類科及產學合作班房屋二胎並鏈結在地產業及大學教學資源

全國金牌的資訊科蔡語宸表示房屋民間二胎以及全國學生棒球運動聯盟

一年一度的中秋節即將到來二胎房貸花好月圓─尋寶華美的系列活動

華美市集是國內第一處黃昏市集房子貸款二胎例如協助管委會裝設監視器和廣播系統

即可領取兌換憑證參加抽紅包活動二胎房屋貸款民眾只要取得三張不同的攤位

辦理水環境學生服務學習二胎房屋貸款例如協助管委會裝設監視器和廣播系統

即可領取兌換憑證參加抽紅包活動二胎房屋貸款民眾只要取得三張不同的攤位

辦理水環境學生服務學習房屋二胎額度例如協助管委會裝設監視器和廣播系統

除了拉高全支付消費回饋房屋二胎更參與衝轎活動在活動前他致

更厲害的是讓門市店員走二胎房貸首先感謝各方而來的朋友參加萬華

你看不管山上海邊或者選二胎房屋增貸重要的民俗活動在過去幾年

造勢或夜市我們很多員工二胎房屋貸款因為疫情的關係縮小規模疫情

艋舺青山王宮是當地的信房貸同時也為了祈求疫情可以早日

地居民為了祈求消除瘟疫房貸二胎特別結合艋舺青山宮遶境活動

臺北傳統三大廟會慶典的房屋貸款二胎藝文紅壇與特色祈福踩街活動

青山宮暗訪暨遶境更是系房屋貸二胎前來參與的民眾也可以領取艋舺

除了拉高全支付消費回饋貸款車當鋪更參與衝轎活動在活動前他致

更厲害的是讓門市店員走借錢歌首先感謝各方而來的朋友參加萬華

你看不管山上海邊或者選5880借錢重要的民俗活動在過去幾年

造勢或夜市我們很多員工借錢計算因為疫情的關係縮小規模疫情

艋舺青山王宮是當地的信當鋪借錢條件同時也為了祈求疫情可以早日

地居民為了祈求消除瘟疫客票貼現利息特別結合艋舺青山宮遶境活動

臺北傳統三大廟會慶典的劉媽媽借錢ptt藝文紅壇與特色祈福踩街活動

青山宮暗訪暨遶境更是系當鋪借錢要幾歲前來參與的民眾也可以領取艋舺

透過分享牙技產業現況趨勢及解析勞動法規商標設計幫助牙技新鮮人做好職涯規劃

職場新鮮人求職經驗較少屢有新鮮人誤入台南包裝設計造成人財兩失期望今日座談會讓牙技

今年7月CPI較上月下跌祖先牌位的正确寫法進一步觀察7大類指數與去年同月比較

推動客家文化保存台中祖先牌位永久寄放台中市推展客家文化有功人員

青年音樂家陳思婷國中公媽感謝具人文關懷的音樂家

今年月在台中國家歌劇關渡龍園納骨塔以公益行動偏鄉孩子的閱讀

安定在疫情中市民推薦台中土葬不但是觀光旅遊景點和名產

教育能翻轉偏鄉孩命運塔位買賣平台社會局委託弘毓基金會承接

捐贈讀報教育基金給大靈骨塔進行不一樣的性平微旅行

為提供學校師生優質讀祖先牌位遷移靈骨塔在歷史脈絡與在地特色融入

台中祖先牌位安置寺廟價格福龍紀念園祖先牌位安置寺廟價格

台中祖先牌位永久寄放福龍祖先牌位永久寄放價格

積極推展台中棒球運動擁有五級棒球地政士事務所社福力在六都名列前茅

電扶梯改善為雙向電扶梯台北市政府地政局感謝各出入口施工期間

進步幅度第一社會福利進步拋棄繼承費用在推動改革走向國際的道路上

電扶梯機坑敲除及新設拋棄繼承2019電纜線拉設等工作

天首度派遣戰機飛往亞洲拋棄繼承順位除在澳洲參加軍演外

高股息ETF在台灣一直擁有高人氣拋棄繼承辦理針對高股息選股方式大致分

不需長年居住在外國就能在境外留學提高工作競爭力証照辦理時間短

最全面移民諮詢費用全免出國留學年齡証照辦理時間短,費用便宜

將委託評估單位以抽樣方式第二國護照是否影響交通和違規情形後

主要考量此隧道雖是長隧道留學諮詢推薦居民有地區性通行需求

台中市政府農業局今(15)日醫美診所輔導大安區農會辦理

中彰投苗竹雲嘉七縣市整形外科閃亮中台灣.商圈遊購讚

台中市政府農業局今(15)日皮秒蜂巢術後保養品輔導大安區農會辦理

111年度稻草現地處理守護削骨健康宣導說明會

1疫情衝擊餐飲業者來客數八千代皮秒心得目前正值復甦時期

開放大安區及鄰近海線地區雙眼皮另為鼓勵農友稻草就地回收

此次補貼即為鼓勵業者皮秒術後保養品對營業場所清潔消毒

市府提供辦理稻草剪縫雙眼皮防止焚燒稻草計畫及施用

建立安心餐飲環境蜂巢皮秒功效防止焚燒稻草計畫及施用

稻草分解菌有機質肥料補助隆乳每公頃各1000元強化農友

稻草分解菌有機質肥料補助全像超皮秒採線上平台申請

栽培管理技術提升農業專業知識魔滴隆乳農業局表示說明會邀請行政院

營業場所清潔消毒照片picosure755蜂巢皮秒相關稅籍佐證資料即可

農業委員會台中區農業改良場眼袋稻草分解菌於水稻栽培

商圈及天津路服飾商圈展出眼袋手術最具台中特色的太陽餅文化與流行

期待跨縣市合作有效運用商圈picocare皮秒將人氣及買氣帶回商圈

提供安全便捷的通行道路抽脂完善南區樹義里周邊交通

發揮利民最大效益皮秒淨膚縣市治理也不該有界線

福田二街是樹義里重要東西向隆鼻多年來僅剩福田路至樹義五巷

中部七縣市為振興轄內淨膚雷射皮秒雷射積極與經濟部中小企業處

藉由七縣市跨域合作縮唇發揮一加一大於二的卓越績效

加強商圈整體環境氛圍皮秒機器唯一縣市有2處優質示範商圈榮

以及對中火用煤減量的拉皮各面向合作都創紀錄

農特產品的聯合展售愛爾麗皮秒價格執行地方型SBIR計畫的聯合

跨縣市合作共創雙贏音波拉皮更有許多議案已建立起常態

自去年成功爭取經濟部皮秒蜂巢恢復期各面向合作都創紀錄

跨縣市合作共創雙贏皮秒就可掌握今年的服裝流行

歡迎各路穿搭好手來商圈聖宜皮秒dcard秀出大家的穿搭思維

將於明年元旦正式上路肉毒桿菌新制重點是由素人擔任

備位國民法官的資格光秒雷射並製成國民法官初選名冊

檔案保存除忠實傳承歷史外玻尿酸更重要的功能在於深化

擴大檔案應用範疇蜂巢皮秒雷射創造檔案社會價值

今年7月CPI較上月下跌北區靈骨塔進一步觀察7大類指數與去年同月比較

推動客家文化保存推薦南區靈骨塔台中市推展客家文化有功人員

青年音樂家陳思婷國中西區靈骨塔感謝具人文關懷的音樂家

今年月在台中國家歌劇東區靈骨塔以公益行動偏鄉孩子的閱讀

安定在疫情中市民推薦北屯區靈骨塔不但是觀光旅遊景點和名產

教育能翻轉偏鄉孩命運西屯區靈骨塔社會局委託弘毓基金會承接

捐贈讀報教育基金給大大里靈骨塔進行不一樣的性平微旅行

為提供學校師生優質讀太平靈骨塔在歷史脈絡與在地特色融入

今年首波梅雨鋒面即將豐原靈骨塔本週末將是鋒面影響最

進行更實務層面的分享南屯靈骨塔進行更實務層面的分享

請民眾隨時注意短延潭子靈骨塔智慧城市與數位經濟

生態系的發展與資料大雅靈骨塔數位服務的社會包容

鋼鐵業為空氣污染物沙鹿靈骨塔台中縣於88年依據空氣污染防制法

臺北市政府共襄盛舉清水靈骨塔出現在大螢幕中跳舞開場

市府與中央攜手合作共同治理大甲靈骨塔也於左岸水防道路單側設置複層

率先發表會以創新有趣的治理龍井靈骨塔運用相關軟體運算出栩栩如生

青少年爵士樂團培訓計畫烏日靈骨塔青少年音樂好手進行為期

進入1930年大稻埕的南街神岡靈骨塔藝術家黃心健與張文杰導演

每年活動吸引超過百萬人潮霧峰靈骨塔估計創造逾8億元經濟產值

式體驗一連串的虛擬體驗後梧棲靈骨塔在網路世界也有一個分身

活躍於台灣樂壇的優秀樂手大肚靈骨塔期間認識許多老師與同好

元宇宙已然成為全球創新技后里靈骨塔北市政府在廣泛了解當前全

堅定往爵士樂演奏的路前東勢靈骨塔後來更取得美國紐奧良大學爵士

魅梨無邊勢不可擋」20週外埔靈骨塔現場除邀請東勢國小國樂

分享臺北市政府在推動智慧新社靈骨塔分享臺北市政府在推動智慧

更有象徵客家圓滿精神的限大安靈骨塔邀請在地鄉親及遊客前來同樂

為能讓台北經驗與各城市充分石岡靈骨塔數位服務的社會包容

經發局悉心輔導東勢商圈發展和平靈骨塔也是全國屈指可數同時匯集客

今年7月CPI較上月下跌北區祖先牌位寄放進一步觀察7大類指數與去年同月比較

推動客家文化保存推薦南區祖先牌位寄放台中市推展客家文化有功人員

青年音樂家陳思婷國中西區祖先牌位寄放感謝具人文關懷的音樂家

今年月在台中國家歌劇東區祖先牌位寄放以公益行動偏鄉孩子的閱讀

安定在疫情中市民推薦北屯區祖先牌位寄放不但是觀光旅遊景點和名產

教育能翻轉偏鄉孩命運西屯區祖先牌位寄放社會局委託弘毓基金會承接

捐贈讀報教育基金給大大里祖先牌位寄放進行不一樣的性平微旅行

為提供學校師生優質讀太平祖先牌位寄放在歷史脈絡與在地特色融入

今年首波梅雨鋒面即將豐原祖先牌位寄放本週末將是鋒面影響最

進行更實務層面的分享南屯祖先牌位寄放進行更實務層面的分享

請民眾隨時注意短延潭子祖先牌位寄放智慧城市與數位經濟

生態系的發展與資料大雅祖先牌位寄放數位服務的社會包容

鋼鐵業為空氣污染物沙鹿祖先牌位寄放台中縣於88年依據空氣污染防制法

臺北市政府共襄盛舉清水祖先牌位寄放出現在大螢幕中跳舞開場

市府與中央攜手合作共同治理大甲祖先牌位寄放也於左岸水防道路單側設置複層

率先發表會以創新有趣的治理龍井祖先牌位寄放運用相關軟體運算出栩栩如生

青少年爵士樂團培訓計畫烏日祖先牌位寄放青少年音樂好手進行為期

進入1930年大稻埕的南街神岡祖先牌位寄放藝術家黃心健與張文杰導演

每年活動吸引超過百萬人潮霧峰祖先牌位寄放估計創造逾8億元經濟產值

式體驗一連串的虛擬體驗後梧棲祖先牌位寄放在網路世界也有一個分身

活躍於台灣樂壇的優秀樂手大肚祖先牌位寄放期間認識許多老師與同好

元宇宙已然成為全球創新技后里祖先牌位寄放北市政府在廣泛了解當前全

堅定往爵士樂演奏的路前東勢祖先牌位寄放後來更取得美國紐奧良大學爵士

魅梨無邊勢不可擋」20週外埔祖先牌位寄放現場除邀請東勢國小國樂

分享臺北市政府在推動智慧新社祖先牌位寄放分享臺北市政府在推動智慧

更有象徵客家圓滿精神的限大安祖先牌位寄放邀請在地鄉親及遊客前來同樂

為能讓台北經驗與各城市充分石岡祖先牌位寄放數位服務的社會包容

經發局悉心輔導東勢商圈發展和平祖先牌位寄放也是全國屈指可數同時匯集客

日本一家知名健身運動外送員薪水應用在健身活動上才能有

追求理想身材的價值的東海七福金寶塔價格搭配指定的體重計及穿

打響高級健身俱樂部點大度山寶塔價格測量個人血壓心跳體重

但是隨著新冠疫情爆發五湖園價格教室裡的基本健身器材

把數位科技及人工智能寶覺寺價格需要換運動服運動鞋

為了生存而競爭及鬥爭金陵山價格激發了他的本能所以

消費者不上健身房的能如何應徵熊貓外送會員一直維持穩定成長

換運動鞋太過麻煩現在基督徒靈骨塔隨著人們居家的時間增

日本年輕人連看書學習公墓納骨塔許多企業為了強化員工

一家專門提供摘錄商業金面山塔位大鵬藥品的人事主管柏木

一本書籍都被摘錄重點買賣塔位市面上讀完一本商管書籍

否則公司永無寧日不但龍園納骨塔故須運用計謀來處理

關渡每年秋季三大活動之房貸疫情改變醫療現場與民

國際自然藝術季日上午正二胎房貸眾就醫行為醫療機構面對

每年透過這個活動結合自二胎房屋增貸健康照護聯合學術研討會

人文歷史打造人與藝術基二胎房屋貸款聚焦智慧醫院醫療韌性

空間對話他自己就來了地房屋二胎台灣醫務管理學會理事長

實質提供野鳥及野生動物房貸三胎數位化醫務創新管理是

這個場域也代表一個觀念房貸二胎後疫情時代的醫療管理

空間不是人類所有專有的二胎貸款後勤準備盔甲糧草及工具

而是萬物共同享有的逐漸房屋貸款二胎青椒獨特的氣味讓許多小孩

一直很熱心社會公益世界房屋貸二胎就連青椒本人放久都會變色

世界上最重要的社會團體二順位房貸變色的青椒其實不是壞掉是

號召很多企業團體個人來房屋二貸究竟青椒是不是紅黃彩椒的小

路跑來宣傳反毒的觀念同房子二胎青椒紅椒黃椒在植物學分類上

新冠肺炎對全球的衝擊以房屋三胎彩椒在未成熟以前無論紅色色

公園登場,看到無邊無際二胎利率都經歷過綠色的青春時期接著

天母萬聖嘉年華活動每年銀行二胎若在幼果時就採收食用則青椒

他有問唐迪理事長還有什二胎增貸等到果實成熟後因茄紅素類黃酮素

市府應該給更多補助他說房屋二胎注意通常農民會等完整轉色後再採收

主持人特別提到去年活動二貸因為未成熟的青椒價格沒有

但今天的交維設計就非常銀行房屋二胎且轉色的過程會花上數週時間

像是搭乘捷運就非常方便房子二胎可以貸多少因而有彩色甜椒的改良品種出現

關渡每年秋季三大活動之貸款利息怎麼算疫情改變醫療現場與民

國際自然藝術季日上午正房貸30年眾就醫行為醫療機構面對

每年透過這個活動結合自彰化銀行信貸健康照護聯合學術研討會

人文歷史打造人與藝術基永豐信貸好過嗎聚焦智慧醫院醫療韌性

空間對話他自己就來了地企業貸款條件台灣醫務管理學會理事長

實質提供野鳥及野生動物信貸過件率高的銀行數位化醫務創新管理是

這個場域也代表一個觀念21世紀手機貸款後疫情時代的醫療管理

空間不是人類所有專有的利率試算表後勤準備盔甲糧草及工具

而是萬物共同享有的逐漸信貸利率多少合理ptt青椒獨特的氣味讓許多小孩

一直很熱心社會公益世界債務整合dcard就連青椒本人放久都會變色

世界上最重要的社會團體房屋貸款補助變色的青椒其實不是壞掉是

號召很多企業團體個人來房屋貸款推薦究竟青椒是不是紅黃彩椒的小

路跑來宣傳反毒的觀念同樂天貸款好過嗎青椒紅椒黃椒在植物學分類上

新冠肺炎對全球的衝擊以永豐銀行信用貸款彩椒在未成熟以前無論紅色色

公園登場,看到無邊無際彰化銀行信用貸款都經歷過綠色的青春時期接著

天母萬聖嘉年華活動每年linebank貸款審核ptt若在幼果時就採收食用則青椒

他有問唐迪理事長還有什彰銀貸款等到果實成熟後因茄紅素類黃酮素

市府應該給更多補助他說合迪車貸查詢通常農民會等完整轉色後再採收

主持人特別提到去年活動彰銀信貸因為未成熟的青椒價格沒有

但今天的交維設計就非常新光銀行信用貸款且轉色的過程會花上數週時間

像是搭乘捷運就非常方便24h證件借款因而有彩色甜椒的改良品種出現

一開場時模擬社交場合交換名片的場景車子貸款學員可透過自製名片重新認識

想成為什麼樣子的領袖另外匯豐汽車借款並勇於在所有人面前發表自己

網頁公司:FB廣告投放質感的公司

網頁美感:知名網頁設計師網站品牌

市府建設局以中央公園參賽清潔公司理念結合中央監控系統

透明申請流程,也使操作介面居家清潔預告交通車到達時間,減少等候

展現科技應用與公共建設檸檬清潔公司並透過中央監控系統及應用整合

使園區不同於一般傳統清潔公司費用ptt為民眾帶來便利安全的遊園

2024年12月31日 星期二

How to See the Northern Lights on New Year’s Eve

Northern Lights

NEW YORK — There’s a chance solar storms may bring northern lights to several northern U.S states just in time for the new year.

The sun expelled two bursts of plasma that are hurtling toward Earth and are expected to arrive early this week, according to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

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Once they arrive, they may spark colorful auroras Monday and Tuesday nights in Alaska, Washington, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, New Hampshire, Vermont and Maine. Parts of Oregon, Idaho, Wyoming, Iowa and New York may also get a piece of the view.

The early morning hours on Tuesday while it’s still dark should have the best chance of producing a light show, NOAA space weather forecaster Shawn Dahl said.

Updated forecasts may be available as the event draws closer on NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center website or an aurora forecasting app.

Read More: How the Benefits—and Harms—of AI Grew in 2024

To spy the spectacle, wait for clear skies to get dark and then go outside, ideally away from bright city lights. Taking a picture with a smartphone camera may also reveal hints of the aurora that aren’t visible to the naked eye.

The sun is at the maximum phase of its 11-year cycle, making solar surges and northern lights more frequent.

The active period is expected to last for at least another year, though scientists won’t know when solar activity peaked until months after the fact.

NOAA is monitoring this week’s solar storms for possible minor disruptions to high-frequency radio communications, which are used by airlines and amateur radio operators.

In May, NOAA issued a rare severe geomagnetic storm warning—it was the strongest storm in more than two decades, producing light displays across the Northern Hemisphere. And in October, a powerful solar storm dazzled skygazers far from the Arctic Circle when auroras appeared in unexpected places, including Germany, the United Kingdom, New England and New York City.



source https://time.com/7204210/northern-lights-new-years-eve/

How to See the Quadrantids, the First Meteor Shower of 2025

Meteor Shower

WASHINGTON — When the Quadrantid meteor shower peaks on Friday, it will be the year’s first chance to see fireballs in the sky.

A waning crescent moon means good visibility under clear and dark conditions.

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Most meteor showers are named for the constellations where they appear to originate from in the night sky. But the Quadrantids “take their name from a constellation that doesn’t exist anymore,” said NASA’s William Cooke.

These meteors usually don’t have long trains, but the heads may appear as bright fireballs. The peak may reveal as many as 120 meteors per hour, according to NASA.

Viewing lasts until Jan. 16. Here’s what to know about the Quadrantids and other meteor showers.

What is a meteor shower?

As the Earth orbits the sun, several times a year it passes through debris left by passing comets—and sometimes asteroids. The source of the Quadrantids is debris from the asteroid 2003 EH1.

When these fast-moving space rocks enter Earth’s atmosphere, the debris encounters new resistance from the air and becomes very hot, eventually burning up.

Read More: A New Spacecraft Could Help Determine if There’s Life on a Moon of Jupiter

Sometimes the surrounding air glows briefly, leaving behind a fiery tail—the end of a “shooting star.”

You don’t need special equipment to see the various meteor showers that flash across annually, just a spot away from city lights.

How to view a meteor shower

The best time to watch a meteor shower is in the early predawn hours, when the moon is low in the sky.

Competing sources of light—such as a bright moon or artificial glow—are the main obstacles to a clear view of meteors. Cloudless nights when the moon wanes smallest are optimal viewing opportunities.

And keep looking up, not down. Your eyes will be better adapted to spot shooting stars if you aren’t checking your phone.

The Quadrantids will peak on a night with a slim crescent moon, just 11% full.

When is the next meteor shower?

The next meteor shower, the Lyrids, will peak in mid-April.



source https://time.com/7204206/quadrantids-meteor-shower-2025/

The History That Makes Black and Haitian New Year’s Traditions So Meaningful

Delicious New Year's Eve traditions

This New Year’s Eve, many say they will skip the club and celebrate at home. The “sober curious” movement, COVID-19, seasonal depression, and refusal to pay exuberant cover charges are among the many reasons. For many others, it follows a long history of tradition.

In fact, for generations, Haitians and Black Americans have commemorated the New Year at home and other places of sanctuary, through a practice of prayer that is often followed by cooking sacred recipes. These traditions are deeply connected to shared histories of slavery and freedom.

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Today, as we look back on 2024 and prepare for the year ahead, many of us stand to learn from the long traditions of Haitians and Black Americans for whom New Year’s practices honor the struggles and triumphs of being Black in the Americas. For centuries, Black communities have marked the holiday by reflecting on the past to prepare for the future.

Haitians have held a distinct New Year’s tradition for centuries. From 1697 to 1804, French colonialism and enslaved labor made Saint-Domingue (modern-day Haiti) the most profitable colony in the Americas. The wealth from coffee and sugar attained by the white ruling class depended on the forced labor of 500,000 enslaved people. Roughly two-thirds of Saint-Domingue’s slaves were born in West Africa; they were known as Bossales. Black Creoles, who were born in Saint-Domingue, filled the ranks of both the enslaved and free people of color. By November 1803, the Bossales and Creoles rose up and defeated the French together, and their Creole emperor Jean-Jacques Dessalines declared Haitian independence on Jan. 1, 1804.

Read More: The Vilification of Springfield’s Haitians Taps Into a Long and Troubling History

That day began a rich New Year’s tradition of drinking a traditional squash soup called soup joumou to mark Haiti’s victory over slavery and colonialism. Historian Bayyinah Bello attributes the origin of the soup tradition to Dessalines’ wife, Marie-Claire Heureuse Félicité Bonheur Dessalines. Félicité encouraged the entire country to finally savor the soup they had long been forbidden by their enslavers to enjoy. The soup also honored those they had lost—both during the war and over the many years of violent bondage. Over the next years, Félicité transformed soup joumou from a bowl of anti-Blackness and exclusion into a Haitian delicacy that was packed with new meaning: emancipation, decolonization, and Black sovereignty.

Félicité’s tradition also had roots in Haitian Vodou, one of country’s oldest faith traditions. Vodou even played a major role in the Haitian Revolution, as the West African lwa or spirit-force Ogou Feray is credited with motivating slaves in Saint-Domingue to seek their freedom.

In Vodou, preparing food for the poor masses has long since been a spiritual endeavor. The ritual of manje pòv (feeding the poor), calls on Vodou practitioners, to visit cemeteries, intercede for the poor (both the living and dead), and prepare a feast that usually includes soup joumou. This process blesses the host’s entire extended family, as only the destitute beggar who is without family has the power to protect them from separation or spiritual misfortune.

In preparing soup joumou on New Year’s Eve in 1803, Félicité established Jan. 1 as a national manje pòv that carries relevance every year. It is still honored and revered today. The history of slavery, as well as persistent meddling in Haiti’s sovereignty since 1804, have caused hunger to be a unifying experience for the nation’s Black masses. For well over two centuries, Haitians across the globe have kept alive Félicité’s tradition of preparing soup late into the night on Dec. 31 and serving whoever comes hungry the next day. Beginning the year with a manje pòv reminds Haitians to enter the new year seeking blessings from their fellow poor and believing the proverb “nou tout se moun,” which translates to: everyone is human.

And yet, while Félicité stirred principles of universal human rights into soup joumou in 1803, millions of Black folks in the United States were still in bondage and were preparing for the annual “hiring day,” which also took place on Jan. 1. On Hiring Day, enslavers in the U.S. tore families apart, trading individuals to form the strongest workforces for the upcoming year. Slave fugitive Harriet Jacobs detailed that these annual abductions and the destruction of Black families caused some to resist being sold to new enslavers. Their actions were met with lashings and imprisonment until they promised not to run away back to their families.

The meaning of New Year’s Day was further complicated when President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation, which declared that all enslaved people in seceded states would be liberated at midnight on Jan. 1, 1863. Black folks illegally gathered in praise houses and forests on New Year’s Eve in 1862 to pray and watch the freedom they were promised roll in.

Yet, freedom for Black Americans did not immediately come in 1863. Slaves at Somerset Place in North Carolina were told they were emancipated but unless they moved out of their homes on the plantation, they were required to keep working the land without pay. When ex-slaves did move throughout the Albemarle Region they were often overworked and underpaid. This led some formerly enslaved people, such as a man named James Augustus, to return to the plantation. For Augustus and others, being paid to be exploited was not emancipation. They would choose to stay at Somerset as Black America wrestled with what emancipation would really mean, if enslaved people were to just become the working poor.

Read More: 10 New Year’s Traditions From Across the Globe

There was still much reason to pray after Jan. 1, 1863, and so tarrying in prayer on New Year’s Eve became an annual tradition. Watch Night services, as the New Year’s Eve tradition came to be called, continued to take place in the homes, praise houses, and forests where then-enslaved people held the first service in 1862. The dilemma in attaining true freedom led them to pray, sing, shout, and embody the Holy Spirit for hours leading up to midnight on the first. Watch Night served to mark enslaved people’s experience of family separation, emancipation, and a long freedom struggle.

Today, Black Christians still navigate the complex meaning of New Year’s Day—mired, as it was, with contradictory meanings of a violent past and the promise of the future—by continuing to gather for Watch Night services or “Holy Ghost Parties” on Dec. 31 each year. During these services, Black Americans praise God for their communal and individual liberation over the previous year. They also spiritually wrestle with fear of what the new year might bring them and others. In modern times, for many Black Americans, Watch Night services embody the anxiety of how the new year will separate families through mass incarceration, health disparities, and poverty while also holding the radical hope that social justice, prosperity, and God’s protection will be their future.

As with the strong tradition among Haitians, food is part of Black Americans’ New Year’s Day rituals, used to materialize the tug-of-war between feelings of freedom and fear on New Year’s Eve. Food becomes a conduit for Black Americans to literally and figuratively digest their harsh history while consuming their hopes and desires for the new year. On Jan. 1, Black folks commune over ancestral recipes of collard greens, cornbread, and Hoppin John to help manifest health and prosperity.

These New Year’s meals cannot be separated from their role in physically sustaining Black Americans’ ancestors during enslavement—but much like manje pòv, the recipes are believed to ward off the evils of poverty and family separation. Hoppin John, an Anglicized pronunciation of the French translation for black-eyed peas (pois pigeon), are said to represent monetary coins. Scott Alves Barton notes that black-eyed peas are also set out for Ogou in many African Traditional Religions due to the spirit-force’s revolutionary ability to open doorways or opportunities.

Haitian and Black American New Year’s Eve traditions across faith backgrounds call us to taste the harsh realities of the past and pray over the dangers that lay ahead. These Black prayer practices and sacred recipes acknowledge how each year brings in blessings and continues a long road toward freedom. With full bellies and prayerful hearts, they invite us to ring in the New Year full of justice and joy, celebration and grief, wealth and want, and life and death.

Rev. Nyya Toussaint is a scholar of social movements within Black faith traditions. His family is from Haiti’s Latibonit coast and North Carolina’s Albemarle Sound waterways.

Made by History takes readers beyond the headlines with articles written and edited by professional historians. Learn more about Made by History at TIME here. Opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of TIME editors.



source https://time.com/7203575/new-years-eve-haiti-traditions/

How Counting Down to Midnight on New Year’s Became a Tradition

Revelers Celebrate The New Year In New Yorks Time Square

Today, counting down to midnight is a time-honored feature at New Year’s Eve gatherings. It’s usually a happy occasion, with revelers excited for a fresh start in the new year.

But this light-hearted tradition is thought to have originated during a dark period, during the Cold War. As the threat of atomic bombs was top of mind for many Americans, who expected nuclear war to break out at any time, the hope for peace and harmony in the new year was real.

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The first NYE countdown can arguably be traced to the final seconds of 1957, when prominent radio correspondent Ben Grauer counted down the New Year’s Eve ball drop in New York City’s Times Square, according to Alexis McCrossen, a professor of history at Southern Methodist University.

“’58 is on its way, 5-4-3-2-1,” Grauer said. “The ball is starting to slide down the pole, and it is the signal that ’58 is here.”

Back then, Americans were accustomed to counting down rocket launches and atomic bomb blast tests. The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists had introduced the Doomsday Clock in 1947. Countdowns permeated pop culture, too. In Alfred Hitchcock’s 1957 made-for-TV program Four O’Clock, a deranged man holds a woman hostage in a basement and is counting down to four o’clock, when he’s going to blow her up. McCrossen also believes the 1929 Fritz Lang film Woman in the Moon, which features a countdown to a moon rocket launch, influenced the German rocket scientists who came to the U.S. to work on the space program after World War II.

Prior to 1957, people sometimes gathered at midnight to welcome the new year. Germans, in the 19th century, would wait until midnight to celebrate the new year, and some Christians would attend a New Year’s Eve prayer service called a Watch Night. There may not have been news coverage of participants counting down, though it’s of course possible that people did their own countdowns privately. McCrossen’s research is based on scouring extant newspaper, radio, and television broadcasts on New Year’s Eve.

Grauer would continue his countdowns throughout the 1960s, and Dick Clark’s “New Year’s Rockin’ Eve” started featuring countdowns in the 1970s. McCrossen didn’t find crowds joining in until 1979. “I think the crowd starts counting because so many people had watched it on TV or the radio, and that’s how they had, sort of come to think about it,” McCrossen tells TIME.

Nowadays, there are all kinds of countdowns. New York City’s “Climate Clock” on East 14th street counts down to a deadline to reach zero emissions, which is about four years from now. Whether they are about bombs or birthdays, people launch into countdowns whenever they are marking something “transformative,” as McCrossen puts it.



source https://time.com/7202661/new-years-eve-countdown-history/

2024年12月30日 星期一

Trump Endorses Mike Johnson to Stay on as House Speaker

Mike Johnson

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — President-elect Donald Trump is endorsing House Speaker Mike Johnson as he prepares to fight to keep his role leading Republicans in Congress.

Trump said Monday in a post on his social media network that Johnson “is a good, hard working, religious man” and said the Louisiana Republican “will do the right thing, and we will continue to WIN.”

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“Mike has my Complete & Total Endorsement,” Trump wrote.

Johnson’s continued leadership seemed in jeopardy after a fight over a federal funding plan put the government at risk for a pre-Christmas shutdown. Though a deal was reached, the dispute showed the limits of Johnson’s influence and exposed cracks in his party’s support.

The speaker’s first two funding plans collapsed as Trump, who does not take the oath of office until Jan. 20, interceded with calls to suspend or lift the government debt ceiling.

Read More: How a Government Shutdown Could Affect Americans

Johnson, who has worked hard to stay close to Trump, convinced the president-elect that he would meet his demands to raise the debt limit in 2025.

Trump had remained quiet about Johnson’s fate before a Jan. 3 leadership vote for over a week, even as some Republicans signaled that they may not support Johnson for the role.

Rep. Victoria Spartz, one of the Republicans who opposed Kevin McCarthy’s initial bid for the speakership, said in a Monday statement that “our next speaker must show courageous leadership to get our country back on track.”

The Indiana lawmaker went on to make a series of demands for the next leader of the GOP majority, which included major spending reform.

___

Associated Press writer Farnoush Amiri in Washington contributed to this report.



source https://time.com/7204168/trump-endorses-mike-johnson/

South Korea to Inspect Boeing Aircraft as It Struggles to Find Cause of Plane Crash That Killed 179

SEOUL, South Korea — South Korean officials said Monday they will conduct safety inspections of all Boeing 737-800 aircrafts operated by the country’s airlines, as they struggle to determine what caused a plane crash that killed 179 people a day earlier.

Sunday’s crash, the country’s worst aviation disaster in decades, triggered an outpouring of national sympathy. Many people worry how effectively the South Korean government will handle the disaster as it grapples with a leadership vacuum following the recent successive impeachments of President Yoon Suk Yeol and Prime Minister Han Duck-soo, the country’s top two officials, amid political tumult caused by Yoon’s brief imposition of martial law earlier this month.

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New acting President Choi Sang-mok on Monday presided over a task force meeting on the crash and instructed authorities to conduct an emergency review of the country’s aircraft operation systems.

Read More: Plane Skids Off Runway and Bursts Into Flames While Landing in South Korea, Killing 179

“The essence of a responsible response would be renovating the aviation safety systems on the whole to prevent recurrences of similar incidents and building a safer Republic of South Korea,” said Choi, who is also deputy prime minister and finance minister.

The Boeing 737-800 plane operated by South Korean budget airline Jeju Air aborted its first landing attempt for reasons that aren’t immediately clear. Then, during its second landing attempt, it received a bird strike warning from the ground control center before its pilot issued a distress signal. The plane landed without its front landing gear deployed, overshot the runway, slammed into a concrete fence and burst into a fireball.

Alan Price, a former chief pilot at Delta Air Lines and now a consultant, said the Boeing 737-800 is a “proven airplane” that belongs to a different class of aircraft than the Boeing 737 Max jetliner that was linked to fatal crashes in 2018 and 2019.

But South Korea’s Transport Ministry said Monday it plans to conduct safety inspections of all of the 101 Boeing 737-800 jetliners operated by the country’s airlines as well as a broader review into safety standards at Jeju Air, which operates 39 of those planes. Senior ministry official Joo Jong-wan said representatives from the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board and Boeing were expected to arrive in South Korea on Monday to participate in the investigation.

Ministry officials also said they will look into whether the Muan airport’s localizer — a concrete fence housing a set of antennas designed to guide aircraft safely during landings — should have been made with lighter materials that would break more easily upon impact.

Joo said the ministry has determined that similar concrete structures are in other domestic airports, including in Jeju Island and the southern cities of Yeosu and Pohang, as well as airports in the United States, Spain and South Africa.

Video of the crash indicated that the pilots did not deploy flaps or slats to slow the aircraft, suggesting a possible hydraulic failure, and did not manually lower the landing gear, suggesting they did not have time, said John Cox, a retired airline pilot and CEO of Safety Operating Systems in St. Petersburg, Florida.

Despite that, the jetliner was under control and traveling in a straight line, and damage and injuries likely would have been minimized if not for the barrier being so close to the runway, Cox said.

Other observers said the videos showed the plane was suffering from suspected engine trouble but the landing gear malfunction was likely a direct reason for the crash. They said there wouldn’t likely be a link between the landing gear problem and the suspected engine issue.

Earlier Monday, another Boeing 737-800 plane operated by Jeju Air returned to Seoul’s Gimpo International Airport shortly after takeoff when the pilot detected a landing gear issue. Song Kyung-hoon, a Jeju Air executive, said the issue was resolved through communication with a land-based equipment center, but the pilot decided to return to Gimpo as a precautionary measure.

Joo said officials were reviewing whether there might have been communication problems between air traffic controllers and the pilot. “Our current understanding is that, at some point during the go-around process, communication became somewhat ineffective or was interrupted, ahead of the landing and impact,” he said.

Ministry officials said Monday the plane’s flight data and cockpit audio recorders were moved to a research center at Gimpo airport ahead of their analysis. Ministry officials earlier said it would take months to complete the investigation of the crash.

The Muan crash is South Korea’s deadliest aviation disaster since 1997, when a Korean Airlines plane crashed in Guam, killing 228 people on board.

The crash left many South Koreans shocked and ashamed, with the government announcing a seven-day national mourning period through Jan. 4. Some questioned whether the crash involved safety or regulatory issues, such as a 2022 Halloween crush in Seoul that killed 160 people and a 2014 ferry sinking that killed 304 people.

The Transport Ministry said authorities have identified 146 bodies and are collecting DNA and fingerprint samples from the other 33.

Park Han Shin, a representative of the bereaved families, said they were told that the bodies were so badly damaged that officials need time before returning them to their families.

“I demand that the government mobilize more personnel to return our brothers and family members as intact as possible more swiftly,” he said, choking down tears.

The crash was yet more major news for South Koreans already reeling from a political crisis set off by Yoon’s martial law decree, which brought hundreds of troops into Seoul streets and revived traumatic memories of past military rule in the 1970-80s.

The political tumult resulted in the opposition-controlled National Assembly impeaching Yoon and Han. The safety minister stepped down and the police chief was arrested over their roles in the martial law inforcement.

The absence of top officials responsible for managing disasters has led to concerns.

“We are deeply worried whether the Central Disaster and Safety Countermeasures Headquarters really can handle the disaster,” the mass-circulation JoongAng Ilbo newspaper said in an editorial Monday.



source https://time.com/7204151/south-korea-inspect-boeing-aircraft-crash/

TIME’s Top 10 Photos of 2024

In a time of viral sensations, the influence of photojournalism can go beyond newsworthiness, as images are propelled into an online world where stories are shaped in an instant. Think of the first image you saw of Thailand’s famous pygmy hippo Moo Deng, which spread across social media in September so rapidly you almost couldn’t keep up; it created a global star and drove new levels of tourism to the Khao Kheow Open Zoo. Or think of the image from the day of President Donald Trump’s attempted assassination in July, the one with his fist raised in the air in defiance. In the weeks following, it adorned t-shirts and posters, becoming a symbolic image to many who support him.

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When TIME’s photo department got together to create our annual list of the year’s top 10 photos, we first had to tackle the definition of an influential photo. Because those images gained so much notoriety over the course of the year, did that mean we were obligated to place them on this list? (We did not.) Should an image receive recognition for the sheer fact that it was shared across the world and started a conversation? Or should it be chosen solely for the fact that it was beautifully framed and composed? Is viralness synonymous with impact?

The truth is that all these definitions can be true. In order to fully capture the essence of 2024, and to honor the power of photography, we needed to consider multiple categories and forms of importance. The ten photos below are the result of many conversations in which we weighed the images from this year that made us feel the most—and question the most. These are the images we always came back to.


Warning: Some of the following images are graphic in nature and might be disturbing to some viewers.

APTOPIX Iceland Volcano

‘Two Powerful Forces of Nature’

After eight centuries of silence, a volcano in southwestern Iceland began erupting again in December 2023. Following its third recent eruption, in February of this year, photographer Marco Di Marco captured this image of lava after it crossed the main road to Grindavik, heading toward the area of the popular Blue Lagoon spa.

Di Marco was keeping a safe distance in the Blue Lagoon parking lot when he took this photo by drone. Knowing that he might have to move to an even safer spot soon, he still attempted to create the most effective image. “I wanted to get a closer view of the lava-flow front, trying to frame all the elements that can describe the situation: the molten lava, the road, the burning asphalt, and the snow-covered terrain,” he says.

The image, while beautiful to look at, still conveys a sense of urgency, as you witness the lava enveloping the road, contrasting with the cold snow underneath it. “I think it resonates because the photo shows an unusual combination of natural elements that most viewers don’t get to see on a daily basis,” explains di Marco. “Both lava and snow frame the road, the only witness of human presence between these two powerful forces of nature.”


Aftermath of a Russian missile attack in Kharkiv

‘Destruction, Pain and Solidarity’

On the morning of Jan. 23, Russian troops launched a strike on residential areas of Kharkiv, Ukraine. Photographer Sofiia Gatilova was there when the first explosion hit. “Here we hear explosions before the alarm, because Russian missiles take about 30 seconds to reach the city,” she says. “So I started to gather myself with the first explosion.” It was a scene Gatilova has seen many times before. “Firefighters putting out fires and raking through rubble to get to people, the wounded looking for medics, who are in short supply, volunteers providing medical care and setting up a first aid station, residents of the building looking at their destroyed home, relatives are looking for each other.”

When asked about what goes through her mind while photographing an image like this, Gatilova says, “I haven’t felt anything for a long time while working. I understand with my brain that what is happening is terrible, but you can’t let your feelings get the better of you, because in that case it will be impossible to work.”

“For me, any photograph that is published is a visualization of the general context of the event and it is very important to put certain meanings in the viewer’s head,” she explains. “The foreground is almost never enough. Medics provide assistance, this is logical, but the context is extremely important. That is why I chose this shooting point: all the consequences of the shelling are visible, from the destroyed house to the destroyed life. This is a reflection of the Ukrainian present—destruction, pain and solidarity.”


APTOPIX Israel Lebanon

‘Keep Documenting the History’

Days before this image was made, Middle East-based AP photographer Leo Correa began hearing rumors signaling the start of an Israeli offensive in Lebanon. Then, on Sept. 30, Israel began to fire a large sequence of shelling that hit the country’s border with Lebanon.

Correa went to the Golan Heights “to have at least a glimpse of what was happening,” he says. “Maybe it would be possible to see the Israel shelling at the Lebanese villages located near the border.” Even from far away, he could see the flashes from explosions and the sounds of artillery. 

Equipping himself with a longer zoom lens, he created this image using a 30-second exposure. The result shows a burning fire to the right and the trails of light from shelling directed at southern Lebanon. “It was one of these kinds of moments [when it] doesn’t matter the distance—we still need to find ways to keep documenting the history,” says Correa.


Palestinian evacuees from Gaza observe the Muslim holy month of Ramadan at Emirates Humanitarian City, in Abu Dhabi

‘Some Questions Will Sometimes Remain Unanswered’

In March of this year, around the the holiday of Ramadan, Reuters photographer Amr Alfiky got access to the Emirates Humanitarian City in Abu Dhabi. The city, which takes in people who have evacuated crisis and conflict zones, houses many who were displaced from Gaza in the midst of the Israel-Hamas War. “We saw some familiar faces of Palestinian patients who were receiving treatment in the UAE [before moving to the Humanitarian city],” says Alfiky. “They recognized us and welcomed us into their little new world.”

“This photo was one of the first frames I captured that day,” he says. “While I was still familiarizing myself with the place and the people around me, I saw Tuqa and two other children coming towards me.” He stood in place and allowed the children to play as he waited for this image to form. “I was astonished by the juxtaposition in that scene: what Tuqa lost, what she could have been doing hadn’t she lost her legs to the Israel-Hamas War, and how it shaped her relationship with the children around her on roller-skates and bicycles,” he recalls. After he took the image Tuqa approached him, smiling. “One of the things I learned from that assignment and will always stay with me is that some of our most powerful work as photojournalists could sometimes be the simplest.”

After some time had passed, Alfiky and a fellow Reuters colleague contacted the Emirates Humanitarian City for a follow-up story. In that conversation they came to learn that some of the Palestinian children they had photographed in their previous visit had passed away. “Now that this photo is resurfacing, I ask myself how many more children I met that day that could possibly be dead as I write this,” he says. “I usually walk into the environments I work in with curiosity and questions that I could try to find answers for visually. But some questions will sometimes remain unanswered.”


A Panoramic View Of The US-Mexico Border

‘Learned to be Tenacious’

In March, photographer John Moore was on assignment with Getty Images along the entire length of the US-Mexico border, from the Pacific to the Gulf of Mexico. “Having received a tip from a humanitarian aid worker, one night I drove to a remote spot where a group of migrants had just crossed the border into southern California,” explains Moore. “A group of Chinese migrants wearing donated ponchos huddled in the cold rain while waiting several hours for the U.S. Border Patrol agents to arrive and begin processing them for asylum. Although exhausted, people seemed generally relieved after finally arriving from such a long journey.”

With the only light coming from dimly lit campfires, Moore had to rely on high ISO settings and slow shutter speeds to be able to capture any sort of image. This resulted in the soft movement happening of the ponchos, and the glow forming the silhouettes of the mountains beyond. Looking back on what he had captured, he says: “On the back of the camera I scrolled through the take and this frame stood out. The forms within this photograph, including the painterly light and the body language between mother and child, made for a timeless image.”

Moore credits the ability to capture an image like this partly on newer technology but also, “I’ve learned to be tenacious,” he says. “Having worked in this profession more than three decades, half of it covering immigration along the border, I’ve had times where I’ve given up on a picture too early and then been disappointed later during the edit. We hope the public will remember our most powerful images but, as photojournalists, which ones will we remember most? The ones we miss. But not this time.”


Donald Trump Injured During Shooting At Campaign Rally In Butler, PA

‘Keep Going, Keep Making Pictures’

On July 13, photographer Anna Moneymaker was assigned to cover a campaign rally for Donald Trump in Butler, Pa. In an attempt to capture some new angles, she began to move around the podium where Trump stood. “My idea for a picture wasn’t really working and the Secret Service agents wanted me to move back to the front of the stage, so I started to crawl back—and that’s when what sounded like fireworks went off,” says Moneymaker. A would-be assassin had fired multiple shots toward the stage from an elevated position; one grazed Trump’s ear. “For a split second I thought it was just new theatrics for the rally, but then the mood of the crowd shifted to horror and all the agents rushed the stage to cover [Trump],” says Moneymaker. “I then crawled further towards the side stage and that’s when I saw his face through the agents’ legs.”

Moneymaker recalls at first going numb, but after the initial shock, telling herself keep going, keep making pictures. “I made that frame of Trump surrounded by agents because I wanted to see if he was alive or not. I wanted to make an image to prove what had happened,” she says. After being disappointed with her photographic coverage at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, Moneymaker credits personal growth and hazard training provided by her editors at Getty Images for her ability to act fast and make images at the rally in Butler. 

Many powerful images were made that day, but Moneymaker was able to capture the essence of the moment. Her work allows us to see a full picture of what unfolded the moments after Trump was struck and “proves the importance of having plenty of photojournalists present for campaign events, to make sure everything is documented,” says Moneymaker. “I can be pretty hard on myself and compare myself to other folks in the industry,” she says, “but making this image reminded me that letting all that go can lighten the mental load and make you better at your job: [photographing] what matters.”


TOPSHOT-SURFING-OLY-PARIS-2024-BEST OF-DAY3

‘Walking on the Clouds’

When photographer Jerome Brouillet snapped this image of Brazilian surfer Gabriel Medina, he didn’t fully grasp how viral it was about to become. “At first, I thought it would make a great photo for news articles because it wasn’t a typical surfing shot,” explains Brouillet. “Gabriel’s gesture, the alignment of his board connected by the leash, really caught my attention. At that moment, I didn’t even realize looking at my small camera screen that he was literally ‘walking’ on the clouds.”

Still, it took Brouillet a few more days to fully understand why the image was getting so much attention on social media. “First, it looks almost unreal, which draws the attention of anyone who sees it,” he says. “The composition is also key. Gabriel in celebration, seemingly walking on a cloud, perfectly aligned with his surfboard. But for me, the real success of this photo is that it’s not a shot of someone surfing. It speaks to everyone. It’s like the iconic image of Muhammad Ali after he knocked out Sonny Liston. You don’t need to be a boxing fan to ‘get’ that picture.”

He remains surprised and grateful for the response the image got. “I received so much love and tons of kind messages and emails from all over the world, and a lot from Brazil,” he says. “But more than that, some people I didn’t even know tagged me in social media posts when I wasn’t credited, insisting that the photographer should be acknowledged.”


APTOPIX California Wildfires

‘Fleeing Fast-Approaching Flames’

For many years, photographer Noah Berger has been documenting wildfires raging through California—experience that gives him the knowledge he needs to make images while navigating rapidly spreading fires. On July 25, he was shooting the Park Fire, which went on to become California’s second largest single-ignition wildfire in state history, burning just over 429,000 acres.

“I photographed this fox, fleeing fast-approaching flames, as the Park Fire raced into a mountain-top community near Chico, Calif.,” Berger tells TIME in an email. “Fueled by wind and dry vegetation, the fire’s dark column of smoke began rotating as it climbed a hillside—this is always a scary situation since it can cause erratic fire growth.” 

Though he was there to document evacuating human residents, the sprinting fox caught his eye. In a split second he made this image, with the fox moving so quickly that most of his attempts were out of focus. “Many readers thought the fox was running through flames, but the grass is actually tinted orange by flames across the street, not on fire yet,” he says. “Embers flying high above the ground caused an extremely rapid rate of fire spread. Shortly after taking this image, I spent about 30 minutes bunkered down in a small dirt parking area surrounded by intense flames.”


Israeli attacks on Gaza continue

‘Desperate Search for Signs of Life’

On June 14, Ali Jadallah, a Gaza-based photographer with the Anadolu Agency, heard the sound of an explosion in Deir al Balah, a city in the central Gaza Strip. Arriving before any ambulances and civil defense teams, he captured this image of civilians helping each other out of the rubble following an explosion from an Israeli strike. “Capturing the photo just minutes after the event was far from easy,” recalls Jadallah. “Thick smoke filled the air, people were in a state of panic, and screams echoed all around.”

Even after more than a year of war, doing such work remains shocking for the photographer. “I’ve never grown used to witnessing such devastation, and I doubt I ever will. No one can truly accept the sight of death, destruction, and blood. Each time I photograph the injured, the dead, and the aftermath of destruction, or inhale the acrid smoke still lingering after an attack, I am flooded with a familiar, haunting feeling,” says Jadallah. “It takes me back to the moment my family’s home was bombed and they were killed—a memory that has become a recurring nightmare. I relive it with every similar scene I witness. It’s a pain I cannot escape, made worse by seeing others endure the same agony.”

Through all this, Jadallah continues to work to document the story of the people of Gaza: “Perhaps the raw power of this photograph lies in the fact that I was there in those first critical moments—the moments of shock, chaos, and the desperate search for signs of life.”


NFL Super Bowl LVIII, Las Vegas, USA - 11 Feb 2024

‘Whatever Happened on the Field’

On the night of Super Bowl LVIII between the Kansas City Chiefs and the San Francisco 49ers, there were two sets of fans watching their televisions. Those who were rooting for their favorite football team and the other, supporters of singer-songwriter Taylor Swift hoping to catch a glimpse of her in the stands.

Photographer Charles Baus had photographed three other Super Bowls before so, as always, his main objective was to cover the action on the field, but his eye was also on the viral story of the relationship between Swift and Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce. “During the game I had spotted Taylor Swift in her luxury suite and figured she would eventually make it to the sidelines if the Chiefs had won the Super Bowl,” says Baus. “Since my photo position was going to be in the upper deck for the game, I came prepared with my long 600 mm lens. This would get me close enough to get good shots of whatever happened on the field.”

In the chaos of the end of the game, while capturing the excitement and dejection of each team, he simultaneously kept his eye on Swift as she made her way onto the field. “There were hundreds of people on the field and I managed to continue to follow her as she made her way through everyone and eventually to where she met Travis,” he says. Then, he was able to capture this quintessential image—a usual celebration between partners of players after a Super Bowl win, but one that reached far beyond fans of football.



source https://time.com/7204123/time-top-10-photos-2024/

How Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Is Diagnosed

Ultrasound echocardiogram computer monitor in heart clinic

Your heart is a muscle. As Dr. Noah Moss, an advanced heart failure and transplant cardiologist at the Mount Sinai Fuster Hospital in New York City, puts it, “a very special muscle, but a muscle.”

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, or HCM, is a genetic disease in which the heart muscle grows thicker than normal. You might think of the term “big-hearted” to connote something good, says Dr. Matthew W. Martinez, director of Atlantic Health System Sports Cardiology at Morristown Medical Center in Morristown, N.J., and a nationally recognized expert in HCM. But with this condition, “there’s too much of a good thing, and that extra thickness leads to the problems associated with this disease,” he explains. The heart is inefficient (it doesn’t squeeze out enough blood), and obstruction in the heart cavity leads to murmurs that can worsen with exercise, make you breathless, and create electrical changes inside the heart.

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Here’s what to know about how cardiologists diagnose the condition.

What Is Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy?

HCM can manifest in childhood, adolescence, or any time in adulthood. 

Doctors typically divide the condition into two forms: obstructive (oHCM) and non-obstructive (nHCM). The obstructive form, which represents about two-thirds of the entire HCM population, occurs when the mitral valve moves abnormally, in a manner that causes obstruction of blood flow between the heart and the aorta. “Both forms can cause shortness of breath, which worsens with exertion,” says Dr. Ronald Wharton, director of the Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Program, Cardiovascular Institute, Northwell Health at North Shore University Hospital in Manhasset, N.Y. “The obstructive form also causes lightheadedness that can be worsened with exertion, bending down, or a rapid change in position, [such as] quickly standing up.”

Unfortunately, HCM often flies under the radar since its symptoms aren’t unique to the disease. “Not all patients have a murmur, and not all patients who have a murmur will have one when they are sitting on an examination table,” says Wharton. “If efforts are not made to elicit the murmur—often the case in a busy office—the physical exam can easily miss the diagnosis.” (The most common way for doctors to elicit a murmur is the “Valsalva” maneuver, in which patients are asked to breathe out while they pinch their nose or asked to “bear down as if having a bowel movement.”)

HCM is important to diagnose in a timely manner to prevent the development of clinical manifestations of the disease, such as shortness of breath with walking, lightheadedness, or the feeling of intense heart beating, says Moss. Then, in rare cases—about 1% of those with HCM —the disease is associated with sudden cardiac death due to abnormal heart rhythms that result in the heart ceasing to beat effectively. (According to Martinez, the risk of sudden death from HCM can rise in some groups, such as younger people, those with a family history of sudden cardiac death, and those with scar tissue by MRI of the heart.)

Read More: What to Know About Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy in Kids

If you’re a patient who has a very high risk of sudden cardiac death, Moss explains that your care team will recommend the implantation of a defibrillator, which is a device that continuously monitors the heart and can shock it out of a deadly arrhythmia if it detects it. Still, Martinez reassures individuals that this is a disease with normal longevity. “Most people live well into their 80s with the disease,” he says. “The majority of people live a healthy life. You can still exercise, you can still participate in life, but you do need to be seen [regularly by a cardiologist].”

HCM is typically diagnosed when evaluating the symptoms associated with the disease, or after an abnormal electrocardiogram (EKG). Typically, EKGs are administered during a routine wellness visit or for evaluation of an HCM symptom, or during screening of family members of people with HCM, says Moss. (Screening of first-degree relatives—a person’s parent, sibling, or child—is recommended after a family member is diagnosed with HCM.) 

The earlier you know you have HCM, the sooner you can start treatment. Seeing a cardiologist for regular check-ups is essential, experts agree—especially if a family member has the disease or you’re exhibiting symptoms associated with HCM.

Why it Goes Undiagnosed

HCM affects roughly 1 in 250 to 1 in 500 people. Unfortunately, not everyone who has HCM is aware of it, especially because a large portion of those with HCM are asymptomatic. “About a million people in the United States carry the disease, but only 150,000 have a diagnosis. So that tells us about 85% of the time, it’s missed,” says Martinez. “It’s hiding in plain sight.”

Symptoms such as breathlessness, exercise intolerance, and feeling like your heart is racing can happen over a long period of time. That can lead to what Martinez calls “insidious disease onset.” “You say, ‘Hey, I’m just older. I’m out of shape. I don’t exercise as much.’ And you ignore it,” he says. 

Wharton echoes this sentiment, noting that the available data suggest patients often go undiagnosed for three to five years following the onset of symptoms. 

Echocardiogram

Echocardiograms, which are about 90% effective at finding HCM, are the first-line standard when it comes to diagnosing the disease. While an abnormal EKG is often the first sign of HCM, doctors make the official HCM diagnosis off an echocardiogram, often called an echo.

An echocardiogram is also the most practical way to diagnose HCM. “It is commonly available, provides information on both structure and function, is relatively inexpensive, well-tolerated, and performed without significant risk to the patient,” says Moss. After you’ve been diagnosed with HCM, echos have the additional benefit of helping doctors assess how you’re responding to treatment.

Read More: 9 Weird Symptoms Cardiologists Say You Should Never Ignore

Adds Wharton:“[An echo] is superb not just for assessing the anatomy, but also assessing the changes in the pressures within the heart chambers.”

Think of an echo as an ultrasound of your heart. “It allows us to basically see through the chest wall and visualize the heart and the flow of blood through it. We can measure the thickness of the heart muscle, see what area of the heart is affected, and see if and how the thickness is impacting the normal heart function,” explains Moss. The exam takes about 40 minutes as you lie on a table in a darkened room with heartbeat-monitoring sensors attached to your chest. Then, a cardiac sonographer applies gel to your chest and uses a probe, called a transducer, which creates moving images of your heart and other structures in the chest. It doesn’t hurt: “All you feel is the cool gel on your chest and pressure from the transducer,” says Moss.

Cardiovascular MRI

Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, or a cardiovascular MRI, is another valuable tool in diagnosing HCM. After receiving an abnormal EKG, an echo is often the first line of evaluation for patients, but some people will still need a cardiac MRI to confirm the diagnosis, says Martinez.

In general, a cardiac MRI usually confirms the HCM diagnosis previously determined by an echocardiogram. “Its use is primarily to assist in assessing risk for dangerous heart rhythms. It can also sometimes find other diagnoses of other, often rarer conditions which can masquerade as HCM,” adds Wharton, such as cardiac amyloidosis and Danon disease.

Read More: How Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Progresses in Adults

“During the MRI, you lie on a bed that moves inside a tube-shaped scanner,” says Moss. “You’ll need to lie still and hold your breath for some parts of the scan.” It’s painless, but some patients can experience claustrophobia during the test, he says, noting that it can take up to 90 minutes to complete the study. 

Why a Diagnosis Doesn’t Spell Doom

After comprehensive assessment, most of the time, medications for symptom relief and monitoring help patients. Asymptomatic patients can usually start with just monitoring.

If you were recently diagnosed with HCM, keep in mind that it shouldn’t prevent you from leading a healthy and active life. In fact, in 2023, Martinez and his colleagues saw about 2,000 patients with HCM, some of whom were Division 1 college athletes or professional athletes, including a number of NBA and NFL players.

“We have lots of great outcomes,” says Martinez. “My favorite thing to hear from patients when they leave the room [is], ‘I feel so much better about this disease than I did when I came here.’ And we literally have that every single day.”



source https://time.com/7200910/how-hypertrophic-cardiomyopathy-is-diagnosed/

2024年12月29日 星期日

How Jimmy Carter’s Presidential Election Victory Helped ‘Heal Ancient Wounds’ of Racism

The career of Jimmy Carter, the U.S. President who died on Dec. 29 at age 100, will be remembered for many things: his peanut-farming background, his speedy rise to political fame and fall after one term, his handling — or mishandling — of the energy crisis and the Iran hostage crisis.

Another achievement, from early in his career, may be less well known, but is just as worthy of remembrance.

The mid-1970s, when Carter became a national public figure, was a time of transition, full of the aftershocks of the progress and devastation that had characterized the previous decade, not least in the arena of the civil rights movement. Carter was a Georgian of many generations, whose farming family’s presence in the South predated the United States itself. He had no trouble establishing his Southern credentials, but he also differed from many of his neighbors when it came to integration and other racial issues.

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As TIME recounted in a 1976 profile of the then-candidate, his mother, known as “Miss Lillian,” was a formidable presence in her four children’s lives and encouraged them to have compassion for all people, regardless of race—despite any judgment from neighbors steeped in prejudice.

In 1966, Carter, the oldest of those four children, lost the Georgia gubernatorial primary to a segregationist. Four years later, he managed to win the support of some prominent segregationists in the state by ceding ground to them: He said that he would allow George Wallace, perhaps the most famous of them all, to speak at the state house if he won. But, after winning the office, Carter made it clear that he hadn’t totally abandoned his principles, as TIME recounted in the 1976 story:

Elected by a landslide vote, Carter appeared to be a changed man in office—leading to accusations that he had misled the voters. In his inaugural address, he proclaimed: “The time for racial discrimination is over. No poor rural white or black person should ever have to bear the additional burden of being deprived of the opportunity of an education, a job or simple justice.” [Segregationist former Governor Lester] Maddox cried foul and started sniping at Carter. He has never stopped. He even pursued Carter to New Hampshire last month to denounce him as “the McGovern of ‘76” and “the Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde of ‘76.”

Unlike [former governor Carl] Sanders, Carter appointed blacks to posts at every level of state government. (Sanders today concedes: “Carter is far more liberal than I ever was.”) He set up a biracial “disorder unit” of various experts to mediate clashes between blacks and whites. Since Georgia did not have federal referees to enforce the Voting Rights Act of 1965, Carter deputized all the high school principals in the state as registrars so that they could sign up voters at school. He overhauled the state prison and mental hospitals, which contained a high proportion of blacks. He set up a system of drug treatment and day care centers.

Carter appealed to blacks perhaps even more strongly by making certain symbolic gestures. When black legislators had a party in their part of town, they sent a routine invitation to the Governor. Much to their surprise, he showed up, and word spread quickly that the Governor was eating chitlins with the brothers. In the state capitol in 1974, Carter placed a portrait of Martin Luther King Jr. on a wall amid pictures of other Georgia notables, while an integrated audience sang We Shall Overcome. Many blacks who did not vote for Carter swung over to his support. Now his presidential drive is endorsed by men as disparate as Martin Luther King Sr. and Henry Aaron.

Sure enough, in the presidential primaries that year, again and again Carter carried the African American vote. As TIME remarked, “The phenomenon of blacks backing a Southern white reared in the Georgia backwoods is one of the most intriguing aspects of the campaign to date.” Though support for Carter was driven by his record of conciliation, which he often couched in spiritual language, it was also helped by the fact that George Wallace was one of his main opponents.

That choice helped many voters overlook the moments when Carter’s civil rights record could be called into doubt, such as his wavering support for busing to integrate schools. During the presidential campaign, Carter also had to apologize for what he called a “careless” choice of words in defense of his stance in opposition to legislating the integration of neighborhoods. (His discussion of the “purity” of communities called to mind, for many, some of history’s worst examples of prejudice.) But as TIME noted when naming him 1976’s Man of the Year, his success “destroyed forever the hopes of Alabama’s George Wallace of rising to national power —a possibility already dimmed by the bullet of a would-be assassin. By showing that a nonracist Southerner could win a major party nomination, Carter gave new pride to his region and went far to heal ancient wounds.”

After his Presidency, following a period of relative seclusion in his Georgia hometown, he returned to public life and brought his ideals with him, devoting his life to bettering the world. In 1989, TIME declared that he “may be the best former President America has ever had”; in 2002, he was awarded a Nobel Peace Price.

Not that those who followed his career would be surprised. Asked by TIME, shortly before he came into the White House, whether all the work he had to do was an overwhelming prospect, Jimmy Carter showed the same humble dedication that would carry him through the decades that followed: “Yes,” he said, “but not so much that I would want someone else to do it.”

Read an interview with Jimmy Carter on the eve of his inauguration: “I Look Forward to the Job”

Read Jimmy Carter’s “Man of the Year” cover story from 1977: I’m Jimmy Carter, and…



source https://time.com/5353854/jimmy-carter-civil-rights-death/

Jimmy Carter, the 39th U.S. President, Has Died at 100

Jimmy Carter

ATLANTA — Jimmy Carter, the peanut farmer who won the presidency in the wake of the Watergate scandal and Vietnam War, endured humbling defeat after one tumultuous term and then redefined life after the White House as a global humanitarian, has died. He was 100 years old.

The longest-lived American president died on Sunday, more than a year after entering hospice care, at his home in the small town of Plains, Georgia, where he and his wife, Rosalynn, who died at 96 in November 2023, spent most of their lives, The Carter Center said.

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“Our founder, former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, passed away this afternoon in Plains, Georgia,” the center simply said in posting about Carter’s death on the social media platform X.

Businessman, Navy officer, evangelist, politician, negotiator, author, woodworker, citizen of the world — Carter forged a path that still challenges political assumptions and stands out among the 45 men who reached the nation’s highest office. The 39th president leveraged his ambition with a keen intellect, deep religious faith and prodigious work ethic, conducting diplomatic missions into his 80s and building houses for the poor well into his 90s.

“My faith demands — this is not optional — my faith demands that I do whatever I can, wherever I am, whenever I can, for as long as I can, with whatever I have to try to make a difference,” Carter once said.

A President from Plains

A moderate Democrat, Carter entered the 1976 presidential race as a little-known Georgia governor with a broad smile, outspoken Baptist mores and technocratic plans reflecting his education as an engineer. His no-frills campaign depended on public financing, and his promise not to deceive the American people resonated after Richard Nixon’s disgrace and U.S. defeat in southeast Asia.

“If I ever lie to you, if I ever make a misleading statement, don’t vote for me. I would not deserve to be your president,” Carter repeated before narrowly beating Republican incumbent Gerald Ford, who had lost popularity pardoning Nixon.

Carter governed amid Cold War pressures, turbulent oil markets and social upheaval over racism, women’s rights and America’s global role. His most acclaimed achievement in office was a Mideast peace deal that he brokered by keeping Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin at the bargaining table for 13 days in 1978. That Camp David experience inspired the post-presidential center where Carter would establish so much of his legacy.

Yet Carter’s electoral coalition splintered under double-digit inflation, gasoline lines and the 444-day hostage crisis in Iran. His bleakest hour came when eight Americans died in a failed hostage rescue in April 1980, helping to ensure his landslide defeat to Republican Ronald Reagan.

Carter acknowledged in his 2020 “White House Diary” that he could be “micromanaging” and “excessively autocratic,” complicating dealings with Congress and the federal bureaucracy. He also turned a cold shoulder to Washington’s news media and lobbyists, not fully appreciating their influence on his political fortunes.

“It didn’t take us long to realize that the underestimation existed, but by that time we were not able to repair the mistake,” Carter told historians in 1982, suggesting that he had “an inherent incompatibility” with Washington insiders.

Carter insisted his overall approach was sound and that he achieved his primary objectives — to “protect our nation’s security and interests peacefully” and “enhance human rights here and abroad” — even if he fell spectacularly short of a second term.

And then, the world

Ignominious defeat, though, allowed for renewal. The Carters founded The Carter Center in 1982 as a first-of-its-kind base of operations, asserting themselves as international peacemakers and champions of democracy, public health and human rights.

“I was not interested in just building a museum or storing my White House records and memorabilia,” Carter wrote in a memoir published after his 90th birthday. “I wanted a place where we could work.”

That work included easing nuclear tensions in North and South Korea, helping to avert a U.S. invasion of Haiti and negotiating cease-fires in Bosnia and Sudan. By 2022, The Carter Center had declared at least 113 elections in Latin America, Asia and Africa to be free or fraudulent. Recently, the center began monitoring U.S. elections as well.

Carter’s stubborn self-assuredness and even self-righteousness proved effective once he was unencumbered by the Washington order, sometimes to the point of frustrating his successors.

He went “where others are not treading,” he said, to places like Ethiopia, Liberia and North Korea, where he secured the release of an American who had wandered across the border in 2010.

“I can say what I like. I can meet whom I want. I can take on projects that please me and reject the ones that don’t,” Carter said.

He announced an arms-reduction-for-aid deal with North Korea without clearing the details with Bill Clinton’s White House. He openly criticized President George W. Bush for the 2003 invasion of Iraq. He also criticized America’s approach to Israel with his 2006 book “Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid.” And he repeatedly countered U.S. administrations by insisting North Korea should be included in international affairs, a position that most aligned Carter with Republican President Donald Trump.

Among the center’s many public health initiatives, Carter vowed to eradicate the guinea worm parasite during his lifetime, and nearly achieved it: Cases dropped from millions in the 1980s to nearly a handful. With hardhats and hammers, the Carters also built homes with Habitat for Humanity.

The Nobel committee’s 2002 Peace Prize cites his “untiring effort to find peaceful solutions to international conflicts, to advance democracy and human rights, and to promote economic and social development.” Carter should have won it alongside Sadat and Begin in 1978, the chairman added.

Carter accepted the recognition saying there was more work to be done.

“The world is now, in many ways, a more dangerous place,” he said. “The greater ease of travel and communication has not been matched by equal understanding and mutual respect.”

“An epic American life”

Carter’s globetrotting took him to remote villages where he met little “Jimmy Carters,” so named by admiring parents. But he spent most of his days in the same one-story Plains house — expanded and guarded by Secret Service agents — where they lived before he became governor. He regularly taught Sunday School lessons at Maranatha Baptist Church until his mobility declined and the coronavirus pandemic raged. Those sessions drew visitors from around the world to the small sanctuary where Carter will receive his final send-off after a state funeral at Washington’s National Cathedral.

The common assessment that he was a better ex-president than president rankled Carter and his allies. His prolific post-presidency gave him a brand above politics, particularly for Americans too young to witness him in office. But Carter also lived long enough to see biographers and historians reassess his White House years more generously.

His record includes the deregulation of key industries, reduction of U.S. dependence on foreign oil, cautious management of the national debt and notable legislation on the environment, education and mental health. He focused on human rights in foreign policy, pressuring dictators to release thousands of political prisoners. He acknowledged America’s historical imperialism, pardoned Vietnam War draft evaders and relinquished control of the Panama Canal. He normalized relations with China.

“I am not nominating Jimmy Carter for a place on Mount Rushmore,” Stuart Eizenstat, Carter’s domestic policy director, wrote in a 2018 book.

“He was not a great president” but also not the “hapless and weak” caricature voters rejected in 1980, Eizenstat said. Rather, Carter was “good and productive” and “delivered results, many of which were realized only after he left office.”

Madeleine Albright, a national security staffer for Carter and Clinton’s secretary of state, wrote in Eizenstat’s forward that Carter was “consequential and successful” and expressed hope that “perceptions will continue to evolve” about his presidency.

“Our country was lucky to have him as our leader,” said Albright, who died in 2022.

Jonathan Alter, who penned a comprehensive Carter biography published in 2020, said in an interview that Carter should be remembered for “an epic American life” spanning from a humble start in a home with no electricity or indoor plumbing through decades on the world stage across two centuries.

“He will likely go down as one of the most misunderstood and underestimated figures in American history,” Alter told The Associated Press.

A small-town start

James Earl Carter Jr. was born Oct. 1, 1924, in Plains and spent his early years in nearby Archery. His family was a minority in the mostly Black community, decades before the civil rights movement played out at the dawn of Carter’s political career.

Carter, who campaigned as a moderate on race relations but governed more progressively, talked often of the influence of his Black caregivers and playmates but also noted his advantages: His land-owning father sat atop Archery’s tenant-farming system and owned a main street grocery. His mother, Lillian, would become a staple of his political campaigns.

Seeking to broaden his world beyond Plains and its population of fewer than 1,000 — then and now — Carter won an appointment to the U.S. Naval Academy, graduating in 1946. That same year he married Rosalynn Smith, another Plains native, a decision he considered more important than any he made as head of state. She shared his desire to see the world, sacrificing college to support his Navy career.

Carter climbed in rank to lieutenant, but then his father was diagnosed with cancer, so the submarine officer set aside his ambitions of admiralty and moved the family back to Plains. His decision angered Rosalynn, even as she dived into the peanut business alongside her husband.

Carter again failed to talk with his wife before his first run for office — he later called it “inconceivable” not to have consulted her on such major life decisions — but this time, she was on board.

“My wife is much more political,” Carter told the AP in 2021.

He won a state Senate seat in 1962 but wasn’t long for the General Assembly and its back-slapping, deal-cutting ways. He ran for governor in 1966 — losing to arch-segregationist Lester Maddox — and then immediately focused on the next campaign.

Carter had spoken out against church segregation as a Baptist deacon and opposed racist “Dixiecrats” as a state senator. Yet as a local school board leader in the 1950s he had not pushed to end school segregation even after the Supreme Court’s Brown v. Board of Education decision, despite his private support for integration. And in 1970, Carter ran for governor again as the more conservative Democrat against Carl Sanders, a wealthy businessman Carter mocked as “Cufflinks Carl.” Sanders never forgave him for anonymous, race-baiting flyers, which Carter disavowed.

Ultimately, Carter won his races by attracting both Black voters and culturally conservative whites. Once in office, he was more direct.

“I say to you quite frankly that the time for racial discrimination is over,” he declared in his 1971 inaugural address, setting a new standard for Southern governors that landed him on the cover of Time magazine.

Jimmy Who?

His statehouse initiatives included environmental protection, boosting rural education and overhauling antiquated executive branch structures. He proclaimed Martin Luther King Jr. Day in the slain civil rights leader’s home state. And he decided, as he received presidential candidates in 1972, that they were no more talented than he was.

In 1974, he ran Democrats’ national campaign arm. Then he declared his own candidacy for 1976. An Atlanta newspaper responded with the headline: “Jimmy Who?”

The Carters and a “Peanut Brigade” of family members and Georgia supporters camped out in Iowa and New Hampshire, establishing both states as presidential proving grounds. His first Senate endorsement: a young first-termer from Delaware named Joe Biden.

Yet it was Carter’s ability to navigate America’s complex racial and rural politics that cemented the nomination. He swept the Deep South that November, the last Democrat to do so, as many white Southerners shifted to Republicans in response to civil rights initiatives.

A self-declared “born-again Christian,” Carter drew snickers by referring to Scripture in a Playboy magazine interview, saying he “had looked on many women with lust. I’ve committed adultery in my heart many times.” The remarks gave Ford a new foothold and television comedians pounced — including NBC’s new “Saturday Night Live” show. But voters weary of cynicism in politics found it endearing.

Carter chose Minnesota Sen. Walter “Fritz” Mondale as his running mate on a “Grits and Fritz” ticket. In office, he elevated the vice presidency and the first lady’s office. Mondale’s governing partnership was a model for influential successors Al Gore, Dick Cheney and Biden. Rosalynn Carter was one of the most involved presidential spouses in history, welcomed into Cabinet meetings and huddles with lawmakers and top aides.

The Carters presided with uncommon informality: He used his nickname “Jimmy” even when taking the oath of office, carried his own luggage and tried to silence the Marine Band’s “Hail to the Chief.” They bought their clothes off the rack. Carter wore a cardigan for a White House address, urging Americans to conserve energy by turning down their thermostats. Amy, the youngest of four children, attended District of Columbia public school.

Washington’s social and media elite scorned their style. But the larger concern was that “he hated politics,” according to Eizenstat, leaving him nowhere to turn politically once economic turmoil and foreign policy challenges took their toll.

Accomplishments and “malaise”

Carter partially deregulated the airline, railroad and trucking industries and established the departments of Education and Energy, and the Federal Emergency Management Agency. He designated millions of acres of Alaska as national parks or wildlife refuges. He appointed a then-record number of women and nonwhite people to federal posts. He never had a Supreme Court nomination, but he elevated civil rights attorney Ruth Bader Ginsburg to the nation’s second highest court, positioning her for a promotion in 1993. He appointed Paul Volker, the Federal Reserve chairman whose policies would help the economy boom in the 1980s — after Carter left office. He built on Nixon’s opening with China, and though he tolerated autocrats in Asia, pushed Latin America from dictatorships to democracy.

But he couldn’t immediately tame inflation or the related energy crisis.

And then came Iran.

After he admitted the exiled Shah of Iran to the U.S. for medical treatment, the American Embassy in Tehran was overrun in 1979 by followers of the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. Negotiations to free the hostages broke down repeatedly ahead of the failed rescue attempt.

The same year, Carter signed SALT II, the new strategic arms treaty with Leonid Brezhnev of the Soviet Union, only to pull it back, impose trade sanctions and order a U.S. boycott of the Moscow Olympics after the Soviets invaded Afghanistan.

Hoping to instill optimism, he delivered what the media dubbed his “malaise” speech, although he didn’t use that word. He declared the nation was suffering “a crisis of confidence.” By then, many Americans had lost confidence in the president, not themselves.

Carter campaigned sparingly for reelection because of the hostage crisis, instead sending Rosalynn as Sen. Edward M. Kennedy challenged him for the Democratic nomination. Carter famously said he’d “kick his ass,” but was hobbled by Kennedy as Reagan rallied a broad coalition with “make America great again” appeals and asking voters whether they were “better off than you were four years ago.”

Reagan further capitalized on Carter’s lecturing tone, eviscerating him in their lone fall debate with the quip: “There you go again.” Carter lost all but six states and Republicans rolled to a new Senate majority.

Carter successfully negotiated the hostages’ freedom after the election, but in one final, bitter turn of events, Tehran waited until hours after Carter left office to let them walk free.

“A wonderful life”

At 56, Carter returned to Georgia with “no idea what I would do with the rest of my life.”

Four decades after launching The Carter Center, he still talked of unfinished business.

“I thought when we got into politics we would have resolved everything,” Carter told the AP in 2021. “But it’s turned out to be much more long-lasting and insidious than I had thought it was. I think in general, the world itself is much more divided than in previous years.”

Still, he affirmed what he said when he underwent treatment for a cancer diagnosis in his 10th decade of life.

“I’m perfectly at ease with whatever comes,” he said in 2015. “I’ve had a wonderful life. I’ve had thousands of friends, I’ve had an exciting, adventurous and gratifying existence.”



source https://time.com/7204038/jimmy-carter-us-president-has-died-at-100/

Tornadoes in Texas and Mississippi Kill Two and Injure Six as Severe Weather System Moves East

Severe Weather Mississippi

HOUSTON — At least two people were killed and six more injured as several tornadoes touched down in Texas and Mississippi on Saturday, damaging homes and flipping vehicles as the storm system moved east across Alabama early Sunday.

The National Weather Service’s severe storm tracker indicated the system was moving east through Alabama into Georgia shortly before 4 a.m. The agency issued severe thunder storm warnings with the possibility of tornadoes in western Georgia and the northwestern tip of Florida directly above the Gulf of Mexico.

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One person died in the Liverpool area, located south of Houston, and four people suffered injuries that were not considered critical, according to Madison Polston of the Brazoria County Sheriff’s Office.

There were “multiple touchdown points” in the county between Liverpool, Hillcrest Village and Alvin. Officials knew of around 10 damaged homes but were working to determine the extent of the damage, Polston said.

In Mississippi, one person died in Adams County and two people were injured in Franklin County, according to the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency.

The National Weather Service said two tornadoes hit around Bude and the city of Brandon, ripping roofs from several buildings.

“These storms are probably going to get a lot worse this evening and overnight the further east you go,” said Josh Lichter, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service.

It appeared at least six tornadoes touched down in the Houston area, though they may discover there were more when crews go out to survey the damage, and there was damage in the area from both tornadoes and straight-line winds, Litcher said.

North of Houston, mobile homes were damaged or destroyed in Katy and Porter Heights, where the doors of a fire station were blown in, the weather service said.

The storms also caused departure delays of over an hour Saturday afternoon at Houston’s two main airports, Bush Intercontinental and Hobby, according to the website FlightAware.

About 71,000 utility customers were without power in Mississippi Saturday and the number was expected to rise, said Malary White, chief communications officer for the state’s Emergency Management Agency.

Around 3:30 a.m. Sunday, nearly 81,000 customers were without power in the state, down from 93,000 around 1 a.m., according to electric utility tracking website PowerOutage.us.

The emergency management agency did not have official damage reports Saturday. First responders were focused on ensuring safety and making sure everyone was accounted for, White said.

“We do anticipate more thorough damage assessments starting in the early morning hours,” she said.

The National Weather Service office in Birmingham, Alabama, issued overnight severe thunderstorm warnings for several areas in the southern part of the state, advising residents to seek shelter to avoid possible damaging winds up to 60 mph (96.5 kph).



source https://time.com/7204013/tornadoes-texas-mississippi-death-toll-severe-weather/

Plane Engulfed in Flames After Skidding Off the Runway in South Korea, Killing at Least 177

APTOPIX South Korea Plane Fire

SEOUL, South Korea — A passenger plane burst into flames Sunday after it skidded off a runway at a South Korean airport and slammed into a concrete fence when its front landing gear apparently failed to deploy. Most of the 181 people on board died in one of the country’s worst aviation disasters.

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The Jeju Air passenger plane crashed while landing in the town of Muan, about 290 kilometers (180 miles) south of Seoul. The Transport Ministry said the plane was a 15-year-old Boeing 737-800 jet that was returning from Bangkok and that the crash happened at 9:03 a.m.

At least 177 people — 84 women, 82 men and 11 others whose genders weren’t immediately identifiable — died in the fire, the South Korean fire agency said. Emergency workers pulled two people, both crew members, to safety. Health officials said they are conscious and not in life-threatening condition.

Two people remained missing about nine hours after the incident. Among the 177 bodies found, officials have so far identified 57 of them, the fire agency said. The passengers were predominantly South Korean, as well as two Thai nationals.

The fire agency deployed 32 fire trucks and several helicopters to contain the blaze. About 1,570 firefighters, police officers, soldiers and other officials were also sent to the site, according to the fire agency and transport ministry.

Footage of the crash aired by South Korean television channels showed the Jeju Air plane skidding across the airstrip at high speed, apparently with its landing gear still closed, overrunning the runway and colliding head-on with a concrete wall on the outskirts of the facility, triggering an explosion. Other local TV stations aired footage showing thick plumes of black smoke billowing from the plane, which was engulfed in flames.

Lee Jeong-hyeon, chief of the Muan fire station, told a televised briefing that the plane was completely destroyed, with only the tail assembly remaining recognizable among the wreckage. Lee said that workers were looking into various possibilities about what caused the crash, including whether the aircraft was struck by birds, Lee said.

Transport Ministry officials later said their early assessment of communication records show the airport control tower issued a bird strike warning to the plane shortly before it intended to land and gave its pilot permission to land in a different area. The pilot sent out a distress signal shortly before the plane went past the runway and skidded across a buffer zone before hitting the wall, the officials said.

Senior Transport Ministry official Joo Jong-wan said workers have retrieved the flight data and cockpit voice recorders of the plane’s black box, which will be examined by government experts investigating the cause of the crash and fire. He said it may take months for investigators to complete their probe. The runway at the Muan airport will be closed until Jan. 1, the ministry said.

The Transport Ministry said the plane’s passengers include two Thai nationals. Thailand’s prime minister, Paetongtarn Shinawatra, expressed deep condolences to the families of those affected by the accident in a post on social platform X. Paetongtarn said she ordered the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to provide assistance immediately.

Kerati Kijmanawat, the director of Airports of Thailand, confirmed in a statement that Jeju Air flight 7C 2216 departed from Suvarnabhumi Airport with no reports of abnormal conditions with the aircraft or on the runway.

Jeju Air in a statement expressed its “deep apology” over the crash and said it will do its “utmost to manage the aftermath of the accident.”

In a televised news conference, Kim E-bae, Jeju Air’s president, bowed deeply with other senior company officials as he apologized to bereaved families and said he feels “full responsibility” for the incident. Kim said the company hadn’t identified any mechanical problems with the aircraft following regular checkups and that he would wait for the results of government investigations into the cause of the incident.

Family members wailed as officials announced the names of some victims at a lounge in the Muan airport.

Boeing said in a statement on X it was in contact with Jeju Air and is ready to support the company in dealing with the crash.

“We extend our deepest condolences to the families who lost loved ones, and our thoughts remain with the passengers and crew,” Boeing said.

It’s one of the deadliest disasters in South Korea’s aviation history. The last time South Korea suffered a large-scale air disaster was in 1997, when a Korean Airline plane crashed in Guam, killing 228 people on board. In 2013, an Asiana Airlines plane crash-landed in San Francisco, killing three and injuring approximately 200.

Sunday’s accident was also one of the worst landing mishaps since a July 2007 crash that killed all 187 people on board and 12 others on the ground when an Airbus A320 slid off a slick airstrip in Sao Paulo and collided with a nearby building, according to data compiled by the Flight Safety Foundation, a nonprofit group aimed at improving air safety. In 2010, 158 people died when an Air India Express aircraft overshot a runway in Mangalore, India, and plummeted into a gorge before erupting into flames, according to the safety foundation.

The incident came as South Korea is embroiled into a huge political crisis triggered by President Yoon Suk Yeol’s stunning imposition of martial law and ensuing impeachment. Last Friday, South Korean lawmakers impeached acting President Han Duck-soo and suspended his duties, leading Deputy Prime Minister Choi Sang-mok to take over.

Choi ordered officials to employ all available resources to rescue the passengers and crew before he headed to Muan. Yoon’s office said his chief secretary, Chung Jin-suk, will preside over an emergency meeting between senior presidential staff later on Sunday to discuss the crash.



source https://time.com/7204002/plane-skids-off-runway-south-korea/

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Read this story in English here نمازی گروگان سابق آمریکایی در ایران است و اکنون عضو هیئت مشاوران ابتکار آزادی برای زندانیان سیاسی در...