AsianScientist (Jun. 3, 2020) – With university campuses closed and graduation ceremonies cancelled, all our previous assumptions of what higher education should look like have been thrown out the window. For better or worse, classes have moved online and look set to stay there, as educators hurry to adapt their tried-and-tested methods to new realities.
While the COVID-19 crisis feels like it will go on forever, the reality is that it will someday come to an end—hopefully sooner than later. By that time, however, higher education and indeed the entire world will be permanently transformed.
Join Wildtype Media Group’s editor in chief Dr. Rebecca Tan as she chats with Professor Brian Schmidt, Nobel Laureate and Vice-Chancellor of the Australian National University. He will be discussing the role of technology in helping universities respond to COVID-19 and how best to prepare students for an uncertain future.
Professor Schmidt is the 12th Vice-Chancellor of the Australian National University (ANU). Well known for using supernovae as cosmological probes, he won the 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics along with Saul Perlmutter and Adam Riess for providing evidence that the expansion of the universe is accelerating.
Before his appointment as Vice-Chancellor, Schmidt was a distinguished professor and an astrophysicist at the ANU Mount Stromlo Observatory and the Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics. He currently holds an Australia Research Council Federation Fellowship and was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2012.
Beyond higher education, Professor Schmidt will also be sharing his vision for a post-COVID-19 world and how we can reshape it to prioritise the environment and building resilience for all nations.
Date: Wednesday, June 10, 2020
Time: 5:00 pm Singapore/Hong Kong Time 7:00 pm Canberra time
Ella Jones became the first African-American and first woman elected mayor in Ferguson, Mo., on Tuesday, nearly six years after the city erupted in protests after a white police officer shot and killed Michael Brown, a black teenager, propelling Ferguson into the national spotlight and galvanizing the Black Lives Matter movement.
Ms. Jones, 65, and her opponent, Heather Robinett, 49, had both vowed to continue changes enacted after the 2014 shooting of Mr. Brown, including a federal consent decree, a legally binding agreement requiring reforms to a police department.
And both had made clear that they supported peaceful protests after the killing of Mr. Floyd in Minneapolis, while condemning the violence that has broken out in several cities.
“I’ve got work to do — because when you’re an African-American woman, they require more of you than they require of my counterpart,†Ms. Jones said after her victory, in a video posted online Tuesday night by the journalist Jason Rosenbaum of St. Louis Public Radio. “I know the people in Ferguson are ready to stabilize their community, and we’re going to work together to get it done.â€
Ms. Jones, who prevailed with 54 percent of the vote, will succeed James Knowles III, who has been the mayor since 2011 and could not run for re-election because of term limits. Ms. Jones lost to Mr. Knowles in the 2017 mayoral election.
A resident of Ferguson for more than 40 years, Ms. Jones is also a pastor in the African Methodist Episcopal Church.
Protests convulsed Ferguson for weeks in 2014, after the white officer, Darren Wilson, shot and killed Mr. Brown, 18. A grand jury and the Department of Justice declined to prosecute Mr. Wilson, who eventually resigned.
In 2015, Ms. Jones became the first black woman elected to the City Council, and though she was critical of the city’s law enforcement system, she did not have enthusiastic backing from protesters at the time.
“I don’t get along to go along,†she said then. “If I see something that needs to be addressed, I will address it.â€
After losing her bid for mayor, Ms. Jones said that many black residents told her that they did not believe electing her would change their own fortunes and questioned whether she had accomplished anything in her two years on the City Council.
“If you’ve been oppressed so long, it’s hard for you to break out to a new idea,†Ms. Jones said at the time. “And when you’ve been governed by fear and people telling you that the city is going to decline because an African-American person is going to be in charge, then you tend to listen to the rhetoric and don’t open your mind to new possibilities.â€
Ferguson is one of the smallest cities in the country with a federal consent decree, which includes scores of new policies to reform the police department.
Like many other cities throughout the country, Ferguson officials declared a state of emergency and issued a curfew in recent days, as the protests over police brutality have continued.
You definitely can’t rush a superdense star as it gobbles up bites of a neighbor for nearly two weeks before shooting off a burst of X-rays thousands of times brighter than our sun. But thanks to some lucky timing, that process is exactly what scientists were able to watch last summer, according to new research focused on an object called SAX J1808.4−3658.
“When we first saw that optical rise, we got really excited because the underlying theory suggested and we thought that we would get the X-ray rise two to three days later,” lead researcher Adelle Goodwin, a doctoral candidate in astronomy at Monash University in Australia, said during a news conference held at the virtual 236th American Astronomical Society meeting on June 1. “You can imagine how we were feeling about 10 days later, when there was still no X-ray detection and we were beginning to think that there wasn’t going to be an outburst.”
Goodwin had a sense of what she and her colleagues were getting into starting the research. The object they studied is a binary, or two-body system 11,000 light-years away from Earth that includes a superdense pulsar that spins 400 times per second and a tamer companion star. The pulsar, which is the rapidly spinning remnant of a star that exploded in a supernova, feeds off its companion, eventually triggering occasional bursts of X-rays.
“The pulsar will quietly pull this material from the companion star for months to years, until the disk reaches a critical size and material starts transferring directly onto the neutron star,” Goodwin said, referring to the pulsar. “When this happens, this releases a massive amount of energy and is so luminous it emits high energy X-rays.”
Astronomers first spotted the system in 1996, and every four years or so, scientists have noticed a massive outburst. Goodwin’s team hoped that they would catch sight of just that happening during the new observations gathered last year by NASA’s Swift space-based telescope. But of course, there was no guarantee.
“We definitely did get lucky,” Goodwin said. “It’s been getting longer between the outbursts, so you never know exactly when it’s going to come into outburst. By the time we put in for this monitoring proposal, the source was overdue for its outburst. So we were expecting it, but we were not even sure it was going to go off anymore.”
But late in July, things started to get interesting: the object began to glow more brightly in wavelengths detectable to the human eye. Goodwin and her colleagues hustled to get a total of seven observatories focused on the object to catch the outburst in detail.
And then, they waited. Despite hypotheses that suggested the outburst should gain speed in more energetic X-rays in a few days, the object’s activity stayed strictly in the optical part of the spectrum. It wasn’t until 12 days later that the X-ray emissions began.
The scientists believe that delay reflects the ingredients of this particular system, which is rich in helium. Helium requires more energy to ionize and glow than the main ingredient of most such systems, hydrogen, which could explain the delayed outburst, Goodwin said. “Because this system has so much helium, we think that it needs to get to a hotter temperature, and that’s why it takes longer for the rise to actually happen,” she said.
In addition to the conference presentation, Goodwin said the research has been submitted to the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
The lockdown has left a lot of people without jobs and since the film and television fraternity pays a major chunk of people, the spot boys and technicians have been left with no source of income. In over two months of the lockdown, the shoots have been put on hold indefinitely with a lot of uncertainty as to when they will resume. Shaheer Sheikh of Yeh Rishtey Hain Pyaar Ke has been supporting his staff financially and says he will continue to do so.
Speaking to another portal, Shaheer said that it is a difficult time for all of us and that we need to be there for each other. He has been helping those that are financially dependent on him, including his team and as many people as possible. He is hoping that others can do that too as he understands how difficult it must be for the daily wage earners to undergo the stress and pressure.
The re-run of his show with Erica Fernandes, Kuch Rang Pyaar Ke Aise Bhi has recently started and the fans are ecstatic!
Apple stores in the US have become targets for looters in areas affected by riots following the death of George Floyd.
The tech company has made the decision to close some of its stores and has also issued a warning to anyone tempted to try and help themselves to some of its expensive gadgetry.
According to postings on social media, iPhones are loaded with special security tracking software that knows when the phone has been taken.
If taken, a message flashes up that reads: ‘This device has been disabled and is being tracked. Local authorities will be alerted.’
An image shared on social media shows an iPhone with the screen clearly saying ‘Please return to Apple Walnut Street.’
This message flashed up on a supposedly stolen iPhone (Credits: MailOnline)
Both peaceful protests and rioting broke out in a number of US cities including Los Angeles, New York, Denver and Louisville.
Apple’s boss Tim Cook has responded to the death of George Floyd with a memo to employees in which he called it ‘senseless’.
The Apple Store in Los Angeles was targeted by looters (Valerie Macon/AFP via Getty Images)
He also explained what Apple will do to try and help the situation.
‘To stand together, we must stand up for one another, and recognize the fear, hurt, and outrage rightly provoked by the senseless killing of George Floyd and a much longer history of racism,’ he wrote in the memo, which was acquired in full by Fox.
‘That painful past is still present today – not only in the form of violence, but in the everyday experience of deeply rooted discrimination.
‘We see it in our criminal justice system, in the disproportionate toll of disease on Black and Brown communities, in the inequalities in neighborhood services and the educations our children receive.’
The Apple boss continued: ‘I have heard from so many of you that you feel afraid – afraid in your communities, afraid in your daily lives, and, most cruelly of all, afraid in your own skin. We can have no society worth celebrating unless we can guarantee freedom from fear for every person who gives this country their love, labor and life.
Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks during the 2018 Apple Worldwide Developer Conference (Getty Images)
‘At Apple, our mission has and always will be to create technology that empowers people to change the world for the better. We’ve always drawn strength from our diversity, welcomed people from every walk of life to our stores around the world, and strived to build an Apple that is inclusive of everyone.
‘But together, we must do more. Today, Apple is making donations to a number of groups, including the Equal Justice Initiative, a non-profit committed to challenging racial injustice, ending mass incarceration, and protecting the human rights of the most vulnerable people in American society.’
He concluded: ‘With every breath we take, we must commit to being that change, and to creating a better, more just world for everyone.’
Diplomats have indicated that a summit in person could take place in July | Kenzo Tribouillard/AFP via Getty Images
Officials say agreement on EU recovery plans only possible if leaders meet in person.
The European Council will not meet in person on June 19, a spokesperson for President Charles Michel said today.
The decision suggests the bloc will not reach an agreement this month on the €1.1 trillion seven-year budget and a €750 billion four-year recovery fund proposed by the European Commission.
“Following consultations @eucopresident will convene the June 19 #EUCO via videoconference,” the spokesperson tweeted. “Multiannual Financial Framework & Recovery Fund are on the agenda. This will be a thorough preparation for a next summit at a later date which should if possible be a physical meeting,†he said.
Officials say that an agreement on the final shape of the budget plans is only possible if leaders meet in person. Diplomats have indicated that a summit in person could take place in July.
Michel has been speaking on the phone with leaders over the past days about the budget plan, including with Angela Merkel. The German chancellor said previously a deal would not come in June but should come by the fall in time for the budget to begin from January 1.
Ms Kairouz granted the exemption on April 28, saying she had “deemed this premise to be of major cultural importance to the stateâ€. The exemption came before the O’Brien Group had made its formal application for a standard liquor licence on the site on May 18.
Ms Kairouz had said extending the freeze would “control the density of liquor licences and related anti-social behaviour in major entertainment precinctsâ€.
At the same time as extending the laws, Ms Kairouz removed the requirement for councils to support liquor licence applications seeking an exemption.
An impact assessment map included with the application for the project shows there are 93 other bars and venues within 500 metres of the site, licensed to serve a combined total of 34,417 patrons.
The city council only learned Ms Kairouz had allowed the 3am exemption when told by the O’Brien Group. A council officer has told the company’s planning consultants SJB the intended hours of operation are “well beyond policy (and indeed that advocated by the state government)â€.
Opposition liquor regulation spokeswoman Steph Ryan questioned why the minister had granted the exemption. “The minister needs to explain why she appears to have done a special deal to exempt this venue from the government’s freeze on new late-night licences,” Ms Ryan said.
A spokeswoman for Ms Kairouz said the “historical site has been vacant for some time and its location means it is suitable for a hospitality venture – if the application is successful”. While Ms Kairouz has allowed a 3am licence to be considered, it cannot proceed until the Victorian Commission for Gambling and Liquor Regulation considers the plan.
The Job Warehouse has been a city eyesore since the former fabric shop closed in 2012. The heritage-listed Bourke Street building, dating from 1849, will be kept but buildings behind it – which currently house restaurants Hochi Mama and Shimbashi Soba & Sake Bar – will be demolished.
The O’Brien Group owns and operates taverns and venues around the country, including The Imperial Hotel opposite the Victorian Parliament and Bondi Icebergs in Sydney.
Mr O’Brien said he acknowledged there was angst about the plan, but that some imagined it was “going back to the Metro nightclub, and this isn’t a nightclubâ€. He said the development would vastly improve the area. “We are doing up a building that has been rat-infested for years.”
He said he had “never met the minister and no one in my company has ever met the minister or knows the ministerâ€.
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Australian Hotels Association chief executive Paddy O’Sullivan said the plan would transform a “derelict building into a hotel Victoria can be proud ofâ€, and compared it to the renovation of the former Rosati’s bar in Flinders Lane into the Garden State hotel, licensed to accommodate 800.
Melbourne City councillor Rohan Leppert, deputy chair of planning and a Greens member, said the council had been bombarded with objections, “mostly about the late-night liquor licenceâ€. He said the ministerial exemption for a 3am licence had “alarmed many†and surprised the council.
Among those concerned is Nicola Smith, who lives opposite where one outdoor drinking area would go.
“The noise will just be huge, and the operating hours are just crazy,†she said, adding that residents appreciated the “beautiful heritage building†would be restored. “But to then demolish those four very successful and lively venues [behind it in Liverpool Street] is just really sad.
“The whole thing just feels like someone has already done a deal behind closed doors and we don’t count.â€
Research fellow in alcohol policy at the University of New South Wales and Latrobe University Claire Wilkinson said there was evidence that the later in the night alcohol was provided, the greater the link to violence. “A number of cities around Australia introduced a freeze on late-night licences to reduce late-night harm,†Dr Wilkinson said.
She said the move in 2008 to involve councils – now removed by the minister – was a good move “because it gave local government a greater role in the approval processâ€.
Clay Lucas is a senior reporter for The Age. Clay has worked at The Age since 2005, covering urban affairs, transport, state politics, local government and workplace relations for The Age and Sunday Age.
Around this time of year, Marianne Alleyne hosts dozens of houseguests in her basement. Far from using camping equipment or cots, they sleep upside-down, clinging to a curtain. The entomologist at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign has collected cicadas, those bizarre and misunderstood cyclical insects, for four years.
“In Illinois, we have 20 species, and hardly anything is known about them,†Alleyne says. “We know very little about what they’re doing underground.â€
Cicadas have a longstanding reputation as loud, swarming pests that keep obnoxiously particular schedules. In the United States, they got a bad rap from the beginning, as early colonists misidentified these clouds of emerging cicadas as locusts. “They were thought of as a biblical plague,†says John Cooley, an assistant professor in residence at the University of Connecticut. That impression has been a lasting one: a group of cicadas is still referred to as a plague or a cloud. “The question I get the most is ‘How do I kill them?’†Cooley says.
Chris Simon, an entomologist with more than 40 years of experience working with cicadas, says that feeling has changed—somewhat. “Some people freak out,†she says. “But the other half…they take their kids out, they go watch [periodical cicadas] come out of their shells. They think it’s amazing.†As another group of cicadas awakens in some U.S. states this spring, experts still have much to learn about them. What we do know, however, is that they are delightfully weird, and researchers across the sciences are studying these creatures to answer big human challenges.
Cicada moulting while attached to a curtain in Marianne Alleyne’s basement.
(Marianne Alleyne)
Prime weirdness
Cicadas spend the majority of their lives underground. They spend years developing into adults before they can emerge to sing, mate and lay eggs. For a majority of the nearly 3,400 cicada species, that emergence happens every two to five years and can vary from cycle to cycle. The strange periodical cicadas, on the other hand, are very different.
Periodical cicadas like Magicicicada spend 13 or 17 years underground, and millions of them surface together. To make sense of it all, biologists classify the periodicals into one of 15 existing “broods†based on their species, location, and—importantly—which years they emerge. This year, for example, Brood IX is emerging in North Carolina, West Virginia and Virginia for the first time since 2003.
Once cicadas do emerge, the sheer volume can be overwhelming. Some people wake up to find millions of cicadas blanketing nearby cars, trees, and houses. According to Cooley, when male cicadas sing in a full chorus on a hot sunny day, they immerse you in sound from every direction. “It’s the most unusual sensation,†he says. Many species sound pleasant, but the periodical cicadas “are like a jet engine or a buzz-saw.†Only a handful of weeks after emerging, the chorus fades away with the cicadas. They leave behind only calories for their predators, nutrients for the soil, and eggs destined to repeat their multi-year cycle.
But why do cicadas emerge in 13- and 17-year cycles, anyway? One hypothesis with much buzz among mathematicians is that it’s because both numbers are prime; the theory goes that the cycles prevent specialized predators from springing up. Cicadas are easy prey. They’re not hard to catch, Cooley says, and “anything that can catch ‘em will eat ‘em.†But predators, such as foxes or owls, whose populations cycle up and down every one to ten years can’t sync up with such irregular prey.
Cooley sees the merits of the hypothesis but is skeptical. Of the thousands of cicada species, only a handful are periodical. If pressure from predators was exceptional enough to make these species periodical, then why aren’t all cicadas periodical? He says we just don’t know.
“This work has been characterized by a hell of a lot of surprises,†Cooley says. “Every time you come up with a great idea for why [cicadas] are periodical, it’s pretty easy to just blow a hole in it. And they do have specialized predators—fungus.â€
1930 illustration of a 17-year Magicicada cicada
(Robert Evans Snodgrass)
Zombie cicadas
In recent years, researchers have unearthed peculiar and sometimes horrifying relationships between cicadas and fungi. Massospora fungi infect cicadas and hijack their bodies. The fungi can even synchronize to the cicada’s life cycle, staying dormant until the cicada is ready to emerge. Once active, they take over the bottom half of the cicada’s body while somehow keeping the cicada alive. The infected cicada flies away, spreading spores that infect future generations.
“Once the host is neutralized, it’s a walking zombie,†says Cooley, who was involved in thework. “It is the walking dead.â€
That’s not the only fungus to wreak havoc on cicadas. Ophiocordyceps fungi also invade the underground cicada. But rather than keep the cicada alive, this fungal parasite coaxes its host to crawl upwards towards the forest floor and die. With nothing in its way, the fungus grows to sprout a mushroom out of the soil—all from within the cicada’s body.
Despite these wild parasites, cicadas are far from doomed. Recent research suggests some cicadas have flipped the script and domesticated their fungal parasites. Rather than turning into a fungal flowerpot for the parasitic Ophiocordyceps, a few species live symbiotically with the parasite. The fungus gets a home and probably provides the cicada with essential nutrients in return. This has happened in species all over the world, but the origin of this arrangement is a mystery.
Simon says this fungal relationship is currently her lab’s major project. “Maybe it’s the fungus that decided to give up its parasitic ways and live inside a comfy cicada.â€
While periodical cicada broods are enormous and remarkably synchronized, once in a while some “stragglers†do come out early. In 2017, for example, periodical cicadas clouded the East coast four years early. This May, Brood XIX crashed the party ahead of schedule, too, leaving scientists curious as to whether climate change has played a role. “We’ve predicted that the warmer it is, the more we’re going to see these four-year accelerations,†Simon says. If these 17-year stragglers keep emerging early, they may permanently synchronize to a 13-year cycle.
Or perhaps they will change in more unexpected ways. Because 17-year cicadas are so abundant, their fussiness makes them living, breathing gauges for the environment. “They’re sitting down there integrating 17 years’ worth of data on what the forest is doing,†Cooley says. “And if the forest is screwed up or broken, that’s going to show up.â€
Cicadas develop differently in cities, too. In 2018, a group led by DeAnna Beasley at the University of Tennessee-Chattanooga showed that urban cicadas grow larger. Urban areas use more fertilizer, and their concrete and population density turn them into “heat islands†that can be 5 degrees warmer than rural areas—stimulating conditions for these insects. (Cicadas develop faster with more warmth and nutrients.)
But it’s not yet possible to conclude how (or if) climate change threatens cicadas. Since historical data isn’t as reliable as current data—Cooley says that scientists are essentially still establishing the starting point. “So if we want to be able to consider these to be indicators of forest health, we’ve got to do the legwork to figure out what normal is.â€
Learning from cicadas
Scientists have been looking to cicadas to solve human-sized problems. That’s because cicadas’ late-life wings are covered in a natural engineering marvel: minuscule uniform nanopillars that repel water, kill bacteria and self-clean. The germ-killing wings inspire chemists and engineers who want to harness these properties.
Some try to design these nanopillars as glare-free, self-cleaning surfaces for solar panels. Others, like Susan Kelleher, a chemist at University College Dublin, were captivated by the antibacterial surfaces. “Controlling cell behavior is not only so interesting but essential for biomedical science,†Kelleher says. “The next step is to translate what we learn from the natural world, into a scalable and manufacturable material.â€
For years, engineers have focused only on the dimensions of the wing patterns. Recently, though, Marianne Alleyne’s team of biologists, chemists and engineers looked deeper. They published evidence that specific chemical compounds secreted by cicadas are essential to building and maintaining those ingenious nanopillars. The work shows that for those seeking to design technology with cicada-inspired antibacterial traits, it’s not enough to mimic what the cicadas look like—the secrets lay deeper. Revealing those secrets, Alleyne says, means working with biologists to actually learn how these mysterious cicadas build what they build.
“Sometimes the engineers can go like, ‘we can make this better, we can do it in a clean room’,†Alleyne says. “But insects can make this material out of nothing, right? Maybe we can be inspired to do it that way.â€
When she goes out to collect cicadas, Alleyne makes a point to bring the engineering students along. All the collected nymphs wind up in Alleyne’s basement. Overnight, they inch their way up the curtain and spread their wings. “Now and then, one of them mysteriously disappears, and that’s when my family is not happy with me. †Alleyne says. “But it’s all for science.â€
Black Americans are fighting against two distinct yet interlaced enemies this week: institutionalized racism and a pandemic that is disproportionately infecting and killing them.
The protests that have rocked cities from coast to coast over the past few days were, in the immediate sense, sparked by the Minneapolis police killing of George Floyd, an unarmed black man. And police brutality has been the central theme of the demonstrations. But the protests are also being fueled by the fact that black communities have been devastated by the deadly pathogen working its way across America.
While black people make up only about 13% of the United States’ population according to the U.S. Census Bureau, they account for 22% of COVID-19 deaths so far, according to the COVID Tracking Project (white people, who make up 77% of the U.S. population, account for only 47% of deaths). The disparities are even more stark in some specific states and cities where black people make up the largest share of the population. In Mississippi, black people represent 38% of the population, but account for 51% of deaths. In Louisiana, that ratio is 32/53%. And in Washington, D.C., it’s a staggering 45/75%.
But the data on COVID-19 and race are incomplete, meaning we can’t even be sure how unequal the outbreak has truly been. “For one thing, there’s really no national-level system for gathering these data,†says TIME senior editor Elijah Wolfson. “It’s all based on state public health authorities, meaning there can be inconsistencies, but more importantly, there was no national mandate to gather these data or framework for doing so.â€
Forty-six states and Washington, D.C. report race data in confirmed COVID-19 cases, while only 41 report race for virus-related deaths. But given the lack of adequate testing and the fact that many cases are going undiagnosed or misreported, the numbers are inaccurate—and likely underestimate just how stark the racial disparities have been. Moreover, some states aren’t reporting race data for coronavirus cases at all—including Louisiana, home to the U.S.’ third-largest black population. Still, with black people accounting for an outsized number of COVID-19 deaths in 34 states, it’s a signal that can’t be ignored.
There is no medical evidence that COVID-19 affects non-whites differently from whites on a biological level. Rather, it seems the virus is exploiting pre-existing disparities and biases within the American health care system—black Americans tend to have less access to health care than whites, for instance, and have been especially hurt by the coronavirus-triggered economic downturn, leaving many without a steady income or health insurance. To address those problems, we at least need good data to smartly allocate resources and increase access and accountability, Wolfson says.
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Sadly, there is a chance that the protests could allow the virus to infiltrate even deeper through the very communities it has already most viciously ravaged. In the immediate term, this week’s protesters face the risk of arrest or violence at the hands of law enforcement or others. By congregating in large groups amid the pandemic, they are also increasing their risk of contracting or spreading COVID-19. But for many black Americans and their allies, that risk is being outweighed by the costs of staying silent in the face of continued oppression.
This story was adapted from The Coronavirus Brief, TIME’s daily COVID-19 newsletter. You can click here to sign up for future updates in your inbox.
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Actor Keke Palmer urged members of the National Guard to “be the change†and “make history†by marching with her group of protesters during a demonstration in Los Angeles on Tuesday.
“Let the revolution be televised. March beside us and show us that you’re here for us,†the “Hustlers†star told the troops, saying that President Donald Trump was “trying to incite a race war†with his violent rhetoric on the protests that have spread nationwide following the police killing of George Floyd.
The soldiers declined to join the march, saying they had to patrol that area. They offered to walk to the next intersection. Ultimately, they all took a knee following encouragement from another protester.
Palmer commented off-camera it was “not enough for me.â€
Video of the exchange, filmed by NBC correspondent Gadi Schwartz, has now garnered more than 16 million views.
Palmer reflected on the protests in a separate video that she posted on Instagram, explaining why she felt “overwhelmed†and “confused.â€
“At 26, I’m looking out and witnessing a physical revolt and it’s a revolt on a scale that I wasn’t sure I’d ever see,†she said, later adding: “Human beings can only take so much and irrational leadership breeds irrational responses.â€Â
Check out that video here:
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