Earliest deuterostome fossils discovery in China


This 31 January 2017 video is about mankind’s earliest ancestor: Saccorhytus coronarius,.

From Science News:

Pinhead-sized sea creature was a bag with a mouth

Anus may have been absent in odd new fossils from 540 million years ago

By Meghan Rosen

2:00pm, February 3, 2017

A roughly 540-million-year-old creature that may have once skimmed shorelines was a real oddball.

Dozens of peculiar, roundish fossils discovered in what is now South China represent the earliest known deuterostomes, a gigantic category of creatures that includes everything from humans to sea cucumbers.

No bigger than a pinhead, the fossils have wrinkly, baglike bodies and gaping mouths that are pleated around the edges like an accordion, researchers report January 30 in Nature. Unlike most other deuterostomes, the animals don’t seem to have an anus. Instead, the ancient oddities, named Saccorhytus coronarius, may have leaked waste (and other bodily fluids like mucus and sex cells) out of tiny holes lining their sides. These holes may have later evolved into gill slits.

A tough, flexible skin would have protected Saccorhytus as it wriggled through grains of dirt, the authors suggest. The find supports previous suggestions that the earliest deuterostomes were actually a kind of water-dwelling worm.

Vegan Mexican burrito recipe, and Trump


This video from the USA says about itself:

Vegan Burrito in 5 Minutes! | Happy Heart Friendly

30 December 2016

It goes without saying that burritos are all the rage these days, so in a bid to ensure that our Happy Heart participants don’t miss out on the fiery fun, we’ve made a recipe that’s seriously tasty but also insanely low in calories, fat and sugar! BOOM! Give it a try and let us know what you think!

Full recipe here.

However, burritos are NOT all the rage for new United States President Donald Trump.

From Waterford Whispers News in Ireland (satire; however, it often turns out that Trump makes satire reality):

Trump Demands Burritos Be Renamed “Freedom Wraps”

January 26, 2017

AS relations between the US and Mexico continue to crumble over the onerous issue of immigration and ‘the wall’, President Donald Trump has demanded that a range of Mexican foodstuffs be renamed to be ‘more patriotic’.

Taking example from the 2003 incident in which France opposed the US on the invasion of Iraq, leading to the White House cafeteria changing the names of french fries to ‘freedom fries’, Trump has decreed that burritos will now be known as ‘freedom wraps’, fajitas will be known as ‘freedom wraps’, quesadillas will be known as ‘freedom wraps’, and tacos will be known as ‘crunchy freedom wraps’.

As thousands of tex-mex restaurants prepared to change their description to just ‘tex’, Trump went on to denounce anyone who still refers to freedom wraps as ‘burritos’ to be ‘among the most unpatriotic, dangerous people in the country’.

“If the president says that they’re freedom wraps, then they’re freedom wraps. Period,” said White House press secretary Sean Spicer, drinking Gaviscon straight out of the bottle.

“Let’s just not question these things, okay? You can be one of two things; a red-blooded American enjoying a spicy, meat-and-cheese-filled freedom wrap, or a dirty flag-burning communist eating a burrito. Which would you like to be, eh? I thought so”.

Furthermore, Trump went on to declare that popular cartoon rodent Speedy Gonzales would be known as ‘Speedy Jones’ from now on.

Ancient Stone Age aurochs depiction discovery


A 38,000-year-old engraved stone (left), depicting an aurochs, or wild cow, covered with dots, was unearthed at a French rock-shelter. Symbolic elements of Europe’s earliest human culture appear in the engraving, its discoverers say. Drawings of the find (center) and of the aurochs separated from the dots show the scene more clearly. P. Jugie/Musée National de Préhistoire (photo), R. Bourrillon et al/Quaternary International 2017

From Science News:

Cow carved in stone paints picture of Europe’s early human culture

Symbolic dots, style link 38,000-year-old engraving to other famous cave art finds

By Bruce Bower

7:00am, February 3, 2017

This stone engraving of an aurochs, or wild cow, found in a French rock-shelter in 2012, provides glimpses of an ancient human culture’s spread across Central and Western Europe, researchers say.

Rows of dots partly cover the aurochs. A circular depression cut into the center of the animal’s body may have caused the limestone to split in two, says Stone Age art specialist Raphaëlle Bourrillon of the University of Toulouse-Jean Jaurès in France. Radiocarbon dating of animal bones unearthed near the discovery at Abri Blanchard rock-shelter put the engraving’s age at roughly 38,000 years, Bourrillon and colleagues report online January 24 in Quaternary International.

The rock art is similar to some engravings and drawings found at other French and German sites, including the famous Chauvet Cave (SN: 6/30/12, p. 12), and attributed to the Aurignacian culture, which dates to between 43,000 and 33,000 years ago. Like the new find, that art includes rows of dots, depictions of aurochs and various animals shown in profile with a single horn and a long, thin muzzle.

Within a few thousand years of arriving in Europe from Africa, Aurignacian groups developed regional styles of artwork based on images that had deep meaning for all of them, proposes anthropologist and study coauthor Randall White of New York University, who directed the excavation.

Through cutting-edge dental research on six human teeth discovered at Manot Cave in the Western Galilee, Dr. Rachel Sarig of TAU’s School of Dental Medicine and Dan David Center Center for Human Evolution and Biohistory Research, Sackler Faculty of Medicine in collaboration with Dr. Omry Barzilai of the Israel Antiquities Authority and colleagues in Austria and the United States, have demonstrated that Aurignacians arrived in modern-day Israel from Europe some 40,000 years ago — and that these Aurignacians comprised Neanderthals and Homo sapiens alike: here.

United States Donald Trump news update


This video from the USA says about itself:

The “De-Judification” of the Holocaust? Trump Avoids Word “Jews” on Holocaust Remembrance Day

2 February 2017

Prominent white supremacist and Donald Trump supporter Richard Spencer has praised Trump for not mentioning in a statement commemorating International Holocaust Memorial Day the 6 million Jews killed. Trump has faced widespread criticism for the omission, but the administration has repeatedly defended the statement. Sen. Tim Kaine went as far as calling it a form of “Holocaust denial”. Spencer, however, praised the statement as the “de-Judification” of the Holocaust. We speak to Andrea Pitzer, author of the forthcoming book, “One Long Night: A Global History of Concentration Camps“. It looks at mass civilian detention without trial from 1896 to today.

Trump administration officials reportedly ignored a draft White House statement for Holocaust Remembrance Day that specifically mentioned Jews, instead releasing remarks that made no mention of Jewish victims.” [HuffPost]

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP TO ROLL BACK DODD-FRANK, OTHER FINANCIAL REGULATIONS FRIDAY According to Gary Cohn, the White House Economic Council Director. The Wall Street Journal reports that the move is the “stuff of banker dreams.” [WaPo]

PARTS OF TRUMP’S FOREIGN POLICY ARE LOOKING A LOT LIKE OBAMA’S  “President Trump, after promising a radical break with the foreign policy of Barack Obama, is embracing some key pillars of the former administration’s strategy, including warning Israel to curb settlement construction, demanding that Russia withdraw from Crimea and threatening Iran with sanctions for ballistic missile tests.” [NYT]

Washington’s war threat against Iran: here.

The US Congress took its first legislative action of the new congressional term on behalf of the corporate elite, as the Senate voted by 54-45 to pass a resolution rescinding the Stream Protection Rule adopted by the Department of the Interior in December. The rule restricts the dumping of waste by coal companies engaged in a technique known as “mountaintop removal”: here.

In what appears to have been a calculated leak from the highest echelons of the White House, US President Donald Trump reportedly “blasted” Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull during a phone call last weekend and then abruptly cut off the call: here.

Students and workers at San Diego State University (SDSU) and New York University (NYU) rallied Thursday afternoon to defend the rights of immigrants and refugees and to voice their opposition to the Wall on the Mexico border, the deportation of tens of thousands of undocumented workers, and the massive expansion of the border security force and internment camps: here.

Rare water shrew at camera trap


This 1 February 2017 video shows a rare water shrew at a camera trap on Marken (traditionally an island, now a peninsula) in the Netherlands.

It is in a pit, made artificially to enable grass snakes to winter.

Which animals spent time in these pits, according to camera trap images? Many wood mice, stoats, a greater white-toothed shrew.

And also this water shrew. This rare species had only been seen once on Marken, in 2008.

Shouldn’t the water shrew worry about a grass snake being in the same pit as it? Not really now, as in winter the snakes sleep. Even in spring, as grass snakes become active, they only rarely eat mammals, preferring amphibians.

Fukushima radiation worse than ever


This video from Japan says about itself:

The Radioactive Forest of Fukushima

27 January 2017

FULL Documentary 2017. The Fukushima nuclear accident in 2011 turned the surrounding towns into a desolate land, making the area into a “radioactive forest”. Without human presence, the land is roamed by wildlife like civets, macaques and wild boars. A project is underway to study the deserted areas by attaching a camera to wild boars to record the conditions of the former farmlands. 5 years after the disaster, we take a close look at how radiation has affected the wildlife, and what it entails for us humans.

From Kyodo news agency in Japan:

Highest radiation reading since 3/11 detected at Fukushima No. 1 reactor

The radiation level in the containment vessel of reactor 2 at the crippled Fukushima No. 1 power plant has reached a maximum of 530 sieverts per hour, the highest since the triple core meltdown in March 2011, Tokyo Electric Power Co. Holdings Inc. said.

Tepco said on Thursday that the blazing radiation reading was taken near the entrance to the space just below the pressure vessel, which contains the reactor core.

The high figure indicates that some of the melted fuel that escaped the pressure vessel is nearby.

At 530 sieverts, a person could die from even brief exposure, highlighting the difficulties ahead as the government and Tepco grope their way toward dismantling all three reactors crippled by the March 2011 disaster.

Tepco also announced that, based on its analysis of images taken by a remote-controlled camera, that there is a 2-meter hole in the metal grating under the pressure vessel in the reactor’s primary containment vessel. It also thinks part of the grating is warped.

The hole could have been caused when the fuel escaped the pressure vessel after the mega-quake and massive tsunami triggered a station blackout that crippled the plant’s ability to cool the reactors.

The searing radiation level, described by some experts as “unimaginable,” far exceeds the previous high of 73 sieverts per hour at the reactor.

Tepco said it calculated the figure by analyzing the electronic noise in the camera images caused by the radiation. This estimation method has a margin of error of plus or minus 30 percent, it said.

An official of the National Institute of Radiological Sciences said medical professionals have never considered dealing with this level of radiation in their work.

According to the institute, 4 sieverts of radiation exposure would kill 1 in 2 people.

Experts say 1,000 millisieverts, or 1 sievert, could lead to infertility, loss of hair and cataracts, while exposure to doses above that increases the risk of cancer.

According to Tepco, readings of surface radiation on parts used inside a normally operating pressure vessel can reach several thousands sieverts per hour.

The discovery spells difficulty of removing the fuel debris to decommission at the plant. The government and Tepco hope to locate the fuel and start removing it in 2021.

In the coming weeks, the utility plans to deploy a remote-controlled robot to check conditions inside the containment vessel, but the utility is likely to have to change its plan.

For one thing, it will have to reconsider the route the robot takes into the interior because of the hole in the grating.

Also, given the extraordinary level of radiation, the robot would only be able to operate for less than two hours before it is destroyed.

That is because it is designed to withstand exposure of up to 1,000 sieverts. Based on the calculation of 73 sieverts per hour, the robot could run for more than 10 hours, but 530 sieverts per hour means it would be rendered inoperable in less than two hours.

Tepco has been probing reactor 2’s containment vessel since last week.

On Monday, it found a black mass deposited on the grating directly under the pressure vessel. The images, captured using a camera attached to a telescopic arm the same day, showed part of the grating was missing. Further analysis found the 2-meter hole in an area beyond the missing section on the structure.

If the deposits are confirmed to be melted fuel, it would be the first time the utility has found any of it at the three reactors that suffered core meltdowns.

The world’s worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986 triggered core meltdowns in reactors 1 through 3. Portions of the core in each reactor are believed to have melted through their pressure vessels and pooled at the bottom of their containment vessels.

The actual condition of the melted fuel remains unknown because the radiation is too high to check it.

Meanwhile, a nuclear research organization unveiled on Friday a robot that will be tasked with surveying reactor 1 at the complex.

Tepco plans to send the robot into reactor 1 in March, while its survey plan for reactor 2 remains unclear because of the high radiation levels.

The stick-like robot is 70 cm long and equipped with a camera, according to the International Research Institute for Nuclear Decommissioning.

During a robotic survey in April 2015, the operator found no major obstacles in the path planned in reactor 1 but found water accumulating in the basement.

In the upcoming survey, it hopes to examine the water by deploying a camera and a radiation sensor.

The man blocking the world’s largest nuclear plant says he grew opposed to atomic energy the same way some people fall in love. Previously an advocate for nuclear power in Japan, Ryuichi Yoneyama campaigned against the restart of the facility as part of his successful gubernatorial race last year in Niigata. He attributes his political U-turn to the “unresolved” 2011 Fukushima Dai-Ichi disaster and the lack of preparedness at the larger facility in his own prefecture, both owned by Tokyo Electric Power Co. Holdings Inc.: here.

According to TEPCO, 8 Fukushima workers have developed leukemia; 5 workers have developed malignant lymphoma; and 2 workers have multiple myeloma: here.

Dinosaur soft tissue discovery


This video from the USA says about itself:

7 March 2016

Mary Higby Schweitzer is a paleontologist at North Carolina State University, who is known for leading the groups that discovered the remains of blood cells in dinosaur fossils and later discovered soft tissue remains in a Tyrannosaurus rex specimen.

From AFP news agency:

Dino rib yields evidence of oldest soft tissue remains

January 31, 2017

The rib of a long-necked, plant-eating dinosaur that lived 195 million years ago has yielded what may be the oldest remains of soft tissue ever recovered, scientists said Tuesday.

The find promises a chance to extract rare clues about the biology and evolution of long-extinct animals, a team wrote in the journal Nature Communications.

Such information is mostly missing from preserved hard skeletons, which form the bulk of the fossil record.

“We have shown the presence of protein preserved in a 195 million-year-old dinosaur, at least 120 million years older than any other similar discovery,” study co-author Robert Reisz of the University of Toronto Mississauga, told AFP.

“These proteins are the building blocks of animal soft tissues, and it’s exciting to understand how they have been preserved,” he added.

Reisz and a team scanned a rib bone of Lufengosaurus, a common dinosaur in the Early Jurassic period. Fully grown, these lizards

Dinosaurs are not really closely related to lizards.

measured about eight metres (26 feet).

The researchers used a photon beam at the National Synchrotron Radiation Research Center in Taiwan to examine the insides of the bone, specifically its chemical contents.

They found evidence of collagen proteins within tiny canals in the rib and concluded they were “probably remnants of the blood vessels that supplied blood to the bone cells in the living dinosaur.”

Most previous studies had extracted organic remains by dissolving away other parts of the fossil, the team said.

With the synchrotron method, this is not necessary, and even older remains may be uncovered without damaging dinosaur bones in future.

Does it bring us any closer to recovering DNA from which dinosaurs may one day be cloned?

“No, that is still fantasy,” said Reisz.

The previous oldest find of suspected and collagen fibres was reported in 2013, in that lived about 75 million years ago.

Proteins and other organic remains usually decay soon after an animal dies. During fossilisation, the space they occupied within bone is filled by mineral deposits carried by groundwater.

Finding fossilised soft tissue is very rare indeed.

Fossils that preserve entire organisms (including both hard and soft body parts) are critical to our understanding of evolution and ancient life on Earth. However, these exceptional deposits are extremely rare. New research suggests that the mineralogy of the surrounding earth is key to conserving soft parts of organisms, and finding more exceptional fossils. The work could potentially support the Mars Rover Curiosity in its sample analysis, and speed up the search for traces of life on other planets: here.

Bad news, Jurassic Park fans — the odds of scientists cloning a dinosaur from ancient DNA are pretty much zero. That’s because DNA breaks down over time and isn’t stable enough to stay intact for millions of years. And while proteins, the molecules in all living things that give our bodies structure and help them operate, are more stable, even they might not be able to survive over tens or hundreds of millions of years. In a new paper published in eLife, scientists went looking for preserved collagen, the protein in bone and skin, in dinosaur fossils. They didn’t find the protein, but they did find huge colonies of modern bacteria living inside the dinosaur bones: here.

Anti-bird crimes in Britain


This video from Britain says about itself:

8 January 2015

Birds of Prey was filmed over the last 7 years…See List Below

0:01 – Young Kestrel at Hells Mouth

1:11 – Buzzard attacked by Jay

3:09 – Peregrine Falcon on The Cliffs

4:08 – Sparrowhawk in The Garden

5:03 – Kestrels Hovering, Hunting and Eating A Snake

7:58 – Juvenile Tawny Owl in The Woods

9:42 – Golden Eagle

11:08 – Buzzards Foraging

12:40 – Great Grey Owl

13:54 – European Eagle Owl

15:23 – Buzzard – Watching You, Watching Me

16:48 – Sparrowhawk in The Lane

18:04 – 2 Young Kestrels on The Cliffs

19:11 – Barn Owl

20:29 – Buzzard in The Trees

22:08 – Bald Eagle

23:37 – Kestrel Hovering Above The People

24:24 – Buzzard on The Prowl

25:42 – Very Young and Fluffy Kestrel at Mutton Cove

26:59 – The Kestrel and The Paraglider

27:50 – Striated Caracara

29:03 – Kestrel at Hells Mouth

31:04 – Harris Hawk

31:40 – Morepork Owl

33:09 – Lanner Falcon

34:00 – Indian Eagle Owl

35:06 – Ashy Faced Barn Owl Chick

36:12 – Kestrel on The Cornish Cliffs

Filmed over many years in Cornwall, England

Video Produced by Paul Dinning – Wildlife in Cornwall

From daily The Morning Star in Britain:

Friday 3rd February 2017

ALMOST 200 reports of shooting, trapping and destruction of birds of prey were received by the RSPB in 2015, the charity has revealed.

Sixty-four out of the 196 reports were confirmed, including the shooting or attempted shooting of 46 birds of prey, including 16 buzzards, 11 peregrines, three red kites, one red-footed falcon and one hen harrier, a report from the RSPB out today says.

There were also 50 reported incidents of wildlife poisoning, including confirmed cases of 15 buzzards, four red kites and three peregrine falcons falling victim to poison baits.

Illegal persecution of birds of prey is still happening too regularly in Britain’s countryside, the RSPB said, and it called for tougher legislation and enforcement to allow the birds to thrive.

Frogs’ tongues, new research


This video says about itself:

How are frog tongues so sticky? | Science News

1 February 2017

Here’s what puts the grip in a frog’s high-speed strike: quick-change saliva and a tongue softer than a marshmallow.

From Science News:

What gives frog tongues the gift of grab

Quick-switch saliva, squishy tissue combine to catch prey

By Susan Milius

7:05pm, January 31, 2017

Frogs’ remarkable power to tongue-grab prey — some as big as mice or as oddly shaped as tarantulas — stems from a combo of peculiar saliva and a supersquishy tongue.

The first detailed analysis of the stickiness of frog saliva shows that the fluid can shift rather abruptly from gooey to runny, says mechanical engineer Alexis Noel of Georgia Tech in Atlanta. Those quick changes come in handy during the various phases of a single tongue strike. And it all works because the tongue itself is so soft, Noel and colleagues report February 1 in Journal of the Royal Society Interface.

Internet videos of frogs feasting sparked Noel’s curiosity about their ability “to eat furry things, hairy things, slimy things,” she says, and to do so with speed and power. A frog tongue strikes five times more quickly than a human can blink.

But frog tongue tissue is so soft that none of the standard equipment on campus could measure it without special modifications. Noel eventually discovered that this tissue is as soft as a brain, which is itself naturally softer than a marshmallow.

When the tongue shoots out at, say, a fly, the soft frog tissue splats on impact, spreading and curling around the prey. This action “massively increases the contact area” of frog tissue that can stick to the fly, enhancing grip, Noel says. Then frog saliva intensifies the effect.

Frogs don’t have salivary glands spread around inside their mouths that drip saliva on their tongues. Instead, the tongue itself secretes the saliva. To see how sticky frog saliva might be, Noel spent several hours per sample scraping some 15 frog tongues to put together enough spit for a single test.

Noel and colleagues found that this saliva is what’s called a shear-thinning liquid, which grows thinner and easier to stir or smear around when force is applied. Smacking into a fly jolts saliva from its sticky phase — more viscous than honey, she says — into the more “liquidy” phase “flowing into all the small cracks” of the insect body. As the tongue returns to the mouth, the spit thickens again, intensifying the grip.

During that tongue jerk, acceleration can surge to 12 times the pull of Earth’s gravity. Still, in spite of the spit’s stickiness, the insect could be flung loose at this point, Noel calculated. But the soft stretchiness of the tongue, a natural bungee cord that retracts without too much of a jolt, prevents the loss, she says.

But once the fly is in the mouth, the tongue’s grip needs to loosen so the fly can slide down the gullet. “Frogs actually use their eyeballs while swallowing,” Noel says. Eyeballs sink from bulges to barely bumps, dipping inside the head and pushing food back toward the throat. The eyes’ impact jars the saliva into a runnier phase, easing its grip on the prey.

Frogs aren’t the only hunters that tongue-snatch their prey. Chameleon tongues also can be very sticky, says Pascal Damman, who studies the physics of soft matter (including chameleon tongues) at the University of Mons in Belgium. The new findings remind him of how chameleons catch prey using gooey mucus and a stretchy tongue, he says.

Donald Trump, Britons react


This video from Britain says about itself:

30 January 2017

Tens of thousands of protesters join an anti-Trump rally in central London as Prime Minister Theresa May refuses to back down on inviting the US President for a glitzy state visit.

By Felicity Collier in east London, England:

‘Sleepwalking into Genocide’

Friday 3rd February 2017

Muslim communities mobilise – and warn against Trump fatigue

WE could be “sleepwalking into genocide” unless we wake up from being “shocked and dumbfounded” by the effects of Donald Trump’s presidency, Muslim Safety Forum chairman Azad Ali warned yesterday.

Mr Ali urged communities to co-ordinate and organise, as “we should not allow this fascism to go unchallenged” and he warned: “We’re shocked, dumbfounded. We need to wake up — or we’re sleepwalking into genocide.”

Mr Ali was representing the advocacy organisation Mend (Muslim Engagement and Development) at the London Muslim Centre in Whitechapel yesterday.

Muslim community groups and campaigners gathered there ahead of this Saturday’s Stop Trump’s Muslim Ban — Stop May Supporting It demo.

East London Mosque and London Muslim Centre executive director Dilowar Khan referenced Mr Trump’s description of Whitechapel as a “no-go area” in December 2015, when he was a presidential candidate.

At the time, the community in Whitechapel responded with a protest outside the East London Mosque, where Mr Khan addressed the crowd, saying there was “no such thing as no-go areas in London.”

Mr Khan expressed his concern yesterday about living in a world where the US president “wants to take us back to the days of racism and hatred” in light of his recent policy which stops people from countries that are predominantly Muslim from entering the US.

A rise in far-right politics, Mr Khan said, would “damage the fabric of society.” He recalled being attacked in the 1970s, when there were “no-go areas” for Muslims. He condemned Mr Trump’s ban as “unjust, discriminatory,” and stated: “We believe in a multicultural society.”

Over 7,000 worshippers gather at the London Muslim Centre, which has three mosques and runs a programme of events which promote community cohesion.

Stand Up to Racism’s Weyman Bennett, who grew up in the surrounding area, described fond memories of the mix of different cultures and lauded it as one of the most integrated parts of London.

In the 1930s, the Battle of Cable Street took place nearby which turned back the fascist Oswald Mosley. In the 1930s-40s, Lord Alf Dubs passed through with his Kindertransport.

Mr Bennett said that withdrawing the invitation for Mr Trump’s state visit to Britain is “the basic thing” that Prime Minister Theresa May should do.

Stop The War Coalition’s Lindsey German condemned Ms May for her “indecent haste” in going to meet and hold hands with Mr Trump in the US.

She also expressed anger at the fact that it took a week for Ms May to comment on Mr Trump’s divisive travel ban policy and pointed out that the seven countries affected by the ban have either been bombed or occupied by the US.

Ms German expressed her outrage that the British public should have Donald Trump “wined and dined” at our expense.

This Saturday’s protests are expected to be attended by “unprecedented numbers” of people from the Muslim community.

The demo takes place this Saturday at 11am outside the US embassy at 24 Grosvenor Square, London, followed by a march to Downing Street.

Shadow home secretary Diane Abbott will be taking part in the march opposing Trump’s Muslim ban and demanding Ms May withdraw her offer to the US president to visit Britain.

Several groups are backing the demo to call for Trump’s state visit to Britain to be pulled in light of his imposed travel ban, which targets Muslims.

On February 20, a 1.8 million-strong petition opposing Trump’s visit will be debated in Parliament.

White House Ignored Draft Holocaust Statement Mentioning Jews: Report. Trump failed to mention Jewish victims, sparking condemnation: here.