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President Barack Obama and the former First Lady have been busy for years now on a number of film and television projects, usually in producer roles. Now we can see the former president as host of a show, in the form of a new Netflix documentary called Our Great National Parks.

Featuring National Parks from around the world, the show will give us gorgeous visuals and spectacular animals and natural that thrives, thanks to the protections that the National Parks affords them.

We love seeing so much interest paid to the world’s national parks, and the importance they have to the planet.

The 5-part documentary series starts on April 13.

In a move that will certainly cement his place in the pantheon of Worst Presidents of All Time, Donald J. Trump moved unilaterally this week to remove protections and shrink the boundaries of this beautiful, natural expanse of Southeastern Utah. Β Justifications aside, we all know this was done as a callous and jealous move to undo the designation of his predecessor, Barack Obama. Β An evil and ugly testament to his ego, Trump wanted to undo the ‘wins’ of a President who he so clearly hates, and hand the mining industry a greater ability to extract minerals. What exactly is Bear’s Ears National Monument, and why does it matter? Well, if you’ve ever been to Utah, you’ve realized just how special the natural beauty is. Β Southeastern Utah is home to vast expanses of land that holds great significance for Native Americans, specifically the Navajo Nation, Hopi, Ute Mountain Ute, Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation, and the Pueblo of Zuni. The result is a land that stands vulnerable to greedy developers, harmful off-road recreation, and a general worsening of America’s legacy and history. Β A shameful, low-point in a year full of gut punches from a truly maniacal and awful administration. Β  Visit this land while you can, and while it still exists. Β Photos via NBC News and Patagonia.

Image: Trump Reduces Size of Bears Ears National Monument

With overΒ 100,000 archaeological sites designated within the Bear’s Ears Monument, it’s clear that this beautiful land should be protected. And in 2016, that protection came in the form of a designation just below a national park, a monument that states the land cannot be sold or developed for commercial use.

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This designation added to the Utah’s economy in the form of conservation and tourism dollars. And it kept precious resources intact for future generations to visit and enjoy.

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Some vistas of Bear’s Ears’Β 1,351,849 acres of (formerly) protected land.

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Some of the over 100,000 ancient artifacts that dot this special land.

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DesignBoom has a great look at the work of Craig and Karl, two fantastically creative designers originally from Australia, now working in New York and London.


Floating


Dries Van Noten SS13


Outside pass


David Hockney


Barack Obama for New York Magazine


Hillary Clinton for Volkskrant Magazine

These really cool election maps are going around the web, and I wanted to share, to show that despite all of the tired, cynical voters in this country, the actual results from the election show a country that is decidedly purple in nature, and not as red vs. blue as sometimes it may seem.

ViaΒ Mark Newman, Department of Physics and Center for the Study of Complex Systems, University of Michigan:

Most of us are, by now, familiar with the maps the TV channels and web sites use to show the results of presidential elections.

Here is a typical map of the results of the 2012 election:


The states are coloredΒ red or blueΒ to indicate whether a majority of their voters voted for the Republican candidate, Mitt Romney, or the Democratic candidate, Barack Obama, respectively. Looking at this map it gives the impression that the Republican won the election handily, since there is rather more red on the map than there is blue. In fact, however, the reverse is true – it was the Democrats who won the election. The explanation for this apparent paradox, as pointed out by many people, is that the map fails to take account of the population distribution. It fails to allow for the fact that the population of the red states is on average significantly lower than that of the blue ones. The blue may be small in area, but they represent a large number of voters, which is what matters in an election.

We can correct for this by making use of aΒ cartogram, a map in which the sizes of states are rescaled according to their population. That is, states are drawn with size proportional not to their acreage but to the number of their inhabitants, states with more people appearing larger than states with fewer, regardless of their actual area on the ground. On such a map, for example, the state of Rhode Island, with its 1.1 million inhabitants, would appear about twice the size of Wyoming, which has half a million, even though Wyoming has 60 times the acreage of Rhode Island.

Here are the 2012 presidential election results on a population cartogram of this type:

As you can see, the states have been stretched and squashed, some of them substantially, to give them the appropriate sizes, though it’s done in such a way as to preserve the general appearance of the map, so far as that’s possible. On this map there is now clearly more blue than red.

The presidential election, however, is not actually decided on the basis of the number of people who vote for each candidate but on the basis of theΒ electoral college. Under the US electoral system, each state in the union contributes a certain number of electors to the electoral college, who vote according to the majority in their state. (Exceptions are the states of Maine and Nebraska, which use a different formula that allows them to split their electoral votes between candidates.) The candidate receiving a majority of the votes in the electoral college wins the election. The electors are apportioned among the states roughly according to population, as measured by the census, but with aΒ small but deliberate biasΒ in favor of less populous states.

We can represent the effects of the electoral college by scaling the sizes of states to be proportional to their number of electoral votes, which gives a map that looks like this:

This cartogram looks similar to the one above it, but it’s not identical. Wyoming, for instance, has approximately doubled in size, precisely because of the bias in favor of small states.

The areas of red and blue on the cartogram are now proportional to the actual numbers of electoral votes won by each candidate. Thus this map shows at a glance both which states went to which candidate and which candidate won more electoral college votes – something that you cannot tell easily from the normal election-night red and blue map.

Election results by county

But we can go further. We can do the same thing also with the county-level election results and the images are even more striking.

Here is a map of US counties, again colored red and blue to indicate Republican and Democratic majorities respectively:

Now the effects we saw at the state level are even more pronounced: the red areas appear overwhelmingly in the majority, an appearance again at odds with the actual results of the election.

However, this map is still somewhat misleading because we have colored every county either red or blue, as if every voter voted the same way. This is of course not realistic: all counties contain both Republican and Democratic supporters and in using just the two colors on our map we lose any information about the balance between them. There is no way to tell whether a particular county went strongly for one candidate or the other or whether it was relatively evenly split.

One way to improve the map and reveal more nuance in the vote is to use not just two colors, red and blue, but to use red, blue, and shades of purple in between to indicate percentages of votes. Here is what the normal map looks like if you do this:

Al Gore made headlines today for publicly lambasting President Obama for his lackluster performance when it comes to climate change legislation. I think it’s about time, and I applaud him for calling our president out for being weak, non-commital and frankly, irresponsible for not doing more when it comes to our environmental protection.Β  Don’t get me wrong- Republicans have done everything in their power to halt, stop, weaken and knock down legislation. And tragically, they’ve been extremely effective at blocking positive change. Regardless, we voted for a leader. Someone to show us a course where we need one. And by god do we need one.

The last three years have been extremely hard on a lot of people. A global recession that left millions out of work, and many of us underemployed or feeling dejected by the state of affairs, at least economically. In this time of despair, a nationwide coming-together could have been built around the issue of climate change. R&D, investment in clean tech, construction jobs, and even an Apollo-like quest for the next great revolution in energy. All of these things were talked about, and people like me were optimistic.Β  Hugely grateful that people were awakening to the idea that the climate was in trouble, and that a combined effort could not only help thwart the problem, but bring our society together.

Instead, we had three years of scare tactics by oil companies, stagnation and downright inaction by industry, and a complete belly flop by the public, too swept up by menial crap like sex scandals and reality TV to give a damn about saving the one planet we have.Β  I have raised blood pressure and a deep-seated cynicism that arose out of the last few years. I don’t trust nor put much faith into people anymore, understanding that until the floods, tornadoes, forest fires and droughts reach everyone’s front door, nothing will advance.Β  I recommend you read Mr. Gore’s thoughtful, stirring essay, as he is surely more patient and optimistic than I.

Click here to read Al Gore's in-depth, thoughtful essay.

 

The President has reality on his side. The scientific consensus is far stronger today than at any time in the past. Here is the truth: The Earth is round; Saddam Hussein did not attack us on 9/11; Elvis is dead; Obama was born in the United States; and the climate crisis is real. It is time to act. – Al Gore.