Kamis, 16 Juli 2020

EDITORIAL CARTOON BY TIARA G 1788203086

1. ANALYZING THE NEWS

This police-free protest zone was dismantled - but was it the end?
By Ashitha NageshBBC News
· 
12 July 2020

EDITORIAL CARTOON
Application for edit this cartoon : PicArt



TYPES : Editorials of argument
and persuasion take a firm stand on a problem or condition. They attempt to persuade the reader to think the same way. This editorial often proposes a solution or advises taking some definite action.

TYPE : Editorials of entertainment
 have two categories. One is the short humorous treatment of a light topic. The second is a slightly satirical treatment of a serious subject. (Satire is the use of sarcasm or keen wit to denounce abuses or follies. While it ridicules or makes fun of a subject it has the intent of improving it.)




On 8 June, after a number of increasingly dangerous clashes between protesters and law enforcement, police officers in a popular area of downtown Seattle abandoned their precinct.
Hundreds of activists, who had been demonstrating against police brutality since the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis in May, then flocked to the neighbourhood and set up a peaceful occupied protest. There, they distributed free food and medical supplies, planted community gardens, and held film screenings and workshops. One small group painted a large, bright statement on a wall within the zone: "Black Lives Matter".
The area was declared the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone - or Chaz, for short. It was to be a police-free, self-governing utopia. A few days later, in an interview with CNN on 11 June, the city's Democratic mayor Jenny Durkan said the zone could herald a "summer of love".
Protester Grace Morgan, from Portland, Oregon, told the BBC that she travelled up to the Chaz about a week after it had been established.
"It was absolutely astonishing," she said. "There was a food co-op, as well as a full medics corner with actual doctors from around the city that had volunteered, and had their own ambulance. There were classes, lectures, speakers, poetry, lots of live music, huge works of art… It was really beautiful."
TYPES : Editorials of argument

Crucially, Chaz had the official backing of socialist councilmember Kshama Sawant.
"The idea of occupation isn't a new one, and it's an immensely powerful idea as a part of protest movements," Ms Sawant told the BBC. "Not only social movements on the streets, but also in workplace actions through history."
The initial success of Chaz, which later came to be known as Capitol Hill Occupied Protest (Chop), inspired activists across the US. On 18 June another autonomous zone sprung up in Portland, Oregon. It was declared the Patrick Kimmons Autonomous Zone, or PKAZ, named after a 27-year-old black man who was killed by Portland police in September 2018.
"Sometime around midnight, more tents started to pop up on the street - and then word got around that we were building an autonomous zone right there and then," Grace, who also saw PKAZ get set up, said. "I and a few of my friends got rolling dumpsters from surrounding businesses and condos in the area, and somebody got a huge couch somehow. There are also quite a few construction sites nearby, so we got a lot of scaffolding from those to help reinforce the borders."
The atmosphere that night, she said, was "pretty magical".
"People were making beats and music just with the things we had around us… and a few spontaneous dance parties broke out," she said. Police officers stayed away for most of the night, which Grace said felt "pretty suspect": "Every other night, the cop presence had been very strong - they had been constantly breaking us up, tear-gassing us, and shooting us with rubber bullets, flashbangs and pepper balls."
But the PKAZ only stood for about five hours. The police arrived at about 05:30, reportedly in full riot gear. "There were about 30 of them and they started dismantling the barriers and telling people to leave," Grace said.

Another autonomous zone, this time on the other side of the country, suffered a similar fate. On 22 June, activists cordoned off an area just north of Lafayette Square in Washington DC. They set up tents and put up signs reading: Black House Autonomous Zone, or Bhaz. The name "Black House" was to place it in contrast to the nearby White House.
By the following morning, Bhaz had been dismantled by the police, and President Donald Trump had vowed in a tweet to meet protesters with "serious force" if they tried to rebuild the area - a threat so serious that Twitter placed a warning flag on it.
And later that week, in Philadelphia, protesters briefly brought a disused hospital back to life. On 27 June a crowd marched to Hahnemann Hospital, set up barricades, canopies, and tables, and nurses began treating patients on the spot. It lasted for less than an hour.
The occupation was led by a coalition of healthcare workers and community members called Care Not Cops, which calls for funding that currently goes to the local police force to be reinvested in preventative public services, such as healthcare and community centres.
Local residents say Hahnemann primarily served low-income and black communities before it was permanently closed by its owner, real estate developer Joel Freedman, in September last year. As the coronavirus started sweeping through the US with force earlier this year, Mr Freedman told local media he had offered to sell the hospital to the city, or lease it for almost $1 million a month - $60 per day per bed, plus utilities and other running costs. The city couldn't afford it, and so despite the growing public health crisis, the hospital has remained empty.



"The hospital shut last summer to immense local resistance, and the owner's attempt at extracting a ransom during the pandemic made it a really potent symbol of privatised health," local reporter Max Fox, who took part in the protest, told the BBC. "So there was a lot of pent up anger."
At the time of his offer, a spokesman for Mr Freedman told US media that he had offered to sell the hospital to the city below market rates and that he had "not only desired to be helpful to the city… but he was very reasonable".
Although brief, the Hahnemann Hospital occupation touched on a crisis that has run parallel to these protests - access to healthcare, particularly as the US has the world's highest number of coronavirus infections and the highest death toll.
Patrick Cline heads up an organisation called the Frontliners, which distributes medical supplies to protesters across the US through a network across different parts of the country, including Seattle. He told the BBC he started the organisation after seeing a police officer destroy medical supplies at a protest.





s
"He took his elbow and put it through a medic table - and all of the food and medical supplies spilt out onto the ground, and he stomped with his foot on the medical supplies," he said. Later, he saw videos of other officers doing the same thing in other parts of the country. "[Medics] weren't there to burn down buildings and whatnot, they were just there to help others being injured."
Councilmember Sawant accused the police in Seattle of targeting medics, too.
"Early on in the Capitol Hill movement, when the protest movement was facing down police violence, it was not only that the police were targeting peaceful protesters with mace and tear gas - they were targeting the medic tents near the protest action," she told the BBC. "I can tell you from personal experience how horrific it is. I was personally among the hundreds who were there. We were tear-gassed and maced, and the number of flashbang grenades that were exploded… it looked like a war zone."
There were four shootings at the Chop in a 10-day period towards the end of June, two of which were fatal. The first shooting happened in the early hours of 20 June, killing 19-year-old Horace Lorenzo Anderson and injuring a 33-year-old man. A second shooting the next day left a 17-year-old boy injured, and another person was wounded in a third shooting two days later. In the fourth shooting, on 29 June, a 16-year-old boy was shot and a 14-year-old boy was left critically injured. Allegations of sexual assault and mental health crises within the zone began to be reported, too.
Although protesters insisted the violence wasn't directly connected to Chop, the atmosphere in the community began to change.
Some officials who had previously been supportive of the protest zone began to sour, too. Mayor Durkan walked back her "summer of love" comments, and at the end of June announced that the zone would be dismantled, claiming the movement's message had "been undermined by violence". On 1 July, Chop reached a violent end.
The Seattle Police Department tweeted that anyone who remained in the area, or returned to it, would be arrested. After the area was cleared, Police Chief Carmen Best tried to put a nail in the idea of a police-free society, telling reporters: "Enough is enough."
TERS
Daniel Baryon, an anarchist YouTuber from Tulsa who spent a week in Chop towards the end of its existence, said the zone felt like it was on its "last legs" - and in contrast to the hopeful atmosphere when it was first established, negative coverage, a lack of democratic process and a toxic atmosphere all contributed to protesters feeling a "lack of enthusiasm" towards the end.
But the movement is looking to the future, he told the BBC.
"People are trying a tactic and seeing how it works, what the successes and the failures are, and how they should move forward," he said. "I don't want to get too specific, but the direction many people are going in is towards organising neighbourhoods, democratic structures that allow people to make decisions together, and to create an autonomous zone but the other way around - by building citizen power first, and then declaring autonomy, instead of seizing an autonomous zone in a spontaneous moment and then having to work through the chaos."
This democracy, he adds, would be "a consensus process - it's not electing representatives to decide for you, but it's everybody sitting down, forming the path forward together through discussion, and voting as a direct democracy".
For Grace, the autonomous zone was never meant to last forever. "I think it's sad and symbolic, and the way the police dismantled it was really terrible," she said. "But I don't think it was meant to be a permanent thing... it was meant to be a moment in time, a piece de resistance - and in that way it served its purpose."

INFORMATION:
THE HEAD
HEADLINE
BYLINE
QUOTE
DATELINE


B. THE HEAD
1. What happened after a number of increasingly dangerous clashes between protesters and law enforcement?
ANSWER: police officers in popular areas in downtown Seattle left their police station. then activists flocked to the neighbourhood and carried out peaceful protests that were occupied. There, they distributed free food and medical supplies, planted community gardens, and held film screenings and workshops. One small group painted a big, bright statement on the wall in the zone: "Black Lives Matter".

2. Where did the activity take place?
ANSWER: police officers in a popular area of downtown Seattle

3. When did this happen?
ANSWER: June 8th

2. Who was involved in the Chaz activities?
ANSWER: Hundreds of activists

4. Why was the area dubbed the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone - or Chaz?
ANSWER: That area became a utopia that was free of police and independent. A few days later, in an interview with CNN on June 11, the city's Democratic mayor Jenny Durkan said the zone could be a "summer of love".

5. How can Chaz inspire activists across the US?
ANSWER: The early success of Chaz, which later became known as the Capitol Hill Occupied Protest (Chop), the area was free of police which was a protest since the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis by police
Hundreds of activists participated in peaceful protests. This was in order to maintain the peace of the environment. There is a food cooperative, and also medical staff full of authentic doctors from all over the city who volunteer, and have their own ambulance. There are classes, lectures, speakers, poems, lots of live music, great works of art. so activists throughout the US are enthusiastic. Most importantly, Chaz has official support from the socialist council member Kshama Sawant.


source :
retrieved from : https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53218448
title : This police-free protest zone was dismantled - but was it the end?




A.SUMMARIZE

Hundreds of activists, who had been demonstrating against police brutality since the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis in May, then flocked to the neighbourhood and set up a peaceful occupied protest. There, they distributed free food and medical supplies, planted community gardens, and held film screenings and workshops. One small group painted a large, bright statement on a wall within the zone: "Black Lives Matter".
The area was declared the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone - or Chaz, for short. It was to be a police-free, self-governing utopia. A few days later, in an interview with CNN on 11 June, the city's Democratic mayor Jenny Durkan said the zone could herald a "summer of love".
Protester Grace Morgan said"There was a food co-op, as well as a full medics corner with actual doctors from around the city that had volunteered, and had their own ambulance. There were classes, lectures, speakers, poetry, lots of live music, huge works of art… It was really beautiful."

Crucially, Chaz had the official backing of socialist councilmember Kshama Sawant. The initial success of Chaz, which later came to be known as Capitol Hill Occupied Protest (Chop), inspired activists across the US. On 18 June another autonomous zone sprung up in Portland, Oregon. It was declared the Patrick Kimmons Autonomous Zone, or PKAZ, named after a 27-year-old black man who was killed by Portland police in September 2018.
"Sometime around midnight, more tents started to pop up on the street - and then word got around that we were building an autonomous zone right there and then," Grace, who also saw PKAZ get set up.
The atmosphere that night, she said, was "pretty magical".
"People were making beats and music just with the things we had around us… and a few spontaneous dance parties broke out," she said. Police officers stayed away for most of the night, which Grace said felt "pretty suspect": "Every other night, the cop presence had been very strong - they had been constantly breaking us up, tear-gassing us, and shooting us with rubber bullets, flashbangs and pepper balls."
But the PKAZ only stood for about five hours. The police arrived at about 05:30, reportedly in full riot gear. "There were about 30 of them and they started dismantling the barriers and telling people to leave," Grace said.

Another autonomous zone, this time on the other side of the country, suffered a similar fate. On 22 June, activists cordoned off an area just north of Lafayette Square in Washington DC. that is Black House Autonomous Zone or BHAZ.By the following morning, Bhaz had been dismantled by the police, and President Donald Trump had vowed in a tweet to meet protesters with "serious force" if they tried to rebuild the area - a threat so serious that Twitter placed a warning flag on it.
And later that week, in Philadelphia, protesters briefly brought a disused hospital back to life. The occupation was led by a coalition of healthcare workers and community members called Care Not Cops, which calls for funding that currently goes to the local police force to be reinvested in preventative public services, such as healthcare and community centres.
Local residents say Hahnemann primarily served low-income and black communities before it was permanently closed by its owner, real estate developer Joel Freedman, in September last year. As the coronavirus started sweeping through the US with force earlier this year, Mr Freedman told local media he had offered to sell the hospital to the city, or lease it for almost $1 million a month - $60 per day per bed, plus utilities and other running costs. The city couldn't afford it, and so despite the growing public health crisis, the hospital has remained empty.
Although brief, the Hahnemann Hospital occupation touched on a crisis that has run parallel to these protests. Patrick Cline heads up an organisation called the Frontliners, which distributes medical supplies to protesters across the US through a network across different parts of the country, including Seattle. He told the BBC he started the organisation after seeing a police officer destroy medical supplies at a protest.
At the time of his offer, a spokesman for Mr Freedman told US media that he had offered to sell the hospital to the city below market rates and that he had "not only desired to be helpful to the city… but he was very reasonable".
Although brief, the Hahnemann Hospital occupation touched on a crisis that has run parallel to these protests - access to healthcare, particularly as the US has the world's highest number of coronavirus infections and the highest death toll.
Patrick Cline heads up an organisation called the Frontliners, which distributes medical supplies to protesters across the US through a network across different parts of the country, including Seattle. He told the BBC he started the organisation after seeing a police officer destroy medical supplies at a protest.
There were four shootings at the Chop in a 10-day period towards the end of June, two of which were fatal. Allegations of sexual assault and mental health crises within the zone began to be reported, too.
Although protesters insisted the violence wasn't directly connected to Chop, the atmosphere in the community began to change.
Some officials who had previously been supportive of the protest zone began to sour, too. Mayor Durkan walked back her "summer of love" comments, and at the end of June announced that the zone would be dismantled, claiming the movement's message had "been undermined by violence". On 1 July, Chop reached a violent end.
The Seattle Police Department tweeted that anyone who remained in the area or returned to it would be arrested. After the area was cleared, Police Chief Carmen Best tried to put a nail in the idea of a police-free society, telling reporters: "Enough is enough."
For Grace, the autonomous zone was never meant to last forever. "I think it's sad and symbolic, and the way the police dismantled it was really terrible," she said. "But I don't think it was meant to be a permanent thing... it was meant to be a moment in time, a piece de resistance - and in that way, it served its purpose."

RESOURCES :
TITLE: Chop in Seattle: Why this police-free protest zone ultimately failed
BBC News (https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53218448)




Senin, 06 Juli 2020

WRITING BROADCAST by Tiara G

Coronavirus cases rising in Saudi Arabia, UAE after curfews lifted

·  
Reuters
Dubai, United Arab Emirates   /   Sun, July 5, 2020   /   04:42 pm
A Saudi family wearing protective face masks walk on Tahlia Street as nightlife kicks off, after the government loosened lockdown restrictions following the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia June 21, 2020. (REUTERS/Ahmed Yosri

Saudi Arabia's coronavirus infections have passed 200,000 and neighboring United Arab Emirates 50,000, with the number of new cases climbing after the Arab world's two largest economies fully lifted curfews last month.
Restrictions had been in place in both countries since mid-March and their gradual lifting has allowed commercial businesses and public venues to reopen.
Other Gulf countries have also moved to ease restrictions, although Kuwait has maintained a partial curfew and Qatar, Bahrain and Oman did not impose one at all.
Saudi Arabia, which has the highest count among the six Gulf states, reported more than 4,100 cases on Friday and on Saturday to take its total to 205,929, with 1,858 deaths. The daily tally first rose above 4,000 in mid-June, but had dipped.
The United Arab Emirates, where daily infection rates recently dropped to between 300 and 400 from a peak of some 900 in late May, registered more than 600 cases on Friday and over 700 on Saturday, taking its toll to 50,857, with 321 deaths.
Dubai, the region's business and tourism hub is due to reopen to foreign visitors on July 7, although this has not been implemented at a federal level in the UAE, which does not provide a breakdown of cases for each of its seven emirates.
Qatar, which has the second highest regional infection rate, has seen its daily case numbers fall from a peak of more than 2,000 in late May to around 500 on Saturday, bringing it near to 100,000 cases in total.
In Oman, the health minister warned on Thursday that there had been a disturbing surge in infections in the last six weeks and urged people to comply with health measures.
Iran, the epicenter for the disease in the Middle East with a total infection count of 237,878 and 11,408 deaths as of Saturday, has imposed new curbs to halt the spread of the virus. 


Jumat, 03 Juli 2020

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written by tiara guspianty 1788203086

Senin, 22 Juni 2020

Visiting Seaworld,Ancol with My Family

VISITINGSEAWORLD ANCOL WITH MY FAMILY
WRITING CAPTION
name :Tiara Guspianty
NIM   :1788203086

Visiting Seaworld Ancol with My Family



In February 2020, my family and I visited one of the educational facilities in Ancol, Central Jakarta.
interesting part of this place was outside the seaworld building, shown the decoration of trash bottles that were turned into a work of art in the form of sea animals

when entered into. a lot of aquariums filled with sea animals such as turtles, stingrays, jellyfish, sharks, eels, various ornamental fish and many other species that I did not know before, for example this eel.it was unique,I never seen this kind of eel before. this is cool, right?


the coolest part is that in seaworld I can also watch swimmers show to feed sharks in the huge aquarium


I arrived into a room that was quite dark filled with a aquarium that lights up in blue, the aquarium is inhabited by beautiful jellyfish


there was also a pool of unique baby sharks. baby sharks are docile so I can hold them


the most memorable part was when I entered the aquarium tunnel, I felt like I was under water
it's a beautiful time. I hope I can visit it again after covid-19 is over.





Senin, 15 Juni 2020

More than 300 foreigners infected with COVID-19 in Indonesia with 26 deaths

Apriza Pinandita and Budi Sutrisno
The Jakarta Post
Jakarta   /   Fri, June 12, 2020   /   04:03 pm
Indonesian Red Cross staff prepare to sterilize Wisma Atlet Kemayoran in Jakarta on March 21 prior to the opening of the COVID-19 hospital there. JP/Seto Wardhana (JP/Seto Wardhana)
· 
Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno LP Marsudi announced on Thursday that there were at least 311 foreign nationals infected with COVID-19 in Indonesia, of whom 26 have died.
“As of Wednesday, there are 311 foreigners who have tested positive for COVID-19, 26 have died and 204 others have recovered,” she said in a virtual press briefing.
The ministry also recorded as many as 485 foreigners currently classified as people under surveillance (ODP). Of the figure, 265 foreigners have been repatriated to their home countries.
Retno did not provide details on the nationalities of the foreign nationals.
However, she ensured that the Foreign Ministry was consistently communicating with their respective embassies in Jakarta.
In the briefing, Retno also gave an update on the status of Indonesian returnees amid the COVID-19 pandemic. She said that, as of Wednesday, 110,457 Indonesians had returned home, an increase of 2,807 within a week.
Meanwhile, 21,733 Indonesian crewmembers had also returned from 29 countries. They arrived in Indonesia through dedicated entry points in Jakarta and Bali. This was an increase of 1,096 compared to last week.
Furthermore, at least 7,299 Indonesians have returned home via self-repatriation from 43 countries, an increase of 490 compared to last week.
“The Foreign Ministry also continues to extend assistance to Indonesians abroad who are in need. Between March 18 and June 10, in Malaysia alone, our embassies and consulate generals have distributed 298,007 packages of basic needs,” Retno said.
She also explained that with the help of the Indonesian diaspora abroad, the ministry managed to provide 407,175 packages in total in Malaysia.
“This brings our assistance globally to a total of 474,947 packages including in the Middle East, Asia-Pacific, Europe, America and Africa,” she added.




The results of headline analysis.
1. The headline is very emphasized and can sell  the stories' content.
2. There's no opinion stated in that headline
3. That headline is the number one entry point into the story.
4. That headline is not given information that is not given in the story. It means that the headline is appropriate with the story.
5. Readers can scan that headline very quickly to see and there's anything that they can read about it, so the most recent information should be featured. That headline will be read by more people than story will.
6. That headline is inform the reader through a simple declarative sentence: subject, verb, direct object.
7. That headline is in active voice and use action verbs rather than "being verbs".
8. To reflect past action, the headline is written in the past tense.
9. To show future or possible action, the headline is written with the infinitive form of the verb: to + verb.
10. Headline writer is not use "can", "may" or "will", because it is real fact that happening, not prediction.
11. That headline is let the reader know who is doing what, along with other necessary W and H. The "when" is not find, because it is not necessary.
12. That headline is avoided from abbreviations.
13. That headline is not using the name of the school or its initials.
14. That headline is still using conjunction “with”, but is not many for more interesting subjects, verbs and objects.
15. That headline structure is varied and uses multi-line as well as one-line headline on news stories. For special stories and feature stories, use specialty or feature headlines.
16. When writing multi-line headline:
a. That headline is keep the verb phrase on the same line.
b. That headline is keep adverbs and the words they modify on the same line.
C. That headline is keep prepositional phrases on the same line.
d. That headline is keep keep words that go together, such as a first and last name, on the same line.
e. A line of that headline cannot end with a hyphen.
17. That headline is keep capitalization to a minimum.
18. there is no Punctuation

The results of headline analysis.

The headline is very emphasize and can sell the stories’ content. There’s no opinion stated in that headline, even though in editorial and column. Readers can scan that headline very quickly to see and there’s anything that they can to read about it, so the most newsworthy information must be featured. That headline will be read by more people than story will. That headline is the number one entry point into the story, not give information that is not given in the story, it means that that headline is appropriate with the story. inform the reader through a simple declarative sentence: subject, verb, direct object, and that headline is in active voice and use action verbs rather than “being verbs”. To reflect past action, the headline is written in past tense. To show future or possible action, the headline is written with the infinitive form of the verb: to + verb. Headline writer is not use “can”, “may” or “will”, because it is real fact that happening, not prediction. That headline is let the reader know who is doing what, along with other necessary W and H. The “when” is not find, because is not necessary. That headline is avoided from abbreviations, not use the name of the school or its initials, still using conjunction “with”, but is not many for more interesting subject, verb and object, and that headline structure is varied and use multi-line as well as one-line headline on news stories. For special stories and feature stories, use specialty or feature headline. When writing multi-line headline, that headline is keep verb phrase on the same line, keep adjectives and the words they modify on the same line,  keep adverbs and the words they modify on the same line, keep prepositional phrases on the same line, keep words that go together, such as a first and last name, on the same line, and a line of that headline cannot end with a hyphen. That headline is keep capitalization to a minimum. There is no Punctuation