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‘No Kings’ rallies draw millions protesting Trump globally

A rolling wave of “No Kings” protests swelled through America’s small towns and big cities Saturday, with crowds gathering to blast President Trump, Immigration and Customs Enforcement crackdowns, the war in Iran and high gas and food prices.
Saturday’s demonstrations were expected to draw millions of people nationwide, including thousands for a downtown Los Angeles rally. More than 40 protests were planned for L.A., Orange and Ventura counties, part of the national “No Kings Day of Nonviolent Action.”
No Kings Coalition organizers were hoping that turnout for the rallies in all 50 states could combine to form the largest single-day protest in U.S. history. They pointed to growing anger over the country’s direction, including fatal ICE shootings and troops dispatched to the Middle East, since the first “No Kings” demonstration was held last June.
On Saturday morning, hundreds gathered around the reflecting pool at Pasadena City College. A band rolled through with a fascism-themed parody of Johnny Cash’s “Folsom Prison Blues.” Sign-toting protesters lined Colorado Boulevard, drawing a constant stream of honking from the cars driving by. For many, the Iran war was top of mind.
“Every time we protest, there’s something completely new, which speaks to the chaos of the Trump administration,” Cindy Campbell told The Times. “ICE raids last year, Epstein files a few months ago. Now, war.”
“This administration doesn’t serve us. It serves billionaires,” said Kent Miller, of Monrovia, who participated in the Pasadena protest. “War with Iran is only making life harder for working people.”
Miller pointed to a Chevron gas station advertising gas for $6.45 per gallon.
“See?” he said.
National coordinators said there has been increased interest in smaller communities, including Republican bastions, with higher-than-expected attendance during Saturday’s protests.
“I’m out here because I’m disgusted with what I’m seeing,” said Kersty Kinsey, a mother who was protesting near the Beaufort, S.C., City Hall. “People are suffering, and he’s playing golf. People are suffering, and he’s going other places and blowing things up.”
In Beaufort, an antebellum city founded in 1711, an estimated 3,000 people turned out — a marked increase over earlier “No Kings” rallies, said Barb Nash, one of the coordinators. Amid the moss-draped live oaks and blooming pink and white azaleas, a person in a purple Barney dinosaur costume held a sign reading: “Dino’s for Democracy.” A young girl handed out homemade “Resistance Cookies.”
Los Angeles coordinators said they expect more than 100,000 people at the local events, which were being planned for Beverly Hills, Burbank, West Covina, West Hollywood and Thousand Oaks. One group planned a “Road Outrage” car caravan to motor through Mid City with flapping flags calling for “No War,” and “ICE Out of LA.” At a Torrance gathering, cars honked, protesters waved flags, and a person in an inflatable green cow costume hoisted a large American flag.
The White House, in a Saturday statement, dismissed the protests as a “Trump Derangement Therapy Session.”
Organizers said they have been particularly encouraged by the surge of interest from groups in rural communities that wanted to join the loose-knit No Kings Coalition and hold protests.
Jaynie Parrish, founder of the Arizona Native Vote project, started planning a protest for her tiny town of Kayenta, on the Navajo Nation in northern Arizona, only earlier this week.
“My dad, who’s a [military] veteran and an elder, said: ‘We should go,’ and I said, ‘OK,’” Parrish told The Times.
“Our folks don’t always protest for things, but this was very important,” Parrish said. “A lot of our families are feeling the impacts right now of higher prices and things being cut. A lot of our healthcare benefits are being cut … and our tribal sovereignty is being threatened.”
Upbeat Midwestern activists withstood whipping winds to form a line of protesters stretching nearly three blocks of Burlington Avenue in Hastings, Neb. Under the crisp blue skies, one of the protesters, Drew Fausett, told The Times in a phone interview that he is a registered Republican in the decidedly red state.
“My politics haven’t really changed — but the party around me has,” Fausett said. “It used to be the two parties were two sides of the same coin, and they would work together — but not anymore.”
He and his wife, Becky, have attended “No Kings” and other protests because “it’s the only way to show that people have different opinions,” he said. “People are out here speaking for their families and their neighbors. That’s what this is all about.”
Trump’s policies are hurting many in Nebraska — including farmers, said Debby Thompson, one of the Hastings organizers.
“We want to urge our representatives in Congress to not just rubber stamp whatever Trump wants because it’s really hurting rural folks and farmers,” Thompson said. “The tariffs and huge increase in prices on fertilizer are hitting farmers really hard.”
The “No Kings” campaign sprouted in June as an act of defiance on Trump’s 79th birthday. He wanted a military parade in Washington to mark his milestone, and anti-Trump protesters came out in force — an estimated 5 million people around the country — with their own display. At the time, Trump’s second-term policies were coming into focus, including ramping up immigration raids, deploying the National Guard to L.A. in response to protests, and mass firings within the federal government.
A subsequent event in mid-October drew even larger crowds, with an estimated 7 million people protesting around the country.
Saturday’s event coincided with a dip in Trump’s approval ratings. A Reuters/Ipsos poll last week found 36% approve of Trump’s job performance, marking the lowest level since his return to office last year. In a separate Fox News Poll released last week, 59% disapproved of his job performance.
“Since the last ‘No Kings,’ we’re seeing higher gas prices and groceries, all while there’s an illegal war in Iran,” national organizer Sarah Parker of the organization 50501 said during a Thursday press briefing. “We’ve also seen our neighbors executed — American citizens executed.”
Widespread protests and candlelight vigils followed January’s fatal shootings by ICE agents in Minneapolis of Renee Good, a 37-year-old mother of three, and Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old intensive care unit nurse.
“The defining story of this Saturday’s mobilization is not just how many people are protesting — but where they are protesting,” Leah Greenberg, co-founder of Indivisible, said during the press briefing. She said two-thirds of the RSVPs to national organizers came from outside of major urban centers.
The Los Angeles event was organized by the local chapter of 50501 (short for “50 protests, 50 states, 1 movement”) and other progressive groups, including the ACLU, Human Rights Campaign, Indivisible and Public Citizen, as well as labor unions such as Unite Here Local 11 and the Service Workers International Union.
“There’s an affordability crisis in this country — people can’t afford groceries or healthcare,” Joseph Bryant, SEIU executive vice president, said in a statement. “But this administration is focused on expanding its power, starting unnecessary wars that benefit billionaires, and targeting immigrants and citizens who dare to stand up for them.”
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Is Iran a Political Problem for Trump? Tell Me How Long the War Lasts.
Historically, quagmire abroad and high prices at home are the ingredients of a failed presidency.
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Mars-Like Worlds Near M-Dwarfs May Lose Air in Millions of Years
The criteria for finding an Earth-like planet unofficially comes down to two things: water and the habitable zone. But a phenomenon known as atmospheric escape often “escapes” the minds of many astronomy fans, and it turns out that atmospheric escape is one of the key characteristics for finding an Earth-like world. Although extensive research has been conducted on how the planet Mars might have lost its atmosphere, and potentially the ability to sustain life, how would the atmosphere enveloping a Mars-like exoplanet respond to stars different from our own?
Now, an international team of more than three dozen researchers might be one step closer to understanding atmospheric escape and how it not only influences planetary atmosphere evolution, but potentially the evolution of life. In a study recently submitted to The Astrophysical Journal, the collaborative team used computer models to simulate a Mars-like exoplanet (referred to as an exo-Mars in the paper) orbiting Barnard’s star, which is an M-type red dwarf star located approximately 6 light-years from Earth, about 14 percent the mass of our Sun, and is estimated to be between 7 to 10 billion years old.
For context, our Sun (which is a larger, G-type star) is approximately 4.6 billion years old. It is because of its age that Barnard’s star is so inactive compared to younger M-type stars, which exhibit larger solar flares and activity than our Sun. It is this inactivity compared to younger M-type stars that astronomers chose Barnard’s star to model their exo-Mars, the latter of which the team used the same planetary parameters as the planet Mars, including its same mass, radius, and thin carbon dioxide-heavy atmosphere.
However, the team placed their exo-Mars at a much closer orbital distance from Barnard’s star at 0.087 astronomical units (AU) compared to the actual Mars orbiting our Sun at 1.52 AU. The reason for this closer distance was to simulate the same level of solar activity and radiation as Mars receives from our Sun.
In the end, despite the less-active Barnard’s star, the researchers found that the atmosphere of exo-Mars would take approximately 350,000 years to remove a present-day Mars atmosphere enveloping exo-Mars and would take approximately 50 million years to remove an exo-Mars atmosphere equivalent to Earth’s atmosphere. While the team’s exo-Mars orbits just outside Barnard’s star’s habitable zone, they hypothesize that any planet orbiting within the habitable zone would likely have their atmosphere stripped like exo-Mars. Currently, Barnard’s star is estimated to have four small, rocky worlds orbiting inside the inner edge of the habitable zone, potentially putting the fates of their atmospheres even worse than the modeled exo-Mars.
The study notes, “Exo-Mars loses atmosphere very rapidly, and it is difficult to imagine that the four planets would lose atmosphere significantly more slowly than exo-Mars. Primary atmospheres seem similarly unlikely, since primary atmospheres are comprised of hydrogen and helium, which are lighter than CO2 [carbon dioxide] and thus should escape more easily, and were likely removed much earlier in the star’s evolution when the stellar XUV [X-ray/Extreme Ultraviolet] flux and wind rates were ∼ 100 times larger.”
Billions of years ago, Mars was hypothesized to have been a warmer and wetter planet, with vast rivers and large lakes of liquid water cascading across the Red Planet’s surface. While scientists estimate that these potentially habitable conditions existed for hundreds of millions of years, it is estimated that the Martian cooled significantly early in Mars’ history, resulting in a loss of volcanic activity and the magnetic field meant to shield the atmosphere and surface from the harsh solar radiation. Presently, Mars is a cold and dry world, devoid of liquid water or habitable conditions of any kind.
Studying how Mars-like worlds orbit and interact with other types of stars enables researchers to gain greater understanding into how life on exoplanets could form and evolve, and even how it might not come to pass. Additionally, studying how M-dwarf stars age and evolve is crucial for finding Earth-like exoplanets, as M-type stars are not only the most common type of star in the galaxy, but they also have lifetimes estimated to surpass our Sun by potentially trillions of years.
What new insight into Mars-like exoplanets and M-dwarf stars will researchers make in the coming years and decades? Only time will tell, and this is why we science!
As always, keep doing science & keep looking up!
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Early spring storms bringing snow to California, drizzle to Los Angeles
The storm season isn’t over just yet, as an early spring system headed for California is expected to bring snow to the Sierra and light rain to Los Angeles next week.
Two waves of precipitation are headed to the Tahoe region, with the first wave beginning Monday into Tuesday evening, according to the National Weather Service. The Sierras could get up to two inches near Mammoth.
A second, stronger system is expected to drop from Alaska Wednesday into Thursday, with up to a foot of snow predicted for the highest peaks in the Tahoe basin and about 2 to 5 inches of snow outside of the highest peaks, according to the weather service. Lake Tahoe could receive up to 3 inches of snow.
“With active winters, we’ll have snow even in May,” said National Weather Service meteorologist Gigi Giralte in Reno. “It’s not necessarily out of the ordinary. It’s just out of ordinary for the winter that we’ve been in because it’s been very dry in the month of March for our area and it’s been warm as well.”
On Friday, temperatures are expected to warm up to the mid-60s to the lower 70s for the Sierra communities, with gusts up to 25 mph, according to the weather service. On Saturday, South Lake Tahoe could reach 66 degrees and is supposed to warm up even more by Sunday.
Temperatures are expected to drop during the snow to near-normal temperatures by the end of March, according to the weather service. The second storm could also bring some wind-related impacts. Snow levels could dip below 7,000 feet and as low as 5,000 feet by early Thursday.
In Los Angeles, there’s about a 20 to 40% chance there could be light rain on Tuesday into Wednesday.
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Why Did the UK Police Repeatedly Decline to Investigate Claims About Epstein and Prince Andrew?
