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New York Exploded in Protests for Eric Garner Last Night

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Photos by ​Pete Voelker

"How do you spell racism? N-Y-P-D."

It's been four hours since a grand jury on Staten Island decided ​against indicting Officer Daniel Pantaleo in the chokehold death of 43-year-old Eric Garner in July. The streets surrounding Rockefeller Center in Manhattan are crammed with people who are either here to see the annual Christmas tree lighting or to protest the death of yet another unarmed black man by a white police officer. And the mood is tense, as NYPD police officers blankly stare at people calling them racists and murderers.

Earlier, Mayor Bill de Blasio joined high-ranking officials in a small church on Staten Island, a few blocks from where Garner was fatally confronted by cops this summer. The mayor spoke somberly to the crowd, appearing choked up at times, and called for peace during the protests.

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"Nonviolent social activism is the only thing that has ever worked," the mayor said after teasing a federal Department of Justice probe into the case. "And the Garner family has made that abundantly clear. Michael Brown's family made that abundantly clear. People should listen to those we say we stand in solidarity with, fulfill their wishes and work for change the right way."

And for the most part, that's what happened. The streets of New York City erupted in protest throughout the night, with throngs of people spreading as far uptown as Harlem and far as west as the Hudson River. Reports of sporadic arrests—which were notably nowhere near the number of people collared at Occupy Wall Street—came through, and cops were equipped with plastic handcuffs and billy clubs, but barely used them.  (The NYPD said early Thursday that some 83 people were arrested in the protests.)

The protest methods varied: Some crowds walked right into oncoming traffic on Park Avenue, with dozens of cops tailing them, while others shut down entire roads, even Broadway. Several times, the crowds converged on Times Square, hands raised, yelling the line now synonymous with the death of Eric Garner: "I can't breathe!"

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"I feel disgusted to be a New Yorker today," Patrick Waldo, a protester originally from Virginia, told me. "I am disappointed to live in a city when a police officer who killed someone illegally in public, in broad daylight, can walk free."

This past summer, Waldo had marched alongside Esaw Garner, Eric's wife, on Staten Island. He said he felt "depressed" when he heard the news Monday, but more shocked that a person could be illegally put in a chokehold, slammed to the ground, and kneed in the chest, on video for all to see, without the perpetrator even coming to trial. That's why he's out here.

"I hope 50 years from now, when kids learn about Eric Garner on Wikipedia," he told me," there will be an anecdote attached that said, 'People all over organized mass protests in response.' When asked what he thought of the mayor's words, Waldo said, "He's scared."

Another protester I spoke with named Dan (who omitted his last name) wore a cardboard hat that spelled out the names of Akai Gurley, Eric Garner, Tamir Rice, and Michael Brown (all black males killed by the cops in the past few months) on each side. He was a bit disappointed with the protest's overall set-up; it was too docile and organized for him. "In-box," is how he described it. To remedy that, he wanted to "make Ferguson in NYC," which was NYPD Commissioner William J. Bratton's worst night​mare.

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"The best protests happened out of box," Dan told me. "No meeting time, no set place, nothing. We need to get more out of our box; every type of protest here is controlled. Let's make it happen! It was on camera!"

Dan said the mayor's call for calm was a "gimmick," and his friend, Joe, who also didn't want to give his last name, said. De Blasio was "weak as shit," Joe added—the mayor's deference to the cops shows that "the NYPD run this city."

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"These protests... it's as if the city is saying, 'OK, do this, but don't do more than that,'" Dan added. "'Don't rock the boat too much.' I'm about to take 50 people and start moving."

Soon after, down on 47th Street and Sixth Avenue, the crowd grew agitated as more cops appeared as if from nowhere to tame the masses. A smirk by one officer led loads of people to yell, "What the fuck are you laughing about?!" and another protester started to shake the barricade, yelling that he was "tired of this fucking shit."

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A number of people splintered off, forming a line that walked to Grand Central Terminal, the site of an earlier "die-in," which had dozens of supporters laying on the ground of the massive transportation hub, imitating Garner's cold, dead body. The protestors were able to walk among taxi cabs and buses free of harm—something that would have been incomprehensible during the Bloomberg years—and one guy even threw a dumpster in the middle of the road.

That's when I caught up with Akil Gibbons, another protester who had arrived just an hour before. "I wasn't surprised when I heard the verdict—there's been so many killings in these last three months," he told me. "This is New York City. It'll still be as racist and as corrupt as ever."

But Gibbons conceded that he's noticed a change from the cops, in terms of how they control crowds. He does believe de Blasio is on his side, but he's still not sure what that means.

"I don't know what he is going to tell his kids tonight," he told me. "They're all black! The great part about it is that he has to tell his family tonight about all of this."

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At the press conference that afternoon, de Blasio had responded to that frustration, and did exactly what critics argued President Obama failed to do after Ferguson: act human.

"I couldn't help but immediately think what it would mean to me to lose Dante," the mayor said, referring to his interracial son. "Life could never be the same thereafter, and I could feel how it will never be whole again—things will never be whole again for Mr. Garner."

And last night, at least for a few hours, neither was New York City.

Follow John Surico on ​Twitter.


America Loves This Dutch Cocaine Warning Sign

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Photo via ​Imgur/Reddit

Now that ​some asshole in Amsterdam is passing off heroin as cocaine, city authorities have created a very helpful sign in English to warn tourists about the dangers of buying hard drugs from strangers. One sentence in the black box at the bottom seems to have captured America's imagination: "You will not be arrested for using drugs in Amsterdam," a remark that prompted Christopher Ingraham of the Washington Post to ​praise the sign as "what a sane drug policy looks like." 

The sign, which if full of fun, imperfect English also says that, "Currently extremely dangerous cocaine is being sold in Amsterdam," which flies in the face of the drugs-are-bad-mkay "education" most Americans receive, which claims all coke is extremely dangerous. The sign also instructs the reader to "ignore streetdealers," implying—amazingly—that there are reliable dealers elsewhere.

The sign reflects a Dutch concept called ​Gedogen, a relaxed attitude toward drug enforcement, which is actually not a legal difference between Dutch and American (or British) drug laws. 

Here in the States we urgently needed signs like this earlier this year, when a batch of heroin laced with ​fentanyl caused ​80 fatal overdoses. Police in places like Hartford, Connecticut, issued news releases to the media, and went on TV warning people about the specific "​New World" label. But they didn't distribute anything like the Amesterdam sign, so if heroin users weren't diligently watching the TV news, they probably didn't get the message.

But there could easily be valuable warning signs like this tomorrow in the States without any change in the law. Police departments would just have to allow them to exist. And that's really, really unlikely thanks to a hostile and counterproductive relationship between cops and users.

While common sense should tell you that the best course of action if someone is overdosing is to call an ambulance, in the US—​as well as in the UKagain and again we see people die from overdoses simply because they were afraid to call the authorities. 

And given America's ​plunging levels of trust in law enforcement in, a sign like this would probably seem like some kind of trap.

The Dutch ​pioneered harm reduction as a response to drug use, and this is just the latest example (although it should be noted that this attitude ​isn't shared by all Dutch people). Meanwhile, even the most basic harm reduction programs in the United States remain controversial, with opposition figures usually ​harping on the ​cost in order to kill lifesaving measures like needle exchanges and ​naloxone, the so-called "heroin antidote."

Amsterdam's policy of treating drug users like adults who can make decisions would be a major deal in the US—and a sign that warns adults of added risks seems like an artifact from another world.

Follow Mike Pearl on Twitter.

A Man Is Going to Prison for Breaking California's Revenge Porn Law

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Photo via Flickr user ​f1uffster (Jeanie)

Monday saw the first conviction under California's ​revenge porn law: Noe Iniguez was senten​ced to a year in jail and 36 months of probation after he posted a topless photo of his ex online. The 36-year-old from Los Angeles also called the woman a "drunk" and a "slut," among other derogatory comments.

It's actually pretty surprising that  Iniguez is serving time. When the law was passed in October 2013, criti​cs called it pointless and said it put a burden on prosecutors to prove intended "emotional distress." It also curiously excluded selfies, which make up about 80 percent of what becomes revenge porn. And although these kinds of laws might be said to represent a victory over pervs everywhere, there are some serious questions raised by revenge porn laws in general.

In neighboring Arizona, for instance, a lawsuit has been filed by a consortium of concerned First Amendment advocates. Helmed by a bookseller named Gayle Shanks and bound together by the ​ACLU, the group actually brings up some pretty good points—or at least good enough that they got a federal judge to put a hold on the law late last month. Their efforts also point to a conundrum that will have to be resolved if there's any hope of a federal anti-revenge-porn law getting passed.

Back in April, Arizona became the ninth state to pass a law aimed at stopping disgruntled guys from humiliating their exes. House ​Bill 2515 made it unlawful to "disclose, display, distribute, publish, advertise or offer" nude photographs. That struck plaintiff Shanks as incredibly broad—if she actually followed the law she'd be pulling books off her shelves, or else ostensibly face arrest.

"The law makes it very difficult for a book store to carry art books, because nearly every art book because nearly every book has nudes in them," Shanks told VICE. "Obviously the photographer got permission before taking the photos, but if a police officer walked in and saw an Edward Weston book on my shelves, he or she could ask where we had permission in the store from each model to sell their pictures."

Her complaint brings up examples of potentially banned speech that are much more problematic. Examples include a college professor showing the iconic "Napalm Girl" photo during a lecture on Vietnam, a newsstand operator selling a magazine with the Abu Ghraib images in it, and a sexual assault victim showing a snapshot of her nude assailant to her mother—all could theoretically be subject to felony charges under the new Arizona law.

No one's been prosecuted under Arizona's law yet—and the idea of someone getting charged in one of the aforementioned scenarios is rather unlikely. But the law doesn't take a distributor's motive into account, as the California law does, nor does it make an exception for matters of public interest.

While California's law has been criticized for being too specific at least it worked in  Iniguez's case. But there is still a need to be careful when writing these bills.

"The revenge porn law could be a good law, but unfortunately the Arizona legislators didn't think it through from beginning to end," Shanks said. "They thought they were solving the problem of disgruntled ex-boyfriends posting photos on the internet, but they took it way too far." 

Follow Allie Conti on ​Twitter.

Melbourne’s Unhygienic Restaurants Are More Delicious Than They Look

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​All photos by author

I've gone through the mill of shitty hospitality jobs and taken comfort in the fact that, with the abuse, I've fostered an immunity to less-than-savory hygiene practices in the workplace. When you have a line of ​passive-aggressive brunchers with $900 baby strollers asking you where you source your eggs, there's no time to question why your chef is flipping the steak with his fingers.

I realize that every eatery—within my budget—is dirty. But compared to my parents, who were raised on South East Asian street food, the cushiony enclave of Australian hygiene standards means my stomach is more aluminum foil than steel. So, in an effort to test my digestive system's defenses and do justice to my genetic heritage, I set out to dine at Melbourne's dirtiest eateries. I had two questions in mind: are hygiene levels any indication of taste? And how much dirt can a dirt-cheap restaurant get away with serving before I'm hunched over the toilet screaming to god to send me sweet relief and a Sprite?

Unlike our  ​friends i​n the UK, Melbourne isn't blessed with a food agency ratings list. But the Victorian Health department does publish the Register of Convictions: a list of eateries convicted by the magistrates' court of breaching food safety standards. Each offender is only listed publicly for 12 months, giving them a shot to clean up their act without murdering their reputation permanently.

Not satisfied with the short-term memory of the public register, I turned to UrbanSpoon and various blogs to aid me in my search. Generally speaking, the worst offenders in the city—like the cockroach-infested  Southbank restaurant fined $90,000 for various breaches of food safety standards—are forced to close down. But while Australians should feel proud we live in a country where the government takes your getting diarrhea seriously, there are still a number of establishments that live close to the greasy edge.

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My first stop was Noodle Kingdom on Russell street. This humble and busy chain is known for its handmade noodles. It also incurred fines for  multiple breaches back in 2010, but, undiscouraged, continued business as usual. When I entered, a guy was walking back and forth nonchalantly between the kitchen sink and the front window with a tofu container of soap scum and a window scrubber.

I ordered a serving of Shanghai fried noodles and a plate of preserved egg. I only managed half a serving of the egg. Don't do it unless salty egg-flavored jelly is your thing. Then out came my face-sized plate of noodles. I couldn't tell what type of animal had given up its life to marinate in a sea of slimy noodles and two sad pieces of bok choy for my dining pleasure, but I thanked its mother and father for making it happen. It was fucking delicious. I reluctantly unpeeled myself from the vinyl seats, paid a tenner and headed to my next destination.

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Like most university students around the world, I've spent the past few years surviving on the cheap mysterious offerings of Chinatown. And while the options of interchangeable restaurants are plentiful, I settled on Shanghai Village for its strange popularity despite constant reviews of subpar hygiene levels and poor service. A Yelp reviewer  ​reported maggots in his dumplings and someone named "ShadowRavenwulf" wrote about getting the hot sweats following a visit here.

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Shanghai Village is not generally a daytime destination. In the daylight, the shocking pink décor and militant signage ("NO OUTSIDE DRINKS BY THE LAW" next to a "BYO" sign) seemed more charming than usual. I guess everything looks and tastes different when you're sober and not wiping pee off the toilet seat. 

I ordered a plate of fried pork and vegetable dumplings and some crispy pumpkin pastries. The pastries had the consistency of mashed potato but tasted like custard. Confusing. Despite having few traces of real pumpkin, what was essentially fried baby food was relatively inoffensive. The fried dumplings, on the other hand, were an instant hit of oil that caused my t-zone to level up with each bite. And while the parcels of indistinguishable minced meat made my dining partner grimace, I was more than content. What can I say? My eating standards are as low as these place's hygiene levels.

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Next up was Tiba's on Sydney road, Brunswick. The original plan was to hit up Alaysya's further down the road but friends had noted they'd cleaned up their act majorly since their health breaches in 2006. So Tiba's—with its menu of  UrbanSpoon complaints about gross kitchen practices, dirty floors, and greasy cutlery—it was. 

Service here is really confusing, and no amount of eye contact with an idle waiter will get you anything more than a glance before they brush past you, leaving tables uncleared. I went for a mixed grill that included an assortment of chicken, sausage, lamb cutlet, salads, and dip. 

One of my nonsensical pet peeves is finger contact with food, which happened one too many times here. I don't care much what happens in the kitchen, but for the love of god, don't bring me my food with the tip of your thumb in it. That aside, the salad here was pretty fresh, if a little overdressed. The kebab meat was your standard salt fest while the sausage was, from my best guess, made from a variety of innards and tasted as such. I couldn't stomach the entirety of the sausage, but managed to polish off the rest of the plate.

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By the end of the day, I could feel my stomach working in overdrive to digest the excess of salt and oil consumed. Aside from that, my bowels were intact, and after washing my face I was good as new. Either I have extraordinarily low standards for food, or my initial suspicions were correct: dirty is code for delicious.

Follow Emma on​ Twitter.

Black Lives Matter

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There were times in my youth when I felt ashamed of my skin. I felt like God Himself had cursed me by placing a cloak of steaming hot shit around my white bones. I was marked; everyone could see it. Even on my best days, even when I was at my most jubilant, that weight of identity was always there. No matter how hard I tried, I could never escape my race and the burdens that came with it.

My school classmates were predominately white, and even in the supposedly enlightened days of the 90s—Michael Jordan! The black Power Ranger! ​My Brother and Me!—they never let me forget I was different. I was called a nigger in the schoolyard, dead raccoons were left in my front lawn, and kids would talk about my "rat hair." My teachers seemed to be offended when I displayed cleverness and suggested I should get held back or get placed on Ritalin regimen for my "hyperactivity." Or they just sent me to detention—it was easier for them to punish me than to deal with me as a normal student.

My "friends" didn't treat me any better. Once, when a group of white boys I had invited over to my house saw what an impressive collection of action figures I had, they purposefully destroyed them, cutting off heads and limbs and even pissing all over the room to make sure I never forgot that a black boy like me didn't deserved such nice things. I was so ashamed of the whole affair, it took me a whole day to finally tell my parents what the kids I "played" with had done to me in our house.

At a certain point, I just gave up. No one wanted me, no one would treat me like I belonged, so why would I try to play their games? In the midst of primary school, I stopped  trying altogether and I let my grades fall. I became more introverted. I started getting into more trouble, acting out to actually earn my demerits because I figured I was going to get them one way or another. I got so many detentions at one point, I started looking forward to it. It felt comfortable and had become kind of routine.

It took a lot of love to pull me back from the brink. When I look at back at my early school days, I can see the lost road I might have traveled had I not had my parents, a few key teachers, and some powerful books and art that allowed me to recognize my value as a person. It shouldn't take all that for a child to realize that he is loved, that he has something to offer—but then again, there's a lot of stuff in this world that shouldn't be there.

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I found my spirit and a love for myself in the words of Malcolm X, whose autobiography my mother recommended I pick up from the library. I read it twice. I found it in the Public Enemy, NWA, and Geto Boys cassette tapes my father would play before he dropped me off at school as a kind of call to arms to prepare me for the oncoming onslaught against my personhood. And I found it in the nudging of some caring white teachers and administrators who recognized I was drowning and understood why. They made efforts to add the history of my ancestors to the curriculum and took the time to remind me that, regardless of what people may have said, I was smart and had something positive to contribute.

Racism is powerful; racism is an invisible force that flows through this country like blood through veins. We all know this, or we should. We see it in the deaths of men like  ​Eric Garner , ​Mich​ael Brown, and ​Trayvon M​artin, and in the way their killers walk away unscathed. But institutionalized racism isn't just about the headlines you read or the grand jury verdicts that inspire protests, it's something that infects the consciousness of black people everywhere. 

The dogged concept of the subhumanity of the black race, a myth dreamed up by whites who wanted to excuse the imprisoning, raping, and murdering of my people, has survived far longer than the institution of slavery it supported. We see it in the way cops police our streets like they're an occupying force; we see it in the  way we kill each other day in and day out, exhibiting a blatant disregard for the lives of our brothers and sisters.

When I was  a lost little black boy growing up surrounded by whites, I hated being me. I thought my life didn't matter. l was wrong—but how else was I supposed to feel? What else are the lost black children of today supposed to feel when they hear that black men and boys are killed by white cops and it isn't a crime? What are they going to think when they learn about how Michael Brown's body was left lying in the street for four hours after an agent of the government unloaded a gun into him?

[youtube src='//www.youtube.com/embed/j1ka4oKu1jo' width='100%' height='315']

In the wake of that kind of injustice, we must remind young people that the dysfunctional system that produced the grand juries' decisions is not ours. It has nothing to do with black people. Police departments, the courts, the political structure at large—these are institutions that did not value black lives when  we were slaves, and do not value us today. This sounds like something radical, a bit of political extremism that we should avoid saying in order to avoid terrifying the moderate whites. It's not. It's simply the truth. 

What we need to do is turn to each other to lift one another up and revisit the works of people much smarter than I am, like  ​Huey P. Newton​Frantz Fanon​James Baldwin, and ​Malcolm X. We need to reconcile this system, this corruption, this warping of values, with the truth and unshackle the black mind as well as the black body from all forms of oppression.

When I was a child, I believed what people told me. I even believed it when they called me a nigger. I lacked the will to be angry about the way I was treated. I wasn't myself. It was only when I recognized my self-worth that I could stand in my skin and demand something better for myself. I am marked, but I am not ashamed.

This country, black president or no, will never treat a black man as a man. It's time for a complete overhaul. And I'm emboldened by the action taken by people who have protested against injustice. But there are still so many of us who, instead of being galvanized by these recent events, have been broken—reminded once more of the system's blatant disregard for black life. If we ever hope to ignite a change that burns brightly and fiercely and turns our crooked institutions to ash, we must make ourselves into sparks. That means, for a start, loving ourselves. 

Your life matters. No cop, no grand jury, gets to decide otherwise.

[youtube src='//www.youtube.com/embed/sheNmyMiSm8' width='100%' height='315']

Follow Wilbert Cooper on ​Twitter. ​

The VICE Report: Polar Bear Man - Full Length

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Reported in partnership with InsideClimate News

The campers woke to the sound of screams.

"Help me! Help me!"

It was 3:30 AM in the Nachvak Fjord, a gorgeously desolate chunk of grassy wilderness in the Canadian subarctic, and the sound ricocheted through the silence like a gunshot. The fjord is about 530 miles from the Arctic Circle, and not much warmer. Getting there requires multiple bouncy prop-plane flights or a ten-hour boat ride over choppy waters filled with icebergs, like ice cubes tumbling in a giant glass of ice water. The nearest bank or bar or convenience store is nearly 200 miles away, but who needs one when visitors to the fjord can drink directly out of its Brita-clean streams? In addition to Arctic char, a visitor here sees minke whales splashing in the sea, soaring ptarmigan, and seal skulls dotting the beach—leftover lunch scraps from the 2,000 or so polar bears that call this place home.

Rich Gross, the Sierra Club tour guide who had helped organize the trip, jolted awake at the shrieks. He grabbed a flare gun stashed inside the boot near his head. He tore open his sleeping bag and leaped out of his tent.

Marta Chase, the group's other guide, lay in a tent near Gross's. She was terrified. As Gross climbed outside, she peered through a little window and saw a polar bear, just a few feet away, standing over the tent beside hers. It was down on all fours, eye level with Chase, huge and white except for the black of its eyes and nose. It turned and stared right at her.

"Rich!" she screamed.

Her husband, a spritely man named Kicab Castañeda-Mendez, scrambled out of their tent while Chase searched for her flare gun. When Castañeda-Mendez emerged, Gross was standing in the grass, in his long underwear, aiming the gun at the bear as it started to run away. It was a moving target, now 75 feet down the beach, heading toward the shore of the fjord.

[body_image width='150' height='200' path='images/content-images/2014/12/01/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/01/' filename='polar-bear-man-part-1-015-body-image-1417471741.png' id='8099']​This excerpt is from the e-book "Meltdown: Terror at the Top of the World," written by Sabrina Shankman for InsideClimate News. Click here to read the full story.

By now it was 3:31, maybe 3:32 AM. The night around them wasn't pitch-black—like it might be in a horror movie—but it was still dark, that dusky twilight that makes the air feel as thick as smoke when it descends in far-northern climates. It was dark, in other words, but not so dark that Gross and Chase couldn't see that the fleeing polar bear had something in its mouth as it ran off into the night—it was one of their travel companions. Matthew Dyer. He was no longer screaming, "Help me."

The author, left, and Matt Dyer at the Nachvak Fjord, where Dyer was attacked on July 24, 2013

Nine months earlier, when Dyer read an ad in the fall 2012 issue of Sierra magazine, it described exactly the type of adventure he'd been waiting for: two weeks trekking through the untouched lower reaches of Canada's Arctic tundra, with the possibility of seeing the world's largest land carnivore, the polar bear. Dyer, a 49-year-old lawyer in a small city in Maine, had saved up some money and had always been fascinated by the bears.

Participants would have to be fit and experienced hikers, the ad warned. They would also have to accept an element of risk, including lack of access to emergency medical care. But the payoff would be big.

"If you dream of experiencing a place that is both pristine and magical, a land of spirits and polar bears rarely seen by humans, this is the trip you have been waiting for," the ad said.

Two seasoned Sierra Club guides, Rich Gross and Marta Chase, would be leading the adventure, called "Spirits and Polar Bears: Trek to Torngat Mountains National Park." Gross, 61, worked for a low-income-housing nonprofit in San Francisco, but since 1990 he had spent a week or two each year guiding Sierra Club trips in remote parts of the world. Chase, 60, was a medical-diagnostics consultant who'd been leading hikes since she was in high school. She and Gross had guided 14 excursions together.

It was Gross's idea to go into the Torngats, one of Canada's newest national parks, located in northeastern Labrador. He'd never seen a polar bear in the wild and was drawn to the spiritual appeal of the place. Torngat Mountains National Park was named after Torngarsuk, an ancient Inuit spirit that takes the likeness of a polar bear and controls the lives of sea animals. In photos Gross pored over, the terrain itself had a mystical appearance, with sharply peaked mountains and fjords cutting into the park from the coast of the Labrador Sea. Only a few hundred people venture there each year, and Gross wanted to be part of that exclusive group.

Chase wanted to see the park too. But she worried about hiking in polar bear country.

A large male bear can weigh as much as 1,700 pounds and stand ten feet tall. While they have evolved to eat seals, polar bears, unlike most species, will actively hunt humans in certain circumstances—especially if they're not able to access their typical prey. When the sea ice melts in summer, the bears come on land, and if there's a time and place to see a bear, it's midsummer in the Torngats.

Worldwide, the polar bear population is in trouble. The two best-studied bear populations, in Canada's western Hudson Bay and Alaska's southern Beaufort Sea, are both in decline, and experts predict it's just a matter of time before other bear populations start to plummet. Why is this happening? The sea ice where bears hunt seals is diminishing as a result of rising temperatures and man-made climate change, so the bears' hunting season is shrinking. In turn, bears are reproducing less and must migrate farther and farther to find food, even into cities, like the Canadian town of Arviat, more than 1,000 miles from the Torngat Mountains. Arviat recently hired an armed "bear monitor" to ward off the animals.

An increase of bears on the land is in turn leading to a rise in human and polar bear interactions—back in the 1960s and 1970s there were eight or nine attacks reported per decade, according to wildlife biologist James Wilder. Based on recent trends, that number is expected to reach 35 this decade. While no individual incident can be attributed to climate change, the rise in interactions is precisely what biologists have expected to see as the bears lose their habitat. The result is a paradoxical situation in which fewer polar bears may mean more attacks on humans.

Gross had learned some of this by the time he received an email from Matt Dyer, on November 17, 2012. Dyer was prepared to pay $6,000 for this trip into the unknown, and he wanted to sign up. But Gross wasn't sure Dyer was ready for such an extreme adventure.

"This trip requires backpacking experience and I don't see any on your forms," Gross said in an email after reading Dyer's application. "This is a particularly tough trip since it is all off trail and packs will be quite heavy (50+ pounds). The area is remote and evacuation is only by helicopter."

Dyer told Gross he was in good shape and had been hiking and camping in New England for years, including some trekking with the Appalachian Mountain Club.

"I'm not a city person (I grew up on an island about 8 miles from the mainland) so being away from the [7-Eleven] is not going to bother me," Dyer wrote. "I totally understand that you don't want to wind up a thousand miles from nowhere with a problem, but I think I can do this."

Dyer agreed to follow a strict training plan, and Gross agreed to take him.

Matt Dyer doesn't believe having a gun would have prevented his attack. "Even if I had an AK-47 in my tent, I never would have had time to use it."

On July 18, 2013, Dyer lugged his 50-pound pack into the Quality Hotel Dorval in Montreal, where he would meet his travel companions and then fly north to the Torngats. To save money, he'd taken a 12-hour overnight bus from Lewiston, Maine, and then spent the morning wandering around Montreal. He ate two breakfasts and napped in a park, feeling "kind of like a bum," killing time until he could check in to his hotel.

When Dyer arrived, Larry Rodman walked into the hotel lobby at the same time, fresh off the airport shuttle bus after a quick flight from New York City. Rodman, 65, was a corporate lawyer in Manhattan, and the walls of his office were adorned with photos he'd taken on previous wildlife trips, though he'd never seen a polar bear. He'd signed up the same day he read the "Spirits and Polar Bears" ad on the Sierra Club's website.

The big-city law partner and the legal-aid attorney with the scraggly gray ponytail hit if off immediately—they both loved opera and fencing and had an easy sense of humor. Dyer was relieved. He'd been less concerned about the arduous journey than about the people he'd be trapped with in the wilderness.

Gross and Chase had flown in the day before to buy supplies and make last-minute arrangements. When they saw Dyer he looked as ready for this trip as anyone.

He had a ropy frame, tattoos, and seemed to have a permanent grin on his face.

Later that night, Gross and Chase gathered the crew to go over final details. Another group member, a doctor from Arizona named Rick Isenberg, arrived in Montreal after midnight, and the next morning the crew boarded a plane and headed north.

There are two primary ways to get into the Torngat Mountains. The first is through the Torngat Mountains Base Camp and Research Station, a small collection of tents and outbuildings that serve as the official gateway into the park. The Canadian government opened it in 2006, but in 2009 handed it over to the local Nunatsiavut government, which runs Base Camp as a hub for researchers, visitors, and staff from Parks Canada, the government agency that oversees all of Canada's parks.

The other way in is through a privately run outfit called Barnoin River Camp, about 900 miles north of Montreal. When Chase emailed Base Camp officials and got no reply, she reached out to Vicki Storey, an adventure-travel agent who'd been booking trips to the Torngats for years. Storey put Chase in contact with Alain Lagacé, the owner of Barnoin River Camp, who had been leading fishing expeditions and wildlife tours into the Torngats for decades.

"The thought of polar bears is still a concern to me," Chase wrote in one of her emails to Lagacé before the trip. "I have experience with black and brown bears but not with polar."

Lagacé said they'd need flares, pepper spray, and portable electric fences to protect them while they slept.

"Regarding the safety against polar bears, we have it all," Lagacé wrote. "The 12 gauge magnesium [flare] gun are working extremely well, plus we have the pepper spray, and the pepper spray greanade ( sic) and electric fence. These have worked very well in the past but there are always precautions to be taken. Never cook food in your tent, don't leave trash around your camp site, avoid camping along the shore of a coastal lake, etc."

Previously, Chase and Gross had read that Parks Canada recommends that visitors to the Torngats hire a licensed Inuit bear guard who is allowed to carry a gun into the park and is trained in polar bear safety. But Chase and Gross say that when they confirmed their hiking route and let the government know they'd be traveling through Lagacé's camp, which does not employ bear guards for hire, nobody at the agency mentioned hiring a bear guard. The only requirements for visiting were that they register with the park and watch a DVD on polar bear safety, which a Parks Canada employee said would be sent to Lagacé's camp.

Instead of an armed bear guard, Gross picked up two electric fences from the Sierra Club—one to encircle their campsite, the other to protect the area where they would cook and store their food. The instructions weren't included, so with the help of a close friend who is an electrician, Gross practiced setting them up outside his house in San Francisco.

Each fence stood about two and a half feet high and consisted of three parallel wires suspended from four-foot posts. Although the wires looked flimsy, they carried five to seven kilovolts of charge—not enough to seriously injure a bear, but enough to send it running.

Before their trip, Gross emailed a picture of the fence set up in his front yard to Castañeda-Mendez.

"What's the polar bear supposed to do?" Castañeda-Mendez wrote back. "Die of laughter?"

This polar bear watched Dyer's group for several hours. Some believe it is the bear that attacked him. Photo by Marilyn Frankel

At Barnoin River Camp, Lagacé, a fit, middle-aged man with a gray mustache, gave the group an orientation, pointing out the bathrooms, kitchen, and the bunkhouses. After the group settled in, Gross began testing their equipment. On a patch of grass near the crystal-clear Barnoin River, he pulled out a flare gun. Lagacé had rented two orange Gemini 12-gauge flare guns to the group, but Gross had never shot one before and he wanted to get comfortable with the weapon. When he pressed the trigger, there was a burst of light and a flare shot forward about 150 yards in a straight path toward the ground. Upon impact, the flare cartridge exploded with a second burst.

Marilyn Frankel, a 66-year-old exercise physiologist from Oregon and the group's seventh and final member, saw the flashes from a shed where she was sorting food, pulling out the half that would be airdropped to them midway through the hike. OK, she thought after seeing the burst of flame, those are going to work.

At around 5 or 6 PM the group headed to one of the camp's main buildings for dinner. Chase and Gross had planned to show the group the DVD on bear safety. But they say Lagacé told them that the DVD hadn't arrived (in an interview, a Parks Canada representative claimed the DVD had been mailed to the camp). If they had watched it, they would have learned that the number of human and polar bear interactions is increasing, that the most common place to encounter bears is the coast, and that it's important to know the limitations of bear deterrents and not be lulled into a sense of false security by them.

In lieu of the video, Lagacé agreed to talk to the group about safety in polar bear country, sharing what he had learned in decades of bringing people into the Torngats. (When I interviewed Lagacé about the video, he said he had shown it to the group, and then he declined to answer any more questions.)

According to the hikers, Lagacé told them to be aware and prepared at all times. Polar bears aren't like the grizzlies they had come in contact with before, he warned—they're hunters. The bears travel along water, so the hikers should be sure to camp away from the edge of the fjord. Provided they slept inside the perimeter of the electric fence, he allegedly told the group, they should be just fine.

The Arctic's sea ice has receded rapidly as global temperatures climb. Since 1979, according to NASA scientist Claire Parkinson, about 695,000 square miles of sea ice there have been lost—an area about the size of California, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, Arizona, Utah, and most of Idaho combined. In the Davis Strait, where the Torngat Mountains are located, there are about 15 fewer days of ice cover each decade, and 50 fewer days than in 1979. For two months of the year, where a visitor would have typically seen ice blanketing the strait and the Labrador Sea, he or she now sees dark water. This dark color further warms the earth by absorbing a greater amount of sunlight—the way wearing a black shirt on a summer day makes you hotter than wearing a white one.

In the early afternoon of July 21, 2013, the group traveled east on a floatplane toward the blue waters of the Labrador Sea and Torngat Mountains National Park. Dyer watched breathlessly as their plane skimmed over mountain peaks and then dipped into a desolate but spectacular valley—treeless, with steep peaks cutting down to the water's edge, leaving a spit of land and beach. The green vegetation covering the mountains and hills was new to the area. Years ago, the hills were all rock, but a shifting climate has brought with it new growth.

The plane landed flawlessly on Nachvak Fjord, backing into the shore so they could exit without getting their feet wet. Castañeda-Mendez held on to the plane's pontoon while the rest of the group unloaded their gear. The pilot quickly said his goodbyes and the roar of the engines receded into the distance, leaving the hikers alone with just the sound of water lapping quietly onto the shore.

A cold rain started to fall, but a rainbow stretched across the expansive sky. Dyer took it as a good omen.

Chase and Gross left the group on the shore while they scouted for a campsite. Lagacé had warned them not to camp on the beach and to find a high place to sleep because polar bears are known to come right up the fjord where they landed.

But when Chase and Gross reached an area that met Lagacé's recommendation—an elevated spot about a quarter mile away—they discovered it didn't have easy access to drinking water. Farther down, closer to where they had been dropped off, they found a spot that looked ideal: flat enough for comfortable sleeping and cooking, with easy access to fresh water. It was a bit closer to the shore, but still at least 150 yards away from the mouth of the fjord. People had obviously camped there before, because they'd left behind stakes and piles of rocks. But little did they know, according to Judy Rowell, the superintendent of the park, the campsite was smack in the middle of a "polar bear highway."

The Nachvak Fjord, where Dyer's group camped

"Hey!" Castañeda-Mendez called out in the dawning hours of the next morning. It was 5:40 AM and the group was cozily sleeping inside the perimeter of the electric fence. Castañeda-Mendez had climbed out of his tent to pee. That's when he saw a huge white object, like a cross between a large dog and an abominable snowman, lurking near the water's edge. "Polar bear on the beach!"

A mother and her cub were walking along the shore in the early-morning light. The mother bear's snout was raised in the air, sniffing out her neighbors.

Chase joined her husband outside the tent. Dyer and the others grabbed their cameras. Here they were, in shouting distance of some of the world's most violent predators, yet the scene was overwhelmingly peaceful. Dyer felt on the verge of joyful tears as he watched the bears walk along the shore, the cub close on its mother's heels.

It was only later, as they looked over their photos and zoomed in on the bears, that they got a sense of the animals' physical state. A concave hole fell between the mother bear's sharply pointed shoulder blades. Experts who examined the photos confirmed that the mother appeared underweight, and a native guide would tell the group that he had seen what he believed was the same mother just weeks earlier—but she had had two cubs with her, leading him to believe that one had died.

Mother bears and their cubs have the most tenuous future when it comes to climate change, according to biologist Charles Robbins. Studies have found a direct link between earlier sea-ice breakup and fewer cubs surviving. When biologist Elizabeth Peacock studied polar bears in the Davis Strait, which includes the Torngat Mountains, she found that while the population numbers were strong, litters were smaller than anywhere else in the world, and fewer cubs were surviving into adulthood. She also found that the bears' general health was in decline-a sign that a fall in population may be coming soon.

Essentially, Peacock found that there's an abundance of polar bears in the region, but not enough of their natural habitat—sea ice—to support them. In a year when the ice breaks up early and refreezes late, that could add up to lots of hungry bears.

But on this morning, luckily, changes in the ice did not translate into the mother and her cub being interested in the hikers. The bears just sniffed the air, laced with the scent of humans, and eventually sauntered away. Dyer and the crew marveled at how close they felt to nature, how lucky they were to have this National Geographic moment not even a full day into their trip.

Dyer hours after the attack. "He was probably going to drown in his own blood," said a medic who helped rescue him. Photo by Marilyn Frankel

Later that morning, after a breakfast of oatmeal, the group packed their day bags to get ready for a hike deeper into the land. Gross carefully placed one of the flare guns in his backpack. Chase took the other.

They headed east to explore the area around the fjord. The weather felt unpredictable, with heavy clouds settling in and wind and rain beginning to whip through their campsite.

The Torngat Mountains are technically subarctic, but they lie along the 58th parallel, putting them above the tree line and within the Arctic eco-region. The group hiked through scrub willows and grassy hills and along the ledges above the campsite. The rain turned to a cool mist and gradually cleared, revealing blue skies and spectacular views of the Labrador Sea.

As they walked, Castañeda-Mendez took the lead, relishing moments alone and allowing some distance to grow between himself and the group. Occasionally Gross would call out, "Slow down," "Wait up." Gross, Rodman, and Isenberg made up the middle of the pack, while Dyer, Chase, and Frankel brought up the rear. They bantered pleasantly and playfully while they walked through a landscape that relatively few humans had ever seen and that by its very nature-the extreme cold, the remoteness-was inhospitable to human life.

At about 3:30 PM, after they'd turned back toward camp, they reached a wide stream near their campsite. They sat on some rocks and removed their boots. The water was shallow, clear, and cold. For feet that had been banging around in hiking boots all day, the cool of the stream offered quick relief. Castañeda-Mendez was already halfway across the water when Dyer looked up and saw a creature lumbering toward them.

"Polar bear!" Dyer shouted.

"Get back here! Get back here!" Chase yelled at her husband. "We have a bear!"

The animal was about 150 yards away and closing in. Castañeda-Mendez high-stepped back through the water, and the group clustered together, following the protocol that Lagacé had rehearsed with them before they left Barnoin River Camp: Stand together. Make yourself seem big. Make loud noises, especially metal on metal, like the banging of poles.

The bear was larger and had a fuller coat than the female bear they had previously seen. Slowly it walked toward them, nose in the air, and tongue sticking out, apparently trying to assess the two-legged creatures it had stumbled upon.

Despite the group's banging and shouting, the bear approached. Castañeda-Mendez fired away with his camera. Gross pulled out one of the flare guns.

"I'm gonna shoot," he told Chase when the bear was within 50 yards.

"I think that's a good idea," she said.

As the flare fired, the animal kept coming toward them. But when it landed in front of the bear, causing a second burst, the animal turned and took off in a dead run.

The group burst into cheers, clapping, banging their poles, and celebrating their victory.

"It was like getting a touchdown at a football game," Dyer said later.

But the bear hadn't gone far. It settled itself on a ledge about 300 yards away and lay there quietly, watching the group make the short trek back to their camp.

By the time they reached the safety of their electric fence at about 4 PM, the rain was coming down heavily. Most of the group settled into their tents to rest until dinnertime, but Dyer was uneasy. He couldn't relax while the bear was perched on the nearby ledge.

"I mean, my goodness, there was a very large carnivore watching us," Dyer said.

As the rain poured down, Dyer stationed himself outside of his tent, leaning on his poles, staring down the bear as it watched them. Castañeda-Mendez said Dyer looked like one of the guards at the British palace. He stood staring at the bear for more than an hour, drenched under the dreary gray sky as the afternoon waned.

Eventually, the bear and the rain wore him down. Dyer asked Gross and Isenberg if they were watching the bear from within their tents, and they said they were. So Dyer retired to his shelter, escaping into Leaves of Grass, the only book he had brought with him.

After reading for a while, Dyer walked through the drizzle to the tent next to his, where Chase and Castañeda-Mendez were relaxing. It was just a few steps away, but on the walk he saw that the bear was still there. Dyer had just read a poem that felt so right he had to share it. He read to them Walt Whitman's "Me Imperturbe": "standing at ease in Nature, Master of all, or mistress of all, aplomb in the midst of irrational things..."

At about 6 PM the campers started making their way across the rocky strip that separated them from their cook area to prepare dinner. Up on the ledge, the bear now appeared to be lounging. Using the zoom lenses on their cameras, they watched it roll on its back and then lie on its belly, resting its head on its crossed arms. To Frankel, it looked like a big dog. To others, it looked like a menace.

At sundown, the bear was still there, and Dyer couldn't shake his sense of uneasiness.

"Why don't we post a watch?" he asked Gross after dinner. They could take two-hour shifts overnight until the bear was gone.

But Gross wasn't worried. "That's what the fence is for," he told Dyer. After all, Gross had done his research and spoken with the experts, who had reassured him that they would be fine. To be extra safe, he checked the fence again that night, making sure the wires were taut and the battery was switched on.

Dyer acquiesced, thinking back on their orientation at Barnoin River Camp where he remembered Lagacé telling them: "If the polar bear touches that, you won't have to worry."

The first thing Dyer saw was two giant arms coming over the top of his tent. It was 3:30 AM, two days later. Everyone else was fast asleep, and he had been too until seconds before, when he woke for some ineffable reason. The bear tore him out of the tent, its jaws quickly clamping around Dyers' skull. As he was dragged farther from the campsite and felt the bear's jaws sink into his head, he thought, This is it—you're going to die now.

To find out how Matt survived and learn more about the science behind climate change and polar bears, ​download the e-book, Meltdown, at InsideClimateNews.org.

The Weirdest Cuban Baseball Defector Story You'll Ever Read

Meeting the Cannibal Tribes of Indonesian New Guinea

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Korowai men. All photos courtesy of Paul Raffaele. 

Last month, 34-year-old Matthew Williams was caught eating the face of a girl he lured back to his hotel room, and the world let out a collective "what-the-hell-is-wrong-with-humans?" To most people, cannibalism is one of the most terrifying concepts imaginable, but for some members of the Korowai tribe from Indonesian New Guinea, human flesh is a dish central to their culture, like a Sunday roast or a kebab at the end of a night out.

In 2006, Australian journalist Paul Raffaele went on an expedition to meet the tribe in an attempt to understand the reasoning behind their ancient ritual. Paul was the first Western man to cross the pacification line that borders the territory of their clans deep in the forest. While the communities downriver have been exposed to Western culture, those further upriver still live in isolated groups and continue to practice the customs they have done for millennia.

Not even the Indonesian police or Kornelius (Paul's guide who had been living with Korowai for years) had ventured that deep into the forest in fear of the clans who threaten to kill outsiders. After a few hair-raising moments where he feared for his life, Paul finally made it into the interior. From meeting the great warrior chief of the Letin clan to being passed a human skull to hold by the very man who had dined on the brains, I spoke to Paul about his time in the jungle, where he spent nights sleeping inches away from some of the last cannibals on earth.

VICE: So how did you find access to the tribe?
Paul Raffaele: Through my guide, Kornelius. Originally from Sumatra, he went to visit the Korowai ten years ago intent on getting to know them. They put a test to him, to determine whether they'd allow him to stay or not. One night they gave him a pack of meat and told him it was human. If he ate it, he could stay with them and if he didn't, then they'd tell him to leave. He ate it and so he became very close to them.

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The Letin clan war chief honoring Paul with a welcoming ceremony.

What was it like to be the first white man to cross the pacification line?
Our plan was to visit the Letin clan, who had never seen an outsider before. Even Kornelius hadn't gone that far upriver for fear of being killed. We got ambushed. We were traveling up the Ndeiram Kabur River in a pirogue—a canoe hacked out of a tree trunk—when we ran into a throng of naked men brandishing bows and arrows.

Those people weren't expecting us and decided to attack. It was getting dark and they were screaming at us. I started to figure out what to do if the arrows started flying. I was going to jump into the river and try to float down to Yaniruma, which would take a couple of days if a crocodile didn't get you first.

What did you do?
Kornelius spoke Korowai and so he bargained with them by shouting across the river. They said we'd defiled the river god and had to pay the penalty. One of the warriors paddled across to us still gripping his bow and arrows. For us to pass he demanded Indonesian rupiah—about $30 worth. I paid it and they let us continue upriver.

Can you explain the reasoning behind the Korowai tribe's cannibalism?
For the Korowai, if someone falls out of a tree house or is killed in battle then the reason for their death is pretty obvious. But they don't understand microbes and germs (which the rain forests are rife with) so when somebody dies mysteriously to them (of a disease), they believe it is due to a khakhua, a witch man who comes from the netherworld.

A khakhua possesses the body of a man (it can never be a woman) and begins to magically eat their insides, according to logic of the Melanesian imperative you must pay back in kind. They must eat the khakhua as it ate the person who died. It is part of their revenge based justice system.

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Korowai women

On this trip two of the first Korowai men you met where the brothers Kili-Kili and Bailom. Can you describe this first meeting?
It was night when we arrived in the village upriver by paddle boat. We were at an open hut overlooking the river, sitting by a small campfire. Two men approach through the gloom, one in shorts, the other naked save for a necklace of prized pigs' teeth and a leaf wrapped about the tip of his penis. "That's Kili-Kili," my guide told me, "the most notorious khakhua killer."

They said, "Would you like to see the skull of the latest man we killed? We knew him well, he was a good friend.' I said yes and they brought it out. They handed it to me and I didn't want to touch it but I didn't have much choice.

How did it feel?
Scary. The light was eerie and the skull was cold and I really didn't want to touch it but I had to otherwise they wouldn't have trusted me. Kili-Kili is kind of a crazy name isn't it, for a man who has killed 23 men and eaten them. They had chopped off the top of the skull to get at the brains—their favorite.

Do they cook people or do they just eat them raw?
They steam everything with an oven made from leaves and rocks. They treat it like they would the flesh of a pig. They cut off the legs separately and wrap them in banana leaves. They cut off the head and that goes to the person who found the khakhua. That's why Kili-Kili had the skull. They cut off the right arm and the right ribs as one piece and the left as another. I asked them what it tasted like, and although you always get this common misconception that it tastes like pig they say the flesh tastes more like Cassowary—a New Guinea and Northern Australian bird that resembles an ostrich or an emu.

Do they eat everything?
Everything except the hair, nails, and the penis. Children under 13 are not allowed to eat it, because they believe that as they are eating the khakhua it is very dangerous—there are evil spirits all around and the children are too vulnerable.

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Kili-Kili holding Bunops's skull, the man he had killed and eaten

Cannibalism is, perhaps other than incest, the idea that fills the majority of humanity with the strongest sense horror. Is this something that has been learned rather than a trait innate to our species? Why don't the Korowai share that sense of disgust?
I asked them why they eat people and they said, "We don't, we eat khakhua." They don't consider khuakhua as people, even though it could be their brother or their uncle or their cousin.

Can you tell me a little bit about Wa Wa?
We were in Kili-Kili's village and Kornelius came to me and said, "There's a little boy here who's an outcast and his name is Wa Wa. After the death of his mother and father, the clan suspected that he had killed them using black magic as a khahkua. They won't do anything until he's about 14." You only had to look at him to understand that deep horror and fear in the little boy's eyes.

I talked over it long one night with Kornelius. I can't go into too much detail as I've been promised not to say where he is, but he has been rescued. I wouldn't normally agree to inaugurate something like that because I think children should stay within their own cultures, but this case was different because his family had told me that his life was under threat.

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Wa Wa (right) a month after he had been adopted by Kornelius

Where you ever nervous that they would decide that you were a khakhua?
No it cannot be. A khakhua can only be a Korowai. I actually didn't know that at the time but I wasn't scared. Fear clouds your mind. In these kinds of situations you have to have total clarity of mind. You must pick up signals and body language in case there is a problem.

Even though these people are so far away from Western culture did you feel a bit connected to them?
I mean we're all human aren't we? There's this one story for example—in their tree houses the men live on one side and the women on the other. So I asked Agoos, my guide on my fist trip, "Where do you have sex?" He replied, 'When we feel like it we just go out to the jungle. No one can see us there.' They're naked, remember. so I said, "Well isn't it kind of bothersome because there are so many mosquitos?" And he said, "No, you're enjoying it so much you don't care!" These were precious moments. We were just two humans talking to each other.

Just because people are living in the Stone Age (some have criticized me for using that term but it's accurate terminology) doesn't mean that they are any less intelligent. They are 90 percent like us; they love, they hate, they lust, they get angry, they're ambitious, one man will rise above the others because he has leadership qualities, etc. No one is less intelligent than me just because my ancestors managed to invent the wheel. Big deal.

These people haven't had the advantage of cross-cultural fertilization that our civilizations have had. We had all this innovation like silk coming across on the silk road from China to Europe. We knew nothing about Mathematics until the Arabs brought it to us.

Had we been isolated in clans in rain forests we'd be the same. The human brain is the human brain.

So do the Korowai still practice cannibalism today?
I can't answer that because I haven't been back in years. I have spoken to Kornelius who says yes, in the far regions. He says that the Letin clan and the clans further upriver from them are still practicing khakhua.

Follow Georgia Rose on ​Twi​tter.


'Revenge Evictions' in London Are Still Ruining Renters' Lives

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Campaigners from GMB Young London lobby MPs to vote on the bill to end revenge evictions. Photo by Andrew Wiard

This post first appeared on VICE UK

Last Friday, at 9:30 PM, around 60 British members of parliament made their way to vote on a Private Members' Bill that could have made life for the UK's private renters that little bit less awful. The topic was "revenge evictions"—a feature of housing law that allows private landlords to kick out tenants who complain about a problem with their home. Basically, there is no law about what landlords can and cannot evict you for, meaning they can get rid of you for absolutely any reason they feel like.

It's a part of the housing crisis that is rarely raised, but shockingly common. According to research by the housing charity Shelter, there were over 200,000 revenge evictions last year alone. In London, 14 percent of families renting privately have suffered from a retaliatory eviction in the past 12 months.

The bill being debated seemed hard to object to. It had cross-party support, the backing of major campaign groups (like  ​Generation Rent) and the interests of nine million renters at stake. It may not have been particularly ambitious in scope—rather than stopping revenge evictions altogether it suggested extending the period a landlord could evict a tenant after receiving a complaint from two months to six—but it seemed like progress.

And yet, three hours after the debate started, thanks to the efforts of two backbench Tory MPs—Christopher Chope and Philip Davies—the bill was quashed. For hours, the two men filibustered the session, flooding the chamber with pointless information from the Conservatives' 1987 manifesto until time ran out and the bill was killed.

For those who've suffered from revenge evictions, this was particularly hard to swallow. Last Friday, Rosie Walker—a 37-year-old researcher who help set up Hackney Renters—sat glued to her television, watching BBC Parliament in the vague hope that the watered-down bill might pass, representing something of a victory for the months of campaigning she and others had done.

"It was devastating," she told me. "This was a bill that had cross-party support; even Tory MPs were in favour of it. It's disgusting that two men acting alone could do something so blatantly undemocratic."

Rosie was evicted from her flat in Clapton in 2011 when she asked her landlord to repair a broken chest of drawers. Her story is a vivid reminder of what was at stake when the bill was being debated.

"I sent the landlord a polite reminder to fix the property, and a week later he responded by evicting the entire house," she told me. "According to the council, the landlord described me as a problem tenant because I was 'a woman who answers back.' The whole thing caused incredible levels of stress. I was in between jobs at the time so I couldn't find anywhere else to rent, and became homeless. I had to put my stuff in storage and stay at a friend's house, where I lived for a year."

A quick background check on the two men behind Rosie's anger tells you everything you need to know. Philip Davies is an MP for Shipley—a suburban town near Bradford—whose record includes voting against gay marriage and for the scrapping of Mare​ Nostrum, an Italian rescue operation that provided a lifeline for thousands of refugees. He's also a private landlord; less prolific than some of his colleagues, but with enough of his finger in the property pie to create what looks like a serious conflict of interest.

His colleague, Christopher Chope, is an MP for Christchurch. Among the main things he stands for are scrapping the minimum wage and reinstating the death penalty. His Parliamentary expenses, revealed back in 2009, total over $200,000 and include one $1,380 claim on repairing a sofa. His sole objection  ​held up the bill to officially pardon gay computer scientist Alan Turing—the guy who helped crack the Nazi enigma code and then committed suicide after being prosecuted for his sexuality by the British state.

In short, they're two stand-up guys.

Most people who've rented privately will able to sympathise with Rosie's situation. Whether it's a new-build rabbit hutch with a barcode facade or an ex-local authority building snapped up and run down by a buy-to-let landlord, private renting can be a miserable and precarious experience. In a poll published by YouGov last week, almost half the renters surveyed said they had lived in places with damp or mould in the last 12 months.

In the past, stories like Rosie's would have been hard to find. After the Second World War, and under the 1977 Rent Act, strict limits were introduced on what a tenant could and couldn't be evicted for. It didn't mean living in the lap of luxury, but it did mean freedom from the kind of reprisals that are so common today.

However, all the moderate safeguards that did exist were swept aside in the late 1980s as the country went through massive social and economic change. Rent controls were removed and the balance of power between tenant and landlord shifted so that evictions without justification became possible.

The UK remains unusual in this regard: there are few other countries in Europe that allow landlords to operate with such impunity. In Germany, depending on the length of an occupancy, landlords are required to give nine months' warning if they want to evict. And there has to be a reason.

Rebecca Wilson, a 24-year-old living in London, was also watching the debate on Friday afternoon from her desk in London. Having experienced two different retaliatory evictions in the past four years—both for complaining about the state of her accommodation—she was rooting for the vote to pass.

"I've not been that angry about anything political for as long as I can remember," she told me. "It's just another prime example that the great majority of our politicians are motivated by greed."

The first of Rebecca's evictions happened in Wimbledon back in 2010 after the landlord complained about her and her housemates "causing too much fuss." The house, Rebecca says, was almost uninhabitable: There were leaks in the bathroom, mould on the walls, damp was coming through the ceiling, and there were plants growing inside electrical equipment.

"At the end of the tenancy, having given us no indication that we were going to be asked to leave, he just kicked us out because we'd been making complaints," she said.

Rebecca thought her luck had changed when she moved into the bottom floor of a three-story townhouse in Tooting. But things got even worse. The tenants in the flat above had complained for months about poor drainage in the bathroom without any help. One day, with the pipes totally blocked and a huge backlog of water trying to escape, the pipes burst and Rebecca's housemate's ceiling half-collapsed. With the electrics wet from the flood, everyone was forced to leave.

"We spoke to the landlord the next day, but he said it wasn't his responsibility," she told me. "When I threatened to get the council involved he became aggressive. Two weeks later the entire building got a letter telling us we had to be out within a month."

[body_image width='640' height='426' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='revenge-evictions-kleinfeld-109-body-image-1417703557.jpg' id='8998']

Campaigners from GMB Young London lobby MPs to vote on the bill to end revenge evictions. Photo by Andrew Wiard

The more you dig, the more shocking these evictions become. In May, an IT worker from Kent was evicted after asking his landlord for hot water. Only last week an estate agent in Stoke Newington threatened to evict tenants who complained about paying a $1,973 agency fee for a minor change to the tenancy contract. Somebody I spoke to while researching this piece told me about a friend who'd been thrown out after refusing her landlord's sexual advances.

And it's not just the people getting evicted who are suffering. According to the same research by Shelter, one in eight tenants have not asked their landlords to repair their property for fear of eviction. When I asked Rebecca whether she would think twice about complaining again her answer was clear: "The other day my washing machine button broke. When I realized I was going to have to complain about it to my landlord I started having a kind of panic attack—I could feel my heart rate going up," she told me.

As the housing crisis becomes ever more acute, more and more renters like Rosie will turn their experiences into a political struggle. Local housing groups will become harder to ignore and it's reasonable to expect that two MPs won't be able to face down nine million private renters forever.

Follow Philip Kleinfeld on ​Twitter.

Marion Barry, Go-Go Politics, and the Death of Chocolate City

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The nation's capital has always been a little bit behind the rest of the nation. Back in the 1970s, Washington, DC, didn't have FM radio, just AM. City residents weren't even allowed to vote for president until 1964. And Congress didn't grant Washingtonians "home rule"—in other words, the right to do things like vote for a mayor or pass city laws—until 1973.

That political powerlessness sparked a slow building revolution in the city's majority black population. Graffiti artists found their voices on the city's walls, while others picked up instruments and birthed a new musical genre, go-go, that became the soundtrack of the "Chocolate City."

That was the soundtrack of Marion Barry's four terms as mayor of the nation's capital. Barry died last week at the age of 78, and the ​city begins three days of remembrances today for the former mayor​. While people outside of DC snicker at Barry's crack smoking legacy, he's being remembered for much more than that in Washington; the city he transformed and empowered.

"D.C. has a pulse of itself. Marion Barry came in with a pulse and an awareness. It was like a marriage made in heaven," says Darryl Brooks, a D.C. concert promoter and friend of Chuck Brown, the 'Godfather of Go-Go'—a style and man both as unique to Washington as Barry himself. "His timing was correct for the time that he came into the city," added Brooks.

While Barry was synonymous with the city he led, his roots go back to Mississippi, where he was born. His father was a sharecropper there who died when he was four. His mother remarried, raising Barry and his eight siblings in Memphis, Tennessee. While studying for masters in chemistry at Fisk University, Barry became a part of the first wave of sit-ins with the Nashville Student Movement, and later became the first chair of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, which combated racism all across the Deep South through peaceful but aggressive demonstrations.

In 1965—the year landmark voting rights legislation passed Congress—Barry landed in Washington. Back in those days, he rocked an Afro, which old Washingtonians remember as an extra touch that scared white people both locally and nationally. That didn't matter to Barry, who understood where his power base lied in the Chocolate City. He was first elected mayor in 1979 as the first civil rights leader to lead a large city, and it quickly became evident he marched to his own beat, just as the city did.

Brooks remembers Barry getting in trouble in the press for eliciting campaign donations in strip clubs and bars along DC's bustling 14th Street. "He could go to a strip joint, he could go to a nightclub or he could go to hoity-toity parties and still have a respectable conversation with those folks and also get his point across, because he was consciously and politically aware," he said.

Just as Barry maintained a singular political style that endeared him to Washington voters, go-go music was a unique Washington sound that became the outlet for black youth living in the nation's capital. A few go-go songs were overtly political, but the music itself had a political tinge intertwined into the culture it birthed. The go-go scene was homegrown, and mostly stayed around Washington, offering local residents a personal escape from the blight that surrounded them.

The music wasn't created for stereos. It's something you're supposed to feel in the club, driven by intense percussion and Caribbean-style tempos. Sometimes a dozen musicians perform on stage together, often including a keyboard and a brass section, adding multi-layered texture. Go-go music seemingly builds forever without cresting, just going, going, going, hence the name.

The real show is on the dance floor. Even a halfway decent go-go performance on stage leaves every single body in the club shaking, swaying, sweating. Musicians aren't afraid of being outdone by the audience—they need them. Hence the traditional call and response from singer to crowd, like a pastor and his congregation.

Chuck Brown—go-go's godfather—mastered the technique before dying in 2012 at age 75. Just a year before his death he was still able to rev up the audience at D.C.'s famous 9:30 Club.

"Wind me up Chuck," the crowd would scream at the start.

"What you want me to do?" came Brown's gravelly response.

"Wind me up Chuck!" the audience would demand again, more arms waving in the air.

"One more time," says Brown, as his seven-piece band eggs on the crowd.

"Wind me up Chuck!"

"I don't hear you!"

"Wind me up Chuck!"

"Oh yes I do," Brown would chuckle before unleashing the full force of the band and funky vocals on the ecstatic crowd.

Brown was a master of the audience. But if Brown mastered the call on stage, it was Barry who mastered it on the city's streets. "He was mayor of the culture that that music was the backdrop of, basically, so it kind of goes hand in hand because go-go isn't just a music: it's a culture," said Kato Hammond, owner and publisher of TMOTT​GoGo, or Take Me Out To The Go-Go.

One of the biggest problems facing Barry and other big-city mayors in the 70s and 80s was urban flight, as a lack of jobs drove up crime rates, squalor, and drug use. Barry helped combat that by starting the Summer Youth Employment initiative, a program that also helped spur the go-go scene. "That was like a big thing," Hammond said, noting that he was hired by city's Department of Recreation in 1980 to play music for the n at public spaces around the city. "It helped inspire us in the area of music and you can also say that it helped encourage the music and helped the growth of music."

"The musicians in these bands, in these go-go bands, these were our jobs. I'm not sure a lot of people realized that," he added, remembering that friends played for the city during the week and at clubs on weekends.

Over a drink in the rapidly gentrifying DC neighborhood of Bloomingdale, Natalie Hopkinson, the author of Go-Go Live: The Musical Life and Death of a Chocolate City, explained that go-go was also political. Go-go was everywhere, she said, and touched most everything in Washington in those days.

"So there's a whole economy of bands—there's the promoters, there's the graphic designers, there was a huge clothing industry that it supported," Hopkinson said. "There were all these networks of mom and pop businesses, there were all these storefronts, that it supported."

With go-go, as with Barry, "the underground became the foreground," said Hopkinson. And like the music, the mayor was also part of the city's counterculture. That's what made him the perfect fit for a Washington trying to confront and tear down the racial and economic power structures that dominated the nation in the seventies and eighties.

"He's uppity. He didn't know his place and so I think he really got underneath people's skin – in power – over the years and that's part of what makes him," Hopkinson said. "It's a middle finger to Congress. It's a middle finger to everyone else in the country."

Barry's personal flaws have tainted his record, at least outside of Washington where he's best known as the mayor busted by the FBI for smoking dope at the Vista Hotel. "He is a joke. He is a laughing stock," Hopkinson said of the national perception of Barry. "People can't get that Vista Hotel out of their mind. They can't imagine that anyone can have any human value after seeing that."

But Barry is remembered differently in Washington, where he is credited with creating jobs, and beloved for programs like his annual turkey drive for poor people in his community. Despite his crack bust, he was reelected as mayor in the nineties, and as a sitting city councilman—a political comeback that most people outside of DC will likely never understand.

"For DC, he will always be that person who to the very end fought for the little guy, was a champion of the people, had love for the people, and never benefited personally because he was broke," Hopkinson said.

Now, as gentrification pushes much of DC's black community into the surrounding suburbs, many people in the capital are mourning the death of both Barry, and also of his Chocolate City. But Hopkinson maintains that Barry, who was also known for heavy drinking and womanizing, was much better at taking care of the city than of his own body, and left the city, and its people with a legacy that is stronger than his own.

"He was physically frail and lived hard, and all of that," she said. "Go-go is definitely much healthier. And I think the black community and what's left of the Chocolate City is a lot healthier than what Barry was."

This Pregnant Londoner Just Told Off a Crowd of Pro-Life Protesters

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[body_image width='607' height='1080' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='pregnant-woman-abortion-protest-rant-305-body-image-1417709994.jpg' id='9027']Why are people still filming in portrait mode​? Still via​ YouTube

This post originally appeared on VICE UK

A video of a pregnant woman performing the most thundering mic drop in history on some anti-abortion protesters outside a clinic in Southwark, in central London, has just gone viral—and that is a good thing. That's the "hot take" here.  ​Pregnant women shouting are great. It's impossible to mess with an angry pregnant woman. She is always going to win.

Because whether you're pro-life or pro-choice, you've got to admit that thrusting a placard and a camera into the face of women who are about to get abortions—which isn't, you know, a decision anyone takes lightly, and is one often made by those in horrible positions—is about the worst way of instigating change ever. The clumsiest protest method on earth. Going after those who need help instead of the system that offers it. Shouting at a football because you don't like FIFA. That sort of thing.

[youtube src='//www.youtube.com/embed/XMy-V1TIoHI' width='640' height='360']

Anyway, the woman—who hasn't been named yet but you know the phone lines at every crisis center in Southwark are dinging off the hook as ITV News races MailOnline to find her—took umbrage with a pro-life protester after he alleged he wasn't using his camera to film the faces of women entering the clinic. He insisted the camera was actually for his own safety, to stop the protesters' actions being misconstrued. But if a precaution for your own safety involves putting the safety and privacy of others at risk then it's a shit safety system, mate, isn't it? Plus it looks like those things you clip to toddlers when you take them for a walk.

Journalist Sunny Hundal filmed the exchange, during which the woman said, "I agree with what they're saying; it's wrong what you're doing. You don't know why people are doing what they're doing." Later she said, "Making women feel guilty is so wrong, so fucking wrong."

The main thrust of Pregnant Hero Lady's argument was that the kids' charity she works for, Kids Company, was located nearby, and that the children being helped by them shouldn't have to see banners with bloodied foetuses on them. "Many people have been abused, you don't know what their reasons [are]," she said. "This is just so wrong on so many levels." Then she pointed to the big banner and tutted, and the bloke with the camera looked really sheepish and ashamed, like he was being told off in front of all his mates by his mum.

Obviously abortion is a big issue, especially at the moment, as the group behind the protest—British Pregnancy Advisory Services, or BPAS—campaigns to enforce buffer zones outside abortion clinics and GP surgeries. (Similar tactics are being employed in America, where anti-abortion groups are going as far as building  ​fake crisis cen​ters where pregnant women are sat down and given pro-life lectures.) ​​Infiltrating pro-l​ife groups in the US shows that shock tactics really do warn people away from seeking help. The ​UK pro-life movement is armed with plastic fetuses and vigils, but they are just as persistent. It's weird how being on one side or another of the abortion issue seems to bring out the "let's stand outside buildings with photos of bloodied fetuses" in people. No other issue seems to inspire so much outrage, so many carefully laminated placards and posters.

Abort67, whose volunteers took part in the protest, reckon  ​the woman might be a stooge, and seem to think that harassing their team of pamplet-holding harrassers is somehow worse than harassing vulnerable women who are seeking a perfectly legal medical procedure. Cool argument. In the meantime, if you're into it, Kids Company have a ​Christmas fundraiser that is currently only 34 percent toward its goal.

Follow Joel Golby on ​Twitter.

Why Are Some of Canada's Best Music Video Directors Not Getting Paid?

The Animated Series 'James Bond Jr.' Is the Redheaded Stepchild of the 007 Franchise

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It was announced today that the 24th film in the long-running James Bond series will be named Spectre, after the nefarious terrorist organization that antagonized Sean Connery in the 1960s.

With Sam Mendes back as the director, two-time Oscar winner Christoph Waltz playing the villain, and Daniel Craig yet again grimacing his way through the lead role, it seems certain that this will be yet another dour, realistic, thrilling entry in the series. This incarnation of Bond is a personal favorite of mine, and is a fine representation of the character as envisioned by creator Ian Fleming.

It wasn't always like this. There was a time when James Bond  ​could go to space​dress up like a circus clown, have ​sex with Grace Jones, and ​fix his tie underwater for seemingly no reason. James Bond films have been over-the-top spectacles from the beginning, but after the camp excess of Diamonds Are Forever, the franchise took a hard right turn toward the cartoonish (with a few ​notable ​exceptions in the late 70s and 80s). In 1991, at one of the lowest points in the character's storied history, Bond became a cartoon for real.


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James Bond Jr. ran for 65 episodes and arrived on television two years after the commercial failure of Timothy Dalton's last turn as 007, the gritty License to Kill. Not only was the series reeling from getting clobbered at the summer box office by the first Batman film, Lethal Weapon II,Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, and Ghostbusters II, but the film rights to the character were tied up in a ​quagmire of legal action involving MGM, Bond producers Danjaq, and the French conglomerate Pathe. In 1991, no one knew if there would ever be another Bond adventure on the big screen. To that point, the longest break between films was the three years from The Man With the Golden Gun (easily one of the worst entries in the series) and The Spy Who Loved Me (one of the best). With no new movie in sight, why not do a cartoon Bond on TV?

Well, for starters, James Bond might have turned into a silly character by 1991, but his origin in the literary world is one filled with violent sex that bordered on rape, alcoholism, chain-smoking, nihilism, and xenophobia. James Bond stories were written for adults. Without the hyper-sexual, colonialist fantasy elements of 007, he's just a guy with a raging case of syphilis and a cool car who mutters puns to himself. It's completely counterintuitive to make a Saturday morning cartoon out of a spy character who is constantly having intercourse with strangers and murdering people. Most children's entertainment looks bad from the perspective of adults, and we often need to temper our artistic expectations when watching that material. Still, there's something inexplicably wrong about watching James Bond Jr. For that reason, it's required viewing. It's just so damned strange.

There was precedent for adult films getting the animated treatment at the time. RoboCob, the Rambo series, and Police Academy were all R-rated movies that were sanitized for the sake of children who absolutely should not have seen those movies. RoboCop had a laser pistol, Rambo magically lost his Vietnam PTSD and joined some fake GI Joe adventure team, and absolutely no one ​got a blowjob underneath a podium in Police Academy: The Animated Series

What's notable about these shows is that they took the characters we loved and made then suitable for Saturday morning consumption. James Bond Jr., on the other hand, introduced us to a brand new character—James Bond's nephew, who inexplicably shares his name. It's never explained why James Bond has a nephew, since he had no siblings, no children, and his parents died in a horrific mountain climbing accident when he was a kid. These sorts of continuity errors are meaningless to a child (unless that child is me, and he is a huge dork that has a room full of James Bond books) but if you have to do that much character gymnastics, it stands to reason that your project is wrongheaded. Just call the damn thing "Super Spy Kid" or something and leave Bond out of it.


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Instead of that sensible choice, the show created unrecognizable pubescent versions of the beloved Bond characters who attend a prep school called Warfield Academy. Q's grandson (named "I.Q.") is a generic smarty-pants. Gordo Leiter is an unspecified relative of Bond's CIA buddy Felix Leiter. Kid versions of villains Goldfinger, Dr. No, Oddjob, and others were joined by cheeseball baddies created for the series with names like "Scumlord" and "Dr. Derange." I should mention that Dr. No looks like  ​Fu Manchu mixed with the Geico gecko, because, you know... kids like green things?

James Bond Jr. is naturally the coolest kid in school, even though supervillains are consistently conspiring to murder him. You would think his fellow classmates would tire of being shot at with lasers, but they do their best to keep a stiff upper lip through the trying process of "kill or be killed." I guess Bond Jr. gets to do whatever he wants because he's a teenager who drives a vintage Aston Martin DB5, just like his "uncle." If I had an Aston Martin when I was 16, I might not have been a virgin until I turned 21. It goes without saying that James Bond Jr. didn't do a ton of hooking up, either. I don't even think he held hands with a girl for 65 episodes. I might be reading into it too much, but James Jr. had a bit of chemistry with Goldfinger's daughter, Goldie Finger. Yes, that was her name. Shouldn't it be Goldie Goldfinger, since her dad's last name is Goldfinger? You know, Auric Goldfinger, from the Bond films? No? OK.

After James Bond Jr. was canceled, it was another three years until the next Bond movie—GoldenEye, released in 1995, and starring Pierce Brosnan.​ At this point, I think the odds of there ever being another James Bond animated series are pretty slim, and for good reason. Bond will always be more at home in a grown-up, dark universe. Still, if you're a fan of the character, it's worth checking out James Bond Jr. for the pure curiosity factor of seeing Bond go to gym class.

​Follow Dave Schilling on ​Twitter.

Did a North Korean Hacker Just Tell Us to Go Fuck Ourselves?

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[body_image width='774' height='333' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='an-ostensibly-north-korean-hacker-from-the-team-that-infiltrated-sony-told-us-to-fuck-off-137-body-image-1417712983.jpg' id='9032']
An image from the now-defunct Guardians of Peace hacking group's Facebook page.

The extraordinarily wide-reaching data breach of Sony Pictures Entertainment has been dominating tech news headlines ever since the hack was announced last week. And while there has been plenty of speculation about who is behind it—many ​believe it was North Korea, though a​ North Korean diplomat has issued a denial—no firm proof to determine the hackers' nationalities has surfaced.

Yesterday afternoon, however, a representative from the hacking group once-known as the Guardians of Peace (GOP) told VICE in an email that they are part of a North Korean cyberwarfare unit. They also asked us to "please go and fuck yourself, your editing team and your country." But more on that later.

For those of you who haven't been following the story, last week computers across the offices of Sony Pictures Entertainment were plastered with an image showing a CGI skeleton taunting all who looked upon it. Overlaid on the image were links to zip files, which included a teaser of what was to come. The zips contained a massive amount of filenames in text format, about 40 million in total, all of which GOP claims to have in its grasp.

After that initial blast of filenames, the real leaks began. At the beginning of this week, full length Sony films were posted online after being stolen in the breach. Two of those movies were leaked well ahead of schedule, even by piracy's standards. One, Fury, is still in theaters. The other, Annie, has not even been released yet.

On top of those motion picture leaks is an incredibly large amount of data (the first blast was 25GBs, compressed) that contains contracts, accounting info, and other internal and confidential files. It seems as if GOP is interested in leaking the totality of Sony Pictures' data, without censoring personal information.

The motive for all of this has widely been suspected to be retaliation for an upcoming Seth Rogen and James Franco comedy, The Interview, where the two stoner-comics are tasked with assassinating the leader of North Korea. 

In an article I wrote for our sister tech site Motherboard, I examined the style of malware that's been used to hoover up Sony Pictures' dataThis malware being used against Sony Pictures seems to have been inspired by American cyber weaponry—specifically, the malware may have been reverse engineered from super-viruses that were specifically designed to target Iranian computers. For this reason, it's not completely out of the question that Iranian hackers could be involved as well. Stuxnet, the infamous American-Israeli malware that targeted Iranian nuclear computers, has infuriated the Iranians. And "bone-chilling" new information suggests a major cyber-retaliation against America is already underway.

We also know that North Korea's technological resources are slim, and while they do have a cyberwarfare division, it's reliant on outsourced facilities and training. As a much-cited report on North Korea's cyberwar capabilities in re/code states: "In 2004, a North Korean defector revealed that the unit operates primarily out of a North Korea-owned luxury hotel in Shenyang, China..." and that their hackers "get some of their training in China and in Russia."

Plus, North Korea and Iran have been suspected of cooperating on cyber attacks in the past; most notably against Saudi Aramco, a Saudi oil company that suffered a similar attack to Sony Pictures'. Saudi Aramco does major business with the United States, so it was not surprising that when the computers in their internal network were wiped, their screens began displaying an image of a burning American flag.

This attack was described by the New York Times as Iran " firing back" at America for the US's attacks on Iran's cyber-infrastructure. And when I was reporting on this cyberwar chain reaction for Motherboard, and its possible relation to the Sony Pictures attack, I reached out to several email addresses posted by the GOP hackers who allegedly infiltrated the company's systems.

Yesterday, I received four responses from two different individuals.

The first said, simply, "fuck off." I did not immediately respond.

The second email, from the same address, was more detailed. The hacker, at this point, began claiming to be a part of the "North Korean Hacking Team" rather than the "Guardians of Peace."

"Dear Sir,

Please go and fuck yourself and your government.

Sincerely,
North Korean Hacking Team
'모든 영광스러운 김정은 우박'
3 December Juche 103"

For those of you who aren't familiar, it's the year 103 in North Korea right now, not 2014. That's based on the birth of Kim Il-Sung in 1912, which is a timekeeping system known as the "Juche" calendar. The Korean text in the email signature, when run through Google Translate, translates to: "All hail the glorious Kim Jong Un."

Then there was a third email, sent immediately after. It read:

"Dear Sir,

Please go and fuck yourself, your editing team and your country. You seriously think we send citizens to Russian logging camps? Fuck no.

Sincerely,
North Korean Hacking Team
'모든 영광스러운 김정은 우박'
3 December Juche 103"

The hacker, here, is referring to a VICE documentary in which we investigated North Korea's secret Russian labor camp. Apparently this hacker doesn't like the film. I made an attempt to schedule a proper interview with this individual so they could share more of their perspective on the record, but did not receive an immediate response.

The fourth email I received from GOP, or the North Korean Hacking Team, or "God's Apostles" as they refer to themselves in one instance seen on Pastebin, was a link to even more leaked information. It came from someone who identified themselves as "the boss of GOP," who promised: "...more interesting data will be presented for you."

At this point, it's impossible to say who's in GOP, whether or not they are all North Korean, if they're a mixture of North Koreans and some mercenary hackers, or if it's simply a stunt by an unknown party to make it look like North Korea is involved. Given the suspected cooperation between North Korea, Iran, China, and Russia when it comes to cyberwarfare matters, the nationalities of these hackers is a question that may never have a strong answer.

But as it stands, a hacker whose email address is associated with the GOP—the group claiming responsibility for stealing up to 11 TBs of Sony Pictures' data—is claiming allegiance to the North Korean state.

Update: A Korean speaker has informed us that while the phrase contained in the hacker's email signature roughly translates to "All hail the glorious Kim Jong Un," the sentence structure is incorrect, which could indicate the author of the email is not a native North Korean.

​Follow Patrick on Twitter.

A Queens 'Cop of the Year' Got Caught Trying to Buy Ten Kilos of Coke in South Florida

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Phil LeRoy won Queens Cop of the Year in 2012. Photo via ​Facebook

Phil LeRoy likes to live the baller lifestyle. The 28-year-old New Yorker doesn't look like a stereotypical cop: chiseled abs, pouty lips, perfectly manicured facial hair. He prefers luxury cars to cruisers and enjoys the company of attentive, shapely women. But the former Queens Cop of the Year is set apart from the majority of his fellow officers in a much more crucial way: He's ​been arrested for trafficking cocaine by cops in Sunrise, Florida.

The police department in Sunrise is known for its reverse-sting drug busts, but ​supposedly halted their operations in 2013 after an ​investigation by the South Florida Sun Sentinel. Besides the troubling idea of an award-winning cop running drugs up the East Coast, the arrest means that the Florida cops are likely up to the same old tricks, essentially importing criminals for a cash infusion.

"Sunrise PD does this thing called forfeiture, which are like reverse drug-deal stings, where cops pose as dealers selling very cheap cocaine," the police source told the New York Post. "They're known for these kinds of big busts. You got to be pretty stupid to do this deal in Sunrise."

It makes sense that the cops down there would be dying to conjure up some action. After all, Sunrise is home to awfully little besides a 2,383,906-square-foot shopping behemoth and our count​ry's least popular NHL team. The biggest thing it has to look forward to is a billion-dollar "master-planned co​mmunity." By seizing the money that out-of-towners bring for the supposed drug deals, the suburban department can fill its coffers. LeRoy appears to be the latest person to fall into this trap.

The son of a former detective, LeRoy was the recipient of the Queens "Cop of the Year" award in 2012. But late Monday night, he allegedly tried to buy ten kilos of cocaine with two accomplices. After seizing almost $200,000 and an SUV, cops charged LeRoy with cocaine trafficking, conspiracy to traffic cocaine, and felony weapons possession because he was carrying his off-duty weapon.

When the story on forfeiture in south Florida first broke, it sparked a major debate on police ethics, with the cops claiming they were heroically clearing out kingpins. Not so, the Sun Sentinel ​found. In fact, they were mostly seizing assets from middlemen who were overwhelmingly Hispanic and down on their luck. By offering insanely low prices on the blow, people who might not normally traffic drugs were tempted to give it a one-time-only shot.

Neither a Sunrise PD spokeswoman nor a special agent for the DEA, which has adopted the case, would comment to VICE about the ethics of bringing a crooked cop from New York to be arrested by a bunch of questionable ones. 

LeRoy has been suspended from the NYPD and is currently sitting in Broward County Jail without bond.

Follow Allie Conti on ​Twitter.


The Pernicious Power of the Police Lobby

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​E​ric Garner was standing on a sidewalk one summer afternoon in Staten Island when Officer Daniel Pantaleo appeared, and within a matter of minutes Garner was dead. Michael Brown was walking down the street one summer afternoon in Ferguson when Officer Darren Wilson appeared, and within a matter of seconds Brown ended up dead. These encounters were random in a sense, but they were produced by a political context that has established a precedent in which agents of the state can accost citizens, bark orders, cause fatalities, and get away with it.

Pantaleo might have applied a choke hold that the NYPD specifica​lly prohibits, and the whole sick episode might have been viewed on YouTube the world over, but we learned yesterday that the cop ​won't be prosecuted. Nevertheless, you can rest assured that innumerable commenters will eventually start echoing the sentiments of Nicole Wallace, a panelist on The View who co​mplained Tuesday that America shows insufficient respect for the heroism of law enforcement officers. As evidence for this claim, she cited the predominance of supposedly anti-cop media narratives that have percolated since Wilson was exonerated last week. One hears this storyline often: Despite their sacrifices, cops somehow get a raw deal, and are unfairly demonized by a public that simply doesn't understand all they do to keep us safe. This is crazy. Boatloads of "respect" is constantly being heaped on the men and women who wear badges, and the political system caters to them at every turn. 

When politicians issue crowd-pleasing denunciations of "s​pecial interests," they are typically referring to a narrowly prescribed set of industries: oil, banking, pharmaceuticals. Rarely are police lobbyists similarly targeted for scorn. This might be due in part to law enforcement advocates not appearing to engage in conventional "lobbying" activities—they operate under the auspices of groups with innocuous-sounding names like "Police Benevolent Association" or "National Sheriffs Association"—but like other interest groups, these entities advocate single-mindedly on behalf their memberships, frequently to the detriment of the greater good.

Because of the political leverage accumulated over decades (if not centuries) by the police lobby, officers go about their daily beats with certain guarantees. For one, they will alm​ost never be held personally liable for their bad conduct while on duty thanks to well-established doctrines like qualifi​ed immunity, which puts taxpayers on the hook for lawsuits filed as a result of police misconduct or brutality. They can also be assured that a robust formal and informal support network will be set into motion should they ever be accused of anything.

Pantaleo reportedly characterized his attack to grand jurors as a "wrestling move," and they apparently bought it.

Pantaleo enjoyed this privilege when New York City's powerful police union machinery kicked into high gear immediately following the choke hold incident, pushing an exculpatory narrative which contended that Garner had committed the high crime of selling untaxed cigarettes (a claim​ for which there is no evidence) and had a long rap sheet. Union bosses even absurdly de​nied that Pantaleo used a choke hold in the first place. Astonishingly, it worked: Pantaleo reportedly characterized his attack to grand jurors as a "wrestling ​move," and they apparently bought it.

Given their track record of successfully weighting legal processes in favor of officers, the police lobby tends to be very confident, so much so that its leaders exhibit little compunction about openly disparaging the rare politician who goes against them. In an inter​view with Bloomberg's Dave Weigel, Fraternal Order of Police executive director Jim Pasco mockingly referred to Hank Johnson—the Democratic Congressman who introduced a failed amendment in the House of Representatives aimed at stymieing the flow of militarized equipment to local departments—as a "real scholar" and "whasisname from Georgia."

This helps explain why even with robust bipartisan skepticism of police militarization, lawmakers have made zero progress in halting or even slowing it. Speaking on the House floor, Florida Republican Representative Richard Nugent— himself a former sheriff—dismi​ssed concerns about transferring military-grade gear to police as obviously ridiculous.

How can we break this grip the police lobby has on the political process? For one thing, we'd need to develop alternate avenues through which elected officials could acquire political leverage. We also need to begin to think of law enforcement not just as protectors of the common good but an interest group like any other.

That doesn't mean calling individual cops "pigs" or "murderers," it means modifying how police are viewed in the macro. For instance, it's probably worth communicating to the American people that policing is not an especially dangerous​ job. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, truck drivers are twice as likely to die while working—and transporting goods from one place to another is a pretty important activity. Without truck drivers, our economy would collapse overnight. So why does it seem so ridiculous that we would lower a flag to half-mast to honor a truck driver who died in the line of duty? Why don't we have a day to remem​ber the truck drivers who gave their lives to our country?

Maybe if we stopped thinking of policing as such a hazardous job, we could adjust our policies and discourse accordingly. As of now, "officer safety" is regarded as indisputably paramount whenever we talk about the way cops interact with civilians; despite a precipitous nation​wide decline in violent crime, officers and their union representatives routinely parrot the discredited notion that police must live in constant fear for their lives. As law professor and former cop Seth Stoughton told ​me over Twitter, "Within policing, the risks of intentional targeting are typically quite exaggerated." In fact, more than half of all police fatalities are caused by traffic accidents. Of course there is always a chance of some mentally deranged person consciously seeking to harm officers, but should this remote possibility dictate routine police behavior, or influence our perception of the risks inherent to policing? Probably not.

What if their overriding mantras were something along the lines of "serve the community" instead of "get home from your shift alive"?

Since policing is widely thought to be incredibly dangerous, and those who wear the badge are seen to be making a profound personal sacrifice, it's not surprising that politicians defer to the police lobby. This deference, in turn, means that departments across the country have more opportunities to secure federal grants for ov​ertime and countless other perks.

The culture of police accountability and impunity is partly what fostered Wilson and Pantaleo's mindsets, and though that mindset doesn't always lead to death, it results violent and unpleasant altercations far too often. A public employee who knew his job security was contingent on democratic review from the taxpayers he's supposed to be serving might not so readily pick fights. This also might make policing safer, as young men (of any race) are less likely to lash out at cops they don't perceive as assholes.

Police officers are endowed with enormous discretionary authority, and often must make split-second decisions in determining how best to apply their state-sanctioned powers of deadly force. In those pivotal milliseconds, which can determine whether a person lives or dies, basic instinct reigns supreme. No amount of racial sensitivity training or "National Conversations" are going to change how an officer reacts in such scenarios.

What needs to change, then, is the incentives that lead cops to aggressively confront people who aren't committing a violent crime. Maybe if a different set of incentives were in place when Darren Wilson and Daniel Pantaleo embarked on their fatal exchanges, things might have turned out differently. What if their overriding mantras were something along the lines of "serve the community" instead of "get home from your shift alive"?

The only way to change this is through difficult, tedious governmental reform—not fancy speeches or racial sensitivity seminars—and the police lobby will ferociously oppose such efforts at every step. Maybe the American political system is just too calcified to allow for these reforms. If that's the case, we should prepare ourselves for many more Michael Browns and many more Eric Garners.

Follow Michael Tracey on ​Twitter.

A Man Was Arrested for Allegedly Assaulting His Wife with a McChicken Sandwich

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[body_image width='1024' height='619' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='a-man-was-arrested-for-allegedly-assaulting-his-wife-with-a-mcchicken-sandwich-123-body-image-1417727021.jpg' id='9129']
​Photo via Flickr user ​theimpulsivebuy

On Tuesday, a man in Iowa was arrested for allegedly assaulting his pregnant wife with a McChicken sandwich. At 1 PM, Marvin Tramaine Hill II, 21, was apparently napping when his wife woke him up holding the sandwich. It's unclear whether she was like, "Here honey, have some of this delicious McDonald's!" or what, but in any case he responded by throwing the sandwich at her, picking it up again, and smashing it in her face, breaking her nose in the process, according to the Des Moines Register.

​​In an interview with a local news station, Hill explained that after he threw the bun at her the first time, she started screaming hysterically. "I was, like, 'Dude, you're freaking out for no reason. Chill out.'"

"She hit me in the nose and busted my lip," he added. "Dude, you just hit me while I'm holding our kid... like, what's wrong with you?"

Hill called the police on his wife and said she assaulted him, but they ended up arresting him instead. On the police report, the weapon used is listed as "mc Chicken." [ sic]

[body_image width='1251' height='677' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='mcchicken-body-image-1417717935.png' id='9091']
​Image  ​via

"It doesn't matter what instrument is used to commit the assault," a spokesman for the Des Moines police station told the Des Moines Register. "Domestic abuse is a huge problem. The greater issue is this guy is getting angry over a sandwich."

As for why the fast food item upset him, Hill replied, ​"T here's nothing [specific] about McChicken. Some of them just have cartilage in them. It's not something you want to wake up to."

Follow Zach Sokol on ​Twitter.


VICE Meets: Talking to Marshall Curry, Director of 'Point and Shoot'

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Matthew VanDyke set out on a motorcycle journey across North Africa with a camera to document his quest to find himself. He landed in Libya, where he ended up joining in the revolution against Gaddafi's regime. Academy Award nominee Marshall Curry's documentary, Point and Shoot, tells the story of VanDyke's journey.​ We sat down with Curry to chat about the film.

Photos of the NYPD from Last Night's Protests

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New Yorkers ​flooded the streets in protest last night after a grand jury declined to indict the NYPD officer who killed Eric Garner by placing him in a choke hold last night. Given the circumstances things were surprisingly peaceful—there were no burning cop cars a la Ferguson—but of course the cops were out in force last night. Photo coverage of these events tends to naturally focus on the protesters, but we got so many great shots of law enforcement from out contributors that we decided to put together this collection of photos of the cops, along with a few of the protesters that we couldn't leave out.

[body_image width='1000' height='665' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417720427.jpg' id='9099']
​Photo by ​Jacqueline Silberbush


Photo by Pete Voelker

[body_image width='1000' height='733' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717083.jpg' id='9046']
​Photo by ​Sasha Maslov


Photo by Elise Swain

[body_image width='1000' height='667' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417719073.jpg' id='9098']
​Photo by ​Matt Doscher

[body_image width='1000' height='1499' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717120.jpg' id='9047']
Photo by ​Laura Barisonzi

[body_image width='1000' height='1500' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717147.jpg' id='9048']
Pete Voelker

[body_image width='1000' height='667' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417716106.jpg' id='9038']Pete Voelker

[body_image width='1000' height='733' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717228.jpg' id='9052']
Sasha Maslov

[body_image width='1000' height='1500' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417716380.jpg' id='9040']
Pete Voelker

[body_image width='999' height='665' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417720496.jpg' id='9101']
Jacqueline Silberbush

[body_image width='999' height='665' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417720527.jpg' id='9102']
Jacqueline Silberbush

[body_image width='999' height='665' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417720539.jpg' id='9103']
Jacqueline Silberbush

[body_image width='1000' height='733' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717268.jpg' id='9055']
Sasha Maslov

[body_image width='1000' height='733' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717309.jpg' id='9058']
Sasha Maslov

[body_image width='1000' height='667' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717323.jpg' id='9059']
​Pete Voelker

[body_image width='1000' height='1500' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717397.jpg' id='9062']
Pete Voelker

[body_image width='1000' height='667' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717412.jpg' id='9063']
Pete Voelker

[body_image width='1000' height='667' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717427.jpg' id='9064']
Pete Voelker

[body_image width='1000' height='667' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717654.jpg' id='9078']
Matt Doscher

[body_image width='1000' height='667' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717467.jpg' id='9065']
​Pete Voelker

[body_image width='1000' height='667' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717478.jpg' id='9066']
Pete Voelker

[body_image width='1000' height='666' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717489.jpg' id='9067']
Jacqueline Silberbush

[body_image width='1000' height='667' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717503.jpg' id='9068']
Pete Voelker

[body_image width='1000' height='666' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717516.jpg' id='9069']
Jacqueline Silberbush

[body_image width='1000' height='667' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717528.jpg' id='9070']
Pete Voelker

[body_image width='1000' height='667' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717542.jpg' id='9071']
Pete Voelker

[body_image width='999' height='665' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417720653.jpg' id='9104']
Jacqueline Silberbush

[body_image width='999' height='665' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417720660.jpg' id='9105']
Jacqueline Silberbush

[body_image width='1000' height='1502' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717555.jpg' id='9072']
Jacqueline Silberbush

[body_image width='1000' height='667' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717567.jpg' id='9073']
Pete Voelker

[body_image width='1000' height='667' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717608.jpg' id='9076']
Laura Barisonzi

[body_image width='1000' height='665' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417720842.jpg' id='9108']
Jacqueline Silberbush

[body_image width='999' height='665' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417720850.jpeg' id='9109']
Jacqueline Silberbush

[body_image width='1000' height='665' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417720766.jpg' id='9106']
Jacqueline Silberbush

[body_image width='1000' height='665' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417720803.jpg' id='9107']
Jacqueline Silberbush

[body_image width='1000' height='667' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717690.jpg' id='9081']
Matt Doscher

[body_image width='1000' height='667' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717751.jpg' id='9082']
Matt Doscher

[body_image width='1000' height='733' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717761.jpg' id='9083']
Sasha Maslov

[body_image width='1000' height='667' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717773.jpg' id='9084']
Matt Doscher

[body_image width='1000' height='667' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717805.jpg' id='9085']
Matt Doscher

[body_image width='1000' height='733' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717832.jpg' id='9086']
Sasha Maslov

[body_image width='1000' height='733' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717851.jpg' id='9087']
Sasha Maslov

[body_image width='1000' height='733' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717863.jpg' id='9088']
Sasha Maslov

[body_image width='1000' height='733' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717895.jpg' id='9089']
Sasha Maslov

[body_image width='1000' height='733' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='cops-of-last-nights-protests-body-image-1417717905.jpg' id='9090']
Sasha Maslov

I Worked on a Tree-Planting Contract in the Tarsands

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[body_image width='1200' height='850' path='images/content-images/2014/12/04/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2014/12/04/' filename='i-worked-on-a-tree-planting-contract-in-the-tar-sands-332-body-image-1417722276.jpg' id='9118']

A planter takes a short break. All photos by ​John Holota.

A good morning is when there's coffee. There's never coffee.

We typically work 14 to 15 hours every day, and often even more. Under pressure and sleep-deprived, we get stuck in mud, break our machinery, fix our machinery, get lost, find ourselves again, start work before the sunrise and fall asleep listening to rebroadcasted NPR shows long after the sun sets. For the last seven seasons, I've signed up for some of the shadiest tree-planting ​contracts in Canada, but last season, I was hired by Suncor to deliver trees around the tarsands.

Tree planting is a perennial source of revenue for indebted university students who generally care about the environment, or at least like living in it for months on end. The reforestation industry has existed in Canada since the early 1970s when Dirk Brinkman, the founder of Brinkman & Associates Reforestation Ltd., won his first contract in British Columbia. Since then, tree planting has evolved into a multi-million-dollar industry that in some cases is as effective at buying public relations p​oints as it is at doing legitimate ecologi​cal restoration. Many contracts today are plagued with unfair wages, horrendous working and living conditions, falsely reported hours for employment insurance, and the expectation from employers to do unpaid work. Luckily for me, my season at Suncor wasn't like that.

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A tree deliverer drops the boxes of trees she was carrying on her quad along with her patience. 

My job as a tree deliverer is to bring trees to the planters when they need them. We leave each morning with our pickup trucks and quads intending to find blocks (cle​ar-cuts) sometimes so overgrown they no longer exist. Our equipment consists of inkjet-printed "shape maps" that completely bleed out in the rain, broken 4x4 ATVs or 8x8 Argos, and often-broken trucks. Try finding a clear-cut inside a vast system of forests using only a piece of paper with an inkblot printed on its centre for navigation and an overheating Argo that will only reverse and has no steering. It's impossible.

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A Saskatchewan tree deliverer drives his truck into a mud pit. 

Last season, however, my main contract (beginning around June) was based just outside Fort McMurray, across the Athabasca River from Suncor's base plant—the No​rth Steepbank Mine. Unlike normal tree-planting schedules, reclamation contractors on Suncor sites aren't allowed to stay past 5 PM or start before 7 AM. This is good for a "day-rater" like myself who gets paid a fixed day rate no matter how many hours I work.

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A veteran tree planter works close to camp while Morley, the dog, follows. 

Despite the whole "Fort Mac looks like a 21st century Hiros​hima thing," lots of tree planting happens in Alberta's tarsands, and relative to other planting operations, it's really well managed. Yet the ​disparity between "disturbed" land and certified "reclaimed" land remains high. And despite the relative improvements in labour protections for tarsands planters, tree planting is still one of the few non-unionized trades in the oil patch.

LIVING

Tree planters are a pretty rough and tumble bunch, proud to have slept in the bush for months, showered just a handful of times, and washed their clothes even less. As a tree deliverer, on a normal contract I spent my nights sleeping upright in the driver's seat of a company vehicle. Most mornings I wouldn't even get out of the vehicle until I arrived at my destination. One too many mornings I opened the door and jumped out of the truck, still half asleep, only to land in a mud puddle, realizing instantly I still hadn't put my boots on.

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An Alberta tree deliverer attempts to decipher a new map.  

A couple weeks before leaving our spring contract in Green Lake, Saskatchewan, we got word that Suncor's head office was ordering our camp to stay at Borea​lis Lodge, the largest of Suncor's work camps. I had never seen a work camp before, let alone lived in one. Borealis is a three-floor, dormitory-style camp with rooms that have all you need: a bed and a desk. There was no WiFi but there was cable—although you had to bring your own TV. The camp is dry, meaning no liquor, beer, or spirits of any kind, and if you know anything about tree-planting culture you know that intoxication is pretty central to the practice—so much so that it deserves its own bullet in the employee handbook under Standard Operating Procedures.

Suncor is the closest plant to town, so if you want a couple beers after work it is possible—it's just not easy. A day before finishing the contract, one of the planters was found with weed in her room. She was banned from Borealis Lodge for six months and forced into a motel in Fort McMurray. And if there's a motel in Fort McMurray that costs less than $200 a night and doesn't require an exorbitant cash deposit, I've never heard of it.

At the Borealis Lodge, bathrooms are shared with a single neighbour and contain a toilet and a shower. This is fine if you've got a decent neighbour, but if the boarder adjacent is a messy dude who takes insanely hellacious dumps, this could be a problem. While you're occupying the facilities, your neighbour's door can be locked from the inside and vice versa. If you forget to unlock the door when you're done, your neighbour would essentially be locked out of the bathroom.

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The supervisor prepares for his appearance at the seasonal tent-crawl. 

Early one morning, a friend told me he had accidentally locked the bathroom door from the inside and had gone to sleep. Apparently, his neighbour worked the night shift. My friend heard rattling at the door and woke up affright. After jimmying the lock, a gruff voice, heaving in urgency, cracked the door open and whispered in a deep guttural tone, "Quit your shit."

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A planter smokes a cigarette during the final party of the season. 

In terms of amenities, there are pool tables, a cardio room and weight room, a movie theatre, and excellent food. Suncor work camps don't allow animal companions so I had to send my dog to Manitoba with another camp for the month. Also, my best Canadian tuxedo and backpack were stolen. All in all, though, it wasn't a bad trade for what average tree planters would consider luxury digs.

WILDLIFE

We were ordered to stay at the lodge because Suncor was going through a public relations battle over the recent bear attack that left one woma​n dead.

The bears were such a massive concern that Suncor hired a wildlife contractor called Bear Scare to, you guessed it, scare bears away—or rather, to "aversely condition" them. They had loudspeakers blasting bizarre sounds into the bush. I swear, one of the sounds was a sample of the blac​k smoke from the TV series Lost, but, of the many sounds emanating from the treeline the strangest was an alien sound effect, perhaps a more effective deterrent of late-night wandering workers.

Outside of Suncor, bears remain a big issue for tree-planting camps, many of which are mandated by provincial governments to set up bear fencing, especially in grizzly country. Depending on which province you're in, though, wildlife is treated with differing degrees of concern.

During a contract near The Pas, Manitoba in the spring of 2013, a "nuisance bear" became a big problem for our little camp. Over the course of a week it ravaged a number of tents and tormented our cook so much that he wouldn't leave his shack without an aluminum baseball bat. The appropriate Manitoba authorities were called to remove the threat, but they refused, claiming the campsite we inhabited was actually the place they let problem bears free when they're caught in town.

For obvious safety reasons our supervisor was forced into hiring someone to come out, shoot the bear, then dispose of its carcass. I saw this motley crew of bear busters, speeding down the bush road guns in hand as we were staging. Waving them down, I noticed the box of their yellow Chevy Avalanche was completely empty. I asked them how it went and what happened to the bear—assuming they would have kept at least part of the beast for one purpose or another. The passenger, who wore a bandana nearly covering his eyes, said, "We threw it into the Cosway," before speeding off.

The interaction reminded me of one of the strangest people I'd ever met, a planter I hired. Just two hours after meeting him for the first time, on a dark and quiet night's drive across the barren lands of eastern Saskatchewan, he told me that bear is a rare food in those parts. He assured me that it "tastes like human." The cook clenched his baseball bat. I lit a cigarette.

SAFETY

The training required in order to work in the mines as a planter is rigorous. "Are you in the line ​of fire?" is a campaign slogan that still rings in my head and may remain there for years. When the charismatic driving course instructor—a Newfie who was crushed between a pickup truck and a hydro pole 20-odd years ago—suddenly turns white and screws his face in preparation to bawl, and pleadingly asks the small class, "Are you in the line of fire?" you get the message.

Every worker is required to wear a long-sleeved shirt, long pants, high-visibility vest, safety glasses, gloves, and a hard hat. For anyone who has worked on smaller tree-planting contracts, this is the worst element of the job. Added hot and heavy safety gear seems like a regression in terms of safety when planting trees is as physically demanding as running​ a marathon every day. One of the main causes of tree planter sick days is sunstroke.

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A frustrated tree deliverer stops to pose for a shot. 

Outside of Suncor, if you catch them at the right time, you can look to the hills and see most tree deliverers ripping down harrowingly narrow "quad highways," covered with slash and sinkholes in fourth gear with nothing but a pair of running shorts and cowboy boots on. Since the fateful story of a tree deliver who was flung off his quad into the dusk of life during the summer of 2011 made its way from Ontario to British Columbia, helmets have become hugely popular amongst that breed of neo-cowboy.

Many contractors outside of Suncor do require hardhats and steel-toe boots, but the similarities pretty much end there. Vehicles need to be registered separately each and every morning before entering mine sites, and personnel checks are conducted at specific Suncor gates. Random vehicle inspections are also conducted at these gates and unless you are a manager with a company-provided mobile phone, electronic devices capable of taking photos can be confiscated. Workers can be banned from entering Suncor indefinitely. Drug-sniffing dogs are also randomly assigned to Suncor entry points of the mine and its camps. Every year someone ends up getting busted and reassigned for possession of weed or beer.

WORKING

As far as planting is concerned, the two things that set the tarsands apart from other contracts is that the ground is incredibly hard and the variety of species planted is greater. By contrast, on a normal tree-planting contract it's not uncommon to plant an entire block with a single species of tree. Jack pine or black spruce, for instance—a monoculture. Monocultures are actually detrimental to environmental reclamation activities sincerely vested in long-term regeneration because trees picked from the same seed lot and planted at the same time tend to grow in the same way, leaving very little variety in replanted forests. It's also been shown that animals very​ rarely return to planted monocultures precisely because of a lack of variety in setting.

Although Suncor planting projects are handled well and workers are given the time and resources they need, it's not enough to thwart the belief, even among planters, that what is happening in the tarsands is solely destructive.

Whether the intentions of Suncor executives charged with the task of reclamation are pure or tarsands reforestation projects are conducted with the sole purpose of gaining reclamation certification, or worse, are just a talking point for a widerspread, inter-oil-producer public relations battle, we'll never know, and quite frankly most tree planters working on the ground don't really care. But for whatever reason, what is known, relative to other tree planting operations, is that great pains are being taken to ensure the forests come back as naturally as possible, that planters feel safe and that they're paid appropriately for their work. 

​@TylerBatten

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