Connect with us

CBS News

Young women on Girls State: “The most life-changing week of my life”

Avatar

Published

on


At a time when so many of us feel so bitterly divided, we thought, why not a reminder of how politics could be?

“Sunday Morning” came to Angola, Indiana, for a week that will change 300 girls’ lives. It’s the summer before their senior year, and they’re the latest participants in Hoosier Girls State, where for 82 years, young women have learned about government, and what it means to make laws and campaign.

Right now, 15 of them are running for governor, the highest office at Girls State.

ella-mcgrath-hoosier-girls-state.jpg
Ella McGrath, a candidate for governor at Hoosier Girls State. 

CBS News


Attendees are split into two fictional parties, the Federalists and the Nationalists.

We sat down with four of the candidates for governor: Asha Adhikari, Priscilla Smith, Ivy Zhen, and Ella McGrath.

hoosier-girls-state-candidates.jpg
Hoosier Girls State Gubernatorial candidates Asha Adhikari, Priscilla Smith, Ivy Zhen, and Ella McGrath.

CBS News


I asked, “How long did you have to introduce yourself to people who you would hope later would vote for you?”

“We got here Sunday afternoon,” said Smith, “and then if you wanted to run for governor, I think it was Monday, sometime in the morning we had to file. So, we barely had any time. And then we could start campaigning, I think, at noon on Monday.”

“Did any of you come because a career in public service might be in the cards for you?”

“I definitely want to be a public servant,” said Adhikari, “because I’ve seen that nothing is more powerful than giving back to others.”

Asked if they thought young women are more supportive of each other, all agreed: “Yes, 100%.”

girls-state-b-wide.jpg
Young women attend Hoosier Girls State, an exercise in democracy. 

CBS News


Every summer, all 50 states hold versions of Girls and Boys State, programs with alumni like President Bill Clinton and Texas Governor Ann Richards, Bruce Springsteen and Rush Limbaugh … and 16-year-old me! I was a governor of Hoosiers Girls State, which was one of the stunning honors of my life. 

jane-pauley-hoosier-girls-state-candidate.jpg
Visiting Hoosier Girls State in 2024, alumni Jane Pauley told this year’s attendees, “Discovering that I had a talent in something that wasn’t cheerleading was a revelation, and that’s pretty much why I’m here today.”

CBS News


I still remember the elation, and all the nerves I had that week in Bloomington, Indiana 57 years ago. Back then it was the height of the tensions of the ’60s. Today, these girls say they feel divisions, too.  McGrath said, “I feel like in the world we live in now, it’s hard to put your beliefs out there and what you stand for without making other people upset, either, like, losing friends or making family members upset.”

“It’s kind of difficult to, like, really be able to vocalize your ideas,” said Zhen. “You would describe it as, like, cloudy, kind of like downcast with people being kind of scared to go out and, like, really say what they feel.”

But at Girls State, there’s a place to air it out. Two summers ago, Girls State in Missouri was captured for the 2024 Apple TV+ documentary “Girls State.”


Girls State — Official Trailer | Apple TV+ by
Apple TV on
YouTube

Among the participants then: Emily Worthmore, a candidate for governor. “People at my school don’t know if I’m conservative or liberal, and I kind of like that,” she said in the film. “I don’t wanna say what I am and then have half the room stop listening before I even get a chance to speak. But I’m really hoping that, coming out of Girls State, I’m going to be just openly, I’m conservative, let’s talk about it.

Now a college sophomore, Worthmore was asked if the experience was transformative for her. “I would say that Girls State is the most life-changing week of my life,” she replied.

emily-worthmore-1280.jpg
Emily Worthmore, who attended Girls State in Missouri, was featured in the documentary “Girls State.”  

CBS News


Jesse Moss and his wife, Amanda McBaine, directed “Girls State” (and before that, the 2020 documentary “Boys State”).  “It’s really participatory democracy for young people to figure out, ‘How do we do this thing?'” said Moss.

Asked why now seemed the right time to make films about Boys and Girls State, McBaine replied, “We’re parents of teenagers. I think that’s part of our investigation; it’s personal. How are kids coming of age politically in this kind of incredible moment we’re in in our country? We’re very divided. How do people talk to one another when their politics are so divided? How do people from big cities meet people from small towns? We all have our silos, on social media or whatever.”

asha-adhikari-girls-state.jpg
Asha Adhikari speaks at a Hoosier Girls State assembly.

CBS News


I asked Worthmore, “How do you think politics would be different if attending Boys State or Girls State was a requirement for all students?”

“If there was a way to make that happen, then we would be in a lot better of a place,” Worthmore replied. “People would be voting more, and that’s just the most important thing, right?”

Worthmore didn’t win the election, but she tells us the experience at Girls State will shape the rest of her life. “What the program stresses is, left or right, just participate. Participate in democracy. Who’s representing your city? Who’s representing your county? Who’s representing you? There’d be a lot more representation of women. It would help more people get out and exercise their voice.”

      
For more info:

     
Produced by Sari Aviv and Lucie Kirk. Editor: Steven Tyler. 



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

CBS News

Boeing workers going on strike after overwhelming vote to reject contract offer and walk off the job

Avatar

Published

on


Seattle — Machinists at Boeing voted Thursday to go on strike, another setback for the giant aircraft maker whose reputation and finances have been battered and now faces a shutdown in production of its best-selling airline planes.

The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers said its members rejected a contract that would have raised pay 25% over four years, then voted 94.6% to reject the contract and voted 96% to strike. A two-thirds vote among 33,000 workers was needed to strike.

“This is about respect, this is about the past, and this is about fighting for our future,” IAM District 751 President Jon Holden said in announcing the vote.

Very little has gone right for Boeing this year, from a panel blowing out and leaving a gaping hole in one of its passenger jets in January to NASA leaving two astronauts in space rather sending them home on a problem-plagued Boeing spacecraft.

As long as the strike lasts, it will deprive Boeing of much-needed cash that it gets from delivering new planes to airlines. That will be another challenge for new CEO Kelly Ortberg, who six weeks ago was given the job of turning around a company that has lost more than $25 billion in the last six years and fallen behind European rival Airbus.

Ortberg warned machinists that a strike vote would put Boeing’s recovery in jeopardy and raise more doubt about the company in the eyes of its airline customers.

Workers were in no mood to listen.

Ortberg made a last-ditch effort to avert a strike, telling machinists Wednesday that “no one wins” in a walkout.

“For Boeing, it is no secret that our business is in a difficult period, in part due to our own mistakes in the past,” he said. “Working together, I know that we can get back on track, but a strike would put our shared recovery in jeopardy, further eroding trust with our customers and hurting our ability to determine our future together.”

Many union members have posted complaints about the deal all week on social media. On Thursday, several dozen blew whistles, banged drums and held up signs calling for a strike as they marched to a union hall near Boeing’s 737 Max plant in Renton, Washington.

“As you can see, the solidarity is here,” said Chase Sparkman, a quality-assurance worker. “I’m expecting my union brothers and sisters to stand shoulder to shoulder, arm in arm, and let our company know that, hey, we deserve more.”

The machinists make $75,608 per year on average, not counting overtime, and that would rise to $106,350 at the end of the four-year contract, according to Boeing.

However, the deal fell short of the union’s initial demand for pay raises of 40% over three years. The union also wanted to restore traditional pensions that were axed a decade ago but settled for an increase in Boeing contributions to employee’s 401(k) retirement accounts.

Although the bargaining committee that negotiated the contract recommended ratification, Holden predicted earlier this week that workers would vote to strike.

Boeing worker Adam Vogel called the 25% raise “a load of crap. We haven’t had a raise in 16 years.”

Broderick Conway, another quality-assurance worker and 16-year Boeing employee, said the company can afford more.

“A lot of the members are pretty upset about our first offer. We’re hoping that the second offer is what we’re looking for,” he said. “If not … we’re going to keep striking and stand up for ourselves.”

The head of Boeing’s commercial-airplanes business, Stephanie Pope, tried earlier this week to discourage workers from thinking a strike would result in a better offer.

“We bargained in absolute good faith with the IAM team that represents you and your interests,” she said. “Let me be clear: We did not hold back with an eye on a second vote.”

Voting began at 5 a.m. local time at union halls in Washington state, Portland, Oregon, and a smattering of other locations.

A strike would stop production of the 737 Max, the company’s best-selling airliner, along with the 777 or “triple-seven” jet and the 767 cargo plane at factories in Everett and Renton, Washington, near Seattle. It likely would not affect Boeing 787 Dreamliners, which are built by nonunion workers in South Carolina.

TD Cowen aerospace analyst Cai von Rumohr said it is realistic based on the history of strikes at Boeing to figure that a walkout would last into mid-November, when workers’ $150 weekly payments from the union’s strike fund might seem low going into the holidays.

A strike that long would cost Boeing up to $3.5 billion in cash flow because the company gets about 60% of the sale price when it delivers a plane to the buyer, von Rumohr said.

Union negotiators unanimously recommended that workers approve the tentative contract reached over the weekend.

Boeing promised to build its next new plane in the Puget Sound area. That plane – not expected until sometime in the 2030s – would replace the 737 Max. That was a key win for union leaders, who want to avoid a repeat of Boeing moving production of Dreamliners from Everett to South Carolina.

Holden told members Monday the union got everything it could in bargaining and recommended approval of the deal “because we can’t guarantee we can achieve more in a strike.”

Many union members, however, are still bitter about previous concessions on pensions, health care and pay.

“They are upset. They have a lot of things they want. I think Boeing understands that and wants to satisfy a fair number of them,” said von Rumohr, the aerospace analyst. “The question is, are they going to do enough?”

Boeing has seen its reputation battered since two 737 Max airliners crashed in 2018 and 2019, killing 346 people. The safety of its products came under renewed scrutiny after a panel blew out of a Max during a flight in January.

___

Koenig reported from Dallas.

(Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.)

9/13/2024 12:43:48 AM (GMT -4:00) 



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

CBS News

9/12: CBS Evening News – CBS News

Avatar

Published

on


9/12: CBS Evening News – CBS News


Watch CBS News



Trump says he won’t debate Harris again; How one genealogist helped thousands of Black Americans trace their family history

Be the first to know

Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.




Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

CBS News

Miami Dolphins QB Tua Tagovailoa leaves field with concussion after collision with Bills’ Damar Hamlin

Avatar

Published

on


Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa was ruled out of Thursday night’s game with the Buffalo Bills because of a concussion after colliding with defensive back Damar Hamlin and hitting the back of his head against the turf.

Tagovailoa, who has a history of dealing with head injuries, remained down for about two minutes before getting to his feet and walking to the sideline after the play in the third quarter. He made his way to the tunnel not long afterward, looking into the stands, appeared to smile and departed for the locker room.

Bills Dolplhins Football
Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa (1) and Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin (3) collide during the second half of an NFL football game, Thursday, Sept. 12, 2024, in Miami Gardens, Fla. Tagovailoa suffered a concussion on the play.

Lynne Sladky / AP


The Dolphins needed almost no time before announcing it was a concussion.

Tagovailoa, who sustained multiple concussions his first three NFL seasons, positioned himself for a big pay bump with an injury-free and productive 2023. He threw for 29 touchdowns and a league-best 4,624 yards.

He signed a four-year, $212 million extension before this season and was the NFL’s leading passer in Week 1 this season. Tagovailoa left the game with the Dolphins trailing 31-10, which held as the final score. 

Tagovailoa was hurt on a fourth-down keeper with about 4:30 left in the third. He went straight ahead into Hamlin and did not slide, leading with his right shoulder instead.

He wound up on his back, both his hands in the air and Bills players immediately pointed at Tagovailoa as if to suggest there was an injury. Dolphins center Aaron Brewer quickly did the same, waving to the sideline.

Tagovailoa eventually got to his feet. Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel grabbed the side of his quarterback’s head and gave him a kiss on the cheek as Tagovailoa departed. Skylar Thompson came into the game to take Tagovailoa’s spot.

Hamlin was the player who suffered a cardiac arrest after making a tackle during a Monday night game in January 2023 at Cincinnati, causing the NFL to suspend a pivotal game that quickly lost significance in the aftermath of a scary scene that unfolded in front of a national television audience.

Tagovailoa’s history with concussions — and how he has since worked to avoid them — is a huge part of the story of his career, and now comes to the forefront once again.

He had at least two concussions during the 2022 season. He was hurt in a Week 3 game against Buffalo and cleared concussion protocol, though he appeared disoriented on that play but returned to the game.

The NFL later changed its concussion protocol to mandate that if a player shows possible concussion symptoms — including a lack of balance or stability — he must sit out the rest of the game.

Less than a week later, in a Thursday night game at Cincinnati, Tagovailoa was concussed on a scary hit that briefly knocked him unconscious and led to him being taken off the field on a stretcher.

His second known concussion of that season came in a December game against Green Bay, and he didn’t play for the rest of the 2022 season.

Going into last season, Tagovailoa added muscle and spent time studying jiu-jitsu in an effort to learn how to fall more safely and try to protect himself against further injury.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Copyright © 2024 Breaking MN

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.