On this Wednesday, June 8, edition of Sundial:
Updates in the confessed Parkland shooter's trial
Defense lawyers representing the confessed shooter asked to withdraw from the case this week.
That's because a COVID infection on the defendant's legal team has led to chaos in the trial for the confessed Parkland school shooter, Nikolas Cruz after someone on the legal team tested positive for the virus.
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At the moment, both sides are still trying to finalize the jury for the second phase of the capital case.
WLRN's Broward County Reporter, Gerard Albert III, joined Sundial to help us understand what happened and how it impacts the case going forward.
You can hear that full conversation, below:
Florida’s abortion paradox
When it comes to abortion, Florida is a paradox.
While the state has passed some of the most restrictive laws in the country, it also has one of the highest rates of abortion. Part of that is because of people holding incongruent political beliefs — but another dynamic at play is restrictions in other places.
“We are seeing people coming from other countries, especially in Caribbean nations, where abortion is banned … but more so it's folks coming in from the neighboring states, from Alabama," Arek Sarkissian, a health reporter for POLITICO Florida, said on Sundial.
Sarkissian, along with Kathy Gilsinan, an author and contributing editor at , recently published a deep dive into the attitudes people have about politics and abortion.
Gilsinan specifically spoke with people in Hialeah.
“Miami-Dade County has the highest number of abortion clinics in the state. That's 14. And then Hialeah, which is a Republican enclave in Miami-Dade County, has five abortion clinics by itself. And so this was just a really interesting disconnect that we sought to explore," Gilsinan said on Sundial.
"I think it's very easy for political commentators and politicians and reporters and activists to think about this in terms of the abstracts and the fights," she continued. "But really, this is such an individual, often excruciating decision. And, you know, one woman I talked to about it outside of an abortion clinic in Hialeah said, 'Listen, it doesn't matter if you're a Democrat or Republican if you can't afford a kid.'"
South Florida paints a clear picture of what’s happening around the state — the disconnect between how people feel about abortion and what they choose to do about it.
Medicine in outer space
In outer space, human bodies react very differently than on earth. Aches, illnesses, injuries and the way they are treated will be very different.
“Basically, everything and anything that can go wrong goes wrong in space for the human body,” said Shilpi Ganguly, a student at the who is pursuing space medicine.
She recently became one of the country’s first medical students to complete a space medicine rotation with SpaceX, where she contributed on a launch of an all-civilian crew into space.
Much of the medication we take here on the ground may not work the same, or at all, in zero gravity and other hostile environments.
Ganguly hasn’t been to space, but she does have experience practicing medicine in extreme environments.
“I'm a big high alpine mountaineer. I love climbing mountains. I'm trying to work my way through the seven summits,” she said. “Space is probably the most extreme and austere of environments ... all the lessons that we learn here on Earth in the wilderness apply very much for space reticence.”
She joined Sundial to discuss her passion for space medicine, how it started with a planet being named after her, and a free online on wilderness medicine education.