Watch: Confucian alternative beats giving robots rights

As robots assume more roles in the world, a new analysis reviewed research on robot rights, concluding that granting rights to robots is a bad idea.

Philosophers and legal scholars have explored significant aspects of the moral and legal status of robots, with some advocating for giving robots rights.

The analysis, published in Communications of the ACM, looks to Confucianism to offer an alternative.

“People are worried about the risks of granting rights to robots,” notes Tae Wan Kim, associate professor of business ethics at Carnegie Mellon University’s Tepper School of Business, who conducted the analysis. “Granting rights is not the only way to address the moral status of robots: Envisioning robots as rites bearers—not a rights bearers—could work better.”

Various non-natural entities—such as corporations—are considered people and even assume some Constitutional rights. In addition, humans are not the only species with moral and legal status; in most developed societies, moral and legal considerations preclude researchers from gratuitously using animals for lab experiments.

Although many believe that respecting robots should lead to granting them rights, Kim argues for a different approach. Confucianism, an ancient Chinese belief system, focuses on the social value of achieving harmony; individuals are made distinctively human by their ability to conceive of interests not purely in terms of personal self-interest, but in terms that include a relational and a communal self. This, in turn, requires a unique perspective on rites, with people enhancing themselves morally by participating in proper rituals.

When considering robots, Kim suggests that the Confucian alternative of assigning rites—or what he calls role obligations—to robots is more appropriate than giving robots rights. The concept of rights is often adversarial and competitive, and potential conflict between humans and robots is concerning.

“Assigning role obligations to robots encourages teamwork, which triggers an understanding that fulfilling those obligations should be done harmoniously,” explains Kim.

“Artificial intelligence (AI) imitates human intelligence, so for robots to develop as rites bearers, they must be powered by a type of AI that can imitate humans’ capacity to recognize and execute team activities—and a machine can learn that ability in various ways.”

Kim acknowledges that some will question why robots should be treated respectfully in the first place.

“To the extent that we make robots in our image, if we don’t treat them well, as entities capable of participating in rites, we degrade ourselves,” he suggests.

Source: Carnegie Mellon University

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Chicago suffers 34 shot, 8 killed as bloody Memorial Day weekend nears end

Chicago has suffered 34 shootings so far in Memorial Day weekend, with eight of them resulting in deaths, according to the Chicago Police Department.

As of Sunday, several of those injured remained in critical condition in hospitals across the city. The carnage is already well above what was seen the previous weekend.

The oldest victim of the weekend’s violence is 55, while the youngest is just 14. The young girl suffered a bullet graze wound to her right arm while standing on the sidewalk with group of people at roughly 10 p.m. Saturday, according to ABC7 Chicago.

Police treated the girl at the scene, but she declined a trip to the hospital.

SUBURBAN CHICAGO MAN FATALLY SHOT BY POLICE OFFICER WHO WAS CALLED TO ASSIST PARAMEDICS

Chicago Police cruiser

The Chicago Police Department has reported at least 34 injuries from shootings so far this Memorial Day weekend, with at least eight of the shootings being fatal. Several other victims remain in critical condition. (Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

MAN WHO SHOT SUBURBAN CHICAGO OFFICER HIT WITH ADDITIONAL ARMED ROBBERY CHARGE

The youngest victim of a fatal shooting so far was a 20-year-old man killed Sunday morning. Police said two men approached the unidentified male and at least one of them opened fire, striking him in the head and legs.

No one is in custody in relation to the incident.

Chicago Police Shooting after carjacking

Chicago police officers are scrambling to respond to crimes across the city as violence ramps up over the extended Memorial Day weekend. (FOX32 Chicago WFLD)

Another trio of men were shot while standing on the sidewalk at roughly 12:50 a.m. Sunday. Shots were fired from unknown attackers, wounding all three men. One of them, 22, was taken to the hospital in good condition with a gunshot wound to the leg. Another man, 32, was also reported in good condition with a gunshot wound to the back.

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The third man, of unknown age, was reported in serious condition, however, and was taken to Advocate Illinois Masonic Medical Center with gunshot wounds to the back and chest.

No one is in custody in relation to the incident.

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Premier League: Everton avoids relegation on dramatic final day as Leicester City and Leeds United drop down to Championship



CNN
 — 

Everton avoided relegation from the Premier League by the skin of its teeth on Sunday, earning a hard-fought 1-0 win over Bournemouth at a raucous Goodison Park.

The outlook was bleak for Everton for quite some time after Harvey Barnes gave Leicester City a first-half lead against West Ham, vaulting the Foxes above Everton and out of the relegation zone.

However, Abdoulaye Doucoure’s crisp volley just before the hour mark clinched three of the most important points in Everton’s history to maintain its Premier League status and condemn Leicester to the Championship, despite a 2-1 win over the Hammers.

Goalkeeper Jordan Pickford pulled off a huge save late in the game to keep the Toffees’ lead intact, before a bellowing roar from the fans almost blew the roof off Goodison Park when the referee blew the whistle for full time.

Leeds United will join Leicester in England’s second tier after losing 4-1 at home to Tottenham Hotspur, with Southampon’s relegation already confirmed weeks ago.

Sam Allardyce was unable to save Leeds United from relegation.

Defender Conor Coady said the overriding emotion was “relief” after Everton avoided relegation from the Premier League for the first time, but admitted the club needs to avoid these relegation battles “becoming a bit of a thing.”

“It was last season and now this season,” he told Sky Sports after the match. “This is where we need to improve and we need to reset, but it’s relief – I’ll be honest, it’s been the hardest season of my life, of my career.

“It’s something you don’t want to be part of, this giant of a football club and going down, you don’t want to be part of that and we’ve reiterated that all season. We’re not, but what we’ve got to do now is not make this a common theme because that’s now the last two seasons.

“This club has to rise and it has to get better now.”

It’s going to take some serious work and investment over the English summer if Everton is to win back the fans.

Throughout the season, supporters have continued their vociferous backing of the team, despite its consistently poor performances, but have now regularly been voicing their displeasure with the club’s board.

Many point to a lack of direction from ownership and some wayward investment in the playing squad as the root cause of a second successive relegation battle, with protests against the club’s board taking place before every game at Goodison Park for the last couple of months.

Leicester City was relegated despite a win over West Ham.

The relationship between supporters and Everton chairman Bill Kenwright appears beyond repair as fans have continually called for changes at the boardroom level this season.

The board of directors were even told to not attend Everton’s home game against Southampton in Janaury due to a “real and credible threat to their safety and security,” the club said at the time.

Club majority shareholder Farhad Moshiri has spent hundreds of millions of pounds since purchasing a stake in the club in 2016, but that outlay has yielded little to no success.

At least for tonight, those problems will pale in comparison to Leicester, Leeds and Southampton’s woes as the trio now face at least one season in the Championship.

England’s second tier is a notoriously difficult league to earn promotion from, however, so returning to the Premier League is by no means certain.

With some talented players and a healthy transfer budget from the inevitable sales of its stars, Leicester is perhaps best placed of the three relegated teams to earn promotion back at the first time of asking, while Leeds and Southampton struggle to find a direction and an identity.

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New zone could expand search for habitable planets

Researchers are suggesting a new way to expand the search for habitable planets that takes into account a zone not previously considered: the space between the star and what’s called soot line in planet-forming disks.

Worlds that form in this region—a disk of dust rotating around a central star from which planets may be built—could have surfaces rich in volatile carbon compounds quite different from Earth’s.

These planets would also be rich in organic carbon, but water poor, according to study lead author Ted Bergin, professor and chair of astronomy at the University of Michigan.

When we search for Earth-like planets, we are particularly interested not only in bodies that look like ours, but also in those that are formed by processes similar to ours.

Current models of rocky exoplanets are built using Earth-like atmospheric conditions and bulk composition, including the molecules essential for life that form from carbon-based building blocks and water. These models also focus on zones within planet-forming disks called ice lines, regions distant enough from the disk’s center star which mark where water or other key molecules transition from gas to solid phases.

Terrestrial worlds, like our planet, formed from solids. It has long been thought that Earth, which contains only approximately 0.1% water by mass, must have formed inside the water-ice line.

But that type of model may be too limited, Bergin says. To expand the search for habitable planets, Bergin and his research team suggest a new model that considers the soot line, a boundary closer to the solar system’s star.

Between this boundary and the star, organic compounds in solids sublimate out of the solid into gas. Considering this region would also encompass rocky planets that may have more carbon than Earth has, raising questions about what that means for habitability in these kinds of planets.

“It adds a new dimension in our search for habitability. It may be a negative dimension or it may be a positive dimension,” Bergin says. “It’s exciting because it leads to all kinds of endless possibilities.”

Why Earth has so little carbon

Just as Earth is poor in water, it is carbon poor as well, Bergin says. When forming, it likely received only 1 carbon atom per 100 available in planet-forming materials. Astronomers think the soot line explains why Earth has so little carbon.

If Earth’s building blocks formed inside the soot line, the temperature and solar radiation blasted the materials that would form the young planet, turning carbon-rich compounds into gas and limiting carbon in the solids that are supplied to the forming Earth.

The team’s model theorizes about the formation of other planets born in between the soot line and water-ice lines.

Such a world does not appear to exist in our solar system, but our solar system is not representative of most known planetary systems around other stars, Bergin says. These other planetary systems look completely different. Their planets are closer to the sun and are much larger, ranging in size from what are called super-Earths to mini-Neptunes, he says.

“These are either big rocks or small gas giants—that’s the most common type of planetary system. So maybe, within all those other solar systems out in the Milky Way galaxy, there exists a population of bodies that we haven’t recognized before that have much more carbon in their interiors. What are the consequences of that?” Bergin says. “What this means for habitability needs to be explored.”

Hazy habitable planets

In their study, the team models what happens when a silicate-rich world with 0.1% and 1% carbon by mass and a variable water content forms in the soot line region. They found that such a planet would develop a methane-rich atmosphere through a process called outgassing. In this circumstance, organic compounds in a silicate-rich planet produce a methane-rich atmosphere.

The presence of methane provides a fertile environment for the generation of hazes through interactions with stellar photons. This is analogous to the generation of hazes from methane in Titan in our own solar system.

“Planets that are born within this region, which exists in every planet-forming disk system, will release more volatile carbon from their mantles,” Bergin says. “This could readily lead to the natural production of hazes. Such hazes have been observed in the atmospheres of exoplanets and have the potential to change the calculus for what we consider habitable worlds.”

Haze around a planet might be a signpost that the planet has volatile carbon in its mantle. And more carbon, the backbone of life, in the mantle of a planet means that there is a chance it can be considered a habitable planet, for at least that it deserves a second glance, Bergin says.

“If this is true, then there could be a common class of haze planets with abundant volatile carbon, and what that means for habitability needs to be explored,” he says. “But then there’s the other aspect: What if you have an Earth-sized world, where you have more carbon than Earth has? What does that mean for habitability, for life? We don’t know, and that’s exciting.”

The study is published in Astrophysical Journal Letters.

Source: University of Michigan

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Nikki Haley on the path to 2024 presidential victory: 'This is a marathon'

Nikki Haley, the first and only woman in the 2024 presidential race, knows there’s still a long way to go until election day.

“This is a marathon, it’s not a sprint. I’m not concerned with where things are now. I’m concerned about touching as many voters as we can and watching that go,” the candidate told USA Today on Thursday. “It’s slow and steady wins the race.”

The former ambassador to the United Nations, 51, has kept her pace since launching her campaign earlier this year. 

The outlet said her campaign has hosted nearly 20 grassroots events in New Hampshire and more than 20 in Iowa.

NIKKI HALEY, 2024 REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE, VOWS TO SIGN FEDERAL ABORTION BAN IF ELECTED PRESIDENT

Nikki Haley

Republican presidential candidate and former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley speaks at a town hall event in New Hampshire on April 26, 2023, in Bedford, New Hampshire. Haley is the first, and thus far, the only female candidate to announce a 2024 run for president, a field that includes frontrunner and former President Donald Trump.  (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

In the Granite State, Haley also said she was unconcerned regarding polling performance there, pointing to former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker’s lead in Iowa. He led the field there in summer 2015 but dropped out before the state’s caucuses after support for him fell. 

The former South Carolina governor is running on a multitude of issues, including some her fellow Republican contenders have been hammering as well. 

For example, she spotlights defending Second Amendment rights, cracking down on illegal immigration, creating jobs and a pro-life point of view on her website.

Notably, abortion has been a touchy subject for former President Donald Trump – something the newest GOP candidate Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has focused on in recent weeks.

Haley, a mother to two children, has committed to signing a federal abortion ban, although noting she believes the prospect of such a ban getting through Congress is unlikely. Conversely, Trump said earlier this month that Florida’s six-week restriction was “too harsh.” 

Former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley holds a town hall

Republican presidential candidate and former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley holds a town hall meeting on March 9, 2023, in Nevada, Iowa.  (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

Trump has been on the trail for a while, but DeSantis is just officially crossing the start line. While DeSantis seeks to separate himself from Trump – widening the divide in a Friday interview with Ben Shapiro – Haley has called DeSantis “an echo” of the former president.

ONLY ON FOX: AS DESANTIS ENTERS THE RACE, HALEY ARUGES FLORIDA GOVERNOR IS ‘COPYING TRUMP’

While she is “unapologetically pro-life,” Haley reportedly told people attending the Saint Anselm College and New England Council’s “Politics and Eggs” event that she is going to “treat [the issue] with the respect it deserves.”

An April Fox News Poll showed a majority of American voters think the FDA-approved prescription medication used to end a pregnancy, mifepristone, should be legal.

To note further, around 70% of women in the U.S. were registered to vote in 2022, according to Statista. 

Nikki Haley in front of American flag

Nikki Haley speaks to hometown supporters during a campaign rally at The Grove in Lexington County, South Carolina on Thursday, April 6, 2023.  (Tracy Glantz/The State/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

The article also highlighted that suburban women can make or break elections and that Haley believes she is in the right spot to capture those votes.

“I know the challenges they face. I know whether they’re taking care of elderly parents because I’m doing that. I know about their spouses in the military. I’m a military wife. I know about that,” she told USA Today. “I know about raising children and the concerns you have.”

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Haley pointed out that women focus on issues from education to border safety and national security.

“I know not only what they care about, but I also know how to communicate that to them because I can relate to what they’re feeling,” she said.

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Celine Dion cancels upcoming shows and 'will likely never tour again,' source says



CNN
 — 

Celine Dion announced the cancellation of her “Courage World Tour” dates through 2024 and “will likely never tour again,” a source close to Dion told CNN Friday.”

“She is in a lot of pain,” the individual said. “She does daily physical therapy.”

“I’m so sorry to disappoint all of you once again,” an announcement on the singer’s social media read. “I’m working really hard to build back my strength, but touring can be very difficult even when you’re 100%. It’s not fair to you to keep postponing the shows, and even though it breaks my heart, it’s best that we cancel everything now until I’m really ready to be back on stage again. I want you all to know, I’m not giving up… and I can’t wait to see you again!”

Dion postponed several shows in December after she announced she had been diagnosed with stiff-person syndrome, a condition, she said, that doesn’t allow her “to sing the way I’m used to.”

The disorder is “a rare, progressive syndrome that affects the nervous system, specifically the brain and spinal cord,” according to the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.

“While we’re still learning about this rare condition, we now know this is what’s been causing all of the spasms that I’ve been having,” Dion said at the time. “Unfortunately, these spasms affect every aspect of my daily life, sometimes causing difficulties when I walk and not allowing me to use my vocal cords to sing the way I’m used to.”

Tickets for her concerts will be refunded from their point of purchase.

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Screening for kidney disease at 35 would save lives

Screening all US residents over 35 for chronic kidney disease would increase life expectancy, reduce the number of people requiring dialysis or transplant, and save money, according to a new study.

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) affects 37 million people in the United States, or 15% of US adults. Diabetes and high blood pressure are responsible for two-thirds of cases. Annual Medicare spending on chronic kidney disease is $87 billion and an additional $37 billion is spent annually on kidney replacement therapy.

“CKD is often clinically silent until patients reach late-stage kidney disease, so many people with early-stage CKD are unaware they have it,” says Marika Cusick, a PhD candidate in health policy at Stanford Medicine and lead author of the study in the Annals of Internal Medicine.

“By screening for CKD, we can diagnose and treat it at an earlier stage, improving life expectancy, and reducing the risk of progressing to late-stage kidney disease, which is deadly and costly.”

A new class of drugs, sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitors, have been found to slow disease progression. These drugs, used to treat type 2 diabetes and approved by the Food and Drug Administration about 10 years ago, changed the discussion over whether screening for early-stage chronic kidney disease improves clinical outcomes, Cusick says.

Screening for chronic kidney disease involves testing for albuminuria, the presence of albumin, a type of protein, in urine. Its presence in urine is an indicator of the disease.

For the study, the researchers used data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, an annual nationally representative survey by the National Center for Health Statistics to assess the health of some 5,000 adults and children in the United States.

They then extrapolated their results to the full US adult population aged 35 years and older, conducting a cost-effectiveness analysis of screening for albuminuria with and without SGLT2 inhibitors to the current standard of care for chronic kidney disease.

The authors assessed costs, quality-adjusted life years, and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios. They found that screening, in addition to using SGLT2 inhibitors, the 158 million persons aged 35 to 75 years in the United States would prevent the need for dialysis or kidney transplant in 398,00 to 658,000 individuals during their lifetime, depending on the frequency of screening.

Though the researchers found that adding a one-time screening that included SGLT2 inhibitors would increase total lifetime health care costs from $249,800 to $259,000 for 55-year-olds, they believe the intervention provides good value when considering the dollars spent on treating chronic kidney disease and the health benefits.

“Advanced kidney disease harms the health of Americans, places burdens on families and caregivers, and is extremely costly for the health care system to manage,” says senior author Jeremy Goldhaber-Fiebert, professor of health policy.

“This analysis shows that, while it is a substantial undertaking, screening to detect chronic kidney disease before it advances and providing effective new treatments improves health and represents good value for the money and resources used.”

The Agency for Health Research and Quality, the Veterans Administration Office of Academic Affairs Advanced Fellowship in Health Services Research, and the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases supported the work.

Source: Stanford University

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LA reinstates controversial zero bail policy as judge rules holding those who can't pay is unconstitutional

Los Angeles has reinstated a controversial zero bail policy after a judge ruled that holding suspects in prison because they can’t pay violated their constitutional rights.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Lawrence Riff granted a temporary injunction earlier this month stopping the city and county from requiring bail in a class action lawsuit that seeks to end cash bail.

The policy only impacts individuals arrested for misdemeanors and non-violent felonies.

“Those arrested for sexual offenses, domestic violence and offenses involving weapons will be exempt from the zero-bail policy,” ABC 7 reported. “Those with repeat offenses while out on no bail can be made subject to a cash payment.”

A man pays cash bail in the bond office to secure his brothers release on Dec. 21, 2022, at Division 5 of the Cook County Jail.

A Los Angeles Superior Court judge granted a temporary injunction in a class action lawsuit seeking to end cash bail. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

CALIFORNIA VIOLENT CRIME TRIPLED AS SUSPECTS WALKED FREE WITHOUT BAIL: REFORM STUDY

The plaintiffs argued in the lawsuit that secured money bail does not reduce crime and is unjust to the poor.

The judge said the defendants had offered “no evidence” to disprove any of the plaintiffs’ evidence and had declined to testify at the hearing. He gave the county, city and plaintiffs 60 days to develop alternative pretrial detention rules.

Los Angeles adopted an emergency zero bail policy during the pandemic to reduce crowding in jails to deter the spread of COVID-19. It was lifted in July 2022.

The L.A. County Sheriff’s Department told Fox News Digital it would comply with the policy while prioritizing public safety.

Police officers and an LAPD vehicle

A recent study found no bail policies resulted in a spike in violent crime from reoffenders. (AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu)

LA POLICE BLAST LIBERAL ‘ZERO BAIL’ POLICY AMID RASH OF LOOTING: ‘CHRISTMAS EVERY DAY FOR CRIMINALS’

“The Department is aware of the preliminary injunction regarding the cash bail system, and of course will comply with any court-ordered bail schedule. The County is also working with the court and other stakeholders to explore ways to reduce the number of people held before arraignment because they can’t afford bail and to provide the Sheriff greater release options to safely reduce the jail population, while always prioritizing public safety,” it said in a statement.

The LAPD also reaffirmed their commitment to public safety and protecting individuals’ constitutional rights.

“The Los Angeles Police Department is reviewing the courts recent ruling regarding modifications to the existing Superior Court Standardize Bail Schedule. The Los Angeles Police Department remains committed to safeguarding the constitutional rights of all individuals while also  working with our criminal justice partners in addressing the community safety concerns related to individuals accused of serious crimes,” the department said in a statement.

Fox News Digital also reached out to attorneys in the lawsuit for comment.

Police officers at an intersection

The L.A. County Sheriff’s office said it would comply with the no bail policy while prioritizing public safety. (AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu)

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The lead attorney in the case argued that the no bail policy reaffirms the presumption of innocence in our legal system.

“We’re supposed to have a presumption of innocence in this country. It’s not much of a presumption of innocence when you’re in a jail cell,” attorney Salil Dudani said in the lawsuit.

A recent study found California’s zero bail policies resulted in a spike in violent crime from repeat offenders in one county.

Suspects released without bail were rearrested on 163% more charges than those who posted bail, and they reoffended 70% more often. Those reoffenses resulted in felony charges 90% more often — and they were accused of three times as many violent crimes, according to the study.

Fox News’ Michael Ruiz contributed to this report.

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The least-visited national parks in the United States in 2022

Editor’s Note: Monthly Ticket is a CNN Travel series that spotlights some of the most fascinating topics in the travel world. In March, we’re heading to the great outdoors.



CNN
 — 

America’s least-visited national park is quite a distance from mainland US shores. Almost 5,000 miles away, in fact.

The National Park of American Samoa in the South Pacific is the only National Park Service site south of the equator. In 2022, it had just 1,887 visits, according to new visitation figures released this week by the National Park Service.

Compared with 2021, that number is down by 78%. The park had several Covid-19 closures last year, NPS said.

The national park stretches over three islands with tropical rainforests, volcanic slopes, pristine beaches and thousands of acres of marine habitat, and it’s interwoven with a rich culture.

“In keeping with the meaning of the word Samoa – ‘sacred earth’ – the park helps protect fa’asamoathe customs, beliefs, and traditions of the 3,000-year-old Samoan culture,” the park’s website says.

A 93-year-old woman and her grandson recently achieved their mission – more than seven years in the making – of seeing all 63 headliner US national parks with a visit to the far-flung archipelago.

The island park is far from the only uncrowded NPS site.

Nearly 400 of the 424 National Park Service sites count visitors. And three quarters of all visits are to just 64 sites. So there are lots of less-visited spots to explore.

Even among the 63 natural expanses that have “national park” in their proper names, there are parks where visitors number in the thousands or tens of thousands – far short of the nearly 13 million that visited Great Smoky Mountains National Park in 2022. It was the most visited of the 63 national parks last year.

Gates of the Arctic National Park covers a whopping 8.4 million acres in Alaska. Plenty of room to spread out ...

The vast state of Alaska – which covers 665,384 square miles – is home to five of the 15 least-visited national parks in 2022.

“Alaska’s national parks are some of the least visited for a good reason – they are hard to get to,” said Peter Christian, chief of public and legislative affairs in the National Park Service’s Alaska Region

But while they may be sparsely visited compared with other parks, several of them saw substantial jumps in visitor numbers last year, with increases of 30% to 50% over 2021, another step toward recovering from dramatic pandemic declines.

And one Alaska park that was among the least visited in 2021 – Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve – has catapulted out of the list with a 500% increase in visitors, thanks to a more robust return of cruises. But visitation still hasn’t reach pre-pandemic levels, Christian said.

With more and more travelers heading out for the busy spring and summer seasons, the least-visited national parks have a lot to offer those who venture off the most well-worn paths.

1. National Park of American Samoa – 1,887 recreation visits

Most parkgoers will need a passport to visit this spot in a remote part of the South Pacific. Hawaiian Airlines offers direct flights to American Samoa twice a week from Honolulu. Covid-19 travel requirements were relaxed at the end of last year, and the first cruise ship in three years arrived in January.

The park has units on three islands and stretches across 13,500 acres, some 4,000 of which are marine acres that are mostly coral reefs.

2. Gates of the Arctic National Park & Preserve, Alaska – 9,457 recreation visits

With no roads, no trails, no cell service and no established campsites, this massive expanse is a true wilderness experience. The park and preserve has six designated Wild Rivers.

“Visitors may wander at will across 8.4 million acres of superlative natural beauty,” the park’s website says. Visitors must be self-sufficient, flexible and “able to execute self-extraction and communication, should an emergency situation arise.” Arrive prepared.

3. Kobuk Valley National Park, Alaska – 16,925 recreation visits

There are no roads, campgrounds or entrance gates for this 1.8 million-acre expanse’s human visitors. Half a million caribou migrate through this park, crossing the Kobuk River and Onion Portage, according to the National Park Service. An 8,000-year tradition of hunting caribou here continues today.

Lake Clark National Park & Preserve had fewer than 20,000 visits in 2022.

4. Lake Clark National Park & Preserve, Alaska – 18,187 recreation visits

Stretching across more than 4 million acres, this national park and preserve is home to three designated Wild Rivers and two National Natural Landmark volcanoes. The land holds 10,000 years of human history and preserves the ancestral homelands of the Dena’ina people.

5. Isle Royale National Park, Michigan – 25,454 recreation visits

An isolated archipelago in Lake Superior, Isle Royale boasts 165 miles of trails and more than 30 campgrounds. It’s open from mid-April through the end of October. Ferry and seaplane service typically runs from mid-May through the end of September, according to NPS.

There are fewer mammal species here – only 18 – than on the mainland because animals must cross at least 14 miles of Lake Superior. Wolves and moose are among the notable animal residents.

Trail of the Cedars leads through giant ferns and mossy cedar trees in North Cascades National Park.

6. North Cascades National Park, Washington – 30,154 recreation visits

Peaks crowned by more than 300 glaciers tower over this alpine landscape. More than 1,600 species of plants have been identified on this land that spans temperate rainforest to a dry ponderosa pine ecosystem. There are more than 400 miles of trails.

7. Katmai National Park & Preserve, Alaska – 33,908 recreation visits

Katmai is an important habitat for thousands of brown bears. One of the world’s premier bear-viewing spots, according to the Park Service, Katmai is home to an estimated 2,200 brown bears. Brooks Camp along the Brooks River is one of the most popular viewing spots to observe bears feasting on salmon.

Most of Wrangell-St. Elias National Park & Preserve is rugged backcountry with limited visitor services.

8. Wrangell-St. Elias National Park & Preserve, Alaska – 65,236 recreation visits

America’s largest national park, Wrangell-St. Elias encompasses 13.2 million acres – or about the size of Yellowstone National Park, Yosemite National Park and Switzerland combined, the Park Service says. Most of the park is backcountry, and visitor services are limited. There are some maintained trails in the frontcountry Nabesna and McCarthy areas.

9. Dry Tortugas National Park, Florida – 78,488 recreation visits

About 70 miles (113 km) west of Key West, Dry Tortugas is mostly open water with seven small islands. Garden Key is home to one of the nation’s largest 19th-century forts, Fort Jefferson. The park is accessible by boat or plane and is host to nearly 300 species of birds. Bush Key closes every year from February to September so that sooty terns and brown noddies can breed there undisturbed.

10. Great Basin National Park, Nevada – 142,115 recreation visits

Mountain peaks meet hot desert valleys here. Great Basin National Park is home to 13,063-foot Wheeler Peak, ancient bristlecone pines, about 40 caves and a wide array of plants and animals. The elevation ranges from 5,000 to 13,000 feet with hiking trails for all levels.

Virgin Islands National Park, with Trunk Bay pictured, saw a nearly 40% drop in visits last year.

11. Virgin Islands National Park – 196,752 recreation visits

About two thirds of the US Virgin Island of St. John is national park, with sandy beaches, rich marine life, petroglyphs from the indigenous Taino people and sites related to the island’s troubled history of enslaved labor. There are more than 20 trails in the park, which is typically busiest from November to April.

12. Congaree National Park, South Carolina – 204,522 recreation visits

Congaree National Park’s landscape is “defined by the presence of both flood and flame,” the Park Service says.

Floodwaters from the Congaree and Wateree rivers regularly cover the park’s old-growth bottomland hardwood forest, and the upland pine forest depends on wildfires to clear out competing vegetation. Canoeing and kayaking are popular ways to explore the park. There’s a 15-mile marked canoe trail.

Guadalupe Mountains National Park is home to the four highest mountains in Texas.

13. Guadalupe Mountains National Park, Texas – 219,987 recreation visits

This park boasts the four highest peaks in Texas and the world’s most extensive Permian fossil reef. Guadalupe Mountains Wilderness has more than 80 miles of trail including a hike in the Salt Basin Dunes that rise 100 feet from the desert floor.

14. Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota – 221,434 recreation visits

Billed as a park of “water, islands and horizons,” Voyageurs covers 218,055 acres – 84,000 of which is water. There are more than 500 islands and four large lakes, plus more than two dozen smaller lakes in the park, which is best experienced by boat. Voyageurs shares its northern boundary with Canada, and lucky visitors may even see the northern lights.

15. Pinnacles National Park, California – 275,023 recreation visits

Pinnacles was formed when volcanoes erupted some 23 million years ago. Talus caves and towering rock spires draw hikers and climbers; there are more than 30 miles of hiking trails and hundreds of climbing routes.

While Pinnacles may rank among the 15 least-visited national parks, it gets very busy on weekends, holidays and throughout the spring, according to a notice on the park’s website. Arrive early to beat the crowds.

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CNN talks to 8-year-old climber from the side of El Capitan

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