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As the Columbia University professor steps down, he addresses student protests and how ‘higher education has developed into a hedge fund’ | |
Submitted at 10-09-2024, 02:12 AM by sleeppoor | |
0 Comments | |
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is putting the full weight of the Florida government behind an effort to defeat a ballot measure that would protect abortion access in the state — including by enlisting government lawyers in a campaign to silence a young mother with terminal brain cancer who is warning of the danger Florida’s strict ban poses to women like her.
This November, Florida residents will have the opportunity to vote on Amendment 4; if passed, the measure will enshrine the right to abortion “before viability or when necessary to protect the patient’s health” in Florida’s constitution. The pitch is broadly popular with Floridians: A September poll showed the measure attracting support from 76 percent of voters.
But DeSantis, who has signed two separate abortion bans into law — restricting the procedure first at 15 weeks, then 6 weeks gestation — is desperately trying to tank Amendment 4. First, he worked with the Heritage Foundation to add language to the ballot measure implying that relegalizing abortion would have a negative fiscal impact on the state. Amid that baseless warning, state agencies began spending public money on TV and radio ads peddling misinformation about the measure, as well as a website that claims Amendment 4 “threatens women’s safety.”
Now, DeSantis is trying to keep a cancer patient named Caroline from sharing the story of her abortion, by threatening to criminally prosecute TV stations that carry the Amendment 4 ad featuring her story. | |
Submitted at 10-09-2024, 02:09 AM by sleeppoor | |
Because if we learned anything from the Terminator franchise, it's that cops are good. | |
Submitted at 10-08-2024, 11:07 PM by Mordant | |
Inquiry by Sheldon Whitehouse found White House and FBI ‘misled’ about inquiry into supreme court nominee | |
Submitted at 10-08-2024, 09:40 PM by sleeppoor | |
Submitted at 10-08-2024, 09:21 PM by sleeppoor | |
Internet forums are still alive and kicking and full of information. Here are the best niche communities I could find that are alive and well. | |
Submitted at 10-08-2024, 08:44 PM by sleeppoor | |
Qantas has apologised to passengers on a flight from Sydney to Japan after a sexually explicit film was played to the entire plane.
Passengers on the flight to Haneda were shown the start of Daddio, a 2023 film starring Dakota Johnson. The film is rated R for “language, sexual material and brief graphic nudity” in the US, and MA15+ for “strong coarse language and nudity” in Australia.
Technical issues meant individual movie selection was not available, so after a request from some passengers, the crew chose to play the film for the entire flight. Once passengers realised the content of the movie, crew members ended it and instead put a children’s film on screens.
After the flight, some passengers shared the experience on social media. One described the movie as “40 minutes of penis and boobs”. | |
Submitted at 10-08-2024, 08:02 PM by sleeppoor | |
In 1934, a German paleontologist named a giant flying insect from the Carboniferous period Rochlingia hitleri, after Adolf Hitler, who had just taken power in Germany, and Hermann Röchling, an anti-semitic steel manufacturer and member of the Nazi Party. Three years later, an Austrian amateur entomologist named a brown, eyeless beetle from Slovenian caves Anophthalmus hitleri because he admired Hitler. In recent years, neo-Nazis have reportedly paid thousands for specimens, pushing the beetle toward extinction.
Some researchers have argued for years that A. hitleri and other species names, including the many that honor racists and colonizers, are offensive and should be changed. A few societies have taken steps toward doing so. But not the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN), and its stance has ignited fierce debate.
In January, the commission, which arbitrates on the correct use of scientific names of animals, announced in the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society (ZJLS) that it will not consider changing animal names many researchers consider offensive. “If these names are not stable, you can create a massive confusion,” explains ICZN Commissioner Luis Ceríaco, a biologist at the University of Porto. But on 23 August, a series of editorials in the same journal pushed back, saying the decision was made without feedback from the community and wrongly prioritized tradition over ethics. It’s a matter of “eliminating the commemoration of people who caused untold human misery,” says one author, botanist Estrela Figueiredo of Nelson Mandela University’s Ria Olivier Herbarium. “In which other spheres of human endeavor is anything still named [after] Hitler? … The codes must change and adapt, like the rest of society.”
Names identified as problematic include Hypopta mussolinii, a butterfly discovered in Libya and named after Benito Mussolini, the fascist Italian leader who invaded the country. And sometimes, organisms are named apparently with intent to mock: In 2017, researchers named a moth with pale blond head scales and small genitalia Neopalpa donaldtrumpi.
The ICZN commissioners, who are in charge of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, argued in January that renaming animals because of cultural offense would disrupt the code’s chief goal: stability. Scientists would then use more than one name to refer to the same species. | |
Submitted at 10-08-2024, 06:30 PM by sleeppoor | |
Submitted at 10-08-2024, 05:17 PM by sleeppoor | |
Submitted at 10-08-2024, 03:45 PM by sleeppoor | |
BP has abandoned a target to cut oil and gas output by 2030 as CEO Murray Auchincloss scales back the firm's energy transition strategy to regain investor confidence, three sources with knowledge of the matter said.
The London-listed company is now targeting several new investments in the Middle East and the Gulf of Mexico to boost its oil and gas output, the sources said. | |
Submitted at 10-07-2024, 08:42 PM by sleeppoor | |
The Department of Canadian Heritage is being told that more than half of the 550 names on the Memorial to the Victims of Communism should be removed because of potential links to the Nazis or questions about affiliations with fascist groups, according to government records.
As originally planned, there were to be 553 entries on the Ottawa memorial’s Wall of Remembrance.
Article content
The department had determined that 50 to 60 of the names or organizations were likely directly linked to the Nazis, according to the documents obtained by the Ottawa Citizen through an access to information request.
A 2023 report for Canadian Heritage recommended more than 330 names be excluded to be on the safe side, the records noted. | |
Submitted at 10-07-2024, 08:29 PM by sleeppoor | |
"One really violent day" in our morally underdeveloped nation. Supremacist superfans, Star Wars, and the popular insistence within a violent empire of owning heroism as exclusive property. | |
Submitted at 10-07-2024, 08:23 PM by Disruptive Emotional-Support Pig | |
What’s happening in the Middle East was enabled by a president with ideological priors, aides who failed to push back, and a cheerleading media establishment.
It’s unclear yet whether the consequences of Israel’s post–October 7 war will be as bad as the Iraq War. They very well might, but one thing already clear is that both catastrophes were enabled in part by a U.S. president with strong ideological biases, a confidence in his own judgment as unshakeable as it was unjustified, advisers unwilling or unable to push back effectively, and an elite media establishment with an overtly militarist bent and a shockingly callous disregard for Arab lives, far more interested in editorializing about college student chants than about sitting U.S. senators—that is, people with actual power—urging Israel to “flatten” Gaza. (It’s hard to imagine a better demonstration of the bigotry still underlying our foreign policy discourse that, amid the flood of anti-Palestinian invective issuing from members of Congress, the only censure the U.S. House managed to pass was of its one Palestinian American member.) | |
Submitted at 10-07-2024, 05:09 PM by sleeppoor | |
Submitted at 10-07-2024, 04:45 PM by sleeppoor | |
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has issued a recall due to possible Listeria contamination for more than a dozen brands of beef jelly tongue products sold in Ontario.
The agency issued the warning and recall Saturday, urging people who purchased the potentially contaminated meat to throw it out or return it to where it was bought.
The recall affects 13 different brands(opens in a new tab), and includes beef jelly tongue products that may not have a labeled brand. Products may have a slight variation in naming, such as Jellied Beef Tongue, Beef Tongue & Jelly, or Beef Tongue in Jelly. | |
Submitted at 10-07-2024, 03:25 PM by NickNoheart | |
Something fishy is happening in the deep blue sea. In a recent study, scientists documented how a particular fish species known as sea robins evolved to have legs. | |
Submitted at 10-06-2024, 05:07 PM by Nibbles | |
Now that the former president and Tesla CEO have teamed up, there’s only one way to describe the American political right in its current form. | |
Submitted at 10-06-2024, 01:47 PM by Mordant | |
Read the complaints submitted to the FTC by users of Donald Trump's social media platform. | |
Submitted at 10-06-2024, 01:41 PM by Mordant | |
Trish Carter-Goodheart, a Democratic House candidate for Seat A in the district, said in a news release that after a question was asked about discrimination and whether it exists in Idaho, she said that, “just because someone hasn’t personally experienced discrimination, doesn’t mean it’s not happening. Racism and discrimination are real issues here in Idaho, as anyone familiar with our state’s history knows.”
Sen. Dan Foreman, R-Viola, reportedly responded to Carter-Goodheart, “I’m so sick and tired of this liberal bull----. Why don’t you go back to where you came from?”
Foreman then left the forum early. The senator did not respond to a call requesting comment.
In a Facebook post Thursday, Foreman said the incident was a “quintessential display of race-baiting.” | |
Submitted at 10-06-2024, 06:12 AM by Vaidency | |

As the Columbia University professor steps down, he addresses student protests and how ‘higher education has developed into a hedge fund’
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is putting the full weight of the Florida government behind an effort to defeat a ballot measure that would protect abortion access in the state — including by enlisting government lawyers in a campaign to silence a young mother with terminal brain cancer who is warning of the danger Florida’s strict ban poses to women like her.
This November, Florida residents will have the opportunity to vote on Amendment 4; if passed, the measure will enshrine the right to abortion “before viability or when necessary to protect the patient’s health” in Florida’s constitution. The pitch is broadly popular with Floridians: A September poll showed the measure attracting support from 76 percent of voters.
But DeSantis, who has signed two separate abortion bans into law — restricting the procedure first at 15 weeks, then 6 weeks gestation — is desperately trying to tank Amendment 4. First, he worked with the Heritage Foundation to add language to the ballot measure implying that relegalizing abortion would have a negative fiscal impact on the state. Amid that baseless warning, state agencies began spending public money on TV and radio ads peddling misinformation about the measure, as well as a website that claims Amendment 4 “threatens women’s safety.”
Now, DeSantis is trying to keep a cancer patient named Caroline from sharing the story of her abortion, by threatening to criminally prosecute TV stations that carry the Amendment 4 ad featuring her story.
Because if we learned anything from the Terminator franchise, it's that cops are good.
Inquiry by Sheldon Whitehouse found White House and FBI ‘misled’ about inquiry into supreme court nominee
Internet forums are still alive and kicking and full of information. Here are the best niche communities I could find that are alive and well.
Qantas has apologised to passengers on a flight from Sydney to Japan after a sexually explicit film was played to the entire plane.
Passengers on the flight to Haneda were shown the start of Daddio, a 2023 film starring Dakota Johnson. The film is rated R for “language, sexual material and brief graphic nudity” in the US, and MA15+ for “strong coarse language and nudity” in Australia.
Technical issues meant individual movie selection was not available, so after a request from some passengers, the crew chose to play the film for the entire flight. Once passengers realised the content of the movie, crew members ended it and instead put a children’s film on screens.
After the flight, some passengers shared the experience on social media. One described the movie as “40 minutes of penis and boobs”.
In 1934, a German paleontologist named a giant flying insect from the Carboniferous period Rochlingia hitleri, after Adolf Hitler, who had just taken power in Germany, and Hermann Röchling, an anti-semitic steel manufacturer and member of the Nazi Party. Three years later, an Austrian amateur entomologist named a brown, eyeless beetle from Slovenian caves Anophthalmus hitleri because he admired Hitler. In recent years, neo-Nazis have reportedly paid thousands for specimens, pushing the beetle toward extinction.
Some researchers have argued for years that A. hitleri and other species names, including the many that honor racists and colonizers, are offensive and should be changed. A few societies have taken steps toward doing so. But not the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN), and its stance has ignited fierce debate.
In January, the commission, which arbitrates on the correct use of scientific names of animals, announced in the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society (ZJLS) that it will not consider changing animal names many researchers consider offensive. “If these names are not stable, you can create a massive confusion,” explains ICZN Commissioner Luis Ceríaco, a biologist at the University of Porto. But on 23 August, a series of editorials in the same journal pushed back, saying the decision was made without feedback from the community and wrongly prioritized tradition over ethics. It’s a matter of “eliminating the commemoration of people who caused untold human misery,” says one author, botanist Estrela Figueiredo of Nelson Mandela University’s Ria Olivier Herbarium. “In which other spheres of human endeavor is anything still named [after] Hitler? … The codes must change and adapt, like the rest of society.”
Names identified as problematic include Hypopta mussolinii, a butterfly discovered in Libya and named after Benito Mussolini, the fascist Italian leader who invaded the country. And sometimes, organisms are named apparently with intent to mock: In 2017, researchers named a moth with pale blond head scales and small genitalia Neopalpa donaldtrumpi.
The ICZN commissioners, who are in charge of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, argued in January that renaming animals because of cultural offense would disrupt the code’s chief goal: stability. Scientists would then use more than one name to refer to the same species.
BP has abandoned a target to cut oil and gas output by 2030 as CEO Murray Auchincloss scales back the firm's energy transition strategy to regain investor confidence, three sources with knowledge of the matter said.
The London-listed company is now targeting several new investments in the Middle East and the Gulf of Mexico to boost its oil and gas output, the sources said.
The Department of Canadian Heritage is being told that more than half of the 550 names on the Memorial to the Victims of Communism should be removed because of potential links to the Nazis or questions about affiliations with fascist groups, according to government records.
As originally planned, there were to be 553 entries on the Ottawa memorial’s Wall of Remembrance.
Article content
The department had determined that 50 to 60 of the names or organizations were likely directly linked to the Nazis, according to the documents obtained by the Ottawa Citizen through an access to information request.
A 2023 report for Canadian Heritage recommended more than 330 names be excluded to be on the safe side, the records noted.
"One really violent day" in our morally underdeveloped nation. Supremacist superfans, Star Wars, and the popular insistence within a violent empire of owning heroism as exclusive property.
What’s happening in the Middle East was enabled by a president with ideological priors, aides who failed to push back, and a cheerleading media establishment.
It’s unclear yet whether the consequences of Israel’s post–October 7 war will be as bad as the Iraq War. They very well might, but one thing already clear is that both catastrophes were enabled in part by a U.S. president with strong ideological biases, a confidence in his own judgment as unshakeable as it was unjustified, advisers unwilling or unable to push back effectively, and an elite media establishment with an overtly militarist bent and a shockingly callous disregard for Arab lives, far more interested in editorializing about college student chants than about sitting U.S. senators—that is, people with actual power—urging Israel to “flatten” Gaza. (It’s hard to imagine a better demonstration of the bigotry still underlying our foreign policy discourse that, amid the flood of anti-Palestinian invective issuing from members of Congress, the only censure the U.S. House managed to pass was of its one Palestinian American member.)
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has issued a recall due to possible Listeria contamination for more than a dozen brands of beef jelly tongue products sold in Ontario.
The agency issued the warning and recall Saturday, urging people who purchased the potentially contaminated meat to throw it out or return it to where it was bought.
The recall affects 13 different brands(opens in a new tab), and includes beef jelly tongue products that may not have a labeled brand. Products may have a slight variation in naming, such as Jellied Beef Tongue, Beef Tongue & Jelly, or Beef Tongue in Jelly.
Something fishy is happening in the deep blue sea. In a recent study, scientists documented how a particular fish species known as sea robins evolved to have legs.
Now that the former president and Tesla CEO have teamed up, there’s only one way to describe the American political right in its current form.
Read the complaints submitted to the FTC by users of Donald Trump's social media platform.
Trish Carter-Goodheart, a Democratic House candidate for Seat A in the district, said in a news release that after a question was asked about discrimination and whether it exists in Idaho, she said that, “just because someone hasn’t personally experienced discrimination, doesn’t mean it’s not happening. Racism and discrimination are real issues here in Idaho, as anyone familiar with our state’s history knows.”
Sen. Dan Foreman, R-Viola, reportedly responded to Carter-Goodheart, “I’m so sick and tired of this liberal bull----. Why don’t you go back to where you came from?”
Foreman then left the forum early. The senator did not respond to a call requesting comment.
In a Facebook post Thursday, Foreman said the incident was a “quintessential display of race-baiting.”