The Asian giant hornet is the world's largest hornet and can grow to greater than 45 mm with a wingspan around 75 mm [read more: https://t.co/i0cnDeJqrc] pic.twitter.com/0F5bM8tpqE
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) August 2, 2022
Wednesday, August 31, 2022
I see wonderful things
None so blind as those who will not see
The urgency to stop Trump feels like a mistrust of the people. The deplorable subsection of America shouldn't have elected him in the first time — so goes the elite opinion — and we can't let those people have another chance to give this man power. That's anti-democratic, and isn't that why the oligarchy presents itself as serving democracy?Is that one of the "profound questions about American democracy" the NYT editors address here? I doubt it, but I will finally read this thing and let you know if — by off chance — the elite editors of the NYT notice the contradiction:Mr. Trump’s unprecedented assault on the integrity of American democracy requires a criminal investigation....Trump is framed as the attacker of democracy, rather than one of the candidates for election. He's going to wreck elections, not participate in them.[D]oing nothing to hold him accountable for his actions in the months leading up to Jan. 6 could set an irresistible precedent for future presidents. Why not attempt to stay in power by any means necessary or use the power of the office to enrich oneself or punish one’s enemies, knowing that the law does not apply to presidents in or out of office?...Trump pursued available remedies and didn't get very far, then participated in a big demonstration, but do you want to criminalize seeking court remedies and delivering big speeches? That doesn't approach "by any means necessary." And it's odd to include on that list "us[ing] the power of the office to... punish one’s enemies," because that sounds like what is being done to Trump.[snip]Part of democracy is critiquing democracy. Both sides do it, and both sides lie. The "Russia collusion" hoax dogged Trump throughout his presidency. We need to be able to debate about defects in the voting and vote counting process, even as we also need to be able to declare a winner within a practical timeframe. Would the NYT denounce things like "Not My President Day" or all the people who think Al Gore won in 2000?No, there won't be any principled demand to suppress lies about elections, and if there were, it would be a despicable attack on freedom of speech. The remedy for what they see as lies about the election is simply more speech. I can see the frustration: Why do people keep believing what the NYT believes it knows to be lies? But that's always the problem with freedom of speech. People tell and believe a lot of lies. If you want democracy, you can't let that flip you out into hysteria. Concentrate on the next election and defeat your opponent at the polls.If your response is, no, because my opponent might win and we can't take that risk, then you don't believe in democracy.
The danger is that “stuff I agree with” will increasingly be labeled as “democratic,” while anything someone opposes will be called “anti-democratic.” Democracy thus comes to be seen as a way to enact a series of personal preferences rather than a (mostly) beneficial impersonal mechanism for making collective decisions.Closer to home and more controversially, many on the political left in the US have made the charge that the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade was “anti-democratic.” It is fine to call Dobbs a bad decision, but in fact the ruling puts abortion law into the hands of state legislatures. If aliens were visiting from Mars, they simply would not see that move as anti-democratic.[snip]It is also harmful to call the Dobbs decision anti-democratic when what you’re really arguing for is greater involvement by the federal government in abortion policy — a defensible view. No one says the Swiss government is “anti-democratic” because it puts so many decisions (for better or worse) into the hands of the cantons. And pointing out that many US state governments are not as democratic as you might prefer does not overturn this logic.It would be more honest, and more accurate, simply to note that court put the decision into the hands of (imperfectly) democratic state governments, and that you disagree with the decisions of those governments.By conflating “what’s right” with “what’s democratic,” you may end up fooling yourself about the popularity of your own views. If you attribute the failure of your views to prevail to “non-democratic” or “anti-democratic” forces, you might conclude the world simply needs more majoritarianism, more referenda, more voting.Those may or may not be correct conclusions. But they should be judged empirically, rather than following from people’s idiosyncratic terminology about what they mean by “democracy” — and, by extension, “anti-democratic.”
History
In 1884, only 325 bison remained in the United States— down from the historical 30-60 million.
— Stone Tool Poet 🌲🍻🪕 (@PalatinePuritan) July 18, 2022
Bison were thought to have gone extinct in Yellowstone, until this small herd of 23 bison were photographed in a remote section of the park.
1 in 14 American bison were in this photo. pic.twitter.com/PuMQ4KXBDA
An Insight
So the rest of the world is warming faster than the rest of the world... 🤔 pic.twitter.com/gz2wJQLOEF
— BozenaTar (@Bozena15259009) July 27, 2022
I see wonderful things
Mesmerizing timelapse of a lenticular cloud hovering over Mount Teide in the Canary Islands as day turns to night, captured by photographer Bartosz Wojczyński.pic.twitter.com/1eLRYGWWsu
— Wonder of Science (@wonderofscience) July 20, 2022
Some times you just have to call it out as a lie
Resistance to nuclear power is starting to ebb around the world with support from a surprising group: environmentalists.This change of heart spans the globe, and is being prompted by climate change, unreliable electrical grids and fears about national security in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.In California, the state's last remaining power plant — Diablo Canyon, situated on the Pacific Coast between San Francisco and Los Angeles — long scheduled to be scrapped, may now remain open. Governor Gavin Newsom, a longtime opponent of the plant, is seeking to extend its lifespan through at least 2029.It's a remarkable turnaround in a state where anti-nuclear activists and progressive Democratic lawmakers have fought with great success to rid the state of nuclear power.Last week, Japan's prime minister said the country is restarting idled nuclear plants and considering building new ones. This is a sharp reversal for the country that largely abandoned nuclear after the tsunami-led disaster at the Fukushima plant in 2011.Germany pulled the plug on nuclear after Fukushima, too. But this summer there's been an intense debate in Germany over whether to restart three plants in response to the country's severe energy crisis prompted by the Russia-Ukraine war.
Backers of nuclear power note that it is a source of emissions-free reliable power. And they believe their case has been strengthened due to the threat of climate change and the need to stabilize unreliable electrical grids.In California the moment of truth came in 2020 when residents had to endure a series of rolling power outages, said Michael Shellenberger, an environmentalist and author who supports nuclear."The state is constantly on the verge of blackouts," Shellenberger said.
Michael D. Shellenberger (born June 16, 1971) is an American author and former public relations professional whose writing has focused on the intersection of climate change, the environment, nuclear power, and politics, and more recently on how he believes progressivism is linked to homelessness, drug addiction, and mental illness. He is a co-founder of the Breakthrough Institute, co-founder of the California Peace Coalition, and the founder of Environmental Progress.A self-described ecomodernist, Shellenberger believes that economic growth can continue without negative environmental impacts through technological research and development, usually through a combination of nuclear power and urbanization. A controversial figure, Shellenberger disagrees with most environmentalists over the impacts of environmental threats and policies for addressing them. Shellenberger's positions and writings on climate change and environmentalism have received criticism from environmental scientists and academics, who have called his arguments “bad science" and "inaccurate". In contrast, his positions and writings have received praise from writers and journalists in the popular press, including conservative and libertarian news outlets and organizations. In a similar manner, many academics criticized Shellenberger's positions and writings on homelessness, while receiving mixed reception from writers and journalists in the popular press.
So it is striking that the most vehement arguments to keep Diablo Canyon running haven't come the nuclear industry. Instead, they have been put forward by a most unlikely collection of pro-nuclear advocates.It seemed quixotic, even hopeless, in 2016, when Shellenberger along with the pioneering climate scientist James Hansen and Stewart Brand, founder of the crunchy Whole Earth Catalog, began advocating to save Diablo Canyon."We were basically excluded from polite conversation for even talking about keeping the plant open," recalled Shellenberger. Promoting nuclear as an important tool in fighting climate change would get him dismissed by fellow environmentalists as a conspiracy theorist or, falsely, as a corporate shill, he added.
At the same time, Kristin Zaitz and Heather Hoff were forming an advocacy group called Mothers for Nuclear, a local grassroots effort to keep Diablo Canyon operating. To say their views were not widely embraced would be a serious understatement."We felt like we were on an island all by ourselves," said Zaitz. "We had people wishing that we would die, wishing we would get cancer...making weird videos about us that made me feel like, am I unsafe, is my family unsafe?"In many ways Zaitz and Hoff are also the most unlikely of nuclear advocates. They both describe themselves as eco-friendly liberals, moms concerned about preserving wild spaces, recycling and climate change.At Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo, not far from Diablo Canyon, they both studied engineering and both took jobs at the plant – Hoff is a materials scientist and Zaitz is a civil engineer – despite misgivings about nuclear energy."I was nervous about nuclear before I started working there," said Hoff. "And it took a lot of years to change my mind...and eventually realize that nuclear really aligned with my environmental and humanitarian goals."
Data Talks
Lmao, political science is the new king of unreplicability. Median observed power was about 10% in this analysis of 2000 articles. Even the bold title is a gross understatement.
— Emil O W Kirkegaard (@KirkegaardEmil) July 16, 2022
Quantitative Political Science Research is Greatly Underpoweredhttps://t.co/Ez53SzNlwj pic.twitter.com/MTPbkdiEX5
Tuesday, August 30, 2022
History
Ancient loaves of bread from the cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum that were carbonized in volcanic pyroclastic flows of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD. The Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli (MANN). pic.twitter.com/mLFlMd6G05
— Archaeology & Art (@archaeologyart) July 17, 2022
An Insight
“Inflation is just like alcoholism.”
— Jon Erlichman (@JonErlichman) July 26, 2022
~ Milton Friedmanpic.twitter.com/2iODbkebbj
I see wonderful things
Break dance during the break on a Hubei construction site🕺🕺🕺
— Tansu YEĞEN (@TansuYegen) July 19, 2022
pic.twitter.com/4z6tnemNFb
The Ninth Circuit is by far the largest of the thirteen courts of appeals, covering a total of 9 states and 2 territories and with 29 active judgeships.
Pioneer’s Climate Committee—the body that led the district-wide push for FCA derecognition—had members that expressed remarkably similar hostile statements. Peter Glasser was the most forthcoming about his contempt for FCA’s religious beliefs. The day after learning about FCA’s religious-based views on marriage and sexuality, Glasser channeled his inner Martin Luther, pinning the Statement of Faith and Sexual Purity Statement to his classroom whiteboard along with his grievances. But instead of a reformation, Glasser demanded an inquisition. As he explained in emails sent to Principal Espiritu, FCA’s “bullshit” views “have no validity” and amount to heresy because they violated “my truth.” Glasser believed “attacking these views is the only way to make a better campus” and proclaimed that he would not be an “enabler for this kind of ‘religious freedom’ anymore.”Glasser’s desire to attack FCA’s views makes plain that FCA, putting it charitably, was “less than fully welcome” on Pioneer’s campus. Glasser’s comments also improperly imputed insincerity to FCA’s religious views by referring to their beliefs as an exercise in (air quotes) “religious freedom.”Glasser was not the only skeptic. Michelle Bowman also serves on the Climate Committee and as faculty advisor to the Satanic Temple Club. In discussing this lawsuit with a former student, she opined that “evangelicals, like FCA, are charlatans and not in the least bit Christian,” and “choose darkness over knowledge and they perpetuate ignorance.” But it is not for Bowman to dictate what beliefs are genuinely Christian. Id. at 1731 (The government cannot "pass[ ] judgment upon or presuppose[ ] the illegitimacy of religious beliefs."). Nor should the government disfavor religious-based beliefs, even if many may view them as not "acceptable, logical, consistent, or comprehensible."With these two individuals in the room, the Climate Committee concluded that FCA's Statement of Faith and Sexual Purity Statement go against Pioneer High School's core values and that the Committee "need[s] to take a united stance" against FCA. The Committee's unity suggests there was little to no push back against Glasser and Bowman's views. So does the speed of the derecognition decision—two days later, Principal Espiritu informed FCA that they had lost recognition without giving FCA's students any opportunity to defend themselves or their organization. At least the baker in Masterpiece Cakeshop had a chance to be heard.Equally telling was the continued hostility towards FCA even after it lost ASB recognition and thus could not possibly violate the School District’s non-discrimination policies. In an effort “to ban FCA completely from campus,” Glasser ginned up another potential “avenue” of attack during Summer 2019. He posited that FCA could be accused of violating the School District’s sexual harassment policy by creating “a hostile work environment for students and faculty.” In other words, teenagers—meeting privately to discuss the Bible—were creating a hostile work environment for adult faculty, according to Glasser. There is no indication in the record that Glasser’s inimical view of FCA was rebuffed.
Headquartered in San Francisco, California, the Ninth Circuit is by far the largest of the thirteen courts of appeals, covering a total of 9 states and 2 territories and with 29 active judgeships. The court's regular meeting places are Seattle at the William Kenzo Nakamura United States Courthouse, Portland at the Pioneer Courthouse, San Francisco at the James R. Browning U.S. Court of Appeals Building, and Pasadena at the Richard H. Chambers U.S. Court of Appeals.
Panels of the court occasionally travel to hear cases in other locations within the circuit. Although the judges travel around the circuit, the court arranges its hearings so that cases from the northern region of the circuit are heard in Seattle or Portland, cases from southern California and Arizona are heard in Pasadena, and cases from northern California, Nevada, Hawaii, and the Pacific territories are heard in San Francisco. Additionally, the court holds yearly sittings in Anchorage and Honolulu. For lawyers who must come and present their cases to the court in person, this administrative grouping of cases helps to reduce the time and cost of travel. Ninth Circuit judges are also appointed by the United States Secretary of the Interior to serve as temporary acting Associate Justices for non-federal appellate sessions at the High Court of American Samoa in Fagatogo.
[snip]The Ninth Circuit's large size is due to the dramatic increases in both the population of the western states and the court's geographic jurisdiction that have occurred since the U.S. Congress created the Ninth Circuit in 1891. The court was originally granted appellate jurisdiction over federal district courts in California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington. As new states and territories were added to the federal judicial hierarchy in the twentieth century, many of those in the West were placed in the Ninth Circuit: the newly acquired Territory of Hawaii in 1900, Arizona upon its admission to the Union in 1912, the Territory of Alaska in 1948, Guam in 1951, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands in 1977.
However, a detailed study in 2018 reported by Brian T. Fitzpatrick, a law professor at Vanderbilt University, looked at how often a federal circuit court was reversed for every thousand cases it terminated on the merits between 1994 and 2015. The study found that the Ninth Circuit's decisions were reversed at a rate of 2.50 cases per thousand, which was by far the highest rate in the country, with the Sixth Circuit second as 1.73 cases per thousand. Fitzgerald also noted that the 9th Circuit was unanimously reversed more than three times as often as the least reversed circuits and over 20% more often than the next closest circuit.
Data Talks
In 1858 the Foreign Office had a staff of 43. By 1902, at the almost peak for the British Empire the headcount was down to 42. Today it’s somewhere over 10,000. pic.twitter.com/HXBh0Lc3Qz
— Ned Donovan | فارس دونوفان (@Ned_Donovan) July 28, 2022
Monday, August 29, 2022
History
1/2) The Man of Delos, a captivating Hellenistic bronze portrait of a concerned looking man - likely a Delian magistrate - dating to around 100 BC. The portrait retains its original inlaid eyes giving it an uncanny realism.. pic.twitter.com/J8z62FX66m
— Gareth Harney (@OptimoPrincipi) July 16, 2022
An Insight
Observation:
— The Skull King (@GathererSkull) July 27, 2022
Women do so poorly in the modern dating market because they've completely abandoned intersex social skills so they expect men to talk to them like women
This is foreign to men so the only ones good at it are almost entirely predatory
I see wonderful things
Incredible. 25 yo pizza delivery man runs into burning house, saves four children who tell him another might be in the house. He goes back in, finds the girl, jumps out a window with her, and carries her to a cop who captures the moment on his bodycam https://t.co/cNitkSYtAd https://t.co/ID36BcpAEJ
— Sam Ro 📈 (@SamRo) July 18, 2022
A policy so bad it can't even be defended.
Student LoansI’ve written before that student debt forgiveness is bad economic policy. I don’t say that lightly. Usually, there’s some merit to any economic policy. Even if I don’t think it’s the right choice, I can make an argument for it. But this is shockingly bad, even if we knew it was coming. I still didn’t believe it, but it seems like once a bad policy idea gets into the ether, it necessarily comes to be.There are reasons economists on the left and right (except for the extreme left) are all horrified. I don’t think it’s fair, but fairness is not how I judge an economic policy—because fairness is subjective. I hate it because it is inefficient.I operate under the assumption that someone has to pay for a $300–$900 billion giveaway. I think many people genuinely believe we don’t have to pay for it, or the only potential cost is inflation (Modern Monetary Theory still lives in the minds of the naïve). I think it will be inflationary—not in a big way, but in a way we don’t need right now. If you thought the IRA reduced inflation by lowering the deficit, then you should think forgiveness is inflationary because any deficit reduction is eliminated—twice over. Inflation will probably decline over the next year for other reasons, but now it will be higher than it otherwise would have been. So, people will probably assume forgiveness was costless.I judge policies based on their efficiency. By efficient, I mean this thing will cost something, and what are we getting out of it? It will cost something by increasing the national debt, which will mean higher interest rates and/or taxes one day. Generally, for that cost, you want the policy to do one of two things: boost growth or help the needy. This does neither. You can quibble about overall inflation, but it will make education inflation worse and distort incentives, which is bad for growth: so are more debt and higher rates. And there’s an opportunity cost. Think of the better ways we could use that money: climate change, K–12 education, anything. And the benefits go to the well-off. Most graduates earn less than $125,000 right after they graduate, but graduate salaries grow quickly. And so, we’re giving a big, big bailout to the highest earners who don’t need it. It’s the most inefficient policy I can think of, and we’ve had some very inefficient policies.Economists also take institutions seriously. Good institutions are critical to growth and prosperity. And the fact that the president used the pretext of a “COVID emergency” to hand hundreds of billions of dollars to his favored political constituency and more than double the generosity of an on-going entitlement is really disturbing. I don’t love every economic policy, but when Congress passes a spending bill, I figure, “Well, it’s the will of the voters, and whoever passed it will be held accountable in a local election in a few months.”Spending bills are supposed to go through Congress for a reason. And the fact that some Democrats, who are facing an election this fall, are critical of forgiveness suggests this would not have passed Congress. The whole thing degrades our institutions and changes how we spend; what’s next when Republicans are in office? This is a banana republic–level policy and economic malpractice.The fact the White House says they don’t even know what this will cost and then mocked businesses who took PPP grants is shameful. We can quibble about all the COVID-era policies, but we came out of the pandemic with one of the best jobs market in a generation (at the cost of inflation) for new graduates; why do they get a bailout on top of that?I agree there are problems with student debt, especially for borrowers who did not graduate or went to for-profit schools. But we can deal with that by allowing debt to be discharged into bankruptcy filings and reforming the income-based repayment program to something sane and meaningful (not 5% of income).
Doesn't increase individual or national productivity.Doesn't help the needy.Unknown price tag because we don't know how many students would have how much debt forgiven.Exceedingly regressive, rewarding the privileged and doing nothing for the poor.Inflationary.Increases national debt with no compensatory national benefit.Rewards degrees and education which do not improve individual productivity outcomes.Almost certainly illegal.Erodes trust in institutions (educational and governmental).A blatant bribing of voters.
Bi-partisan opposition.
TBD
Data Talks
This is important: A carefully-designed, well-powered trial has found that teaching mindfulness in schools does not reduce depressive symptoms (CES-D), social-emotional-behavioural functioning (SDQ) or wellbeing (WEMWBS) in 11-13 year olds (N=8376)https://t.co/9UvBqT7BO2
— Dr Lucy Foulkes (@lfoulkesy) July 13, 2022
Sunday, August 28, 2022
History
Hardit Singh Malik, the first Indian pilot of the First World War. Known as "The Flying Sikh of Biggin Hill", Hardit was one of only four Indians to fly with the Royal Flying Corps. pic.twitter.com/2Y11cqghy8
— Marina Amaral (@marinamaral2) July 17, 2022
An Insight
The political system poisoned Socrates and crucified Jesus.
— Alice Smith (@TheAliceSmith) July 15, 2022
This is its nature, this is what it is, this is what it does.
Do not look to governments for enlightenment or salvation.
You will find only death.
I see wonderful things
The remarkable preservation of the Roman siege works at the base of Masada have provided archaeologists invaluable insight into how the Roman army conducted a siege when in the field
— Ancient History Hit (@HistoryHitRome) July 19, 2022
Besieging Masada - with Jodi Magness 🎧 https://t.co/TSmgsvc9n2 pic.twitter.com/PAhKFSKHJE
Data Talks
US Housing price vs wage growth since 1990 pic.twitter.com/qHkGBdJxJw
— Wall Street Silver (@WallStreetSilv) July 13, 2022
Saturday, August 27, 2022
History
The salt wells of Leshan (乐山, then Jiading 嘉定 in Sichuan), in 1914. The Sichuan basin, an old inland sea, was rich in salt and gas (which was burned to evaporate the salt). https://t.co/3PBVcmu1sR pic.twitter.com/uI38jjdiOK
— Dan Hopper (@evohopp) July 17, 2022
An Insight
When was the last time a politician fixed a problem for you?
— ZUBY: (@ZubyMusic) July 14, 2022
When was the last time a politician created a problem for you?
Do the math.
I see wonderful things
A wunderpus octopus (Wunderpus photogenicus) wandering through a colony of white spotted garden eels, imitating them
— Science girl (@gunsnrosesgirl3) July 19, 2022
This octopus can actively mimic a wide variety of other marine animals to elude predation
Filmed by Gail Kukulapic.twitter.com/XnHN2l11eV
Offbeat Humor
"really? with the dragon?" pic.twitter.com/FVq3Dl2VGD
— weird medieval guys (@WeirdMedieval) July 15, 2022
Data Talks
CA's new state budget will spend $128.6 bil for K-12 education this year.
— Lance Christensen (@Lance4CASuper) July 13, 2022
That's $23,893 per kid.
And we're still LAST in literacy.
50th out of 50 states.
Let that sink in.
Friday, August 26, 2022
History
Reminder that in 1776, Alexander Hamilton was 21, Burr was 20, Thomas Jefferson was 33, Madison was 25, and Monroe was 18.
— Soona (@soona) July 4, 2022
That this seems unfathomable today should signal something about the consensus view on ambition, risk-taking, and our expectations of the next generation.
An Insight
The tension between Reductionist and Complex Sciences is just a repeat of the Monotheistic debate between factions who argue God’s simple intellect is Comprehensible or Ineffable.
— Art of Christendom (@GalahadofMalta) July 14, 2022
I see wonderful things
There’s a Baseball field in Finland that has a river camera. The results are what I’d expect. pic.twitter.com/XP5H4Fyzja
— Daniel Holland🎗🏴 ॐ (@DannyDutch) July 13, 2022
Data Talks
Ethnic groups of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1910. pic.twitter.com/2mGt1Wxn1U
— Vintage Maps (@vintagemapstore) July 13, 2022
Thursday, August 25, 2022
History
#OnThisDay in 1966, Chairman Mao joined 5,000 other swimmers in Wuhan’s 11th annual Cross-Yangtze Competition.
— History Today (@HistoryToday) July 16, 2022
Surrounded by six swimming bodyguards and accompanied by giant portraits of himself, he stayed in the water for 65 minutes:https://t.co/reN1L8flmI
An Insight
The tragic “irony” is that “post 1960’s changes in the family which promised people greater personal freedom and liberation from traditional constraints” made “inequality worse.” @KayHymowitz https://t.co/SrBwniJiem @FamStudies
— Brad Wilcox (@BradWilcoxIFS) July 14, 2022
I see wonderful things
Flyby the nightside of Earth in the International Space Station. (Watch fullscreen) pic.twitter.com/y14brUUo6x
— Wonder of Science (@wonderofscience) April 17, 2022
Data Talks
In SF zero people under the age of 21 have died from Covid in 2.5 years.
— Jennifer Sey (@JenniferSey) July 13, 2022
55% of deaths have been amongst those over 80.
This screams for focused protection. Yet @JCCSF continues masking 2-4 year olds outside. #urgencyofnormal pic.twitter.com/7kDdNPNni5
Wednesday, August 24, 2022
History
Colonel Theodore Roosevelt with his Rough Riders in the trenches outside Santiago (1898). Roosevelt returned from Cuba a war hero & was promptly elected Governor of New York. He became 26th President of the USA when McKinley was assassinated in 1901. https://t.co/3JRDKssVU0 pic.twitter.com/SW4uqe63xY
— Dan Hopper (@evohopp) July 16, 2022
An Insight
This crap is eerily reminiscent of the early critiques of Justice Thomas as intellectual lightweight - just fueled by sexism not racism. Those tempted to embrace the narrative might consider how those critiques look in the rear view mirror of 30 years. https://t.co/BE74yX8a8e
— Nicole Garnett (@nsgarnett) July 14, 2022
I see wonderful things
Germ vs Soap: Fascinating microscope footage of soap dissolving the membrane of a ciliate.
— Wonder of Science (@wonderofscience) May 17, 2022
Credit: Nomadic Nostocpic.twitter.com/bsd1yS7vYS
Offbeat Humor
Being an archaeologist I agree ! My team and most teams I knew had 80/100 female archeologists ... 😀#archaeohistories pic.twitter.com/DQJr0nuCwL
— Archaeo - Histories (@archeohistories) July 28, 2022
Data Talks
It's not just presidents BTW it's executive positions in general. No current governor is as old as Biden. Just 2 Fortune 500 CEOs are. There's a pretty steep cliff between early/mid 70s and late 70s/early 80s.https://t.co/CZJGjOZHp2.
— Nate Silver (@NateSilver538) July 12, 2022
Tuesday, August 23, 2022
History
Not sure why, but these photos of blimps landing on carriers just look cool.
— Navy General Board (@thegeneralboard) July 27, 2022
Here we see one on the flight deck of the carrier USS Sicily (CVE-118) in April 1949.#History #wednesdaythought #USNavy pic.twitter.com/LZr0rSDB0c
An Insight
Working class New Yorkers engage in a level of ethnic and racial banter that would get any professional fired immediately. And it’s incredibly healthy.
— David Marcus (@BlueBoxDave) July 13, 2022
I see wonderful things
The Tesla coil is a resonant transformer circuit that produces high-voltage alternating-current electricity. A light bulb held near a Tesla coil will light up and spark due to the electric field created by the coil https://t.co/b8fwvjO5Ww [source: https://t.co/my3F5RUjb6 pic.twitter.com/C84cptpmZv
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) July 17, 2022
Data Talks
It's not the Guardian or anything, but..... https://t.co/rmtTF5OqS8 pic.twitter.com/yA1bYqViyx
— Angus “jar of pickled tomatoes" Grier (@ez_angus) July 11, 2022
Monday, August 22, 2022
History
Construction of the Golden Gate Bridge, 1935. pic.twitter.com/YxN9o0DO79
— World Of History (@TalatBanday) July 27, 2022
An Insight
Is this some sort of sick joke? @GavinNewsom is getting an award for his transformative contributions to education??
— Jennifer Sey (@JenniferSey) July 12, 2022
He kept 6M public school children out of school for a year and a half while sending his kids to in person private school. The world is upside down. https://t.co/zQIjceBfOx pic.twitter.com/Ws6r6k6If6
I see wonderful things
The Clearest Image of Jupiter ever taken! pic.twitter.com/hGefwnOnyo
— Curiosity (@Sciencenature14) July 16, 2022
Offbeat Humor
Did horses write this? pic.twitter.com/OnhQAhhAM1
— Amos Posner (@AmosPosner) July 27, 2022
Data Talks
Previous studies suggested that teaching kids chess improved a range of outcomes, from math skills to logic to academics.
— Ethan Mollick (@emollick) July 5, 2022
But it just isn’t true. Now, two large randomized trials, one in the UK & one in Bangladesh found no other benefits to learning chess. (except ♟ is fun!) 1/ pic.twitter.com/rgctzYcxKt
Sunday, August 21, 2022
History
“Jonathan Livingston Seagull” was that rare thing, a sleeper hit. It didn’t reach the No. 1 spot on the best-seller list until July 1972, almost two years after it was published. https://t.co/dc1jnpxWXA
— New York Times Books (@nytimesbooks) July 15, 2022
An Insight
1. Rising gas prices
— Lafayette Lee (@Partisan_O) July 11, 2022
2. Inflation
3. The Economy
4. Violent Crime
5. Election Integrity https://t.co/WoFTsl7gOy
I see wonderful things
Van Gogh's starry night with the first image taken from the James Webb Telescope 🌌 pic.twitter.com/T0YJmCgQWu
— Suzie Sante (@SanteSuzie) July 15, 2022
Data Talks
Lancet: Cold weather kills 20 times as many people as hot weather.
— Tom Nelson (@tan123) July 11, 2022
Why should we want the Earth to be colder?https://t.co/bqFdlitkVX
Saturday, August 20, 2022
History
If you think it’s hot in the U.K. now then take a look at the comparison between the summer of 2018 and 1995.. and then look at the bottom remark for 1976.. “In comparison, the famous heatwave summer of 1976 saw 15 days in a row when temperatures hit at least 89.7F (32C).” pic.twitter.com/F4nVPQtmgM
— Climate and Citizen Realist (@ClimateRealists) July 14, 2022
An Insight
“Blue states are pushing for censorship” is what this headline actually says. https://t.co/wS0Do6cH3Z
— Miles Smith IV (@IVMiles) July 11, 2022
That's not what the headline actually says, but certainly that is what it means and what it describes.
I see wonderful things
Bears have been observed sitting for long periods of time in scenic locations, presumably taking in the view. pic.twitter.com/nms6j4zzVU
— Weird Science (@weird_sci) July 15, 2022