shewhostaples: View from above of a set of 'scissor' railway points (railway)
two log cabins with snow on the roofs in a wintery forest the text snowflake challenge january 1 - 31 in white cursive text

Top 10 challenge

I'm onna train, so here are 10 railway stations I like. In no particular order, and for various different reasons.

1. Frankfurt Hbf. This was where my international rail travels began. Standing on the concourse, looking at the departure boards (getting slightly earwormed by Stuttgart and Fulda), realising that I could get pretty much anywhere from here...

2. London St Pancras. It's beautiful. It's not actually a terribly pleasant experience getting a train from here (maybe the East Midlands and South Eastern platforms are better) but from the outside it's a fairy tale castle.

3. Stockholm. Rolling in, bleary eyed, off the sleeper from Malta, through dingy orange lights, and then suddenly you're in this marble palace. (I got chugged in Stockholm station. I don't know what I was doing to look like a Swede with disposable income rather than a discombobulated tourist, but there we go.)

4. London King's Cross. Never mind all that wizard nonsense, it has a fully functional platform zero. Also the toilets are free these days.

5. Liège Guillemins. Just glorious.

6. Ryde Pier Head. When it's operational and when you don't just miss the train because the catamaran was thirty seconds late. But there's still something fun about a station in the sea.

7. Dawlish. Train to beach in under a minute (your mileage may vary, as may mine considering I haven't been there in about a decade).

8. York. Never mind a pub in the station, it has one on the platform. Lovely stained glass, too.

9. Norwich. Light, gracious, makes you glad you've arrived.

10. Luxembourg. Stained glass again - and just time for an ice cream before the train.

Posted by Michala Garrison

September 20, 2025
October 30, 2025
A satellite image shows a portion of the dark blue Caribbean Sea near Jamaica. A submerged carbonate platform appears as a slightly brighter blue area of water in the center. The mostly green island of Jamaica is in the upper right, and scattered clouds are present throughout.
A satellite image shows a portion of the dark blue Caribbean Sea near Jamaica. A submerged carbonate platform appears as a slightly brighter blue area of water in the center. The mostly green island of Jamaica is in the upper right, and scattered clouds are present throughout.
NASA Earth Observatory
A satellite image shows a portion of the Caribbean Sea near Jamaica. Much of the water in the middle third of the image is bright blue due to suspended sediment. The mostly green island of Jamaica is in the upper right, and scattered clouds are present throughout.
A satellite image shows a portion of the Caribbean Sea near Jamaica. Much of the water in the middle third of the image is bright blue due to suspended sediment. The mostly green island of Jamaica is in the upper right, and scattered clouds are present throughout.
NASA Earth Observatory
A satellite image shows a portion of the dark blue Caribbean Sea near Jamaica. A submerged carbonate platform appears as a slightly brighter blue area of water in the center. The mostly green island of Jamaica is in the upper right, and scattered clouds are present throughout.
A satellite image shows a portion of the dark blue Caribbean Sea near Jamaica. A submerged carbonate platform appears as a slightly brighter blue area of water in the center. The mostly green island of Jamaica is in the upper right, and scattered clouds are present throughout.
NASA Earth Observatory
A satellite image shows a portion of the Caribbean Sea near Jamaica. Much of the water in the middle third of the image is bright blue due to suspended sediment. The mostly green island of Jamaica is in the upper right, and scattered clouds are present throughout.
A satellite image shows a portion of the Caribbean Sea near Jamaica. Much of the water in the middle third of the image is bright blue due to suspended sediment. The mostly green island of Jamaica is in the upper right, and scattered clouds are present throughout.
NASA Earth Observatory
September 20, 2025
October 30, 2025

Before and After

Hurricane Melissa made landfall in Jamaica on October 28, 2025, as a category 5 storm, bringing sustained winds of 295 kilometers (185 miles) per hour and leaving a broad path of destruction on the island. The storm displaced tens of thousands of people, damaged or destroyed more than 100,000 structures, inflicted costly damage on farmland, and left the nation’s forests brown and battered.

Prior to landfall, in the waters south of the island, the hurricane created a large-scale natural oceanography experiment. Before encountering land and proceeding north, the monster storm crawled over the Caribbean Sea, churning up the water below. A couple of days later, a break in the clouds revealed what researchers believe could be a once-in-a-century event.

On October 30, 2025, the MODIS (Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) instrument on NASA’s Terra satellite acquired this image (right) of the waters south of Jamaica. Vast areas are colored bright blue by sediment stirred up from a carbonate platform called Pedro Bank. This plateau, submerged under about 25 meters (80 feet) of water, is slightly larger in area than the state of Delaware. For comparison, the left image was acquired by the same sensor on September 20, before the storm.

Pedro Bank is deep enough that it is only faintly visible in natural color satellite images most of the time. However, with enough disruption from hurricanes or strong cold fronts, its existence becomes more evident to satellites. Suspended calcium carbonate (CaCO3) mud, consisting primarily of remnants of marine organisms that live on the plateau, turns the water a Maya blue color. The appearance of this type of material contrasts with the greenish-brown color of sediment carried out to sea by swollen rivers on Jamaica’s southern coast.

As an intense storm that lingered in the vicinity of the bank, Hurricane Melissa generated “tremendous stirring power” in the water column, said James Acker, a data support scientist at the NASA Goddard Earth Sciences Data and Information Services Center with a particular interest in these events. Hurricane Beryl caused some brightening around Pedro Bank in July 2024, “but nothing like this,” he said. “While we always have to acknowledge the human cost of a disaster, this is an extraordinary geophysical image.”

A bathymetric map of part of the Caribbean Sea shows Jamaica in the upper right and the large, flat-topped Pedro Bank at the center, which sits 20 to 30 meters below the surface and displays steep edges. Several smaller shallow shelves appear in the lower left.

Sediment suspension was visible on Pedro and other nearby shallow banks, indicating that Melissa affected a total area of about 37,500 square kilometers—more than three times the area of Jamaica—on October 30, said sedimentologist Jude Wilber, who tracked the plume’s progression using multiple satellite sensors. Having studied carbonate sediment transport for decades, he believes the Pedro Bank event was the largest observed in the satellite era. “It was extraordinary to see the sediment dispersed over such a large area,” he said.

The sediment acted as a tracer, illuminating currents and eddies near the surface. Some extended into the flow field of the Caribbean Current heading west and north, while other patterns suggested the influence of Ekman transport, Wilber said. The scientists also noted complexities in the south-flowing plume, which divided into three parts after encountering several small reefs. Sinking sediment in the easternmost arm exhibited a cascading stair-step pattern.

Like in other resuspension events, the temporary coloration of the water faded after about seven days as sediment settled. But changes to Pedro Bank itself may be more long-lasting. “I suspect this hurricane was so strong that it produced what I would call a ‘wipe’ of the benthic ecosystem,” Wilber said. Seagrasses, algae, and other organisms living on and around the bank were likely decimated, and it is unknown how repopulation of the area will unfold.

A sediment sample from Pedro Bank includes white globular pieces of calcified algae measuring several inches in diameter and smaller flaky white macroalgae remnants.
Sediments from the top of Pedro Bank contain masses of calcified red algae, flaky sands made of Halimeda macroalgae remnants, and carbonate mud. The wing-like shape of Halimeda sand allows it to be lifted and transported while waters are turbulent, and finer mud remains suspended longer. These samples were acquired during a research expedition in the winter of 1987-1988 and are archived at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
Photo by Jude Wilber, January 8, 2026.

Perhaps most consequentially for Earth’s oceans, however, is the effect of the sediment suspension event on the planet’s carbon cycle. Tropical cyclones are an important way for carbon in shallow-water marine sediments to reach deeper waters, where it can remain sequestered for the long term. At depth, carbonate sediments will also dissolve, another important process in the oceanic carbon system.

Near-continuous ocean observations by satellites have enabled greater understanding of these events and their carbon cycling. Acker and Wilber have worked on remote-sensing methods to quantify how much sediment reaches the deep ocean following the turbulence of tropical cyclones, including recently with Hurricane Ian over the West Florida Shelf. Now, hyperspectral observations from NASA’s PACE (Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, ocean Ecosystem) mission, launched in February 2024, are poised to build on that progress, Acker said.

The phenomenon at Pedro Bank following Hurricane Melissa provided a singular opportunity to study this and other complex ocean processes—a large natural experiment that could not be accomplished any other way. Researchers will be further investigating a range of physical, geochemical, and biological aspects illuminated by this occurrence. As Wilber put it: “This event is a whole course in oceanography.”

NASA Earth Observatory images by Michala Garrison, using MODIS data from NASA EOSDIS LANCE and GIBS/Worldview, and ocean bathymetry data from the British Oceanographic Data Center’s General Bathymetric Chart of the Oceans (GEBCO). Photo by Jude Wilber. Story by Lindsey Doermann.

References & Resources

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A Direct Hit on Jamaican Forests 
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The post A Plume of Bright Blue in Melissa’s Wake appeared first on NASA Science.

stonepicnicking_okapi: snowflake (snowflake)
Snowflake Challenge: A mug of coffee or hot chocolate with a snowflake shaped gingerbread cookie perched on the rim sits nestled amidst a softly bunched blanket. A few dried orange slices sit next to it.

Challenge #5

In your own space, create a list of at least three things you'd love to receive, a wishlist of sorts.


1. Strength Training. I have been doing the same strength training workout over and over for many years. So if anyone has a program, book, website, app, YT channel, etc. they like for strength training (hand weights, using your own body weight, which I prefer, home workout or gym machines because I do go to the YMCA twice a week, I also have some of those rubber bands with handles somewhere), let me know, keeping in mind I'm a 50-year-old obese woman who strength train a maximum of four times a week.

2. Tarot resources. I just got my first tarot deck for Xmas so if you have tarot resources you like, let me know.

3. Poetry. I'm always keen to know what poems speak to people.
tsuki_no_bara: a group of emperor penguins with "the big chill" in all caps (pengies)
hello my flist! i had such high hopes for the new year and, just, pfft. it's [community profile] snowflake_challenge season and i haven't even posted for that. oy.

anyway i hope your 2026 has been decent-to-good so far or at least not worse than 2025.

for new year's i went to my sister's and we went out for dinner (delish) and watched a lot of lotr, pausing only to watch the ball drop in times square. i like a good tradition but she may or may not want to do something different this year. we'll see. and for christmas she came to my house and we drove around to look at people's holiday lights and got chinese takeout and watched wake up, dead man on netflix because we both felt too meh to go out. (i liked it but i think i liked the first one the best.) and like four days before that my cousin's youngest kid got married in dc and i brought a cold with me and lost my voice at the wedding. wtf. that made it very difficult to talk to cousins which did not stop me. but it also meant i was still sick or recovering for the entirety of my time off. whiiine. at least i had two weeks off to cough up a lung and sit on my couch and be tired, rather than having to take sick days or work from home a lot. but still! i had a lot of time off and couldn't even enjoy most of it! and i had plans! which were mostly "watch tv, work on holiday project for writing group, start pumpkin spice cross stitch". sigh.

(while in dc my sister and i did a little sightseeing, which included a farmer's market down the street from the hotel - it was SO WINDY but there were lots of dogs - a walk around the washington monument, a stroll down the reflecting pool, and a little talk by a park ranger in the lincoln memorial.)

we got snow a couple times tho, that was nice. i'm a big fan of waking up to snow on the ground. :D especially new year's day! it was just enough to shovel but if it had been, say, four inches, i would've enjoyed that too.

during my time off i met admin s who works at the libraries for lunch and a week later i met one of the admins m for lunch and both of those things were really nice, partly because i enjoy a lunch out and partly because it was just nice to see people. and i never see admin s because i don't work with her any more. i also had mexican brunch with [livejournal.com profile] tamalinn and friend a and friend a's hubs and that was fun and also delicious. and saturday i got a haircut. :D

before the haircut i went to cousins j&m's for brunch and to say hi and goodbye to their kids before they went back to school, and friday night my sister and i took cousin p on dad's side out for dinner for her birthday. it was yummy (i had black pasta with shrimp and calamari) and they brought cousin p a slice of flourless chocolate cake for her birthday. my sister and i ate most of it.

work re-entry was fine and going to campus was weird because it's been like three weeks since i was there. classes don't start until february so it's very quiet but again, it's nice to see people.

things i did in november and december:

went record album/antique shopping with tamalinn and friend a and bought the go-gos' beauty and the beat, heart's little queen, and a cookbook from the 50s full of buffet recipes
saw wicked pt 1 (again) in preparation for seeing wicked pt 2
went out to dinner with my sister and cousin j (of j&m)
fetched the mothership at the airport for tday
went out for bday dinner with mom, sister, cousins j&r, and the aforementioned lone cousin j
got snowed on in harvard square :DDD
had brunch with cousins from mom's side
bought a dress for the wedding
did not need to buy shoes
had dinner with cousins from dad's side
had mom and sister over for dinner (i made pork chops because i could)
went to j&m's for tday
ate a lot
saw wicked pt 2 (not bad but i liked pt 1 better, also why did the story have to be two movies?)
went to snowport (boston holiday market, down by the seaport) where i bought a print of a pickle sign and saw the lobster nativity
borrowed a bolero jacket from one of the admins m for the wedding because the dress is sleeveless and it was a jewish wedding and i'd have to cover my shoulders
went to the holiday market at the somerville armory and bought a blockprint of a medieval looking fish and a print of my favorite local bridge
one of the vendors had a print with a drawing of a guillotine and the legend "a better world is possible!" heh.
watched red one (so cute, so silly)
went to friend r's to watch the thin man because it's set around christmas and while i don't know how successful it was as a murder mystery i liked nick and nora as a couple and overall enjoyed it
saw the housemaid (had some twists i appreciated and i liked it)
curled lots, made a couple good shots and a lot more acceptable-to-missed shots
finished the lowdown (liked it, recommend it, didn't love the way the murder plot shook out)
watched talasmasca: the secret order (partly because of elizabeth mcgovern going "talamasssca" in the trailers) (mostly liked it altho i didn't really like the protagonist - he thought he was the smartest person in the room and every time he got in over his head, which was pretty much the entire show, women showed up to get him out of trouble)
watched hysteria! (about a high school heavy metal garage band that pretends to be a satanic cult to get fans, and then shit goes off the rails) (it's set in 1987 and got a lot of the satanic panic right but was otherwise only glancingly historical which made me twitch. was fun altho did i mention it went totally off the rails?)
rewatched stranger things s1-s4 with folks on discord in preparation for s5
watched s5 (i have mixed feelings about the season as a whole but i was pretty satisfied with how it ended)

so this news is massachusetts based and one of my friends even works for massdot and DID NOT TELL ME and i had to learn from a snowflake challenge from someone who doesn't even live here and now i share with you the winners of the name-a-snowplow contest. the entries all came from public school classrooms (k-8) and the plows are in service this winter. sleet caroline! clearopathra! you're killing me squalls! read and giggle.

speaking of mass, the boston aquarium built an old folks home for their geriatric penguins. how cute is that?

in the wake of dump and his administration cutting funding to universities mackenzie scott (aka the former mrs jeff bezos) donated $80m to howard university, an hbcu (historically black colleges and universities, for the non-americans in the audience), which is one of the biggest single donations in the school's history. she got billions of dollars when she split from jeff and she's definitely using her powers for good.

i know thanksgiving was last year and these are probably quite sold out but i must share the "no-thanks" jell-o molds. you could get canberry canned cranberry jelly, pecan pie, and brussel sprouts. i don't like brussel sprouts at all but the round little molds are so cute.

joe keery officiated a wedding in his scoops ahoy uniform. for the stranger things fen in the audience. :D

i must share one of the scariest videos i've ever seen - a guy climbing up and then skiing down mt everest with no supplemental oxygen. i'm sorry, but watching him ski down that mountain, especially from the top, is fucking terrifying. i'm not afraid of heights but absolutely not, no way.

sir david attenborough sends a hedgehog on its way. to end with something cute.

dave grohl vs animal drum battle. and something fun. :D

Weekly Goals 2026: 03

Jan. 12th, 2026 05:18 pm[personal profile] cyberneticdryad
cyberneticdryad: An anthropomorphic white rabbit with long, dark teal hair.  They wear a pastel pink dress with a lighter teal shawl and hold a wooden bobbin of thread. (Default)
I actually got a lot done this past week, though most of it was general upkeep rather than my goals list as brainfog and exhaustion made things a little harder. On the bright side, I think my cough has finally subsided enough that I can do some running this week!
  • GYWO: Write 20 minutes 1/4
  • Exercise 1/2
  • Finish cleaning desk
  • Schedule ONE medical appointment
  • Declutter Bedroom
  • Bake Cookies for Work
  • Clean Car Windows

(no subject)

Jan. 12th, 2026 04:59 pm[personal profile] lycomingst
lycomingst: (Default)
Back from the 6 month eye dr visit. Yeah, glaucoma still there, come back in July. Dilated eyes,dilated the hell out of my eyes. Very cautious drive home. The visit seems so far away, and then it's here.
yourlibrarian: Taylor and LeBon (OTH-JTSLB-yourlibrarian)
1) [community profile] threeforthememories is off to a great start! You have until January 24th to make your own post. I made mine today about my 2025.

2) Speaking of things to rec, saw the film House of Dynamite and thought it was wonderfully done –- except for the ending. Read more... )

I do think that its structure was helpful, given that just 10 minutes in there is a lot starting to go on, and it helped to have it reinforced with repeated elements.

3) Another yes from me was for the series The Beast in Me. This is mostly because I thought it was particularly well done. I'm not a big fan of the murderous husband/neighbor type thriller because they're always guilty and one of my DNW is gaslighting elements. But I thought this was a particularly well developed story and one with less "shocking twist!" than unexpected surprises that relate to character development.

4) The documentary about the making of Frozen 2 was very interesting, and rather surprising, in seeing how Disney approaches making an animated film. I'd think that -- given the costs and enormous amount of labor -- they would have a script nailed down before starting. And not just a draft, but one that had been run past the internal focus groups, had a table reading done by the cast, etc. Instead they scrapped tons of work from animators, some of which took them a year, because they kept veering back and forth on elements of the story, rewriting the central songs, etc. Read more... )

5) The re-release of the Beatles Anthology on Disney+ promised a new episode and remastered footage. It certainly looked very good, but as I'd seen it during its 1990s release, I noticed more about the big gaps in it. Read more... )

Poll #34076 Kudos Footer-555
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Posted by Matt Kiser

Day 1819

Today in one sentence: The Justice Department opened a criminal investigation into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and served the Fed with grand jury subpoenas threatening a criminal indictment; the Justice Department fired a senior prosecutor over a disagreement about whether to pursue a re-indictment of former FBI Director James Comey; Trump is reportedly considering a military strike on Iran to punish the regime for killing hundreds of protesters; Trump said he regrets not ordering the National Guard to seize voting machines after his loss in the 2020 presidential election; a federal judge blocked the Trump administration from freezing more than $10 billion in child care and social services funding for five Democratic-led states; the EPA will stop assigning a dollar value to lives saved and other health benefits when setting air pollution rules; 52% of Americans disapprove of ICE; 45% of Americans identified as political independents in 2025 – the highest level recorded; and a San Francisco man who helped invent psychedelic rock and spent six decades playing guitar turning a long, strange trip into a shared cultural experience died at 78.


1/ The Justice Department opened a criminal investigation into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and served the Fed with grand jury subpoenas threatening a criminal indictment tied to his congressional testimony on the Fed’s headquarters renovation. “Those are pretexts,” Powell said. “The threat of criminal charges is a consequence of the Federal Reserve setting interest rates based on our best assessment of what will serve the public, rather than following the preferences of the President. This is about whether the Fed will be able to continue to set interest rates based on evidence and economic conditions – or whether instead monetary policy will be directed by political pressure or intimidation.” The renovation project is about $700 million over budget and expected to cost roughly $2.5 billion. Meanwhile, Trump, who has repeatedly threatened to fire Powell, said he didn’t “know anything about” the investigation, but denied it was about punishing the central bank for setting rates based on economic conditions rather than his demands. Nevertheless, he said Powell was “not very good at the Fed” and “not very good at building buildings.” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, however, privately warned Trump that the investigation had “made a mess of things,” and Republican senators said they’d block confirmation of any Fed nominees until the matter is resolved, complicating Trump’s pending choice to replace Powell when his chair term ends in May. (New York Times / Associated Press / Wall Street Journal / Bloomberg / NBC News / Axios / New York Times / Politico / Wall Street Journal / The Guardian / CNBC / Axios / NPR / Washington Post)

  • Trump said he would to impose a temporary 10% cap on credit card interest rates for one year, because consumers are being “ripped off.” He said the cap would start Jan. 20, but he didn’t explain a legal way of imposing or enforcing the limit. Bank associations warned the cap would cut off credit for higher-risk borrowers and push consumers into “less regulated, more costly alternatives.” (Politico / Washington Post / ABC News / CNBC / CNN / Bloomberg)

2/ The Justice Department fired a senior prosecutor over a disagreement about whether to pursue a re-indictment of former FBI Director James Comey. In November, a judge dismissed the Comey indictment after finding that Lindsey Halligan had been unlawfully appointed as U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia. Robert McBride had declined to lead a renewed indictment effort, but also secretly met with federal judges in the district to try to get appointed acting U.S. attorney. (NBC News / New York Times)

3/ Trump is reportedly considering a military strike on Iran to punish the regime for killing hundreds of protesters. U.S. officials said no final decision has been made and diplomatic options remain under review, but Trump confirmed that “the military is looking” at “some very strong options.” Iran, meanwhile, said it is “fully prepared for war,” but also ready to reopen negotiations over its nuclear program, a move U.S. officials describe as an effort to de-escalate or delay military action. The protests began over the collapse of Iran’s currency and rising living costs, then spread after security forces used lethal force, turning economic demonstrations into calls for an end to clerical rule. The U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency said more than 500 people have been killed and over 10,000 detained, but the scale of the crackdown remains unclear because Iran has released no official numbers, and has imposed a nationwide communications blackout that limits independent verification. Trump also said that any country doing business with Iran will face a 25% tariff “on any and all business being done with the United States of America.” Iran’s major trading partners include India, Turkey, and China. (Axios / NBC News / Wall Street Journal / New York Times / Axios / Politico / Associated Press / Washington Post)

  • The U.S. military carried out a second round of strikes across Syria targeting the Islamic State, calling it retaliation for a December ambush that killed two U.S. soldiers and a civilian interpreter. U.S. Central Command said the strikes hit multiple Islamic State targets, but provided no evidence of casualties or independent confirmation of damage. (Reuters / Politico / Associated Press)

4/ Trump said he regrets not ordering the National Guard to seize voting machines after his loss in the 2020 presidential election, saying “Well, I should have.” Trump said the machines should have been taken to search for evidence supporting his baselessly false claim that the election was stolen from him, but questioned whether the Guard was “sophisticated enough” to do so, adding that they’re “good warriors” but not skilled in dealing with what he called “crooked Democrats and the way they cheat.” The idea was reportedly discussed during a December 2020 Oval Office meeting, but was rejected by senior officials, including then attorney general William Barr, who said there was no legal basis or evidence to justify seizing the machines. (New York Times / Washington Post / The Guardian)

  • The National Portrait Gallery removed references to Trump’s impeachments and the Jan. 6 Capitol attack from his exhibit while installing a new official photograph. The revised display now lists only Trump’s years in office, replacing a caption that had detailed his two impeachments, acquittals, and other defining events of his presidency. (Washington Post)

poll/ 52% of Americans disapprove of ICE, while 39% approve. 51% said ICE’s tactics were too forceful, compared with 27% who said they were about right, and 10% who wanted more force. Separate data found that 42% of adults support abolishing ICE entirely – the highest support for abolition on record. (Strength in Numbers / Axios)

poll/ 45% of Americans identified as political independents in 2025 – the highest level recorded – while an equal share of 27% each identified as Democrats or Republicans. When independents were asked their partisan leanings, 47% of Americans identified as Democrats or Democratic-leaning independents, compared with 42% who identified as Republicans or Republican leaners. (Gallup)

The 2026 midterms are in 295 days; the 2028 presidential election is in 1,030 days.


✏️ Notables.

  1. A federal judge blocked the Trump administration from freezing more than $10 billion in child care and social services funding for five Democratic-led states. U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian didn’t rule on the legality of the funding freeze, but said the five states met a legal threshold “to protect the status quo” for at least 14 days, while the court considers whether the administration can withhold money Congress already appropriated. The administration claimed the states were providing benefits to people in the country illegally. (Associated Press / Politico / New York Times)

  2. Trump said civil rights-era protections left white people “very badly treated,” claiming without evidence that the Civil Rights Act produced “reverse discrimination.” He claimed that affirmative action and diversity measures unfairly blocked white people from college admissions and jobs, framing those policies as central to his campaign against diversity, equity, and inclusion programs. (New York Times)

  3. The Labor Department said the U.S. added 50,000 jobs in December – the weakest year of job growth since the pandemic. U.S. employers added 584,000 jobs in 2025 after revisions, well below the roughly 2 million added in 2024. (NBC News / NPR / Wall Street Journal / New York Times / Washington Post)

  4. The EPA will stop assigning a dollar value to lives saved and other health benefits when setting air pollution rules, instead focusing its cost-benefit analyses on the compliance costs faced by industry. The agency claims that prior health benefit calculations created “false precision” despite decades of use across administrations. (New York Times)

  5. San Francisco man who helped invent psychedelic rock and spent six decades playing guitar turning a long, strange trip into a shared cultural experience died at 78. Bob Weir, guitarist, songwriter, and founding member of the Grateful Dead, died after a July cancer diagnosis. His family cited underlying lung issues. Weir and the Dead reshaped American music, “building a community, a language, and a feeling of family” that turned concerts into gatherings and fans into participants. “We speak a language that nobody else speaks.” (Rolling Stone / New York Times)



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Tollhouse plaque

Jan. 12th, 2026 11:38 pm[personal profile] loganberrybunny
loganberrybunny: Drawing of my lapine character's face by Eliki (Default)
Public


346/365: Tollhouse plaque, Bewdley
Click for a larger, sharper image

This is the plaque that marks where the tollhouse once stood on the Wribbenhall (eastern) end of Bewdley Bridge. It was designed by Thomas Telford, as was the bridge itself, and built in the last years of the 18th century. Modernisation works in 1960 saw it demolished, despite a fairly energetic campaign by Bewdley Civic Society; the society put up this plaque and shaped paving in 2002. The only decent photo I can find of the tollhouse before its demolition is on this Facebook page, which should be visible without an account. (I haven't got one, after all!)

Warlock

Jan. 12th, 2026 06:03 pm[personal profile] yamamanama
yamamanama: (mervyn pumpkinhead)
66 days until the vernal equinox


That’s not a confidence builder.


Warlock is a movie, not to be confused with the 1959 western with that name or Project Warlock or anything else. It’s no masterpiece or anything but it does have some fun gore effects. You know, a perfect choice for the family friendly Nintendo console.


The sun aligns with the moon more than once a millennium. it’s called an eclipse. Yeah, it feels like every millennium in New England only it’s more like every ten thousand to fifty thousand years but they do happen in places like the Sahara, the Arabian Peninsula, and Patagonia.


Massachusetts readers, you’re going to have to wait until 2079.


The game’s based loosely on the sequel Warlock: The Armageddon, which is kind of like the first one, only with even more blood, gore, and explosions. And in 1999 came Warlock III: The End of Innocence, which is direct to video trash. Doesn’t even have Julian Sands.


Note that this game is rated K-A, which was basically E for Everyone. Also note that this game came out in the SNES era, before Nintendo was known for shovelware and borderline pr0nz0rz.


There’s a Genesis version with some differences but I won’t be playing them both. Once is enough, thank you very much.

click )

burning question: and in the end, aren’t fun gore effects what count for horror?
thewayne: (Default)
https://qr.ae/pCZEPA

Question: How many Democrats are pro-Maduro?
Reply: Zero.

Back in my uni days, I took a class in cognitive science that was one of my favorite courses. One of the many, many things we talked about in class was the difference between abstract thinkers and concrete thinkers.

This difference appears to be architectural, a consequence of how your brain is wired, not a matter of choice or education.

Concrete thinkers see the world in strict black and white terms. They have difficulty drawing indirect connections between things, struggle to see multiple perspectives, and tend to hold an all or nothing, with-us-or-against-us mentality.

Abstract thinkers understand complex associations, can understand multiple perspectives at the same time, and can see second and third order relationships between things.

And crucially, abstract thinkers can understand concrete thought patterns, but generally speaking, concrete thinkers seem physically incapable of understanding abstract thought patterns.

So here’s the thing:

Abstract thinkers are capable of grasping multiple ideas at once. Like, “Maduro is an illegitimate totalitarian ruler with an authoritarian bent who presided over an illegitimate government” and also “a unilateral move to depose Maduro is illegal under international treaties and morally wrong.”

Concrete thinkers be all like “you’re either good or your bad, and if you’re bad you deserve anything bad that happens to you, anyone who says Maduro shouldn’t have been kidnapped must live and support Maduro.”

Abstract thinkers be like “no, you can believe a person is bad and also believe that breaking the law to kidnap that person is bad too, both of those things can be true at the same time.”


Very interesting, I wish we had classes available here on such a topic. I'm not sure how much I agree with it being a structural thing vs an education thing, I'd want to see some information on that, I'd be open to discussion.

I can certainly see where some conservative people whom I know/knew had problems with abstract thinking. I think I would hazard to say that concrete thinkers might be more easily persuaded by ideologues since they would be more likely to present their arguments and ideas in more concrete 'for or against' terms with straw man arguments that appear harder to refute.

Personally I've never had problems to easily see and argue multiple sides of an argument. When I first started working here at the university, around 20 years ago in the computer lab, we had one guy who had a degree in philosophy, and we had a security guard who was an ex-cop and a former preacher, and another who just liked discussing things in a lively fashion. And we had these informal round tables where we'd argue the issues of the day, going around and round, picking up and discarding different viewpoints. It was tremendous fun. But it only lasted about a year before I left and the group broke apart.

I know I definitely prefer to associate more with abstract thinkers, they're much more fun to talk and argue (more in a discuss way, not combative ) things with.

Outage 🚧

Jan. 12th, 2026 09:16 pm[syndicated profile] jbanana_gemlog_feed

Posted by JBanana

My capsule was unavailable for a while. I guess I should expect that sometimes when I rely on someone else to run the box. It's generally pretty solid, so no complaints.

I'm also recovering from my health outage. I tried working from home today, and it wiped me out. Too much concentration required. While I've been off work my project hasn't been completed by a colleague. Damn!

One thing I tried while having to spend a lot of time in bed was writing some C code for the first time this millennium. I forgot the painful verbosity of manual memory management. I quite enjoyed the challenge though.

#outage
#C

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