Thursday, September 9
Populist Press
Officials Demand Election Be Decertified After Massive Fraud Proven…
Romney Admits He Joined Liberals to Target Republicans With Sick Move
Taliban Announce Huge Surprise For 9/11… Seems Like This Was All Planned
China May Take Over US Air Force Base
Biden Administration Prepares To Sue Texas
Biden Shredded And Told To Resign
Kavanaugh Threatened… Horrid Event Planned At His HOME
Nancy Pelosi Is In Hot Water
White House Staffers Panic — Leak What They Do When Biden Speaks
Chuck Schumer Gets Caught On Camera Doing The Unthinkable
Berlanga of Spain
There's some debate over how it happened. It might have been after the screening of The Executioner, which satirised capital punishment in Spain, at the Venice Film Festival in September 1963 – or it might have been after Welcome, Mr Marshall! (1953) lampooned Spanish hopes for a slice of the US money destined to rebuild Europe after World War Two.
This little anecdote delighted no one more than Berlanga himself. For the duration of the dictatorship, the director made films that were out of step with Spain's cultural mores and reverence for family, church and nation. Franco was right: Berlanga wasn't a communist.
Kenya: Ending FGM
John can barely remember a time when having sex with his wife did not end with her in tears. It was just too painful because she had undergone female genital mutilation (FGM). "Anytime I go to Martha, she recoils, curling like a child. She cries, begging me to leave her alone. She doesn't want to have sex any more," the 40-year-old says. John and Martha come from Kenya's Marakwet community in western Kenya.
Although FGM is illegal in Kenya, girls in their community often undergo FGM between the ages of 12 and 17, as a rite of passage in preparation for marriage. Martha was cut when she was 15.
Sex as an endurance test
"It is painful when we have sex. I wish this practice would end," she says, adding that it had also made childbirth very difficult for her. Recounting their first sexual experience, the couple describe it as traumatising. Martha says she felt a lot of pain and it is not how she had imagined sex would be. She had to ask her husband to stop.
"I didn't realise a part of her [vulva] had been stitched, leaving only the urethra and a tiny vaginal opening," John tells the BBC. "I try to be very compassionate with my wife. I don't want her to feel like I don't respect her, yet we are a couple."
They lived in agony with little hope that things would ever change - not just for them, but they feared for their young daughter as well. That was until John heard of an anti-FGM campaign meeting in his village, targeting men. READ MORE
Downside of IVIG Infusions
According to the Clieveland Clinic, prior to infusions of IVIF patients are usually pre-medicated with acetaminophen 650 to 1000 mg, diphenhydramine 50 mg. Acetaminophen is for headaches basically that this drug might cause and diphenhydramine is to prevent an allergic reaction or nausea. However, at UT Medical, I have decadron instead of diphenhydramine which is a steroid and in my body is much more powerful because every once in a while, it prevents me from falling asleep even though I take 2 benadryl at 6:00 pm.
Last night was especially important for sleep as I have back-to-back early days (awake at 5:30) since my second early wake-up call is for my monthly OPDIVO infusion.
Idiot or "no brainer me," has forgotten to swap out these two days or have IVIG on Fridays instead of Wednesdays because of the use of steroids so I will not have any problems falling asleep. Obviously, I have yet to make that swap because here it is 1:30 am and I am wide awake drinking coffee.
Once you start these monthly infusions, it is necessary for optimum affectiveness to have them every 4 weeks... and while that can be played with once or twice (in case of vacations), it is not something that the Oncologist likes to do. However, I have yet to exercise that option and once in a while my body makes me pay the price...
Studied Law in Prison
In the US city of Philadelphia in 2018, one in 22 adults was on probation or parole. Among them was LaTonya Myers, who was facing almost a decade of supervision after a string of minor crimes. But a reforming district attorney, who started work the same year, has been reshaping the system - and LaTonya herself has become an activist for change.
LaTonya woke up in the night to the sound of thuds and yells. Her mother's boyfriend had been growing increasingly abusive and unstable, and now he was dragging their bed out of the apartment and into the passageway outside.
LaTonya crept out of bed and saw the boyfriend shouting and jabbing his finger at her mother's temple.
"I thought I could protect my mom," she says. She picked up an aerosol can and hit him with it. He went to a payphone and called the police.
"I thought that all I had to do was tell the truth and they would see that this man was abusing me and my mom," LaTonya says.
Instead, the police took her away in handcuffs and charged her with first-degree aggravated assault. She was 12 years old.
For three days she sat behind bars and cried the deep sobs of a child who doesn't know where her family is, or what is going to happen.
"I remember being asked for my social security number. I was 12, I didn't know my social security number!" she says.
Eventually she was taken to a juvenile court and given a choice by a lawyer: plead guilty and be released on probation, or go back to jail for another 10 days and fight the case in court.
All LaTonya wanted was to go home with her grandma, who was waiting outside. So she pleaded guilty without appreciating what becoming a convicted felon would mean.
"That experience turned my heart calloused and cold," she says. "It was a wayward life after that." READ MORE
Wednesday, September 8
Wild Pigs and CO2
They are like tractors plowing through fields.
Feral pigs have the same climate impact as 1.1 million cars, according to recent research.
Using modeling and mapping techniques, an international team of scientists predict that wild pigs are releasing 4.9 million metric tonnes of carbon dioxide each year around the world when they uproot soil.1
One of the study’s authors, Christopher O'Bryan, is a postdoctoral research fellow of the University of Queensland. He tells Treehugger that feral pigs are prolific globally.
“Wild pigs (Sus scrofa) are found on every continent except Antarctica but are native throughout most of Europe, Asia, and parts of northern Africa,” he says. “As such, they have been spread around the world by humans and are invasive species in Oceania, parts of Southeast Asia, parts of southern Africa, and North and South America.”
For the study, which was published in the journal Global Change Biology, researchers only looked at areas where wild pigs are invasive and not native. READ MORE
Biscuit Taste Test
To narrow down the list, we first rated the store-bought biscuits by their overall value, ingredients and ease of use.
Misokinesia
According to a new first-of-its-kind study, the stressful sensations triggered by seeing others fidget is an exceedingly common psychological phenomenon, affecting as many as one in three people.
Called misokinesia – meaning 'hatred of movements' – this strange phenomenon has been little studied by scientists, but has been noted in the research of a related condition, misophonia: a disorder where people become irritated upon hearing certain repetitious sounds.
Misokinesia is somewhat similar, but the triggers are generally more visual, rather than sound-related, researchers say.
"[Misokinesia] is defined as a strong negative affective or emotional response to the sight of someone else's small and repetitive movements, such as seeing someone mindlessly fidgeting with a hand or foot," a team of researchers, led by first author and psychology PhD student Sumeet Jaswal from the University of British Columbia (UBC) in Canada, explains in a new paper.
"Yet surprisingly, scientific research on the topic is lacking."
To improve our understanding, Jawal and fellow researchers conducted what they say is the "first in-depth scientific exploration" of misokinesia – and the results indicate that heightened sensitivity to fidgeting is something a large number of people have to deal with.
Across a series of experiments involving over 4,100 participants, the researchers measured the prevalence of misokinesia in a cohort of university students and people from the general population, assessing the impacts it had upon them, and exploring why the sensations might manifest. READ MORE