The NRA is an organization that promotes the second amendment to the US Constitution... it does not promote the killing of either adults or children in the United States... nor does it promote or sanction the use of firearms in the commission of a felony... the organization has a lot of powerful, wealthy members who exercise their influence in the House and in the Senate to keep strong gun control laws from being passed... however, strong gun control laws will not stop individuals from committing crimes nor will it stop criminals from finding a way to own a firearm...
Monday, June 6
National Rifle Association
The NRA is an organization that promotes the second amendment to the US Constitution... it does not promote the killing of either adults or children in the United States... nor does it promote or sanction the use of firearms in the commission of a felony... the organization has a lot of powerful, wealthy members who exercise their influence in the House and in the Senate to keep strong gun control laws from being passed... however, strong gun control laws will not stop individuals from committing crimes nor will it stop criminals from finding a way to own a firearm...
When You Vote in November
When you go to vote in November, what do you think that you will remember???
- Abortion
- Gun Control
- Inflation
- Immigration
Drought Stricken USA
A once-in-a-lifetime drought in the western part of the US is turning up dead bodies - but that's the least of people's worries.
The water level is now so low that bodies of murder victims from decades back, once hidden by its depths, have surfaced.
One was stuffed in a barrel with a gun shot wound - presumably because someone thought it would stay unnoticed at the bottom of the vast reservoir forever.
While the dead bodies are fuelling talk about Las Vegas' mob past, water experts warn of even more worrisome consequences. If the lake keeps receding, it would reach what's known as "dead pool" - a level so low the Hoover Dam would no longer be able to produce hydropower or deliver water downstream.
Californians have been told to conserve water at home or risk mandated water restrictions as a severe drought on the West Coast is expected to get worse during the summer months.
People have been told to limit outdoor watering and take shorter showers. In Los Angeles, many are being asked to cut their water use by 35%. The restrictions come after California recorded the driest start to the year on record.
Nasa, which monitors changing water levels, is warning that the western United States is now entering one of the worst droughts ever seen.
"With climate change, it seems like the dominoes are beginning to fall," Nasa hydrologist JT Reager told the BBC. READ MORE...
Breakthrough for Gravitational Waves
Scientists have created a proof-of-concept setup of a new laser eigenmode sensor that offers over 1,000 times the sensitivity. After translating this work to gravitational wave detectors, they will offer the unprecedented precision needed to test the fundamental limits of general relativity and probe the interiors of neutron stars.
Gravitational wave scientists from The University of Western Australia (UWA) have led the development of a new laser mode sensor with unprecedented precision that will be used to probe the interiors of neutron stars and test the fundamental limits of general relativity.
Research Associate from UWA’s Center of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav-UWA) Dr. Aaron Jones, said UWA co-ordinated a global collaboration of gravitational wave, metasurface, and photonics experts to pioneer a new method to measure structures of light called “eigenmodes.”
“Gravitational wave detectors like LIGO, Virgo, and KAGRA store enormous amount of optical power, and several pairs of mirrors are used to increase the amount of laser light stored along the massive arms of the detector,” Dr. Jones said. READ MORE...
World's Largest Plant
CNN — The world’s largest living plant has been identified in the shallow waters off the coast of Western Australia, according to scientists.
The sprawling seagrass, a marine flowering plant known as Posidonia australis, stretches for more than 112 miles (180 kilometers) in Shark Bay, a wilderness area protected as a World Heritage site, said Elizabeth Sinclair, a senior research fellow at the School of Biological Sciences and Oceans Institute at The University of Western Australia.
That’s about the distance between San Diego and Los Angeles.
The plant is so large because it clones itself, creating genetically identical offshoots. This process is a way of reproducing that is rare in the animal kingdom although it happens in certain environmental conditions and occurs more often among some plants, fungi and bacteria.
“We often get asked how many different plants are growing in a seagrass meadow. Here we used genetic tools to answer it,” said Sinclair, the author of a study on the seagrass that published late Tuesday in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
“The answer definitely surprised us – just ONE! That’s it, just one plant has expanded over 180 km in Shark Bay, making it the largest known plant on Earth,” she said via email. READ MORE...
Sunday, June 5
My Writiing
In case you were wondering, I have been seriously writing stuff since 1972... my writing started out with poetry, and today, I have written over 42,000 of those little jokers and have been posting them on my poetry blog reflectionsinthoughts.blogspot.com
In addition to my poetry, I have written over 1,200 opinion articles that were posted on LINKEDIN and was planning to continue, but the LINKEDIN team said that I posted something that was not appropriate and I was kicked off forever... I explained to them my account was hacked but that did not matter.
In 2015, I retired and started writing novels. Each novel is right around 90,000 words or about 300 pages... I have written 6 novels but the online storage had a problem and one of those novels has only 3 of 12 chapters and will have to be reconstructed.
My novel titles are:
- Earth's Hidden Keys
- Beyond the Milky Way
- Holding On
- Lost Creek Diaries
- Hunting the Scorpion Scarab
- Deception in Paris (will need to be reconstructed)
- The Ghost Dancer
Back Surgery
Learning to Live
Life... seems to be a concept that most of us take for granted... in that, we will always be around until we get old or until it is our time to go whichever is the longest amount of time... and, therein lies the problem. We assume that our lives are relatively protected and that we will live out our normal and expected lifespans... and, while that may be true up to a certain extent, we have lost sight of the overwhelming importance of life... in that it has been given to us to appreciate not waste.
Most of our lives are, in fact, wasted... and, we waste them on the stuff that we have been told is not just important but necessary... the accumulation of wealth which includes both money and assets... assets being the toys that we purchase, make, or steal along the way.
How much money do you have to earn before you decide that you have earned enough? And, when you have all that money what will you do with it?
- Buy homes
- Buy clothes
- Eat at Restaurants
- Buy cars
- Take vacations
- Buy Jets
- Give it to charity
- you don't drive anymore
- someone cooks all your food
- someone does your maintenance
- you play golf and watch stuff
- someone does your shopping
Oldest Tree in the World
GREAT BASIN NATIONAL PARK - Thousands of feet above the Nevada desert, in a part of Great Basin National Park that tourists rarely see, park ecologist Gretchen Baker neared the top of Mount Washington and raised her binoculars. There just below, sprouting directly from the limestone, grew some of the oldest living things on Earth.
Great Basin bristlecone pines, their dense pale trunks twisted like thick rope by centuries of gusting wind and rain, thrive here in part because so little else does. At altitudes near 11,000 feet along Nevada’s rocky Snake Range there are no grasses, no brush, few pests, no competition. No people to start wildfires. No nearby trees to spread pathogens.
With nothing around to kill them, these ancient beasts are left alone year after year to simply do what they do: store water in needles that can live for decades and pack on the teensiest bit of heft at a time. The wood grows so slowly it gets too dense for beetles or disease to penetrate. READ MORE...
Opening A 830 Million Year Old Crystal
Scientists recently announced the tantalizing discovery of ancient prokaryotic and algal cells – which may potentially still be alive – inside an 830-million-year-old rock salt crystal. Now, the researchers have spoken a little bit more about their recent study and suggested they have plans to crack open the crystal in the hope of revealing whether this ancient life is truly still alive.
Initially reported in the journal Geology earlier this month, the team used a selection of imaging techniques to discover well-preserved organic solids locked within fluid inclusions embedded in an 830-million-year-old piece of rock salt, also known as halite. They argue that these objects bear an uncanny resemblance to cells of prokaryotes and algae.
Crystalized rock salt is not capable of sustaining ancient life by itself, so the potential microorganisms are not simply locked within the crystals, like an ant trapped in amber. As rock salt crystals form through the evaporation of salty seawater, they can trap small amounts of water and microscopic organisms in primary fluid inclusions. TO SEE VIDEO AND READ MORE, CLICK HERE...
Sunken City in Tigris River
A team of German and Kurdish archaeologists have excavated a 3400-year-old Mittani Empire-era city that has emerged in the Tigris River.
The settlement was previously submerged with the construction of the Mosul reservoir, but has since re-emerged due to lower water levels caused by extreme drought.
The city, located in present-day Kemune in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq has a palace and several large buildings that could be the ancient city of Zakhiku – an important centre in the Mittani Empire (1550-1350 BC).
Bronze Age city resurfaced due to drought
Iraq can be affected by climate change, often resulting in extreme drought for months. This has caused major difficulties for the agricultural sector and the draining of large amounts of water drawn from the Mosul reservoir to support farmers crops. The lower water levels has allowed the reappearance of the Bronze Age city, which up until now has never been investigated by archaeologists.
Within a short time, archaeologists have mapped large areas of the city and documented the palace, several large buildings, a fortified wall, towers, multi-storey storage buildings and an industrial complex. READ MORE...
Saturday, June 4
US No Longer Energy Independent
This one action made the US energy dependent and in order to meet our demand we had to start importing oil from other countries...
If this was not bad enough, imported oil is not as clean as the oil we were pumping at home, so we are hurting the environment more than when we were energy independent...
To add insult to injury, we are now talking with Saudi Arabia about buying crude oil from them and not too long ago in the past, Biden had said that he condemned Saudi Arabia for killing their journalist... Biden made the claim that he would never do business with the Saudi Prince...
So, this is a big change...
Now, we all know that the price of gasoline has more than doubled since Biden has been President, and a few months ago, he blamed that increase on COVID... now he is blaming that increase on Putin because of the Russian invasion of Ukraine... and while those two events may have contributed to our problem, the main reason for gas price increases is what Biden did on his first day of office...
The big insult to the American People is the fact, that Biden believes the American People are too stupid to see that he is LYING...
How can you ever trust what Biden says???