Monday, November 18
On the Brink
During the two months that the current administration has before the new administration takes over, the world finds itself on the brink of World War III.
Why do I think that?
Experts at the Institute of War, Economic and Political experts are all downplaying the fact that the world is close to a new global war.
That is exactly why I think one might be coming sooner than later. When officials downplaying something, it is usually because they do not want the public to panic.
Russia has lost 700,000 soldiers in Ukraine and needs to stop the bleeding before civil unrest results in an overthrown of the government.
North Korea has the third largest army in the world and is sending troops to Russia to fight in Ukraine.
Israel is now bombing nuclear facilities in Iran and Iran is vowing to respond like they have never responded before... this could all just be HOT AIR.
China is ramping up its military for what THEY CLAIM will be an inevitable conflict with the USA in 2027 or earlier.
HALF OF THE USA are LIBERALS who want the Trump Administration 2025-2028 TO FAIL MISERABLY.
American WEAKNESS will cause the enemies of the USA to be aggressive.
Israel is fighting Hamas, Hezbollah, Iran and its proxies, not to mention global opinion that DOES NOT FAVOR the JEWS.
The current state of READINESS of the USA MILITARY is questionable... and since the USA is over its head IN DEBT, it is uncertain if they have the money to BUILD UP QUICKLY, given all the other items in the USA that need refurbishing like the INFRASTRUCTURE and the COST to DEPORT ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS.
GLOBAL BILLIONAIRES FAVOR a ONE WORLD GOVERNMENT where the USA/RUSSIA/CHINA would share POWER...
Believe it or not GLOBAL BILLIONAIRES are incredibly influential around the world and are gaining in power each business cycle.
THE BIG QUESTION IS THIS:
DOES THE WORLD NEED TO EXPERIENCE A WORLD WAR THREE IN ORDER TO EVOLVE TO THE NEXT LEVEL OF GROWTH AND TECHNOLOGY?
Our Hiding Consciousness
The neuron, the specialized cell type that makes up much of our brains, is at the center of today’s neuroscience. Neuroscientists explain perception, memory, cognition and even consciousness itself as products of billions of these tiny neurons busily firing their tiny “spikes” of voltage inside our brain.
These energetic spikes not only convey things like pain and other sensory information to our conscious mind, but they are also in theory able to explain every detail of our complex consciousness.
At least in principle. The details of this “neural code” have yet to be worked out.
While neuroscientists have long focused on spikes travelling throughout brain cells, “ephaptic” field effects may really be the primary mechanism for consciousness and cognition. These effects, resulting from the electric fields produced by neurons rather than their synaptic firings, may play a leading role in our mind’s workings.
In 1943 American scientists first described what is known today as the neural code, or spike code. They fleshed out a detailed map of how logical operations can be completed with the “all or none” nature of neural firing—similar to how today’s computers work. Since then neuroscientists around the world have engaged in a vast endeavor to crack the neural code in order to understand the specifics of cognition and consciousness—to little avail. READ MORE...
Sunday, November 17
In The NEWS
Japan's oldest royal, Princess Yuriko, dies at age 101.
Princess Yuriko was the oldest living member of Japan's imperial family and the wife of wartime Emperor Hirohito's brother, Prince Mikasa. She died after a recent decline in health, following a stroke and pneumonia in March. Her passing reduces the imperial family to 16 members, highlighting ongoing concerns about succession due to a 1947 Imperial House Law restricting the throne to male heirs.
Samples from far side of the moon show history of volcanoes.
The first lunar soil and rock samples retrieved by China's Chang'e-6 mission from the moon's far side this year reveal volcanic activity that occurred as recently as around 2.8 billion years ago. The findings suggest the moon was molten for a longer period than previously thought. The samples were taken from the South Pole-Aitken Basin of the moon, the solar system's oldest-known impact crater.
Jake Paul beats Mike Tyson by unanimous decision.
YouTuber-turned-boxer Paul, 27, defeated former heavyweight boxing champion Tyson, 58, Friday. Paul is expected to make roughly $40M, and Tyson is expected to make roughly $20M. The win improves Paul's career record to 11-1, while Tyson's career record falls to 50-7. See photos from the event here.
Comedian Conan O’Brien to host 2025 Academy Awards.
O'Brien will emcee the 97th Oscars ceremony March 2 on ABC for the first time. The Emmy-winning late-night television host, writer, and producer has previously hosted the 2002 and 2006 Emmy Awards as well as the 2014 MTV Movie Awards. O'Brien's stint comes after Jimmy Kimmel emceed the Oscars for two consecutive years.
Super Micro faces deadline to keep Nasdaq listing amid stock plunge.
Super Micro Computer is at risk of being delisted from the Nasdaq composite after its stock price dropped by 85% since its peak in March due to allegations of accounting irregularities and an ongoing investigation. Super Micro has until Monday to submit a plan to meet Nasdaq's minimum bid price requirement (see here) to maintain its listing.
Over 35,000-year-old preserved saber-toothed kitten studied in world first.
Researchers discovered the well-preserved mummy in Siberia's Arctic permafrost, with its fur, head, torso, limbs, and claws still intact. The kitten is estimated to have died three weeks after birth. The finding provides new insights into the saber-toothed cat's physical characteristics and adaptations to ice age conditions.
Institutionalized Religion
I have always had a problem with institutionalized religion, even though I believe that there is a CREATOR...
My first concern was over the fact that in every single church that I attended or visited in the USA, Jesus the Christ was portrayed as a CAUCASIAN MALE and we all know that this simply cannot be true.
Jesus was a JEW by birth and people who lived in that area at the time and still are, resemble a MEDITERRANEAN type of male which is not even similar to a Caucasian male.
A Mediterranean male is typically described as having dark hair, dark eyes, olive skin, a medium to short stature, a slender build, a long face with a prominent nose, and a relatively high level of body hair; with variations depending on the specific region within the Mediterranean basin.
SpaceX's Dragon
Dragon successfully completed the orbital reboost of the International Space Station at approximately 12:50 p.m. ET (1750 GMT), Nov. 8. Read our full story.
SpaceX will boost the space station for the first time Friday (Nov. 8), as the company prepares to eventually kill the orbiting complex.
A Dragon cargo spacecraft docked to the International Space Station (ISS) will fire its engines for 12.5 minutes on Friday (Nov. 8), NASA officials said at a press conference Monday (Nov. 4). Other spacecraft have done this before, but it will be a first for a SpaceX capsule — and an important precursor to a bigger Dragon vehicle that will one day drive the ISS to its demise. READ MORE...
Saturday, November 16
White Supremacy
- beautiful or attractive
- intellectually gifted
- physically talented
- artistically talented
- musically talented
- entrepreneurial material
- gifted speakers
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Satire news outlet The Onion purchases Alex Jones' InfoWars with backing from Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting families, owed nearly $1.5B by Jones following defamation lawsuits (More)
> Craig Melvin tapped to replace Hoda Kotb as "Today" show coanchor; Kotb announced in September she'd be stepping down after more than two decades (More)
> Skiing legend Lindsey Vonn to come out of retirement at age 40, more than five years since her last competition (More) | Tampa Bay Rays to play 2025 home games at New York Yankees' spring-training field in Tampa after Hurricane Milton tore roof off Tropicana Field (More)
Science & Technology
> OpenAI to launch AI-powered agent capable of independently carrying out tasks, such as booking travel and sending emails; "Operator" to launch in January, compete with similar products from Anthropic and Microsoft (More) | The rapid rise of OpenAI (More, w/video)
> Researchers develop algorithm to predict when lithium-ion batteries are about to catch fire by analyzing sounds from inside the devices; batteries can briefly emit flames almost as hot as a blowtorch during failure (More) | Why Li-ion batteries combust (More)
> Skull's bone marrow continues to grow and expand over time, study finds, allowing production of healthy new blood cells as we age (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close lower (S&P 500 -0.6%, Dow -0.5%, Nasdaq -0.6%) as Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell signals caution on further rate cuts (More) | Disney shares close up 6% after company reports growth in profits and customers, forecasts stronger-than-expected earnings outlook (More)
> European Union fines Meta $841M for violating antitrust laws by tying its Marketplace online classified ads business to its Facebook social network (More) | US regulators reportedly seeking to put Google under federal supervision similar to how banks are overseen (More)
> Coach owner Tapestry ends bid for $8.5B acquisition of Michael Kors owner Capri following regulatory hurdles (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> President-elect Donald Trump taps Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to head Department of Health and Human Services; role requires Senate confirmation (More) | See background on Kennedy Jr. (More) | See all picks announced so far (More)
> NY Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) unveils revised New York City congestion pricing plan, the first such plan in the US; plan would charge a daily $9 toll on most vehicles entering Manhattan's central business district during peak hours (More)
> Tropical Storm Sara forms in Caribbean Sea, expected to bring life-threatening flash-flooding and mudslides across Central America, including Honduras (More)
Family
Tiny Earth Light Years Away
The nearest single star to the Solar System has just yielded up a rare and wonderful treasure.
Around a red dwarf known as Barnard's star, which lies just 5.96 light-years away, astronomers have found evidence of an exoplanet.
And not just any exoplanet. This fascinating world, known as Barnard b, is tiny, clocking in with a minimum mass of 37 percent of the mass of Earth. That's a little shy of half a Venus, and about 3.5 Marses.
The reason it's so marvelous is that tiny exoplanets are really, really hard to find. Although Barnard b is not habitable to life as we know it, its discovery is leading us closer to the identification of Earth-sized worlds that may be scattered elsewhere throughout the galaxy. READ MORE...