Sunday, November 2

TimcastIRL

 

A River Flows Through It

 

Bongino Report

 

Diamond & Silk

 

Cold Morning

 

Headlines

PHILANTHROPY
Charities run on marathons













Jason Davis/Getty Images


Marathoners receive reflective blankets that help regulate body heat after crossing the finish line, but many also get a warm fuzzy feeling from fundraising for a good cause.

Runners in the Boston, New York City, and Chicago Marathons collectively raised over $156 million for charitable causes last year, supporting a range of initiatives, from cancer research to local public media.
Bibs for bucks

The only way to snag a slot in the top marathons—aside from showing an awe-inspiring level of fitness in a qualifier or getting lucky with spots allocated via lottery—is by committing to fundraise for a nonprofit:Marathons allocate a limited number of runner bibs to hundreds of partner organizations, which then set a minimum fundraising requirement for each runner.
The New York City Marathon requires runners to raise a minimum of $3,000 to participate in the event through a charity.
But charity marathoning can get cutthroat: Some nonprofits involved in top-tier races request donations of $15,000 or more from aspiring participants, who vie for a limited number of slots.

Besides getting runners into races, some charities, like the American Heart Association, provide a training a training community and coaching to the runners raising money for them.

It’s not free money…as charities invest resources into their own administrative marathon of triaging applicants based on their cash-raising potential, ensuring runners stay on track to meet their fundraising goals, and dealing with “ghosting” from marathoners who run away from their charity commitment.—SK


Robert Reich


Sunday thought: How to cope with Trump’s chaos






Friends,

Trump is incapable of allowing tensions and stresses to ease without creating new ones.

Case in point: After meeting with China’s president Xi Jinping this past week, he announces that China and the United States — the largest and second-largest economies in the world — will de-escalate the trade war.

Sounds good, I suppose (until you realize that the two nations are now back to where they were before Trump created the trade war in the first place).

Not content to calm any waters, Trump also announces that the United States will immediately restart nuclear weapons testing, after not doing so for more than 30 years. Why? He doesn’t explain except to say “other nations” are doing so. (None of the world’s three major military powers has conducted a nuclear weapons test since 1996, but they will if the U.S. resumes.)


At A Glance

The average cost of workplace family health plans has tripled in two decades to roughly $35K.

Explaining the absurdly straight line across Scotland's Great Glen.

Bioluminescence produces new light, while biofluorescence re-emits absorbed light.

Normal fevers help fight viruses and bacteria and support immune cells.

"Viscoelasticity" allows muscles to elongate briefly after stretching.

The British captured Philadelphia in 1777 (and took over Ben Franklin's house).

Mapping all 30,000 Transatlantic slave voyages.

Listen to this extended history of Berkshire Hathaway's origins.

Why horror is so fun for some viewers.

Visualizing the most challenging marathons in the world.

On the strange art of thinking about math without words.

Autograph hunters form secret networks to trade celebrity access tips.

Only 34% of Americans supported the Apollo program in 1967.

Over 100,000 art pieces are stolen each year, with less than 10% recovered.

Credit for inventing the laser was fought over for nearly three decades.

Cauliflower with mushrooms is better than meat! Incredibly delicious and...

Quick Clips

 








In The NEWS


Judges order Trump administration to continue funding SNAP.

Two federal judges separately ordered the Agriculture Department to use a roughly $5B contingency fund to keep the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program running this month. The program, which helps about one in eight Americans buy groceries, was set to lapse today due to the government shutdown. The rulings allow the administration to decide whether it will tap additional funds to fully cover the program’s roughly $8B monthly cost.




LA Dodgers push World Series into Game 7.

After losing to the Toronto Blue Jays 6-1 Wednesday, the LA Dodgers won 3-1 last night, tying the best-of-seven World Series 3-3. The champion will be determined in Game 7 tonight at 8 pm ET. Toronto, which hasn't won the World Series since 1993, will host at Rogers Centre. LA won the 2024 World Series 4-1 against the New York Yankees.




UN human rights chief orders investigation into US military strikes in Caribbean.

The UN high commissioner for human rights yesterday called for the US military to halt strikes on alleged drug-trafficking boats in the Caribbean and Pacific. His spokesperson said he believes the strikes violate international law. This public censure from the UN came after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Wednesday announced the 14th strike since September, bringing the death toll to at least 61.




Ohio approves congressional map with two more Republican seats.

Ohio's redistricting commission adopted new US House districts with two additional GOP-leaning districts. The map secured bipartisan support this week after shifting a third in-limbo district in Democrats' favor. The state will maintain 10 Republican-leaning districts and two Democratic-leaning districts. Unlike map revisions in Texas, Missouri, and North Carolina, Ohio's was required by the state constitution. Meanwhile, Virginia's Democratic-led General Assembly advanced a proposed amendment that could enable districts to be redrawn in Democrats' favor.




Researchers design targeted particles to attack ovarian tumors.

Nanoparticles delivering immune-simulating molecules directly to ovarian tumors eliminated metastatic tumors in more than 80% of mice when administered alongside immunotherapy drugs. The combination treatment also trained mice's immune cells to fight new tumor proteins. The advance is significant because ovarian cancer has not historically responded well to immunotherapy drugs alone.




FBI makes arrests on suspicion of plotting Halloween attack.

FBI agents reportedly arrested two teenagers outside Detroit who were allegedly planning a terrorist attack over Halloween weekend. A law enforcement source said the FBI discovered the teens in an online ISIS chat room and others are being questioned in connection with the plot. Authorities did not provide additional information as of this writing but have said there is no current threat.




Getty Images enters partnership with Perplexity AI.

The visual media company inked a multiyear licensing deal with Perplexity AI Friday, enabling the tech startup's AI tools to use Getty's content. Perplexity will include image credits as part of the deal; financial terms were not disclosed. Getty shares surged 19% on the announcement Friday morning, before closing down 6.5%. Earlier this year, Getty dropped a copyright lawsuit against startup Stability AI. Perplexity faces similar suits from Reddit, Dow Jones, and Merriam-Webster, among others.


SOURCE:  1440 NEWS

A Kodachrome Outlook


A few days ago, I celebrated my 78th birthday by going to Cheddars Restaurant and ordering an 8oz grilled salmon, rice, baked potato, and broccoli, ate half and took the rest home for a second meal tomorrow.  We also stopped by Perkins Restaurant and purchased a whole Caramel Apple pie with Vanilla ice-cream.  While my celebration might not have meant much for most people, for me, it was perfect.


I have lived on this earth for almost 8 decades and have experienced many pros and cons about life in general; I have lived through both Democratic and Republican administrations, survived Vietnam and Woodstock, college, grad school, and 45 years of working for ASSHOLE bosses.  I was very fit and healthy until age 60, when I contracted Lymphoma, had a heart attack (3 surgeries), four years later contracted Melanoma (2 surgeries) that returned twice, radiation treatments, and three years ago had L2-L3-L4-L5-S1 disks fused due to spinal stenosis.


Half of my hair is gone, the muscular physique that I once had has been replaced by fat and I am fifteen (15) pounds heavier that my desired weight of 195.  Most of the weight is due to the steroids I took for over 12 years.  I have been eating healthy since 1987, minimal red meat, no alcohol, no cigarettes, no fried food, but fish, chicken, veal, pork chops, vegetables, and beans, with some fruit. 


MY GOAL is to live until my 96th birthday and beat my mom's longevity as she died just shy of her 96th birthday.  My dad lived until 89.


According to Meyers-Briggs, my personality on numerous occasions has always been INTJ.  The second rarest personality type.  My horoscope sign is Scorpio.  I am a builder of theoretical models and concepts and very few people understand the way I think or why I think that way.  This uncertainty has resulted in only a few friends, most of which are dead except for one, a Canadian and we still stay in touch.


Retired since 2015, I now spend my time maintaining two blogs daily and writing novels that I have no desire to publish.  Does this mean that I don't think my writing is good enough?  Maybe, but it is not what I tell myself.  I tell myself that I just enjoy the creativity of writing.  Fiction is what I write, scifi, spies, FBI, mysteries, adventure, and human interest.  I do a lot of research to make sure my points are authentic and I use CoPilot to test out plot design and other details.  So far, I am the only editor of my work.


When think back on my 45-year career (reminiscent of Paul Simon's Kodachrome), it is a wonder I survived.  I made a point of kissing no ass to keep my job and I was very careful to demonstrate I could outwork everyone.  However, I frequently had to change jobs and in one instance change states from NC to TN.

Lessons Learned:

  1. Arrive early - leave late
  2. Everyone can be replaced
  3. Outperform your peers without cheating
  4. Learn as much as you can as quick as you can
  5. Always be looking for another/better job
  6. Take copious notes, especially at meetings
  7. Try to make the boss look good not matter how bad that hurts
  8. Treat subordinates like you want to be treated
  9. Be fair, honest, and never lie
  10. Be the glue that holds the team together


Somewhat Political

 




Scientists Found an 8,000-Year-Old Figurine


There’s no face on the oldest piece of art—a small sandstone figurine of a human from the Mesolithic era—ever found in one region of modern-day Azerbaijan.

In a study published by Archaeological Research in Asia, a team of archaeologists from both Japan and Azerbaijan showed how they used technology to investigate the details of the stone figurine that helps tell the story of the cultural shifts from Mesolithic to Neolithic.

“Its stylistic features considerably differ from those of Neolithic human figures in the region,” the study authors wrote, “providing a valuable reference point for understanding the cultural processes in symbolic aspects during the Mesolithic-Neolithic interface in the South Caucasus.”


RARE CREEDENCE CLEARWATER -Down on the Corner

Saturday, November 1

Wonderings 29

Is a LIE always a LIE or can some LIES actually be good ones to tell?

Parents lie to their children about Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, and the Tooth Fairy.

Ministers withhold information (still a LIE) that the Bible says the universe is only 6,000 years old.

Politicians promise this or that and once elected do not follow through on that promise - this is considered a LIE.

Parents tell their children that the couple is not getting a divorce only to find out a few months later, there is a divorce - another LIE.

Spouses tell each other that their illness is not terminal when in fact it is, and they soon die - another LIE.

A lie is a lie is a lie...

One has not told the truth...

Withholding information is still a lie...

We lie to protect feelings...


YET...

if we tell the truth, we run the risk of really hurting one's feelings and destroying the relationship...  therefore, is it better to live without being fully informed of the truth?


So...

one spouse no longer loves the other spouse for whatever reason and there are kids involved - teenagers let's say...  we share with the other spouse that the love is gone but there will be no divorce because of the children.  Now, the truth has been told but the marriage is living a LIE because it is no longer based upon love as was promised by their vows.

When, if ever, do we tell the children and the longer we postpone, the longer we perpetuate the lie.




The Long Road Home

 

VINCE

 

Alex Jones Show

 

Six Pack

 

Lara Trump

 

Dinesh D'Souza

 

Diamond & Silk

 

Sun & Moon

 

The White House

 

The Big MIG

 

TimcastIRL

 

Goodbye October

 

Brookings Brief

 



The government shutdown shows the need to reform how the federal government funds Native American Tribes and communities

Headlines


Jetcityimage/Getty Images




Court orders Trump administration to keep disbursing SNAP benefits. A federal judge in Rhode Island yesterday ruled that the Trump administration must use contingency funds to continue paying out SNAP food assistance ASAP, as regular funding was due to run out today because of the government shutdown. A group of cities and nonprofits sued the federal government after it said it wouldn’t use the rainy day funds to keep SNAP funds flowing, arguing that the program no longer exists since Congress failed to fund it. In a separate case brought by several states, a federal judge in Massachusetts ruled yesterday that the Trump administration’s plan to cease disbursing SNAP benefits was likely unlawful. The program provides food assistance to approximately 42 million lower-income Americans and costs the government around $8 billion per month. The $5 billion in emergency cash is expected to enable at least partial payments in the coming weeks.—SK

The FBI thwarted a “potential terrorist attack” in Michigan targeting “pumpkin day.” In a statement posted to X yesterday, FBI Director Kash Patel said the suspects were “allegedly plotting a violent attack over Halloween weekend.” CBS reported that federal agents conducted operations in the cities of Dearborn and Inkster, MI, and that five individuals between the ages of 16 and 20 were arrested. It also reported that the FBI had been monitoring an online conversation in an ISIS chat room regarding the possibility of a terrorist attack over the weekend, but the plot was not concrete. In his statement, Patel said, “Through swift action and close coordination with our local partners, a potential act of terror was stopped before it could unfold.” Gretchen Whitmer, the governor of Michigan, posted on X that Patel had briefed her. She said, “As details continue to develop, I am grateful for the swift action of the FBI and MSP protecting Michiganders.”—HVL

Disney pulls its content from YouTube TV. You might have to go to your grandma’s who still has cable to tune into ESPN, ABC, Nat Geo, or other Disney-owned channels after the House of Mouse pulled its content from the Google-owned paid TV service amid a dispute over carriage fees. YouTube said that Disney was asking for fees that would’ve forced it to jack up the TV subscription price and called their decision to yank its channels a negotiating tactic. If the standoff continues for a prolonged period, YouTube said it would compensate subscribers $20 a month for their lost ability to experience second-hand embarrassment every time the New York Jets play.—SK