From Jenna Orkin
Saturday, December 31, 2022
Friday, December 30, 2022
Thursday, December 29, 2022
From Jenna Orkin
Facial Recognition Software - Didn't work for me at all.
Visualizing 25 Years of Lithium Production, by Country
How fast is gravity, exactly?
Johnson & Johnson Files Lawsuit Against Mesothelioma Expert (She's one of the main doctors serving Ground Zero workers)
Wednesday, December 28, 2022
From Jenna Orkin
Goldman Sachs to lay off up to 4,000 people
Meta Will Pay $725 Million to Settle Lawsuit over Cambridge Analytica Data Leak
The End of Netflix Password Sharing Is Nigh
Bill McKibben examines the immense promise—and potential perils—of the Inflation Reduction Act,
Tuesday, December 27, 2022
Monday, December 26, 2022
Saturday, December 24, 2022
From Jenna Orkin
As flu and RSV surge early in the season, how many children's hospital beds are free in your state?
People Isolated by COVID Suffer from Long COVID
Is climate change triggering extreme cold? The debate is super hot.
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What Donald Trump’s Trial Might Look Like |
Friday, December 23, 2022
Thursday, December 22, 2022
From Jenna Orkin
Biden in newly surfaced video: Iran nuclear deal is "dead"
China races to bolster health system as COVID surge sparks global concern
First ‘Vagina-on-a-Chip’ Will Help Researchers Test Drugs
“Since the fall of Roe, six months ago, at least sixty-six clinics in fifteen states have closed, limiting the choices of nearly twenty-two million women of reproductive age who reside in them,” Stephania Taladrid writes, in a moving and unsettling report from Texas about the distances that women must now go to obtain abortions.
Wells Fargo to Pay $3.7 Billion Over Consumer Banking Violations
Wednesday, December 21, 2022
From Jenna Orkin
Avian flu outbreak wipes out 50.54 mln U.S. birds, a record
This little-known bottleneck is blocking clean energy for millions |
To protect lobstermen, spending bill may speed whales’ extinction, activists sayThe cryptocurrency-trading platform FTX billed itself to customers and investors as a bold break with the past, but, when it came to securing influence in Washington, the company followed the familiar playbook of donating extensively to lawmakers in both parties. The result, as John Cassidy explores in his latest column, was a proposed regulation structure for crypto co-sponsored by Democrats and Republicans that aligned closely with the industry’s preferences, and which some experts have argued would leave consumers at risk. “In a properly functioning political system,” Cassidy writes, “the collapse of FTX would generate a reckoning and a full-scale reconsideration of crypto policy.” But the lobby in D.C. for digital currency remains strong, even as the risks that crypto poses to the wider economy have never been clearer. “One vital imperative is to prevent future crypto disasters from spreading to the biggest banks and non-bank financial institutions,” he writes. “So far, we’ve been lucky.” |
Tuesday, December 20, 2022
Monday, December 19, 2022
From Jenna Orkin
DeSantis reverses himself on coronavirus vaccines, moves to right of Trump
Ship in German ‘Titanic’ film sank, killing far more than the real one |
An unknown weed made spinach eaters hallucinate. The greens were recalled. |
- Amazon "saved the Ukrainian government" with suitcase-sized hard drives
- Russian elites say Putin tricked them into backing war: report
Twitter users just voted for Elon Musk to step down as head of the company
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