2026-06-29
Worthy
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How Europe Became the World Champion of Heat Deaths
why does Europe recoil from a technology which the rest of the developed world (and even large parts of the developing world) take for granted? Part of the answer is historical and cultural. Northern Europe in particular, with its cool climate and mild seasonal swings, had little need for cooling until a few decades ago. But that excuse no longer cuts much ice. The deeper cause is an ideological “less is more” sensibility, more potent in Europe than anywhere else, which frames artificial cooling as a decadent indulgence—something for profligate Yankees with oversized SUVs and backyard pools. That this instinct is especially rampant among European progressives is even more puzzling. Leftists of old such as Karl Marx and Sylvia Pankhurst dreamed of universal abundance and denounced the scarcity mindset; they wanted the masses to share in the comforts once reserved for the rich, not to ration them in the name of nature or virtue. Today’s green gospel of restraint quietly inverts that aspiration, with comfort itself becoming suspect.
The common thread is a lite-version of the degrowth creed: the conviction that energy use is a kind of sin that we should atone for and reduce as much as possible. Until the 1960s, politicians and utilities promised an age of energy “too cheap to meter.” Now Shell, Engie, and EDF buy advertising space to urge customers to consume less of their own product, peddling slogans such as “the cleanest energy is the energy not consumed.” How strange it is for a private company to coach its customers to buy less of what it sells—a commercial squeamishness that makes sense only in the light of the European doctrine of secular penance.
Horseshit
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'We were guinea pigs': The Gen Zs who grew up online reflect on social media
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A few interviewees — mostly employed by frontier AI labs — expected the world to become unimaginably strange in a good way. One put a 30% chance on utopia, a 30% chance on dystopia, a 30% chance on extinction, and a 10% chance on something too weird to imagine. Several refused to make any prediction; several more said only that they still had hope. About half echoed one of my most blunt respondents: “I don't think humanity is going to make it.” What is it like to live in a world you believe is about to end?
- Nukes were gonna kill everyone in the 80s. then Global Warming, and plagues, and so on. Eventually you should conclude that humans aren't good at predictions.
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Scientists Think They've Uncovered the 15M-Year-Old Origin of Laughter
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Food defined social hierarchy in 1776. Here's what was on the table
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These Are the Most Beautiful Equations, According to Mathematicians
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Gracie the giraffe found in Texas after wandering off ranch
Gracie the Giraffe, who went missing for about two weeks in Texas after wandering off a remote private ranch, was finally found Friday — and the open range appeared to have agreed with her. The giraffe was spotted about 4 miles (6.4 kilometers) south of her enclosure during an aerial search in the Texas Hill Country, according to Real County Sheriff Nathan Johnson. He said Gracie’s owner, Vick Jones, contacted a veterinarian and began putting together a team to bring the giraffe safely back to the ranch. “She’s in good shape,” Jones said. “She’s standing there, swishing her tail.” Gracie, who is about 3 years old and weighs at least 1,200 pounds, was found within a half-mile of a pond and creek and had plenty of vegetation to feed on, said Jones, adding that she appeared to have been in that area for about a week.
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The 'Almost Homeless' Subreddit Is a Stark Glimpse at Soaring Wealth Inequality
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Who are the ‘fire-taming’ healers of modern France?
As a fire-tamer, Mme Abgrall can’t ask for money, my colleague warned me, or her ‘gift’ would disappear. after our visit, I can’t stop thinking about the woman, her humility. The quiet power that enveloped the kitchen scene. Within weeks, the warts have gone and my daughter’s skin is clear; they never reappear. Questions inundate my mind: was it real? Did Mme Abgrall cure the warts?
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Your Kids’ School Bus Is About to Become a Roaming Surveillance Vehicle
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There are 5.7M more childless women of prime child-bearing age than expected
celebrity gossip
Rank Propaganda / Thought Policing / World Disordering
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- Horseshit remains the same even with "AI" sprinkled over it.
Electric / Self Driving cars
Edumacationalizing / Acedemia Nuts
Info Rental / ShowBiz / Advertising
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Intel's next-gen 52-core Nova Lake CPU could pull up to 474W
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Reservations for Valve's Steam Machine are being resold on eBay for $2700.
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"Not clear if that includes the cost of the Gabe Cube or if it's just the reservation."
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Flock cameras track more than your license plate, and they're spreading fast
TechSuck / Geek Bait
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Examining circuit boards from the Space Shuttle's I/O Processor
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The Curious Case of aa.ns.charter.com
I started this expecting a five-minute mystery. It turned into a few hours of investigation, a bug report to a major ISP, and a blog post.
- The deeper details of DNS in the wild are full of Lovecraft grade monsters that will eat your sanity.
Space / Boomy Zoomers / UFO
AI Will (Save | Destroy) The World
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White House Will Ad Hoc Decide Who Can Individually Access GPT-5.6
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China Has Matched Anthropic in Cybersecurity, Resetting AI Race
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Pentagon Sees Bigger Role for AI in Setting Military Targets
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'Once you have a machine think and write for you, you're cooked as a species'
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AI Is Making Silicon Valley Productive, Anxious and Afraid to Log Off
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Nearly Three-Quarters of Dutch Responses to EU Tobacco Rules Were AI-Generated
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Global recession and the end of the middle class: What 'AI exuberance' could do
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How People in China Keep Outsmarting Anthropic's Geolocation Restrictions
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Microsoft's Satya Nadella says every company should build its own AI model
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Professor denounces mass AI fraud on an exam at Brown University
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Nvidia Partner Wants to Put a $150k AI Data Center in Your Yard
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AI glasses are aiding cheating in exams. Test-obsessed Asia is ground zero
Neo Gambling / Crypto con games
Economicon / Business / Finance
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How Some Private-Equity Managers Collect Big Fees on Paper Gains
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Oracle stock worst week since 2001 dot-com bust, AI financing concerns escalate
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Michigan bill would bar employers from requiring after-hours coms with workers
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A 'perfect storm' points to a much smaller U.S. auto market by 2040
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Utility boss warns US faces blackouts due to power supply shortfall
Gubmint / Poilitcks / Law Making
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Fauci, the CIA, and the Unanswered Questions of COVID.
The public has a right to know about clandestine meetings between public health officials and the CIA. And if true, it is not out of the realm of possibility that there was self-serving connivance between Fauci and the agency, or that a self-justifying information loop kept the American public at bay.
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California's landmark anti-plastics law sparks anger as 17 states move to sue
Democrats
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A Terrible Thing Happened to My Family
You’ve probably heard of “swatting.” It’s a cruel and dangerous kind of hoax that has started happening more frequently in recent years. Someone anonymously calls 911 with a false report of imminent danger, such as a hostage situation, at the home of a public figure. Law enforcement swarms the house, guns drawn, terrifying the unsuspecting homeowner and family and sometimes even leading to deaths or injuries in the confusion. It’s happened to dozens of lawmakers, judges, celebrities, and others. (When I was in the Cabinet, someone attempted to do this to our home, but fortunately the hoax was quickly detected.) It’s become enough of a problem that the FBI now has a dedicated database to track such incidents. Now imagine the same concept, but with Child Protective Services instead of a SWAT team. Hadn’t thought of that? Me neither, until a few days ago when a police officer and a CPS worker showed up at our home and politely asked to speak with me.
Left Angst
World
Iran / Houthi
Russia Bad / Ukraine War
China
Environment / Climate / Green Propaganda
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France records around 1k additional deaths amid extreme heat wave
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Atlantic "Warming Hole" Heat Content Variations Caused by Ocean Heat Transport
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Artificial rain isn’t a solution to drought, according to a cloud-seeding expert
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'An Inconvenient Truth' 20 Years Later
The film’s deepest failure was selling Americans on fear instead of innovation. The smarter path is hiding in plain sight: fund green innovation — advanced nuclear, next-generation batteries, fusion, geothermal — so that clean energy can finally undercut fossil fuels on price. Invest in adaptation that saves lives at a fraction of the cost, from sea walls to drought-tolerant crops to early warning systems. And help poor countries grow richer, because prosperity is the most reliable form of resilience. The real lesson of “An Inconvenient Truth” is that panic makes for lousy policy. Trading the doomsday script for innovation, adaptation and development would save trillions — and do far more for people and the planet.
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Rats and mice are mutating and becoming resistant to poison, researchers warn
