2026-07-08


etc

  • Midtown Manhattan blocks evacuated after beams buckling at construction site

    Several Midtown Manhattan blocks were evacuated Tuesday morning after construction workers discovered the structure of an office building being converted into residential housing was compromised on the 21st floor, officials said. New York City Fire Department and Department of Buildings crews went to 235 East 42nd Street, which is one block west of the United Nations headquarters, around 8:11 a.m. after workers "observed structural support beams beginning to buckle," the NYPD said.

  • The Bizarre Flaw in the New Orleans Levees

    What happened in New Orleans in August 2005 wasn’t a natural disaster. Don’t get me wrong; Hurricane Katrina was a big storm. By many measures it was one of the strongest hurricanes to ever crash into a United States coastline. There were about 50 individual locations where levees or floodwalls were breached during Hurricane Katrina. Many of those were situations where the structure was overtopped by storm surge. But out of those fifty, only three of those breaches accounted for the majority of the flows that submerged the heart of New Orleans and led to nearly half of the disaster’s total fatalities and economic damage. All three of those breaches happened at surge levels below what the floodwalls were designed to manage.

  • Why the West stopped making land

    Two explanations are commonly proposed for this: first, that the easy spots have already been reclaimed, and second, that improved transportation has made reclamation unnecessary since we can expand cities further inland instead. But neither of these matches the evidence. Other countries still reclaim land at enormous scale, under conditions at least as challenging as those in the United States. The transportation story was once plausible, but not any more. Transportation has stopped improving, and downtown land values have risen so much that reclamation costs would be dwarfed by the value of the land created.

    The timing points to a third explanation. Reclamation stopped abruptly in the 1970s when a wave of environmental regulations made it enormously expensive to reshape the landscape. And it halted at the same time in every other country that passed similar laws. If the legal barriers to reclamation were lifted, we could build hundreds of thousands of new homes near the centers of our most valuable cities. We could build new airports to refresh ailing transportation infrastructure, and we could protect low-lying coastal areas from sea level rise. The disappearance of land reclamation is a choice that we have the power to undo.

Horseshit


Robot uprising / Humanoid Helpers

Religion / Tribal / Culture War and Re-Segregation

Space / Boomy Zoomers / UFO

  • ‘Once-in-a-millennium’ asteroid flyby will be visible to much of the world in 2029.

    According to their calculations, roughly 90% of the world's population — about 7.6 billion people — lives in regions where Apophis could, in principle, be seen with the naked eye on April 13, 2029. The actual viewing success will depend more on earthly considerations, however, including cloud cover and the extent of light pollution. Scientists say it will appear as a point-like speck of light gliding steadily across, which, at its closest approach, will appear to move by about the apparent width of the full moon every minute.

AI Will (Save | Destroy) The World

Left Angst

Pox / COVID / BioTerror AgitProp