2026-03-10
Horseshit
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Jane Austen's death remains a mystery. Her letters and books offer clues
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How the Sriracha guys screwed over their supplier
The global sriracha market was valued at $450 million in 2024 and is projected to reach $1 billion by 2033. Huy Fong remains the name most Americans associate with the sauce. But association is not availability, and availability is not loyalty. A generation of consumers who once reached for the rooster bottle without a second thought has been forced to try something else. Many of them have not reached back. The $23 million the court awarded can be calculated. The cost of teaching your customers that they do not need you cannot.
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The Rise of the Techno-Pastoral
Though its headline and picture highlighted card games and comradery, the actual text was of such a particular cultural context that you could carbon date the author's birth year. These children were "talking to one another as if they were in a Brat Pack movie" and there was "an alphabet of new analog hobbies popping up just about everywhere". We even hear of one child who swapped Spotify for his dad's old CDs on portable CD player
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Child care providers fight headwinds on Colorado's rural Eastern Plains
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Teenagers are getting far less sleep now than they did in late 2000s, new study
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The optimal age to freeze eggs is 19
We've had genetic screening for conditions like Down Syndrome and sickle cell anemia for decades, but starting in 2019, it became possible to screen your child for risks of all kinds of things. Parents who go through IVF can now boost their children's IQ, decrease their risk of diseases like Alzheimer's, depression and diabetes, and even make their children less likely to drop out of high school by picking an embryo with a genetic predisposition towards any of these outcomes. But the size of the benefit of this screening depends significantly on the number of embryos available to choose from, which declines almost linearly with age. The expected benefit of embryo screening declines as a result.
- We have failed to teach younger generations how the hubris of eugenics has failed before. They're gonna learn the hard way.
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CIA faces backlash after document with potential cancer cure hidden 60 years
A newly surfaced CIA document suggests US intelligence once reviewed research that hinted at a possible cancer treatment more than 60 years ago. The document, produced in February 1951 and declassified in 2014, summarizes a Soviet scientific paper that examined striking similarities between parasitic worms and cancerous tumors. The report describes how researchers believed both organisms thrived under nearly identical metabolic conditions and accumulated large reserves of glycogen, a form of stored energy. Although the document was declassified more than a decade ago, it has recently resurfaced online, fueling outrage among some Americans who say it raises troubling questions about why Cold War research hinting at possible cancer treatments sat in intelligence archives for decades.
Obit
Rank Propaganda / Thought Policing / World Disordering
Musk
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Tesla opens its first Megacharger station to Semi customers in California
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Grok sparks outrage after chatbot makes offensive jibes about football disasters
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First Cybercab Rolls Off Line: Musk Says YouTuber Will Have to Shave His Head
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Musk takes the stand at trial for deflating Twitter stock ahead of purchase
Electric / Self Driving cars
Robot uprising / Humanioid Helpers
Edumacationalizing / Acedemia Nuts
Info Rental / ShowBiz / Advertising
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The Privacy 'Zealots' Were Right: Ad Tech's Infrastructure Was Always a Risk
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United States Leads Dismantlement of One of the World's Largest Hacker Forums
According to an affidavit unsealed on March 3, the LeakBase forum had over 142,000 members and more than 215,000 messages between members. Available on the open web and in English, the forum had an enormous and continuously updated archive of hacked databases including many from high profile attacks, including hundreds of millions of account credentials. LeakBase allowed forum users to sell the information from stolen databases,
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"It doesn't feel safe"–Many international game developers plan to skip GDC in US
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I'm locking down updates until Nvidia's drivers and Windows gain back my trust
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Online age-verification in U.S. for child safety, but adults being surveilled
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Amid wave of kids' online safety laws, age-checking tech comes of age
Space / Boomy Zoomers / UFO
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UFO expert William McCasland's disappearance is a 'grave national security crisis:' reporter
The mysterious disappearance of a retired Air Force major general with deep expertise about UFOs who went missing without a trace Feb. 28 constitutes a “grave national security crisis,” according to an investigative journalist. Local law enforcement said William Neil McCasland, 68, disappeared after leaving his Albuquerque, New Mexico, home on foot, leaving his phone behind in a missing persons investigation that has since been joined by the FBI.
AI Will (Save | Destroy) The World
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This whole fuss has the flavor of orchestrated media circus. Much the same flavor as "facebook whistleblower" and other recent shows.
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Anthropic sues to block Pentagon blacklisting over AI use restrictions
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Anthropic sues Trump admin. seeking to undo "supply chain risk" designation
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Anthropic sues Defense Department over supply chain risk designation
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Anthropic Sues U.S. Defense Department, Pete Hegseth for Targeting the Company
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Anthropic says Trump ban puts federal contractor partnerships 'in jeopardy'
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Anthropic sues Pentagon claiming supply chain risk label could cost billions
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Seven tech giants signed Trump's pledge to keep electricity costs from spiking
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Nvidia backs AI data center startup Nscale as it hits $14.6B valuation
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Revealed: UK's multibillion AI drive is built on 'phantom investments'
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Microsoft adds higher-priced Office tier with Copilot to juice sales with AI
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Shortages of crucial chip packaging material threatens AI accelerator supply
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Anthropic investors grow frustrated with CEO after feds ban AI startup
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GNU and the AI reimplementations
we are all happy to have Linux today, and the GNU user space, together with many other open source projects that followed a similar path. I believe rules must be applied both when we agree with their ends, and when we don’t.
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Moody humans should let AI handle bad public feedback first, study finds
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Masterpiece or cheap copy? Art historians and AI may not agree
Neo Gambling / Crypto con games
Economicon / Business / Finance
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Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures slammed as oil prices surge to over $100 a barrel
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WTI Crude over $100 a barrel after Iran US War Tensions refuse to calm
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Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is set to receive a $4 million bonus.
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Cargo thieves are stealing millions of dollars in tech hardware
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Wegovy and Ozempic owner dealt blow as next drug is branded 'obsolete'
Gubmint / Poilitcks / Law Making
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We are the world’s richest country, and yet our buses, parking lots, and city streets are filthy, chaotic, and threatening. Antisocial and abnormal behavior, open addiction, and mentally tortured people are common in almost every community regardless of size. It’s a primary reason why we shy away from dense walkable spaces and instead move towards suburban sprawl. People in the U.S. don’t respect, trust, or want to be around other random citizens, out of fear and disgust. Japanese/European style urbanism—density, fantastic public transport, mixed-use zoning, that so many American tourists admire—can't happen here because there is a fine line between vibrant streets and squalid ones, and that line is public trust. The U.S. is on the wrong side of it. Simply put, nobody wants to be accosted by a stranger, no matter how infrequent, and until that risk is close to nil, people will continue edging towards isolated living. It is why we “can’t have nice things” because we have to construct our infrastructure to be asshole-proof, and so we don’t build anything or build with a fortress mentality, stripping our public spaces down to the austere and utilitarian, emptying them of anything that can be vandalized.
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Florida Judge Rules Red Light Camera Tickets Are Unconstitutional
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White House blocks intelligence report warning of rising homeland terror threat
Trump
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Fox News apologizes for showing old video of a Donald Trump at transfer ceremony
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Energy secretary predicts rising oil prices due to Iran conflict will be temporary.
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Trump Is Backing a Stock-Trading Ban That Doesn't Ban Trading Stocks
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Noem’s deputy director of ICE bought thousands of vehicles that officers can’t use
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Trump says Iran 'war is complete,' talks to Putin
President Donald Trump on Monday said the war against Iran could be over soon, a CBS News reporter said, and separately Trump spoke to Russian leader Vladimir Putin in a call about the war, according to the Kremlin. “I think the war is very complete, pretty much,” Trump said, according to Weijia Jiang, CBS’ senior White House correspondent. “They have no navy, no communications, they’ve got no Air Force,” Trump said, according to Jiang, who posted about her interview with the president on X.
Democrats
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A Pair of Terrorists Targeted an Anti-Islam Protest. You Won't Believe How the Media Spun it.
A pair of apparent Islamic terrorists shouted “Allahu Akbar” after they lit and threw devices clad in black tape toward a group of Christians staging an anti-Islam protest outside of Muslim race-communist Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s mansion. Instead of reporting on the reality of the situation, the media and large left-wing social media accounts have decided to frame the attempted bombing as an attack on Mamdani himself.
Left Angst
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Alabama set to execute man who didn't kill anyone
Burton’s death sentence was possible because of a legal doctrine known as felony murder, which allows prosecutors to treat anyone involved in certain felonies, such as robbery or burglary, equally responsible for a killing that occurs during the crime, even if they did not commit the act themselves. n 1991, Burton was one of six men involved in the robbery of a AutoZone store in Talladega that ended with the murder of a customer, Doug Battle.
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Billionaires Are Swaying Elections in All Corners of America
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Jesse Jackson’s son blasts Obama, Biden for using father’s memorial to take shots at Trump.
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Democratic Leaders Struggle to Explain Their Past Support for Unilateral Presidential War Powers
The greatest face plant may have been Schiff’s appearance on “Real Time” with host Bill Maher. After Schiff denounced any attack without prior congressional approval, Maher read “This statement from the administration: ‘The president had the constitutional authority to direct the use of military force because he could reasonably determine that such use of force was in the national interest.’” He then asked Schiff, “That’s too vague for you?”
Schiff responded, “Totally vague…”
Mayer than dropped the H bomb: “Okay. Because that’s from Obama about Libya.”
The moment laid bare the towering hypocrisy of democrats who continued to support Obama after he attacked Libya without any suggested imminent threat to the United States and an open strategy of regime change. I represented members of Congress opposing that war over the absence of a declaration of war; most of the senior Democrats today refused to join that litigation.
Pelosi is especially hypocritical on the issue. She expressly declared that Obama did not need congressional authorization to launch unilateral attacks on Libya seeking regime change. She stated unequivocally that”I’m satisfied that the president has the authority to go ahead. I say that as one very protective of Congressional prerogative and consultation all along the way.” Reporters then followed up and pressed her if she really believed that a president could not only launch an unprovoked war but could also continue combat operations without congressional approval. Pelosi answered “yes.” This week, she made a ham-fisted effort to spin the contradiction. She told the media that the Iran and Libyan wars are “two completely different things. They’re not at all alike.”
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Trump's Canada Trade War Hits Jack Daniel's and Jim Beam with 'Devastating' Loss
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Lindsey Graham on US war on Iran:'We're going to make a tonne of money'
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Halo Actor Demands Trump's White House Remove Voice from 'War Porn' Video
Law Breaking / Police / Internal Security
External Security / Militaria / Diplomania
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‘World War Three’ bunker manufacturer: ‘I’m inundated with calls’
As war rages in Iran, Ron Hubbard is fielding inquiries from politicians and billionaires, including two members of Trump’s Cabinet
“I’ve been inundated with calls,” says Hubbard. Enquiries have gone up “tenfold” since the war broke out last Saturday. Hubbard claims two senior Cabinet members in the Trump administration are amongst his clients. "One of them texted me yesterday, asking me: ‘When will my bunker be ready?’”, he says.
With somewhat remarkable timing, Hubbard’s firm opened new offices in Dubai at the end of February. Just two days later, Iranian missiles rained down on the glitzy city as the Islamic Republic took revenge on the Gulf States for their support for the bombing campaign launched by the United States and Israel.
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Kuwaiti F/A-18's Triple Friendly Fire Shootdown Gets Stranger by the Day
The new video is also in line with our original assessment of the likely cause of the shootdowns, namely, tail-aspect missile shots made by smaller-yield weapons. As we noted at the time, under certain circumstances, if the Hornet employed passive heat-seeking missiles (AIM-9), the F-15E pilots may not have known they were being engaged until the weapon detonated.
An experienced former F/A-18 pilot talked to TWZ about the event and the new video, and concluded that the incident is, altogether, “very strange.” “I have genuinely no idea how someone could make this mistake,” the ex-Hornet driver continued. “Unless it’s something procedural and GCI [ground-control intercept] has messed up, talked him on, and he’s seen what he wanted to see … but even that’s bordering on implausible.”
Another fighter pilot’s analysis, seen in video below, questions whether the Kuwaiti pilot might even have gone rogue against an ally. That actually seems possible based on the evidence, but it is hard to believe.
World
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Australians must prove they are over 18 to access porn under new laws
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UK eyes powers to regulate tech without parliamentary scrutiny
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Ten years after the EU referendum, Britain has become more European
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South Korea to impose fuel price cap to shield economy from energy shock
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Drop in overseas workers is 'car crash' for UK hospitals and care homes
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Teenagers report for duty as Croatia reinstates conscription
Iran / Houthi
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Iranians describe scenes of catastrophe after Tehran's oil depots bombed
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Data Analysis of the State of the Iranian Conflict on March 8, 2026
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Syria's Kurds caution Iran's Kurds against allying with US against Tehran
- The USA has not been a good partner to the Kurds.
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Israel will target ‘every successor’ appointed by Iran’s Islamic regime, IDF warns.
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A New Spy Radio Signal Has Appeared. It's Broadcasting in Farsi
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US missile hit military base near Iran school, video analysis shows
the Tomahawk didn’t hit the school, it hit the naval base. And the video indicates that at that point, the school had already been struck. By what? We don’t know, but the one thing we know for sure is that it wasn’t the Tomahawk. My guess is that the military investigation will conclude that the school was struck by an errant Iranian missile, but by that time the left-wing press will have firmly implanted the assumption that it was ours.
Health / Medicine
Environment / Climate / Green Propaganda
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Ireland shuts last coal plant, becomes 15th coal-free country in Europe
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Fishing crews in the Atlantic keep accidentally dredging up chemical weapons
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New farm bill would condemn pigs to a lifetime in gestation crates
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he woods have turned hostile, or that foraging is an inherently reckless hobby in need of a blanket ban. The lesson is that knowledge is local. A mushroom that is safe in one region, one tradition, one language can become a lethal lookalike in another. California’s parks are full of convincing impostors, especially within the Amanita world, where edible “Caesar’s”-type mushrooms prized in Mexico can resemble dangerous relatives to the untrained eye. Foraging culture doesn’t deserve to be punished for an education gap; it deserves to be met with better outreach, better translation, more mycological literacy, and yes, a little more respect for a fungus that isn’t out to get anyone, only doing what it has always done: fruiting when it can, indifferent to the stories we tell about it.
