the "Headline That Caught My Attention or the WTF" thread

NBC News

Couple finds rare coins worth over $800,000 while renovating their kitchen floors​


Ronnie Koenig, TODAY and Joyann Jeffrey, TODAY
Mon, October 17, 2022 at 8:52 AM


A couple in England had the surprise of a lifetime when they discovered a stash of rare coins underneath the kitchen floorboards during a renovation project.

Gregory Edmund, an auctioneer and British coin specialist at Spink and Son, said that the coins were discovered by the North Yorkshire couple, who initially thought they had stumbled on a piece of electrical cable while working on their 18th century home in 2019.

"Why they decided to touch it who knows, but when they did, they realized it was a gold disc and there were hundreds more beneath!” Edmunds said in an email.

The haul of rare coins were recently sold at auction for $852,380 against a provisional sale estimate of $231,390. According to The Yorkshire Post, the coins have been linked to a Hull merchant family, the Maisters.

The coins date from 1610 until 1727, from the reigns of King James I to King George I. The period covers the time of the marriage of Sarah Maister to Joseph Fernley. According to The Sun, Fernley died in 1725 and Maister remained in the area until her death in 1745.

Over 200 years later, the Yorkshire couple discovered the hidden treasure.
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The Yorkshire Post, the coins have been linked to a Hull merchant family, the Maisters.
That's where the Brit calls home!!

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1666032392336.webp


 
Associated Press

Police: Campaign signs found booby-trapped with razor blades​


NEWTOWN, Pa. (AP) — Political signs in southeastern Pennsylvania have been found booby-trapped with razor blades, which resulted in sliced fingers for one resident, police said.

Upper Makefield Township police said Sunday that a campaign sign for Democratic gubernatorial candidate Josh Shapiro was placed without permission on someone's property, and while trying to remove it the resident found that razor blades had been “placed around the perimeter of the sign."

“Obviously, this was designed to inflict punishment on anyone who attempted to remove the sign," police said in a social media post.

Police said they inspected all campaign signs and found razor blades placed around the perimeter of signs for two other Democratic candidates, John Fetterman and Ashley Ehasz. Fetterman is running for U.S. Senate and Ehasz for U.S. House.

Police said their investigation continues and warned residents to exercise caution in removing signs placed on their property without permission, and to call them if “any implements" have been installed on the signs.

“Over the past election cycles, we have dealt with theft of signs, vandalism of signs, neighbor disputes, etc., but this is the first time we have dealt with this situation,” police in the Bucks County community said, calling it “totally unacceptable and a disgusting act."

“No matter your political affiliation, no matter your candidate preference, resorting to this type of depravity is unacceptable and criminal. We can do better and must," police said.
 
Brown bears/grizzlies get all the "Danger Bear" attention, but it's a fact that there are more yearly Black Bear attacks on humans. Granted, part of that equation is the fact that there are many more black bears in closer proximation to humans. However, one must understand that bears are a significant threat to us puny humans, especially when you encounter a sow with her "cute" cubs!!

Bear mauls 10-year-old in grandparents’ Connecticut backyard​

pressherald.com/2022/10/18/bear-mauls-10-year-old-in-grandparents-connecticut-backyard/

By Associated Press October 19, 2022

MORRIS, Conn. — A 250-pound black bear mauled a 10-year-old boy playing in his grandparents’ backyard in Connecticut and tried to drag him away before the animal was fatally shot by police, authorities said.

The child was attacked at about 11 a.m. Sunday in the town of Morris, the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection said. He was taken to a hospital for treatment of injuries that were not life-threatening.

Officers from the state police and DEEP’s environmental conservation force responded and shot the bear, authorities said.

The boy’s grandfather described the harrowing attack to the Republican-American of Waterbury. James Butler said his grandson was playing near a trampoline when the bear emerged from thick woods behind the house.

“I heard him yell ‘bear’ and when I looked up, I saw his leg in the bear’s mouth and the bear trying to drag him across the lawn,” Butler said.

Butler, who uses a wheelchair, wheeled his chair toward the bear and threw a metal bar at its head, he told the newspaper.

The bear released the boy but then grabbed the child a second time and used its claws to try to roll the boy onto his back, the grandfather said.

A neighbor alerted by the boy’s screams raced over and scared the bear off by brandishing a pipe and yelling, Butler said.

Once Butler and his grandson were safely inside the house, the bear returned, walking up a wheelchair ramp and peering at them through screen door, Butler said.

“We thought he was coming through the screen,” Butler said. “No doubt he was a big threat.”
The bear was fatally shot by police a short time later.

Butler, and his wife, Christina Anderson, who was inside the house when the bear attacked, said the boy suffered a puncture wound to one thigh, bite marks on a foot and ankle and claw marks on his back.

State biologist Jenny Dixon said the risk of negative bear-human interactions is increasing as Connecticut’s expanding bear population becomes acclimated to humans and develops a taste for their food.
 
This article is a big DUH at Chez Roccus since the Admiral is the world's biggest biting insect walking smorgasbord!! If we're outside without any DEET, there will be a cloud of mosquitoes, black flies, etc. around her, while I'm left unmolested...

Are you a mosquito magnet? It could be your smell​

pressherald.com/2022/10/18/are-you-a-mosquito-magnet-it-could-be-your-smell/

By MADDIE BURAKOFF October 18, 2022
Mosquito_Magnets_39900-1666113818.jpg

NEW YORK — A new study finds that some people really are “mosquito magnets” and it probably has to do with the way they smell.

The researchers found that people who are most attractive to mosquitoes produce a lot of certain chemicals on their skin that are tied to smell. And bad news for mosquito magnets: The bloodsuckers stay loyal to their favorites over time.

“If you have high levels of this stuff on your skin, you’re going to be the one at the picnic getting all the bites,” said study author Leslie Vosshall, a neurobiologist at Rockefeller University in New York.
There’s a lot of folklore about who gets bitten more but many claims aren’t backed up with strong evidence, said Vosshall.

To put mosquito magnetism to the test, the researchers designed an experiment pitting people’s scents against each other, explained study author Maria Elena De Obaldia. Their findings were published Tuesday in the journal Cell.

They asked 64 volunteers from the university and nearby to wear nylon stockings around their forearms to pick up their skin smells. The stockings were put in separate traps at the end of a long tube, then dozens of mosquitos were released.

“They would basically swarm to the most attractive subjects,” De Obaldia said. “It became very obvious right away.”

Scientists held a round-robin tournament and ended up with a striking gap: The biggest mosquito magnet was around 100 times more attractive to the mosquitoes than the last place finisher.

The experiment used the Aedes aegypti mosquito that spreads diseases like yellow fever, Zika and dengue. Vosshall said she’d expect similar results from other kinds, but would need more research to confirm.

By testing the same people over multiple years, the study showed that these big differences stick around, said Matt DeGennaro, a neurogeneticist at Florida International University who was not involved with the research.

“Mosquito magnets seem to remain mosquito magnets,” DeGennaro said.

Out of the favorites, the researchers found a common factor: Mosquito magnets had high levels of certain acids on their skin. These “greasy molecules” are part of the skin’s natural moisturizing layer, and people produce them in different amounts, Vosshall said. The healthy bacteria that live on the skin eat up these acids and produce part of our skin’s odor profile, she said.

You can’t get rid of these acids without damaging your skin health too, said Vosshall, who is paid by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and serves as its chief scientific officer. The institute also supports The Associated Press’ Health and Science Department.

But the research could help find new methods to repel mosquitoes, said Jeff Riffell, a neurobiologist at the University of Washington who was not involved with the study. There may be ways to tinker with skin bacteria and change humans’ tantalizing smells, he said.

Still, figuring out ways to fight off mosquitoes isn’t easy, Riffell said, since the critters have evolved to be “lean, mean biting machines.”

The study proved this point: Researchers also did the experiment with mosquitoes whose genes were edited to damage their sense of smell. The bugs still flocked to the same mosquito magnets.

“Mosquitoes are resilient,” Vosshall said. “They have many backup plans to be able to find us and bite us.”
 
Damn evolution, it's a double-edged sword...

How the ‘Black Death’ Left Its Genetic Mark on Future Generations

Scientists have discovered several genetic variants that protect Europeans from the bubonic plague — but also increase the risk of immune disorders.

Scientists examined the DNA of people who lived centuries ago, extracting genetic material from human remains buried in three London cemeteries.

Scientists examined the DNA of people who lived centuries ago, extracting genetic material from human remains buried in three London cemeteries.Credit...Museum of London Archaeology

Many Europeans carry genetic mutations that protected their ancestors from the bubonic plague, scientists reported on Wednesday in the journal Nature.

When the Black Death struck Europe in 1348, the bacterial infection killed large swaths of people across the continent, driving the strongest pulse of natural selection yet measured in humans, the new study found.

It turns out that certain genetic variants made people far more likely to survive the plague. But this protection came with a price: People who inherit the plague-resistant mutations run a higher risk of immune disorders such as Crohn’s disease.

“These are the unfortunate side effects of long-term selection for protection,” said Hendrik Poinar, a geneticist at McMaster University in Canada and an author of the new study.

Bubonic plague is caused by Yersinia pestis, a species of bacteria spread by fleas. Although the plague has been infecting people for thousands of years, it struck medieval Europe with intense ferocity that led scientists to wonder if the Black Death had changed the genetic makeup of Europe.

“We would expect to see a major shift,” Dr. Poinar said.

The idea makes basic evolutionary sense: When a lot of organisms die off, the survivors will pass down mutations that protected them from death. During the Industrial Revolution, for example, peppered moths changed from a light speckled coloring to dark. That shift was driven by the coal smoke that blackened the trees where the moths rested. Dark moths were better able to hide from birds and survived to pass on their genes.

The Italian artist Raphael and the engraver Marcantonio Raimondi produced “The Plague” (Il Morbetto) in 15 12 or 1513. It captures the horror of the bubonic plague, which devastated Italy during the Black Death and then repeatedly returned over the next 300 years.

The Italian artist Raphael and the engraver Marcantonio Raimondi produced “The Plague” (Il Morbetto) in 15 12 or 1513. It captures the horror of the bubonic plague, which devastated Italy during the Black Death and then repeatedly returned over the next 300 years.Credit...National Gallery of Art

When the Black Death struck, there were no evolutionary biologists to document its impact. In the 1990s, some scientists searched for clues by studying the DNA of living Europeans. A mutation in one gene, called CCR5, is present in 10 percent of Europeans but rare among other people. In 1998, researchers proposed that the gene might have offered protection during the Black Death.

But later research showed it was impossible to rule out that the CCR5 mutation spread in response to another disease at another time in history. “It’s something that a lot of people talk about but is very hard to demonstrate,” said Luis Barreiro, a population geneticist at the University of Chicago and an author of the new study.

Instead of studying living people, Dr. Barreiro, Dr. Poinar and their colleagues examined the DNA of people who lived centuries ago, extracting genetic material from human remains buried in three London cemeteries. They found fragments of DNA in 318 skeletons that had lived between 1000 and 1500. The remains included 42 victims of the Black Death.

Comparing the bones from before and after the plague hit, the scientists found a striking difference in DNA: Hundreds of mutations in genes involved in immunity became more common after the epidemic.

This shift was not proof on its own that the mutations conferred some evolutionary advantage. Biologists have long known that mutations can become more common in a population thanks to the vagaries of history — a process called genetic drift.

It can be challenging to determine if a common mutation came to be because of genetic drift or natural selection. One way to tell the difference is speed: Under extreme conditions, natural selection can make a mutation spread far faster than genetic drift can.

To compare natural selection and genetic drift, Dr. Berreiro and his colleagues went back to the DNA of the Londoners for another look. They took advantage of the fact that large stretches of our DNA contain no working genes. Mutations that strike those stretches are unlikely to cause any harm. They’re also unlikely to bring any benefit. They only spread thanks to genetic drift.

Dr. Barreiro and his colleagues found that some of these neutral mutations became more common after the Black Death. But 35 of the mutations in immune genes spread far faster than the neutral ones — so fast that only natural selection could account for their success.

Researchers extracted DNA from the remains of people buried in the East Smithfield plague pits, which were used for mass burials in 1348 and 1349.

Researchers extracted DNA from the remains of people buried in the East Smithfield plague pits, which were used for mass burials in 1348 and 1349.Credit...Museum of London Archaeology

The findings provide evidence that pandemics may have shaped susceptibility to disease and suggest that they may continue to do so in the future.

The findings provide evidence that pandemics may have shaped susceptibility to disease and suggest that they may continue to do so in the future. Credit...Museum of London Archaeology

Researchers at McMaster University extracted DNA from fragments of bone dating back centuries to look for genes that provided protection against the Black Death.

Researchers at McMaster University extracted DNA from fragments of bone dating back centuries to look for genes that provided protection against the Black Death. Credit...Matt Clarke/McMaster University

For another test, the scientists repeated their experiment, this time in Denmark.

They found DNA in the skeletons of 198 Danes who lived between 850 and 1800. Mutations in immune genes also rapidly spread in Denmark after the Black Death, they found. When the scientists lined up the mutations from the London and Denmark samples, they found four that had spread in both populations. These four mutations spread so quickly in London and Denmark that they must have provided an impressive protection against the plague.

The researchers found that carrying two protective versions of a gene called ERAP2, for example, made people 40 percent likelier to survive the Black Death — the largest evolutionary advantage ever found in humans, Dr. Barreiro said.

“It’s actually shocking,” said David Enard, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Arizona who was not involved in the new study.

Dr. Enard said the study was particularly compelling thanks to the way the scientists ruled out genetic drift. “What really gives this study its power has to do with this whole approach of designing careful comparisons,” he said.

ERAP2 makes a protein that’s involved in the immune response to invading bacteria and viruses. When an immune cell swallows a pathogen, it presents proteins from the invader on its surface. They serve as an alarm to the rest of the immune system. ERAP2’s job is to snip off bits of the foreign proteins to prepare them for their display.

Billions of people have a version of the ERAP2 gene with a mutation that makes it impossible for cells to make its protein. But people with this version of the gene don’t suffer major harm. That’s most likely because humans have many other genes that help present foreign proteins to the immune system.

During the Black Death, Dr. Barreiro and his colleagues found, natural selection favored the working version of ERAP2. To better understand why, they mixed Yersinia bacteria with immune cells from people with both versions of the gene.

The researchers found that two working copies of ERAP2 allowed the immune cells to wipe out the bacteria. Without it, the cells did a significantly worse job.

But that version of the gene also increases the risk of Crohn’s disease, a disorder in which the immune system attacks friendly bacteria in the gut and causes damaging inflammation. Dr. Berreiro said it was possible that ERAP2 could be too good at its job, sounding the alarm against friends and enemies alike. The other mutations he and his colleagues identified from ancient DNA have also been linked to immune disorders.

Dr. Berreiro and his colleagues are continuing to study the genes that evolution favored during the Black Death, not only to understand that chapter in history, but also to understand the genes themselves. The fact that they underwent such strong natural selection most likely means they are important in the fight against diseases — and perhaps not just the plague.

“It was important in the past, and it most likely is going to be important today,” Dr. Berreiro said.
 
Too funny, EPA slams many of those home reno programs. I wish the FTC would slam them too. Far too many folks think that what the shows show for reno costs are actually close to reality. I'm sure that's something any of you hardworking folks in the reno/landscaping/hardscaping business would appreciate!

Kennebec Property Services — the ‘Maine Cabin Masters’ — settles with US EPA over violations of lead paint safety rules​

pressherald.com/2022/10/19/maine-cabin-masters-settles-with-epa-over-alleged-violations-of-lead-paint-safety-rules/

By Chris Bouchard October 19, 2022
10377783_20191003_Cabin_Masters_Headquarters_Manchester_936279.jpg

Chase Morrill, one of the stars of the “Maine Cabin Masters” reality television program, pounds a nail in 2019 into the floor of the farmhouse his family bought in Manchester. Kennebec Property Services LLC, also known as the “Maine Cabin Masters,” reached a settlement recently with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency over lead paint safety violations. Andy Molloy/Kennebec Journal file photo

The company behind the home renovation television program “Maine Cabin Masters” has paid a $16,500 penalty for violating federal lead paint safety rules at five residences in central Maine.

Properties impacted by lead paint safety violations​

• 311 Wanser Lane, Belgrade
• 87 Williamson Road, Manchester
• 76 Brickett Point Estates, Oakland
• 42 Osprey Lane, West Gardiner
• Clary Lake Lane, Whitefield (no street number provided)

Kennebec Property Services LLC, also known as the “Maine Cabin Masters,” reached the settlement Tuesday with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

“Maine Cabin Masters” is a reality TV show on the Discovery network that focuses on the renovation and refurbishing of camps and cabins across the state.

The EPA accused the company of renovating five properties in 2020 without following the federal agency’s lead renovation, repair and painting regulations. The rules, put into place in 2008, are designed to protect people from exposure to lead from dust that can form when surfaces that have been coated with lead-based paint peel, crack or are disturbed.

The five affected residences were built before 1978, the year lead paint was banned for residential uses across the country.

The federal agency said those involved with “Maine Cabin Masters” failed to obtain lead-safe recertification before beginning renovations, and did not assign a certified renovator to the projects.

The company also did not provide property owners with an EPA-approved information pamphlet about lead hazards, and did not maintain records showing its compliance with the rules, according to the EPA.
The five affected properties are in Belgrade, Manchester, Oakland, West Gardiner and Whitefield, according to a spokesperson for the EPA’s New England office.

The company has since obtained the needed certification.

As part of the settlement, Kennebec Property Services has paid the $16,500 penalty and agreed to help raise awareness about lead safety measures in at least three episodes of its upcoming television season and one episode of its “From the Wood Shed” podcast.

It will also place information about the rule on its website, according to the settlement.

“We have worked collaboratively with the EPA to address their concerns,” said Jen Reese, business development manager for Kennebec Cabin Co., which is based in Manchester and bills itself as “the home of the ‘Maine Cabin Masters,'” including a retail store stocked with Maine art, crafts, tools and “Maine Cabin Masters” merchandise.

Lead exposure can cause irreversible and lifelong health complications, including developmental delays, difficulty learning, behavioral issues and neurological damage, particularly in children, according to the EPA and U.S. Centers for Disease Control & Prevention.

“Lead exposure for children is extremely dangerous and entirely preventable. Complying with federal lead paint laws is essential to protect children across the country and is a top priority for EPA,” Larry Starfield, acting administrator for the EPA’s Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance, said in a statement released Tuesday to the news media.

“Television shows that demonstrate home remodeling have a special responsibility to model lead-safe work practices and help their viewers understand common-sense measures to protect themselves and their children from lead hazards.”

The EPA said it has also settled lead paint and renovation safety cases with other programs airing on the same network, including “Two Chicks and a Hammer,” “Magnolia Homes,” “Texas Flip N Move,” “Rehab Addict” and “Bargain Mansions.”
 
The EPA said it has also settled lead paint and renovation safety cases with other programs airing on the same network, including “Two Chicks and a Hammer,” “Magnolia Homes,” “Texas Flip N Move,” “Rehab Addict” and “Bargain Mansions.”

Does someone at the EPA watch TV all day trying to make cases?
 

Glad I don't live in Virginia...


There’s Something in the Water in Virginia. Before You Say ‘Yuck,’ Wait.​

A crucial aquifer is running low, so officials are pumping in treated sewage. It’s an increasingly common strategy as heavy demand and climate change strain water supplies.

A tightly framed photo of two hands holding a clear plastic cup.  The cup is filled with lumpy green sludge.

A sediment sample taken this week in Newport News, Va. A planned recharge well at the site will inject additional treated wastewater into the Potomac Aquifer. Credit...Kristen Zeis for The New York Times

Virginia doesn’t have a megadrought like some parts of the United States, but it has water problems all the same: Homes and businesses in the Hampton Roads region, in the southeastern corner of the state, are drawing groundwater faster than it can be replenished. The situation has gotten so bad that the earth is sinking in some places.

Officials, though, think they might have found a solution in the sewers. Every day, the region’s sanitation system takes a million gallons of treated wastewater and pumps it back into the Potomac Aquifer, a major source of drinking water for the area. And there are plans to increase that to 100 million gallons in the coming years.

Around the country, cities and towns are increasingly turning to treated wastewater to augment their supplies of drinking water. The number of drinking-water reuse projects has quadrupled over the past two decades, according to data collected by the National Alliance for Water Innovation, a research program funded by the United States Department of Energy.

“It is now necessary for us to consider options that would, in previous generations, be considered unthinkable,” said Michael Kiparsky, director of the Wheeler Water Institute at the University of California, Berkeley.

In the case of coastal Virginia, the goal is to stabilize groundwater to address two increasingly urgent problems. First, underground water depletion has led the ground to slowly sink and collapse in some places.

Homes and industries in the area draw around 155 million gallons of groundwater each day. Natural replenishment is much slower in confined aquifers like the Potomac, where layers of impermeable clays and rocks beneath the surface make it hard for rainwater to seep back into the ground.

Even if people stopped drawing groundwater today, it could still take thousands of years for the aquifer to refill, said Mark Bennett, who runs the Virginia and West Virginia Water Science Center for the United States Geological Survey.

Meanwhile, without enough water to help support the ground, underlying sediments fall in on themselves and the surface collapses.

The second big problem is that, as more and more freshwater gets pumped out, the loss of pressure has left the aquifer vulnerable to saltwater contamination as denser seawater encroaches underground.

In low-lying coastal areas like Hampton Roads, climate change exacerbates that problem. That’s because as temperatures rise, ocean water expands in volume, causing sea levels to rise. And, glaciers on land melt at a faster rate, adding even more water to the oceans.

That all leads to increased flood risk and helps saltwater intrude into freshwater sources.

A number of cities in the Hampton Roads region, like Virginia Beach and Norfolk, are less than 10 feet above sea level on average. Sea levels have already risen nearly 18 inches in the region in the past century, according to data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

In response to the growing threats, the Hampton Roads Sanitation District, which manages wastewater in the region, began taking a more direct approach to groundwater replenishment in 2018 with a project called the Sustainable Water Initiative for Tomorrow, or SWIFT.

Although other water authorities around the country, like the Orange County Water District in California, have injected treated wastewater into underground aquifers to serve as barriers against seawater intrusion, the project was the first effort to do so in Virginia.

In fact, the state had no regulatory framework in place to oversee the underground injection of water. So, the sanitation district had to push for legislation to create oversight — an unusual situation, Dr. Kiparsky said, because you rarely see water districts asking for more regulation.

Today, the district’s sewage systems capture wastewater and send it through wastewater treatment plants to remove nutrients and bacteria.

Then, each day at the SWIFT research center in Suffolk, Va., a million gallons of that water goes through additional treatment that disinfects, filters out harmful contaminants and pathogens, and brings the water up to drinking quality. The advanced treatment plant also adjusts things like acidity and dissolved oxygen levels so the water is appropriate for the aquifer.

It is essentially a “tricked-out drinking water plant,” said Charles Bott, the district’s director of water technology and research.

The treated water goes into the Potomac Aquifer via a recharge well 12 inches in diameter that releases it at intermittent levels between 500 and 1,400 feet below the surface. The aquifer acts as an environmental buffer, essentially providing another level of treatment as the water filters slowly through the soils, a process that can remove some pathogens and micropollutants.

By 2032, the district expects to treat and pump up to 100 million gallons of wastewater each day into the aquifer that would otherwise be released into the Elizabeth, James or York rivers. In addition to shoring up the aquifer, the project should also, when fully implemented, eliminate about 90 percent of the district’s wastewater discharge.

Turning wastewater into drinkable water is expensive. The next full-scale SWIFT plant, which will treat up to 16 million gallons of wastewater a day, is expected to cost upward of $650 million, funded in part by customer fees and loans from the Environmental Protection Agency. That does not include maintenance and day-to-day operation, which will cost an estimated $7.2 million a year.

But the sanitation district has calculated that putting wastewater through more intense treatment will help it get ahead on the costs of complying with increasingly stringent rules regulating pollution from the hundreds of treatment plants that regularly discharge wastewater into the Chesapeake Bay.

Planners expect the rules, which are mainly focused on excess nutrients that can harm marine life, to become more strict over time, said Jamie Mitchell, the Hampton Roads district’s chief of technical services. It wouldn’t be cost effective to make incremental upgrades “every five or 10 years to address new regulations,” she said.

So far, the system appears to be “a win-win-win situation,” said Dr. Kiparsky, because it addresses a range of issues: Land subsidence and saltwater intrusion, nutrient pollution in the Chesapeake Bay and growing costs for the district.

Even though the project is still in the early stages, researchers at the United States Geological Survey have already noted slight improvements in the aquifer.

Not long ago, such an idea would probably have been dismissed as too expensive and too unpleasant. Efforts in the 1990s to develop water reuse in San Diego and Los Angeles, for instance, were beaten back by activists who denounced what they called a “toilet to tap” system.

Today, the growing acceptance of wastewater reuse projects reflects a calculus that local governments increasingly have to consider as they confront pressures on water supply from climate change and population growth — even in the regions that don’t face prolonged drought.

There are similar projects in California and other drought-stricken states like Texas that, in some cases, impose mandatory water restrictions on homes and businesses to cut down on consumption. Some of them even directly route treated wastewater for use as drinking water, without an environmental buffer like an aquifer.

One of the big advantages of wastewater, Dr. Kiparsky noted, is that there’s always a reliable supply. He said using it to recharge aquifers was a complex but effective way of accomplishing a basic goal: returning water to where it came from.

“It’s closing the loop on the urban water cycle,” he said.
 

How a third of all fish caught in the ocean is turned into something that no one eats​


The oceans are running out of fish. To slow down that problem, environmentalists pushed for fish farming, or aquaculture. This was supposed to be the solution, but it ended up being a problem on its own. This industry became too big and too hungry. To fatten the farmed fish faster, they started feeding them high-protein pellets, called fish meal, made from massive amounts of fish caught at sea and pulverized into powder. Now, more than 30% of all marine life pulled from the sea goes to feed other onland fish.

To explore this upside-down situation, the Outlaw Ocean Project, a nonprofit journalism organization based in Washington, D.C., traveled to West Africa for an offshore patrol where hundreds of Chinese and other fishing boats trawl for fish meal production, cratering the local food source and polluting the coastline.
:mad:
 

:oops:

A dubious distinction at best...........

An Iranian man dubbed the "world’s dirtiest man" has died at the age of 94, according to state media.

Amou Haji died Sunday in the village of Dezhgah, according to the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA). He had refused to bathe for more than 60 years, fearing it would make him sick.

He gained notoriety around the globe for his unofficial title as "world’s dirtiest man," and his life was even chronicled in a 2013 documentary called "The Strange Life of Amou Haji."
 
A recall on Clorox cleaning products containing bacteria, manufactured over 21 months, WTF????

Clorox recalls cleaning products that may contain bacteria​

pressherald.com/2022/10/25/clorox-recalls-cleaning-products-that-may-contain-bacteria/

associated press October 26, 2022

OAKLAND, Calif. — If you’re thinking of wiping down your kitchen with that bottle of Pine-Sol all-purpose cleaner under your sink – stop. It may contain bacteria that could cause serious illness in people with compromised immune systems.

The Clorox Company said Tuesday it has recalled its scented multi-surface cleaners and all-purpose cleaners. The recall doesn’t include its iconic original pine-scented Pine-Sol, which is its only product registered as a disinfectant.

The products recalled by the Oakland, California-based company also include scented CloroxPro Pine-Sol All Purpose Cleaners and Clorox Professional Pine-Sol Lemon Fresh Cleaners, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission said in a statement.

The products “may contain bacteria, including Pseudomonas aeruginosa, an environmental organism found widely in soil and water,” the commission said.

“The bacteria can enter the body if inhaled, through the eyes, or through a break in the skin. People with healthy immune systems are usually not affected by the bacteria,” the commission said.

Testing identified bacteria in the recalled products produced between January 2021 and September 2022, the commission said. It said consumers should take pictures of the 12 digit UPC code and the date code, throw the product in its container in the trash, and contact the company for a refund.
 


:oops:

A woman in Indonesia's Jambi province was killed and swallowed whole by a python, according to local reports.

Jahrah, a rubber-tapper reportedly in her 50s, had made her way to work at a rubber plantation on Sunday morning.

She was reported missing after failing to return that night, and search parties sent out to find her. A day later villagers found a python with what appeared to be a large stomach.

Locals later killed the snake and found her body inside.

"The victim was found in the snake's stomach," Betara Jambi police chief AKP S Harefa told local media outlets, adding that her body appeared to be largely intact when it was found.


He said the victim's husband had on Sunday night found some of her clothes and tools she had used at the rubber plantation, leading him to call on a search party.

After the snake - which was at least 5m (16ft) long - was spotted on Monday, villagers then caught and killed it to verify the victim's identity.

"After they cut the belly apart, they found it was Jahrah inside," Mr Harefa told CNN Indoneisa.

Though such incidents are rare, this is not the first time someone in Indonesia has been killed and eaten by a python. Two similar deaths were reported in the country between 2017 and 2018.
 

How a Black-Owned Condom Brand Pitches Itself as the Right Fit​

To distinguish itself in a crowded market, B Condoms floods its Instagram account with sex and wellness tips, many of them explicit.



Jason Panda cares deeply about branding. During a recent video interview, the logo for his company, B Condoms, was visible in no fewer than four places: on a blue wall behind him in an Atlanta warehouse, on his white T-shirt, on a condom package that just so happened to be within arm’s reach and on a cornhole board in a nearby storage room.

Just as important is where he hides the logo. His company’s Instagram page features explainer-type posts with titles like “8 things women really want in bed” and “Let’s normalize laughing during sex” — two of the more printable headlines from the account. The final slide of each post features a photo of condom boxes with the words “A Black-Owned Condom Company” in bold letters above them, underlined in red.

“You may not know about us, but when you go through those slides because they’re interesting, they’re captivating, they bring you in,” Mr. Panda said. “When you hit that last slide, you’re like, ‘Oh wow, they’re a Black-owned company.’”

In recent months the brand has signed deals with Walmart, Target and a majority of CVS drugstores, the company said. The stores are physical spaces for what Mr. Panda, 43, calls the “David and Goliath” struggles that he’s been fighting since founding B Condoms in 2011. Its three biggest competitors — Durex, Trojan and Lifestyles — are owned by companies that are worth billions; B Condoms is independently owned.

Beyond B Condoms’ platinum packaging — an implicit riposte to Trojan’s signature color (“Gold is old,” Mr. Panda said) — its marketing is notably different from its competitors. According to Mr. Panda, the brand is predominantly focused on appealing to Black Americans, with Instagram posts that discuss sexuality and sexual wellness in frank terms.

“It was very interesting to see actual Black-owned sexual health,” said Brittany Wooten, 31, a B Condoms customer in Phoenix. “And I’ve never heard or seen anybody before mention anything about Black condoms or any sexual health, reproductive or that kind of stuff when it comes to Black-owned.”

Among the account’s roughly 200 posts are oral sex advice, a post explaining that flirting does not equate to consent and a video in which interviewees recall their first orgasm. Goody Howard, a sex educator in Dallas, said the fact that the posts had a practical bent stood out.

“They are focusing on pleasure education,” Ms. Howard said. “I think Trojan does a kind of good job about insinuating pleasure, but B Condoms is actually giving you actionable items: ‘This is how you do this.’”

The posts, which frequently center on women’s pleasure, typically have at least a few commenters expressing relief that someone is giving out such advice. “I know a couple of men that need to read this,” reads one reply beneath a post about sex tips. “Love this and I wish this was taught more in schools,” says another.

B Condoms has focused its energies on its Instagram, where it has at least 25,000 more followers than Trojan’s and Durex’s U.S. accounts.

The emphasis on social media marketing makes sense: Instagram is not regulated as tightly as television and radio are, and it offers the possibility of more direct engagement with potential customers. And as a digitally native brand, B Condoms may have an edge on competitors that were already decades old when social media became ubiquitous. (A representative for Durex said in a statement that the brand “has been heavily active in social media marketing for more than a decade.”)

As it did for millions of others, social media took on increased importance during the pandemic for condom brands as well, according to Mia Xu, a researcher at the N.Y.U. School of Global Public Health.

“Especially during Covid, brands realized that they had great reach and potentially a lot more buyers because everyone was at home,” Ms. Xu said. “Basically every single brand really pushed out ads on a weekly basis. Before, they were posting once a week to once a month.”

Ms. Xu was the lead author of a study that found that posts pertaining to sex were a positive predictor of likes on Instagram and YouTube, and providing sexual health education had a positive association with likes on Instagram. According to the study, “the sexual health education and resources provided by condom brands have significant reach and positive reception.” Ms. Xu noted that B Condoms was “talking basically about every single aspect of sexual health — even ones that are not related to condoms.”

The largest three condom brands all have sex-positive posts ranging from informative to playful (a recent Durex tweet: “Want to seggz?”) that date well before March, when Mr. Panda says the B Condom account started posting raunchier Instagram slides. Its messaging is generally more reliant on sex education, though: Whereas Trojan’s and Durex’s feeds are sprinkled with collaborations with social media influencers and celebrities, the B Condoms feed features video clips from community and H.B.C.U. outreach events that Mr. Panda, a Morehouse alumnus, helps organize.

With its small, 10-person staff and comparatively tiny budget, B Condoms chooses to focus its resources on Black Americans, Mr. Panda said, citing the disproportionately high rates of H.I.V. and teen pregnancies among people of color.

Mr. Panda said he spent his formative years in Brockton, Mass., south of Boston, watching those issues in real time. (At his high school, there were “so many kids with kids,” Mr. Panda recalled.) Another inspiration was a conversation about the effects of H.I.V. on Black Americans that he had with his mother, who ran a drug- and alcohol-detox facility. Mr. Panda said that after feeling unfulfilled during his time as a corporate lawyer in New York, he quit and founded B Condoms with two other Morehouse alumni. In those early days, he ran the operation from his apartment.

“I never saw condoms as a career, but after I got into it, it made perfect sense,” he said.

Without a model for a successful Black-owned condom brand, Mr. Panda said he spent a good portion of B Condoms’ existence teaching himself “every aspect of this business.” He recalled that in the earlier stages he used a storage facility in the Bronx because a warehouse was too expensive, and that he would place the condoms in bodegas for free because he couldn’t find any buyers. By the time he moved operations to Atlanta, in June 2020, his co-founders had left the company.

Mr. Panda said B Condoms may have to tone down its Instagram posts as the brand becomes “corporate.” During the interview, he declined to reveal who was actually responsible for the brand’s recent posts, saying that he was worried a larger company might pluck them away with the promise of a better salary.

“We’re rewriting the rules with a lot of this stuff,” Mr. Panda said.
 
no surprise

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So one of the charges is Elder Abuse. Looked up California law and it states (
California Criminal law Under Penal Code § 368, elder abuse occurs when a person knows that victim is an elder then inflicts unjustifiable physical pain or mental suffering on the elder or willfully causes or permits that elder to suffer. It also covers situations where a person willfully causes or permits an elder to be placed in a situation in which their health is endangered.)
Well that would mean David is not an intruder but knew Paul. I’m waiting for the kink to come out that Paul was having a perverted fling gone bad better known as a “Giggity”.
 
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