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Jul 23rd, 2021, 6:02 pm
Police responding to report of loose alligator in condo building find gold statue

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July 22 (UPI)
-- Police in British Columbia responded Thursday to a report of an alligator loose inside a high-rise condo building, but arrived to find a realistic sculpture.

Constable Jason Douchette, of the Vancouver Police Department, tweeted that officers were dispatched about 7 a.m. Thursday to a condominium building in which a woman reported she was hiding in a stairwell from a loose gator inside the building.

Douchette said officers were relieved to discover the alligator was a "realistic fake" -- a gold-colored sculpture.

He said the sculpture, while the wrong color for an alligator, was sufficiently detailed to cause a person to panic.

"Running up [a] secluded stairwell, rounding the corner and suddenly coming face to face with this ... 'clean up, aisle one' for me," he wrote.
Jul 23rd, 2021, 6:02 pm

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Jul 23rd, 2021, 6:20 pm
Waitress in Tears After Receiving Thank You Note From Widow Eating Alone

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A waitress arrived at work last weekend unaware of the fact that her kind service was about to positively affect someone's day in a major way.

On Tuesday, Megan King (@alienpostarr) shared two special photos with her Twitter followers in a now-viral tweet with more than 600,000 likes. The first is a picture of a handwritten note she'd received with her tip. The second is a picture of her reaction to the note, which shows King smiling and in tears.

The note reads: "Thank you very much for your kind service. This was my first time eating out alone since my husband passed. I was hoping I could get through it."

King's tweet reads simply: "in pain."

in pain pic.twitter.com/lgjt12Vamx

— ☆ mother inferior ☆ (@alienpopstarr) July 21, 2021

Though she didn't post about the exchange until Tuesday, King told Newsweek that she'd received the note Sunday.

"She [the customer who left the note] came in about halfway through my 17-hour shift, and it was on Sunday, which is always pretty busy," said King. "About halfway through her meal, it started to slow down so we chatted for a few minutes. Small talk, nothing too deep. She told me she was almost 70 and has been slowing down a bit.

"She said she just wanted to stop by an old favorite for a bite," King continued.

King recalled that the woman looked "a bit sad" as she ate, and looked to King frequently throughout her meal.

"In retrospect, I wish I would've taken her quiet as an invitation. I think that's what she wanted, looking back," said King. "She kept looking up at me so I assumed something wasn't right with her meal or that she needed something.

"I guess she did, in a way. [She needed] an ear."

Though King wishes she had spent more time with the woman, the note serves as proof that her attentiveness made a big impact. And in turn, the customer made an impact on her as well.

"I was very surprised," shared King. "As soon as I read that she'd lost her husband, I lost it.

"I had to use the restroom to get myself together enough to tend to my other tables even though I really didn't have time to take a rest," she continued.

Others online were also touched by the note.

"[T]hat's super sad, but also sweet at the same time," replied one commenter. "i just wanna give whoever wrote this note a hug."

i just wanna give whoever wrote this note a hug. (I really don't wanna admit that this made me cry)

— wrecks (@wrabbut) July 21, 2021

But sadly, others used the tweet as an excuse to start an argument. Many were quick to jump to conclusions about the size of the tip, which, in the picture, appears to be rather small.

"Are you crying because of that 1 dollar tip or the note because I would be crying because of the first one," said a commenter.

King was quick to defend the customer and set the record straight. She shared in a response tweet that the woman's meal cost $11 and she left a $3 tip. However, she added: "Not everyone can afford to tip well."

When someone took issue with that statement, King again defended the woman.

"[O]ld people who live on fixed income deserve to get out for a nice meal. big tippers make up for it anyway. im serving them. you arent. im standing by that, thanks."

old people who live on fixed income deserve to get out for a nice meal. big tippers make up for it anyway. im serving them. you arent. im standing by that, thanks.

— ☆ mother inferior ☆ (@alienpopstarr) July 21, 2021

"A lot of our customers are older and living on fixed incomes, so they tip what they can," King told Newsweek. "They are always welcome, no matter how much or little they tip."

And when it comes to the widow who left the kind note, King stated that her tip was "more than enough," but she wouldn't have cared if it had been smaller.
Jul 23rd, 2021, 6:20 pm

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Jul 23rd, 2021, 6:41 pm
Rare forty five kilogram tropical fish discovered on US beach

A large colourful fish washed ashore on the US coast last week in what aquarium officials called a rare occurrence.
The 45 kilogram opah fish, also known as a moonfish, was discovered on Sunset Beach in Seaside, a city in the northwest side of Oregon.
The fish is "rare to the Oregon Coast," Seaside Aquarium said in a Facebook post along with several images of the one metre fish.

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Keith Chandler, the general manager of Seaside Aquarium, told CNN that an opah on the Oregon coast is "uncommon to find" and he also added that the fish was "in such great shape."
"They're pretty cool fish, and we don't normally see them on the shore," said Mr Chandler.
"It was pretty exciting for locals."
According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), little is known about the species since they live deep in the ocean.
The species is usually found in temperate and tropical waters.

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The opah is an unusual looking fish, according to NOAA, they have a round, flat body that's silvery grey in colour.
"Toward the belly (of the fish), the silver shades to a rose red, dotted with white spots," reads NOAA's website.
"Their fins and mouth are red, and their large eyes are encircled with gold."

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Due to the condition the fish was found in, Mr Chandler believes that it had only been on the beach for less than an hour before the aquarium's staff got a notification for it.
"Unfortunately, it washed up not living, but we got to it before the birds," he said.
The opah is being stored in a large freezer, Mr Chandler said.
The aquarium plans to work with a local organisation, the Columbia River Maritime Museum, to dissect the fish. The aquarium added that one lucky school group will get the chance to be part of the dissection.
Mr Chandler said the aquarium plans to "get all the data" possible from the dissection to learn more about the species.

https://www.9news.com.au/world/forty-fi ... ae98142dce
Jul 23rd, 2021, 6:41 pm

Exodus A.D.: A Warning to Civilians by Paul Troubetzkoy [10000 WRZ$] Reward!
https://forum.mobilism.org/viewtopic.php?f=72&t=5556807
Jul 24th, 2021, 12:01 am
Jenna Fischer Says She Was Fired from Matt LeBlanc Show Because People Didn't Believe 'Pam Would Marry Joey'

Jenna Fischer was originally cast to play Matt LeBlanc's onscreen wife in the pilot for the CBS sitcom Man with a Plan
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Jenna Fischer is opening up about lost work after her time on The Office.

In the latest episode of her Office Ladies podcast, the 47-year-old actress said that she was fired after shooting a pilot for Man with a Plan because test audiences closely associated herself and Matt LeBlanc with their respective characters on The Office and Friends and didn't "believe Pam would marry Joey."

Fischer, who played Pam Beesly on The Office for nine seasons until the workplace comedy's end in 2013, recalled that network executives initially wanted "more scenes" with her when she was cast as LeBlanc's onscreen wife, but had a change of heart after showing the pilot episode to a focus group.

"They said — this is a literal quote, they said, 'I don't believe Pam would marry Joey. The chemistry doesn't work between these two,'" Fischer told her Office Ladies co-host Angela Kinsey. "That was the feedback they got."

"They could only see you as Pam and Joey?" asked Kinsey, who played Angela Martin on The Office.

"Yeah," Fischer replied. "So it wasn't working for them that we got married and had a family."

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According to Fischer, she learned that the show was moving on without her just days before she was was set to go to New York for upfronts.

"The first thing I said was, 'Is [Man with a Plan] not getting picked up?'" Fischer remembered asking after receiving a call from her reps. "And they said, 'It's worse than that, hun.' And I was like, 'What's worse than that?' They said, 'It's getting picked up, but without you.' And I was like, 'Wow, I guess I'll unpack my suitcase.'"

Man with a Plan ran for four seasons from 2016 to 2020 on CBS, with Liza Snyder starring opposite of LeBlanc.

While The Office ended more than eight years ago, the NBC series has continued to enthrall fans around the world.

Last year, Fischer admitted during an appearance on An Oral History of The Office podcast that she still has a hard time explaining to fans that she and John Krasinski — who played her character's love interest Jim on the show — are just former on-screen lovers, as she feels like she's shattering the illusion of the series.

"People don't know how John and I are not a couple in real life," she explained. "They don't understand it."

"I don't know how to explain it, because it's a little bit like telling kids there's no Santa," she added.
Jul 24th, 2021, 12:01 am

Testing, one, two, three.
Everything I post is always in good humor and fun.
Unless I'm on my soapbox screaming out crazy, and then well......
Jul 24th, 2021, 11:02 am
Rags-to-Riches Story Sees Human Compassion and Social Media Turn Homeless Painter into LA’s Next Big Artist

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Sometimes the distance between fortune, fame, and ruin is just a house fire away, as Los Angeles painter Richard Hutchins found out found after his studio in Santa Monica burned down.

Thanks to the power of social media however, Richard also understands another distance—the one between homelessness and stardom.

In a real-life riches-to-rags-to-riches story filled with more serendipity than a John Cusack movie, Richard went from living on the streets to being exhibited in Beverly Hills’ largest art gallery, to selling millions of dollars worth of his unique canvasses to people like Oprah, the rappers 2 Chaainz and Whiz Khalifa, and Philadelphia Phillies slugger Bryce Harper.

“I’ve always asked God to give me the opportunity to present myself to the world, and it’s just something that drives me,” Richard told GNN. “My inspiration is people. I’m not trying to get rich, I just want to earn enough to leave something behind that I can continue to help people, [but] the world reached out tremendously.”

It’s fair to say that as well-spoken as Richard is, ‘tremendously’ is an understatement. A once-famous artist who had painted canvasses for Marvin Gaye and Mohammed Ali, Richard knew the heights an artist could achieve, but just one month ago it would have been hard to imagine ever climbing to them again.

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This totally-L.A. story begins when Charlie “Rocket” Jabalay, founder of the Dream Machine Foundation, finished his career at 29 as a manager for hip-hop artists in Atlanta after he was diagnosed with a brain tumor.

“I wanted to chase my dream that I had since I was a kid,” Charlie told GNN. “That happens to us all; we bury a dream and build up something else, but I was facing death and I thought ‘if I’m going to die let me chase my dream,’ and my dream was to become a professional athlete.”

“I lost 130 pounds and biked across America and did Iron Man and marathons and reversed my brain tumor. All my dreams came true, and that’s why I wanted to start making other peoples’ dreams come true. I had a conversation with God, and I asked ‘You’ve done so much for me, what can I do for you?’ And God spoke loud, he said ‘go give love.'”

As enshrined forever on Charlie’s Instagram feed, he came across Richard Hutchins sitting on a cart in front of Ralphs, saying he used to be a famous artist and that his dream would be to walk into a museum and see a painting of his hanging on the wall.

While Charlie and his foundation spent $2,000 to get Richard a canvass and some oils to paint with, Richard was being admitted to the emergency room. At 70-years old and battling cancer, thousands of stories have finished on that page, but not Richard’s. He managed to pull through and was discharged shortly after.

“Out of nowhere” as Charlie described it, an old friend who just happened to operate the Cool HeART Gallery, the largest art galley in Beverly Hills, called the former athlete, and upon hearing about Richard simply offered to throw him a late-June art show alongside celebrity LA artists Ruben Rojas and Richard Orlinksi.

“Charlie kept coming by saying ‘we have a surprise for you’ and every surprise got bigger and bigger and bigger, until I ended up on the red carpet in Beverly Hills,” says Richard.

To drum up support for Richard’s exhibition appearance, Charlie’s Dream Machine Foundation created a Shopify website for Richard to sell his art in order to try and get his life back in order.

The results were staggering, with $50,000 dollars worth of original prints, canvasses, and commissions sold in the first 24 hours, doubling to $100,000 just a few days later. Once again, Charlie was there to capture all of the action on his Instagram.

The look in Richard’s eyes says it all.

Steve Harvey bought a print, noting, “I was homeless and know what Richard Hutchins is going through. I am honored to purchase his art. Let’s go Dream Machine!”

Other celebrities like Trey Songz and Will Smith shared the story, the former noting, “this is amazing,” and even his hosting service Shopify produced a small video about the instantaneous life-transformation happening in real time.

“I came from South Georgia; aged six I was in the cotton field working after school, and during break I would take the brown bags and I would pull them apart and use sticks from the fire to start drawing stick men,” says Richard, reflecting on his journey. “It’s my opportunity now to pay it forward.”

Now Richard has a money manager, a health coach to ensure he doesn’t end up in the ER again any time soon, a new car, and a new career, all without losing any sense of where he could have been.

“About a minute before Charlie pulled up, I stood up and got ready to walk away, but this particular day which was Easter, I stood up and something pushed me back down,” explains Richard. “If I had left that minute I would have never seen Charlie.”

“I don’t want to draw attention to myself, I want to draw attention to the problem. I call the president, the vice-president, I say ‘come to Skid Row,’ that’s my dream—to use my power to help better this place; to help better Los Angeles.”

Richard has since established a foundation named after his late mother for the purpose of providing scholarships to kids who can’t afford to go to school. Richard’s canvasses are next on the road to Miami, where they are to be exhibited alongside those of Richard’s hero, Andy Warhol.

Within a week of going from homelessness to the 1%, Richard was working to give as much back as he could. It’s a story that helps remind us of so many things—of compassion, of belief in the human spirit, in modesty, and it reminds us to never, never give up on our dreams.

https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/painter ... ist-in-la/
Jul 24th, 2021, 11:02 am
Jul 24th, 2021, 1:08 pm
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I sometimes get REALLY DEPRESSED reviewing the news these days.
It's always about a global pandemic threatening life as we know it,
protests around the world, stupid politicians, natural disasters,
or some other really bad story.
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH

Welcome to The mobi weekly news magazine
IN OTHER NEWS
SATURDAY JULY 24

What is it?
Here is your chance to become an "ACE REPORTER" for our weekly news magazine.
It is your job to fine weird, funny or "good feel" stories from around the world and share them with our readers in our weekly magazine

How do you play?
Just post a story that you have come across that made you smile, laugh, feel good...
BUT NOTHING DEPRESSING :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

EXAMPLE POST
Naked sunbather chases wild boar through park after it steals his laptop bag
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A naked sunbather was seen chasing wild boar through a park after it stole his laptop bag.
Amusing photographs from Germany show the man running after the animal to try and claim the plastic bag back.
But the cheeky boar and its two piglets appear to be too quick for the sunbather, who can't keep up with their speedy little trotters.
As the incident unfolds, groups of friends and family sat on the grass watch on and laugh.
Heads are seen turning in surprise and amusement in the hilarious photographs.
The incident happened at Teufelssee Lake - a bathing spot in the Grunwell Forest in Berlin, Germany.

Rules:
Each Edition of IN OTHER NEWS will be open for 7 days...
You can post as many stories as you like, but you will only get paid for One Story in any 24 hour period
So in other words, you can only earn WRZ$ once a day.
Each news day will start when I post announcing it
OR at:
9:00 AM CHICAGO TIME (UTC -5)
2:00 PM GMT (UTC -0)

on those days I space out and forget to post or can't due to Real Life :lol:
Stories may be accompanied with images - but No big images, please! 800x800 pixels wide maximum
Videos are allowed, but please keep them short, and post a short summary for those that don't like to click on videos
No Duplicate stories - Where a post has been edited resulting in duplicates, then the last one in time gets disallowed.
And please limit this to reasonably family friendly stories :lol: :lol: :lol:

Reward:
Each news story posted that I feel is acceptable (must be a real story, too few words or simply a headline are not considered acceptable) will earn you 50 WRZ$
If you post multiple stories on any given day, you will only earn 50 WRZ$ for the first story of the Day
All payments will be made at THE END of the weekly news cycle.
Special Bonus - Each week I will award "The Pulitzer Prize" for the best story of the week
The weekly winner of the "The Pulitzer Prize" will receive a 100 WRZ$ bonus
It's just my personal opinion, so my judgement is final

So help bring GOOD news to the members of mobi, and join our reporting team...

IN OTHER NEWS


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Jul 24th, 2021, 1:08 pm

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Jul 24th, 2021, 1:16 pm
Meanwhile in Oklahoma: Missing Murder Suspect Arrested After Commenting on Police Facebook Post

We’ve all been there. You come across a Facebook post you’d do well to steer clear of, but instead of walking away, you linger. For whatever reason, the post is just too juicy to resist, and against your better judgment, you jump into the comments section with the first thing that pops into your head.

Only, it usually doesn’t get you arrested.

Not so for Lorraine Graves, who was scrolling Facebook last week when her face popped up as Tulsa Police’s Weekly Most Wanted for Accessory to Murder. (BTW, way to make murder fun again, Tulsa PD.) Rather than shit a brick and skip town, Graves decided to crack her knuckles and start typing.

Within hours of the post going up, Graves commented to ask about the reward money for her own capture. Like a woman who’d just won a fake sweepstake, she wrote, “What’s where’s the reward money at?”

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Now, judging from the picture Tulsa PD posted on their social media it looks like nobody ever explained to Lorraine how these things work. But typically, when you’re the face on the wanted poster, you don’t get to collect any reward money for turning yourself in.

Lesson learned.

No surprise twist here, guys. Police used Lorraine’s lottery-winner-level excitement to pinpoint her location, and within 24-hours, made the arrest in north Tulsa near 36th St. N. and Garrison Ave. She’s now being held on $500,000 bail.

Take it from Lorraine Graves: Next time you feel the urge to comment on some random Facebook post, just take a deep breath and keep scrolling. It could end up saving you from a world of trouble.

Source
Jul 24th, 2021, 1:16 pm

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Jul 24th, 2021, 1:25 pm
Unknown Man is Calling Libraries to Masturbate to Court Case
JULY 23, 2021 BY ILE KAUPPILA


Yeah, you read that right. You’re now probably wishing you didn’t. Sure, we at Oddee are in the business of covering the weirdest news we can find. But every now and then we come across a story that makes even us mouth, “what the f***?”

There’s really no way around how bizarre this is, so let’s just cut to the chase. An unidentified man is calling libraries around the country so he can masturbate to a court case. The schtick is always the same. A phone rings at a library and the librarian picks it up with a friendly “how can I help you?”

On the other end is a man who wants information about a court case — specifically the Brady v. Maryland case from 1963. He’ll claim that he doesn’t have a computer and asks the librarian to read the case file out loud so he can take notes. As the librarian reads the file, it soon becomes clear that the man is enjoying what he’s hearing a bit too much. Yeah, he’s pleasuring himself to the text of the court decision.

In case the heavy breathing and other… Noises, don’t make it apparent, he’ll also say such wonderful things as: “Oh yeah, give it to me. Give me that exculpatory evidence. Spank those prosecutors!”

Look, don’t even ask us to explain this.

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‘Absolutely Masturbating’
Like we said, this hasn’t been a one-time thing, either. The man has harassed librarians in several state, and apparently will continue to do so until someone stops him.

One anonymous librarian detailed their encounter with the court case pervert on their blog.

“He’s called multiple libraries and done this, and the FBI is supposedly involved and can’t catch this pervert that’s just calling libraries and getting off on librarians reading about some random court case,” they wrote.

The serial masturbator also struck up the librarian’s own workplace. Luckily enough, they found a way to shut him down.

“Apparently the dude called my work! And I wasn’t there for it but they put him on hold cause they were like, ‘Is it him?’” the librarian explained.

“So, they got a male coworker to answer the phone and he immediately hung up.”

Apparently, it just doesn’t tickle him right if it’s a man reading the case. Another librarian replied to the post, but this person had actually talked to the pervert.

“I talked to him. He is absolutely masturbating while you read the court case,” the second librarian confirmed.

“He has hit multiple libraries across the country. He’s called my library twice and another local library last week.”

An Experienced Pervert
This may not be the first time the man has terrorized libraries. According to a post on the Library Think Tank Facebook group a similar thing happened a few years back.

“Does anyone remember the guy who used to call libraries asking for John Grisham titles to be read to him out loud? I was a victim of that [more than eight] years ago and I think he just called again,” Facebook user Jess Stevens wrote.

“This time, he wanted an entire Wikipedia page read to him, so I’m just forewarning everyone that anyone calling for information on Brady v. Maryland should not be taken seriously.”

Sexy, Sexy Judicial Process
By now you might be wondering what’s so special about the Brady v. Maryland case. Do the case files detail some kind of a sexual assault, or is it a case concerning pornography, perhaps?

And that’s the weirdest thing about this. There’s absolutely nothing about Brady v. Maryland that anyone should write even remotely titillating.

It’s pretty much your bog-standard court case concerning the judiciary process. It’s significant in the sense that in it, the U.S. Supreme Court determined that the prosecution must hand over all evidence that could exonerate a defendant to the defense.

Did that get you all hot and bothered? Yeah, it didn’t do it for us either.

Even the case behind the Brady v. Maryland decision isn’t sexy in any conceivable way. It’s about two men who were sentenced to death for the 1958 first degree murder of an older man.

The prosecution didn’t deliver to the defense certain documents establishing that one of the defendants hadn’t participated in the actual murdering business itself. As a result, that man got his death sentence commuted to life in prison.

Now, did that turn you on? If it did, please keep it to yourself – we really don’t want to know.

Hopefully someone puts a stop to this library pervert soon. Until then, if you’re a librarian – beware the phone calls.
Jul 24th, 2021, 1:25 pm

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Jul 24th, 2021, 1:51 pm
New 'Jack and the Beanstalk' gene could feed the world with giant fruit and vegetables

A discovery being touted as the “Jack and the Beanstalk gene” is giving scientists renewed hope that they’ll be able to keep feeding the world despite the threats posed by climate change.

A US and Chinese team has devised a technique that has seen yields of staple crops such as rice and potato increase threefold after sprouting longer roots.

The crops proved speedier at turning sunlight into energy, and they also survived drought better than their conventional cousins.

The breakthrough by the boffins opens the door to a real-life fairy-tale of being able to grow produce that’s immune to climate change, keeping the planet in food at a time when the population continues to boom. It’s thought there might be 10 billion people on Earth by 2050.

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Project co-leader Prof Chuan He, of the University of Chicago, said: “The change really is dramatic.

“What’s more, it worked with almost every type of plant we tried it with so far, and it’s a very simple modification to make. This really provides the possibility of engineering plants to potentially improve the ecosystem as global warming proceeds.

“We rely on plants for many, many things – everything from wood, food and medicine to flowers and oil. This potentially offers a way to increase the stock material we can get from most plants.”

The technique involves manipulating an RNA molecule which carries information from genes to proteins. Experiments showed cells place chemical markers on RNA to control the production of proteins, but a gene called FTO erases them. The researchers admitted they couldn’t believe their eyes after it was injected into rice plants.

“I think right then was when all of us realised we were doing something special,” said Prof He.

The plants grew three times more rice than usual under laboratory conditions. In field tests, they also did better, producing 50 per cent more rice than normal.

The results were then repeated in potato plants, which are part of a completely different family, suggesting the technique can be used universally.

The exciting, groundbreaking study has been published in Nature Biotechnology.
Jul 24th, 2021, 1:51 pm

Twitter: Fatima99@fatima99_mobi
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Jul 24th, 2021, 2:27 pm
Scientists Say Moon “Wobble” Will Cause More Flooding

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A recent scientific study found that changes that are expected in the coming years to the moon’s orbit would result in more frequent flooding incidents of coastal areas in the US.

The study was conducted by experts from NASA Sea Level Change Team at the University of Hawaii focused on a change in the orbit of the moon that takes place regularly.

The moon and its role in flooding

The findings of the research were published recently in the scientific journal Nature Climate Change and forecast raised ocean levels across the coastal regions of the United States in the coming decade.

The NASA researchers told Voice of America that slight alteration, also known as ”wobble” in the moon’s orbit is part of an 18.6-year cycle, recorded as far back as 1728.

”During half of the cycle, the moon creates lower high tides and higher low tides; the other half creates higher high tides and even lower low tides,” the scientists were reported as saying.

This new moon position is expected to reach its peak in the mid-2030s, and coincides with already higher sea levels, which are a result of decades of climate change.

This mixture of unfortunate circumstances could have devastating results to coastal communities, which already suffer from regular incidents of flooding.

European floods: One of Europe’s worst natural disasters

More than 150 have now been declared dead in the floods that have ravaged Germany, the Netherlands and Belgium over the past several days.

All of Western Europe was inundated with floodwaters, with rescue crews combing devastated areas in Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands.

Deluges of rains have made rivers burst their banks and wash away roads, cover entire villages and sweep away vehicles in these three countries.

Germany’s most populous area, North-Rhine Westphalia, was hit particularly hard while the Rhineland-Palatinate and Saarland regions are also suffering under the record flooding.
Jul 24th, 2021, 2:27 pm
Jul 24th, 2021, 4:26 pm
'Pillars' of mosquitoes fill the sky in Russian driver's video

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July 21 (UPI) -- A man driving in a Russian village captured video of a massive swarm of mosquitoes that formed "pillars" stretching from the ground to high up in the sky.

Alexei Ponomarev said he was driving in Ust-Kamchatsk, a village in the far-eastern Kamchatka Krai region, when the giant cloud of mosquitoes made it difficult for him to see through his windshield.

"I can't say how high these pillars were, it seems, up to the clouds," Ponomarev told Kamchatinfo.ru. "There were many of them, both in the village itself and around."

Entomologist Lyudmila Lobkova said the mosquitoes were displaying a mating behavior. She said most of the insects in the footage were males, which do not bite humans, flying around a smaller group of females.

https://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2021/07/21 ... 626892468/
Jul 24th, 2021, 4:26 pm

Exodus A.D.: A Warning to Civilians by Paul Troubetzkoy [10000 WRZ$] Reward!
https://forum.mobilism.org/viewtopic.php?f=72&t=5556807
Jul 24th, 2021, 4:29 pm
Doctor Breaks Norms to Treat Refugees and Immigrants Who Have Nowhere Else to Go for Healthcare

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Larry Page has gone to Fiji and sold his superyacht
Skilled in strategy (and grudges), top Biden adviser to depart White House

Fatumo Osman, a 65-year-old Somali refugee who speaks limited English, was in a bind. She made too much money at a meal prep service job so she no longer qualified for Medicaid. But knee pain kept her from working, so her income had dropped. She could reapply for Medicaid, get her knee fixed and return to work, at which point she'd lose that safety-net health coverage. Her first step was getting a note from a doctor so she wouldn't lose her job.

So, Osman came to Mango House, a clinic that caters primarily to refugees in Aurora, an eastern suburb of Denver. The clinic turns no one away, regardless of their ability to pay. Dr. P.J. Parmar designed the clinic to survive on the Medicaid payments that many doctors across the U.S. reject as too low.

The clinic is just one part of a broader refugee ecosystem that Parmar has built. Mango House provides food and clothing assistance, after-school programs, English classes, legal help — and Parmar even leads a Boy Scout troop there. He leases space to nine stores and six restaurants, all owned and run by refugees. Mango House hosts a dozen religious groups, plus community meetings, weddings and other celebrations. When Parmar needs an interpreter for a patient from any of a dozen languages spoken in the building, he can easily grab one of his tenants.

"This is what I call a medical home," Parmar said.

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Although it's not part of the formal U.S. refugee resettlement program, Mango House is in many ways emblematic of refugee health care in the U.S. It's a less-than-lucrative field of medicine that often relies on individual physicians willing to eke out a living caring for an underserved and under-resourced population.

Parmar finds creative ways, often flouting norms or skirting rules, to fit his patients' needs. As a result, Mango House looks nothing like the rest of the U.S. health care system and, at times, draws the ire of the medical establishment.

"How do you deliver the quality of care necessary, and that they deserve, while still keeping the lights on? It's a struggle for sure," said Jim Sutton, executive director of the Society of Refugee Healthcare Providers. "It's these heroes, these champions out there, these cowboys that are taking this on."

Osman brought her son, Jabarti Yussef, 33, to interpret for her. They have been coming to Mango House for 10 years and said that Parmar opens doors for them when they have trouble accessing care.
Jul 24th, 2021, 4:29 pm
Jul 24th, 2021, 4:30 pm
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Ice cream will only be 68 cents at a Toronto restaurant that's rolling back its prices this weekend.

Fearless Meat might just be one of the most generous places in town, and they've been selling ice cream for just cents ever since they opened in 2018. They started with 65 cents in honour of owner David Brown's 65th birthday, and on his 68th they're continuing the tradition.

It's not even the first or most generous thing Brown has done: a butcher by trade with 50 years of experience, he views himself as a community figure people can rely on.

They also offer free burgers to seniors and those experiencing food and/or housing insecurity. Free ice cream and coffee are also always on offer for veterans and first responders as well as their spouses, and kiddie cones are always free for children.

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"Even though our costs on many items have significantly increased, I have resisted passing these price increases onto our customers because many folks are struggling with the effects of COVID, higher supermarket prices, etc.," Brown tells blogTO

"We also have many seniors and pensioners in our area and there are times when they are struggling to make it through."

Ice cream cones normally cost $1.99, $2.99 for vegan Dole Whip, and both will be available for the 68-cent price on July 24 and 25 as well as their "ice cream coffee," Reunion Island coffee topped with ice cream.

"My restaurant, Fearless Meat, is committed to being socially conscious and helping out our community," says Brown.
Jul 24th, 2021, 4:30 pm

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Jul 24th, 2021, 6:16 pm
Chris Hemsworth's body double wishes the actor would stop gaining muscle

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Chris Hemsworth (left)'s body double is Bobby Holland Hanton (right). Disney/Marvel/Instagram/bobbydazzler84

Chris Hemsworth's body double said he wishes the actor would stop getting more and more muscular.

Stunt double Bobby Holland Hanton told Australian breakfast radio show Fitzy & Wippa that the bigger Hemsworth gets, the bigger he has to get too.

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"Everyone's like, 'Wow, look at the size of him,' and I'm like, 'Yeah, it's brilliant, now I have to put on that size too,'" Hanton said. "I text him and I'm like, 'Thanks very much, dude, it's going to be even harder this time.'"

Hanton has had his work cut out for him of late as Hemsworth has taken his physique to a new level to play Thor in the latest installment of the Marvel franchise, "Thor: Love and Thunder," which is currently being filmed in Australia.

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In November, Hemsworth posted a photo of himself flipping a tire on Instagram, and his incredibly shredded physique resulted in the image going viral.

As well as putting in the hours in the gym, training twice a day, Hanton — who has also worked as a body double for stars like Henry Cavill and Ryan Reynolds — has had to increase his food intake to gain muscle.

"We train together all the time and we're on the same diet regime," Hanton said. "He's now the biggest Thor he's ever been, so I need to be the biggest I've ever been. It's a big challenge but I'm up for it," Hanton said. "Every two hours we're eating. It's become a chore. I don't enjoy eating at all. It's full-on."

He also downplayed rumors that Hemsworth was struggling with back pain after a break from training.

"Carrying around the extra weight is difficult and hard to maintain on the ligaments," Hanton said. "But he's all good. Look at him. He's a man mountain. He's fit as a fiddle."
Jul 24th, 2021, 6:16 pm

Testing, one, two, three.
Everything I post is always in good humor and fun.
Unless I'm on my soapbox screaming out crazy, and then well......
Jul 24th, 2021, 8:12 pm
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How Locals on Mauritius United To Fight an Oil Spill With Their Own Hair

When a cargo ship crossing the Indian Ocean wrecked just offshore, the “people of the sea” sprang into action.


by Reena Usha Rungoo March 31, 2021

Night had fallen on Mahebourg, a bustling trade town on the southeast coast of Mauritius, when what would come to be called the “people’s factory zone” met for the first time. It was an enterprise born of necessity: A crisis was unfolding only a few miles offshore, in the pristine waters from which many of Mahebourg’s residents earn their livelihoods. That first August night, just a handful of locals showed up to rally around what seemed like a dubious idea. To protect the coast from a devastating oil spill, they would make booms from whatever they could find: single-use plastic bottles, fibrous sugar cane waste, even human hair. Word of the DIY initiative spread. Within hours, hundreds of Mauritians came to the people’s factory zone to contribute whatever they could. For weeks on end, an expanding army of islanders worked round the clock, even cutting off their own hair to add to the growing lengths of handmade booms.

“I was surrounded at all times by 200 to 300 volunteers, from fisherfolks and skippers to teachers and students, from homemakers and children to off-duty police officers,” says Virgine Parisot, one of the volunteers. “It felt like the birth of a new movement.”

Mauritius, an island nation of less than 800 square miles, rises up from the Indian Ocean about 700 miles east of Madagascar. The main island’s mountainous interior is fringed with beaches, lagoons, reefs, and banks of seagrass renowned for their biodiversity. On July 25, 2020, MV Wakashio, a Japanese-owned cargo ship heading to Brazil, ran aground on a coral reef just off the southeast coast. Two weeks later, oil began to leak from the wrecked ship, heading for Mahebourg and the nearby nature reserve Blue Bay Marine Park. It would become, according to some scientists, the island’s worst ecological disaster.
Volunteers stitched and stuffed netting with cane straw, human hair and other material to produce the booms local fishermen deployed around areas affected by the oil spill.
Volunteers stitched and stuffed netting with cane straw, human hair and other material to produce the booms local fishermen deployed around areas affected by the oil spill. Courtesy Umar Timol

“Environmentalists, fisherfolks, and others who make their living from the sea had called for help from the government, but they had only been met with silence,” says Yolande Hennequin, a local marine guide. So, leftist political party Resistanz ek Alternativ (ReA), which focuses on social and environmental justice, decided to take action.

“The administration showed its inability to act quickly, and it felt like criminal negligence toward our country and our ocean,” says Dany Marie, one of the founding members of ReA. Another member, David Sauvage, had researched low-cost, low-tech solutions and come up with the idea of the handmade oil booms. That first night in Mahebourg, the small group started gathering materials. Marie made a few calls to convince some hardware stores to open their doors, while Hennequin and others gathered straw from nearby sugarcane fields, learning as they went. “At first, the work was tentative,” says Hennequin. “We did not even bring a sheet to carry the cane straw back to the waterfront.” They persisted, and word spread, including via social media. In the early morning, fishermen joined in and taught them better sewing techniques. Within hours, the growing team had successfully made and tested an 80-foot boom.

As the sun rose, Hennequin left the scene to take a quick shower. When she returned, she found more than a hundred new faces had arrived to help. “I was so stunned, I had to sit down,” she says. Within the next few days, more locals came. They stuffed nylon netting with hair, cane trash, and other absorbent materials, as well as empty plastic bottles to keep the booms afloat. An assembly line took shape: one volunteer would sew the boom while another stuffed it, passing the completed piece to boat crews who deployed them around the lagoon and other threatened sites.
Fishermen and other volunteers with boats deployed handmade booms around Mahebourg's lagoon and other affected areas, removing 75 percent of the spilled oil by mid-September.
Fishermen and other volunteers with boats deployed handmade booms around Mahebourg’s lagoon and other affected areas, removing 75 percent of the spilled oil by mid-September. AFP/Getty Images

Other helpers distributed food and beverages to the boom-makers. As people rushed to donate their hair, barbers volunteered to snip and shave. Although the government had declared large swathes of the southeast as restricted areas, the movement continued to attract people from far beyond Mahebourg. Restaurants throughout the region distributed free food as the number of volunteers grew. The sugarcane and textile industries provided cane straw and began mass-producing stronger booms. Tourism app developer Discover Mauritius created maps to pinpoint sites where volunteers were needed. Even other countries joined: Australia collected more than 28 tons of hair for use in the booms. “It was all these actions that showed how resourceful and united Mauritians can be when it comes to protecting our homes and our natural heritage,” says Shaama Sandooyea, a marine biologist and environmental activist who was among the volunteers.

Within its first two weeks, the people’s factory zone evolved into a well-oiled machine, producing hundreds of feet of booms per hour, according to Marie, and eventually removing 75 percent of the oil from the coastline. Although male voices dominated media coverage as the disaster response unfolded, many of those who joined or led the effort were women. Virginie Orange, for example, captains a boat she also owns, while Parisot runs a small diner. The two women ran one of the food stations that kept volunteers fed over the long hours of labor. “I would start at 9:30 a.m., stay until 7:30 p.m., go back home and come back at 9 p.m. until around midnight,” says Parisot.
In addition to making handmade oil booms, people defied government orders and came to the southeast coast to protest what they perceived as government mishandling of the oil spill and other environmental and social problems plaguing Mauritius.
In addition to making handmade oil booms, people defied government orders and came to the southeast coast to protest what they perceived as government mishandling of the oil spill and other environmental and social problems plaguing Mauritius. Courtest Dany Marie

The volunteers sacrificed more than time. The long-term effects of the spill remain unknown, but many of those making or deploying booms reported a range of health problems. “During the cleanup some people wore their personal protective gear, but I, like many others who did not, started getting coughs, nausea, and headaches,” says Sandooyea. Orange adds that, for the first few weeks after the spill, “I suffered from nosebleeds and faintness. Now when I go into the lagoon, I still get skin eruptions all over my body.” The oil spill also laid bare the precarious economic position of those whose livelihoods depend on the sea.

Mauritius had already closed its borders due to COVID-19, and the aftermath of the spill has meant further restrictions on access to the lagoon. Boat captain Orange has seen a dip in her business, even as she incurred additional expenses associated with keeping her boat anchored for an extended period. Parisot, a single mother, had saved up for eight years to open a small diner, navigating loans and a difficult bureaucracy in the process. “I wanted to offer seafood so as to support local fisherfolks, and where I am currently located, I cater mostly to those who subsist on the sea and on tourism. But right now, the economy in Mahebourg is at a standstill,” she says. “How am I supposed to work?”

Parisot is among the many small business owners affected by what Marie calls the two-fold shipwreck: the virus outbreak and the Wakashio spill. Beyond the immediate health and economic fallout for Mauritians, the environmental impact is substantial. More than 50 melon-head whales (Peponocephala electra) alone turned up dead along the affected coastline. Entire ecosystems in wetlands, coastal mangrove forests, and the Blue Bay marine reserve have also suffered, though the full toll of the event is not yet clear.

The spill has been particularly hard for those Mauritians who call themselves dimunn lamer, “people of the sea,” whose families have been intimately connected to the ocean for generations. “When I first saw the Wakashio wrecked off the coast, I felt like I was losing my mother,” says Hennequin.

The people’s factory zone closed in mid-September, after the urgent need for the booms had passed. The waterfront spot where volunteers gathered remains a potent symbol of collective power, however. Says Marie: “Even though the government attempted to repress the movement by declaring Mahebourg a restricted area, it became a site of civil disobedience and resistance because of the people’s love for the ocean.”
Jul 24th, 2021, 8:12 pm