The United Nation’s Security Council needs to send Inspectors into Ukraine to validate the Russian claims.
This Blog is created to stress the importance of Peace as an environmental directive. “I never give them hell. I just tell the truth and they think it’s hell.” – Harry Truman (I receive no compensation from any entry on this blog.)
Thursday, February 17, 2022
Wednesday, February 16, 2022
Local control on mask mandates are best.
The Democrats should not prioritize mask mandates in their campaigns at the federal level. I think Virginia is a good example of how local municipalities have the control of mask mandates. Virginia’s new Governor violated the state constitution which provides local control over issues of health.
Mask mandates were necessary in the beginning as there was a learning curve with a global pandemic spawned by an incompetent populous president. The local elected officials have the right to institute any necessary health mandates and that is where it should stay.
Tuesday, February 15, 2022
What will Russia achieve with a bloody invasion into Ukraine?
From Ukraine to the Olympics, is there any place in the world where Russia does not cause adverse outcomes?
Frequent nuclear accidents that cause air pollution that reaches the scandinavian countries to the point of monitoring the wind that comes from Russia to determine the level of radiation it contains.
Methane holes that look like their reach into hell itself and spew tonnes and tonnes of methane into the air and all unabated in any way. At least when the Saudis had a methane hole leaking to the surface of Earth, they closed it.
The famous ballet is still performing well:
The Bolshoi Ballet is back! (click here) Lincoln Theater is bringing three spectacular ballets, captured live in Moscow, right to our community living room here in the heart of Damariscotta. Bolshoi Ballet, the legendary Russian company, offers dance lovers the opportunity to experience their most iconic shows on the big screen, and is kicking off 2022 with George Balanchine’s sparkling “Jewels,” which will screen for one showing only at Lincoln Theater Saturday, Feb. 19 at 1 p.m.
February 15, 2022By Sean Lyngaas and Tim Lister
A cyberattack hit the websites of Ukraine's defense ministry and armed forces, (click here) and the websites of two Ukrainian banks on Tuesday, according to Ukrainian government agencies' statements.
It was not immediately clear who was responsible for the hacking incident. "It's too early to attribute" responsibility, Victor Zhora, a deputy chairman at the State Service of Special Communications and Information Protection of Ukraine (SSSCIP) -- who is investigating the incident -- told CNN.
The incident comes as Russia has massed an estimated 150,000 troops close to Ukraine's border, according to United States President Joe Biden, and as US officials warn that a fresh Russian invasion could come at any time. Russia has denied it is planning to invade Ukraine.
SSSCIP identified the incident as a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack, which floods a website with phony traffic to disrupt access to it. DDoS attacks are relatively cheap and easy to carry out. While they can be disruptive, they do not necessarily require sophistication....
Paleontologists believe they have found the foundation of the modern canine.
By David Grimm
If you were walking through a dark forest in ancient Japan, (click here) you might hope to run into an okuri-ōkami, a wolf that would escort you safely to your destination. This creature of folklore may be based on the Japanese wolf, a border collie–size animal with short legs and stubby ears that lived in Japan for thousands of years until humans wiped it out in the early 20th century. Now, scientists studying ancient DNA from this wolf’s bones say they may have solved the long-standing mystery of where it came from: a vanished population of gray wolves in East Asia that also gave rise to modern dogs.
“It’s a very meticulous study,” says Peter Savolainen, a geneticist at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm who was not involved. The research, he says, adds evidence to the idea that dogs arose in East Asia, as he and other researchers suspect, rather than in Europe or the Middle East, as some experts have proposed.
All of today’s dogs likely descend from a single population of gray wolves. But exactly where and when those wolves lived has long been a source of contentious debate. Part of the problem is that although the species persists, that original population has likely vanished, wiping out genetic clues about doggy origins.
Enter the Japanese wolf (Canis lupus hodophilax). Described by some as one of the greatest mysteries in the history of Japanese zoology, the animal’s origins are unclear, as is the route it took to reach Japan. A genetic analysis of remains from a single Japanese wolf published earlier this year found it was closely related to a lineage of Siberian wolves, long thought extinct. Recent evidence also suggests dogs may have arisen in Siberia. Might Japanese wolves and dogs share more than just geography?...
I think this invention by the Chinese was long overdue. Congratulations to China for taking the initiative.
September 2, 2022
Something out of a Star Wars movie occurred in Earth's orbit last month.
A Chinese satellite was spotted in late January grabbing another long-dead satellite and days later throwing it into a "graveyard" orbit 300 km away, where objects are less likely to hit spacecraft.
These rare events were presented by Dr. Brien Flewelling in a webinar hosted by the Center of Strategic and International Studies and Secure World Foundation last month. Flewelling is the chief space situational awareness architect of ExoAnalytic Solutions, a private U.S. company that tracks the position of satellites using a large global network of optic telescopes.
The Chinese SJ-21 satellite was seen on January 22 changing its usual place in the sky to approach decommissioned satellite Compass-G2. A few days later, SJ-21 attached to G2, altering its orbit....
The successful efforts of the Biden Administration that don't make the front page.
President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law includes billions for ecosystem restoration and resilience of America’s lands, invasive species detection and prevention, and native vegetation restoration efforts, on top of nearly $16 billion for cleaning up legacy pollution. On Friday, the Department of the Interior announced distribution of a record $1.5 billion in Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration (WSFR) Program allocations to state wildlife agencies throughout the nation. The WSFR was reauthorized as part of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. Landrieu noted that these grants will make significant progress in our work to protect our cherished natural treasures, and together with other Bipartisan Infrastructure Law investments, will make significant progress in our work on collaborative conservation....
Oh, yeah, the SuperBowl. Who won?
By Emma Bowman and Peter Ganitz
The championship capped a triumphant return to Los Angeles for the Rams, which won its only other Super Bowl as the St. Louis Rams in 2000. And the team's home field at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif., also hosted a halftime show that featured hip-hop with a West Coast flair.
The Rams needed more than 59 minutes to seal the victory in Super Bowl LVI, with Cooper Kupp, the game's most valuable player, catching a short touchdown pass from quarterback Matthew Stafford with 1.25 left to play. That put the Rams on top - again - and for the final time....
The loyalty of the GOP to Trump isn't about his ideology so much as winning an election.
By Alexander Bolton
Senate Republicans are scrambling (click here) to figure out how former President Trump’s mounting legal troubles will affect his grip on the party and chances of running for office again in 2024.
Allies of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who has worked behind the scenes to counter Trump, are wondering whether the former president’s clout may fade regardless of what happens in the 2022 midterm elections because of his many legal entanglements, including investigations by New York Attorney General Letitia James (D) and Fulton County, Ga., District Attorney Fani Willis (D).
The latest development came Monday evening when Trump’s longtime accounting firm, Mazars USA, severed ties with him and his business empire and said it could no longer vouch for the reliability of a decade’s worth of financial statements it prepared for the Trump Organization....
Again? We were just coming down off the fourth wave. It was the fourth, wasn't it?
By Herb Schribner
It was only a matter of time (click here) — scientists have reportedly found a subvariant of the omicron variant, raising questions about what’s going to happen next with the novel coronavirus.
The news: Scientists across the world have found a sublineage of the highly-transmissible omicron coronavirus variant, called BA.2.
The BA.2 variant is now under investigation because it could have a growth advantage, replacing the original omicron variant, per Reuters.
Why this matters: The subvariant BA.2, which has been nicknamed the “stealth omicron,” could be spreading faster than the original omicron and lead to even more COVID-19 cases, according to Fortune.
Details: Dr. Eric Feigl-Ding, an epidemiologist and health economist and a senior fellow at the Federation of American Scientists, said he is “concerned” about the new subtype because it is surging....
By Lawrence Tabak, DDS, PhD
The NIH continues (click here) to support the development of some very innovative therapies to control SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes COVID-19. One innovative idea involves a molecular decoy to thwart the coronavirus.
How’s that? The decoy is a specially engineered protein particle that mimics the 3D structure of the ACE2 receptor, a protein on the surface of our cells that the virus’s spike proteins bind to as the first step in causing an infection.
The idea is when these ACE2 decoys are administered therapeutically, they will stick to the spike proteins that crown the coronavirus (see image above). With its spikes covered tightly in decoy, SARS-CoV-2 has a more-limited ability to attach to the real ACE2 and infect our cells.
Recently, the researchers published their initial results in the journal Nature Chemical Biology, and the early data look promising [1]. They found in mouse models of severe COVID-19 that intravenous infusion of an engineered ACE2 decoy prevented lung damage and death. Though more study is needed, the researchers say the decoy therapy could potentially be delivered directly to the lungs through an inhaler and used alone or in combination with other COVID-19 treatments.
The findings come from a research team at the University of Illinois Chicago team, led by Asrar Malik and Jalees Rehman, working in close collaboration with their colleagues at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. The researchers had been intrigued by an earlier clinical trial testing the ACE2 decoy strategy [2]. However, in this earlier attempt, the clinical trial found no reduction in mortality. The ACE2 drug candidate, which is soluble and degrades in the body, also proved ineffective in neutralizing the virus.
Rather than give up on the idea, the UIC team decided to give it a try. They engineered a new soluble version of ACE2 that structurally might work better as a decoy than the original one. Their version of ACE2, which includes three changes in the protein’s amino acid building blocks, binds the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein much more tightly. In the lab, it also appeared to neutralize the virus as well as monoclonal antibodies used to treat COVID-19....
The Clinical Implications of Basic Research (click here) series has focused on highlighting laboratory research that could lead to advances in clinical therapeutics. However, the path between the laboratory and the bedside runs both ways: clinical observations often pose new questions for laboratory investigations that then lead back to the clinic. One of a series of occasional articles drawing attention to the bedside-to-bench flow of information is presented here, under the Basic Implications of Clinical Observations rubric. We hope our readers will enjoy these stories of discovery, and we invite them to submit their own examples of clinical findings that have led to insights in basic science.
The pathogenesis of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection is incompletely understood, with its effects on multiple organ systems1 and the syndrome of “long Covid” occurring long after the resolution of infection.2 The development of multiple efficacious vaccines has been critical in the control of the pandemic, but their efficacy has been limited by the appearance of viral variants, and the vaccines can be associated with rare off-target or toxic effects, including allergic reactions, myocarditis, and immune-mediated thrombosis and thrombocytopenia in some healthy adults. Many of these phenomena are likely to be immune-mediated.3 How can we understand this diversity in immune responses in different persons?...
To beat a dead horse, where is Steve Bannon and the Alt Right? It is like looking for Waldo.
It is getting too expensive in the USA for the Alt Right. They are getting caught in law breaking, being taken to court, paying fines and jailed or even prison. They are being sued for their racism and they are losing the lawsuits.So, if they can't live comfortably in the USA with their hate, move to Canada.
Steve Bannon has been causng trouble all over Europe. Bannon wants to disrupt democracy to make a living. Bart what it's name?????? Oh, yeah, Britbart. It has been doing nothing but creating all sorts of misinformation and political disharmony. They are allowed to do it.
For those that want to destroy democracy, it is because of democracy allows them to carry on the way they do. Does that make sense? Silence the demonstrators after they fought so hard to end freedom of speech and The West's constitutions.
?????
I ask myself what this mess is truly about? Nothing. It is about nothing that matters, because, disharmony and aggitation is the way Bannon makes his millions. That is all this is. No other reason. The amusement of million-billionaires.
No different than the truckers at the border or Canada and the USA. They were allowed. They were even tolerated. Democracy at work. They caused problems, but, those that live in a democracy won't give it up.
Look, democracy has given us the ticket line that starts an entire day before the ticket sales begin. You know what I mean? Americans and Canadians have a great deal of patience with democracy. They like it. They don't want to give it up. So, the only reason Bannon is doing this is because he can and let's face it, he is at least a few millions wealthy, right? Or was that left?
Febraury 13, 2022By John Bacon and Christine MacDonald
Windsor, Ontario – The busiest U.S.-Canada border crossing (click here) reopened late Sunday after protests against COVID-19 restrictions closed it for almost a week, while Canadian officials held back from a crackdown on a larger protest in the capital, Ottawa.
Detroit International Bridge Co. said in a statement that “the Ambassador Bridge is now fully open allowing the free flow of commerce between the Canada and US economies once again.” Esther Jentzen, spokeswoman for the company, said in a later text to The Associated Press that the bridge reopened to traffic at 11 p.m. EST.
Police on Sunday swept through the lingering protest that has brought a week of chaos to the massive bridge linking Detroit to Canada, arresting a few truckers and other protesters still attempting to block the nation's largest border crossing....
I didn't know the EPA critiqued plumbers. I always thought that was OSHA or the Better Business Bureau.
The invisible Sarah Palin.
But, to update:
...Todd Palin filed for divorce in 2019 (click here) after 31 years of marriage, according to People, citing "incompatibility of temperament." While they didn't publicly reveal the cause of their split, it's possible that the pressures of fame took their toll on the couple. Family friend John Coale told the outlet, "It's been a long road to this. The family just had to take so much and couldn't handle it, I don't know if anybody could. It's a tragedy. Sarah Palin is a great person, and now it seems the family is in tatters" (via People)....
By Dana Kennedy
Ex-NHL star Ron Duguay (click here) has confirmed that he and “buddy” Sarah Palin are indeed dating, according to a report.
By Jody Godoy and Jonathan Stempel
This is a good commentary about the Platinum Jubilee in both the read and the video.
THE QUEEN (click here) broke with tradition to mark the start of the Platinum Jubilee move as she took the "unusual" move of inviting the public into her private Sandringham Estate.
Pope Francis offers guidance.
With a new motu proprio (click here) published on Tuesday, Pope Francis has modified canon law for both the Latin Church and the Eastern Churches, changing the areas of competence for various bodies within the universal Church. Specifically, with the Apostolic Letter Assegnare alcune competenze (“Assigning certain competencies,” taken from the opening words, or incipit” of the document), Pope Francis transfers certain responsibilities from the Vatican to local bishops.
The new norms deal with different areas of Church life, in each case specifying the authorities competent to make decisions with regard to those issues. “The intention,” of the changes, writes Pope Francis at the beginning of his Letter, “is above all to foster a sense of collegiality and pastoral responsibility on the part of Bishops […] as well as Major Superiors, and also to support the principles of rationality, effectiveness, and efficiency.”...
By Jackie Turvey Tait and Tobias Winright
A full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine (click here) seems imminent, but nobody really wins if this happens. The global economic and food security impacts would fall disproportionately on the most vulnerable. Catholic concern for the common good and just war principles require us to look for a diplomatic solution that might avert the evils such a conflict would unleash. In particular, a personal intervention by Pope Francis may be our last hope for successful negotiations to preserve peace.
Notably, Pope Francis writes in “Fratelli Tutti” that “it is very difficult nowadays to invoke the rational criteria elaborated in earlier centuries to speak of the possibility of a ‘Just War’” (No. 258), in part because of the destructive power of modern weapons. However, this does not mean contemporary Catholic ethics calls for unqualified pacifism; the just war framework allows leaders to judge whether military action is reasonable in light of traditional principles and pragmatic considerations....
It is child abuse. I agree.
Beijing - She will always be the girl with the ghost medal, a tragic figure. (click here)
If Russian teenager Kamila Valieva wins Olympic gold here on Thursday — because even when she’s imperfect, she’s brilliant — there will be no medal ceremony. Not for her and, as drive-by victims, not for the other two figure skating podium finishers either. It’s all too pending, too pendulous, too hanging fire.
And they’d have to take it away from her later, should the doping case against Valieva be substantiated down the road. Best not to even let her touch it.
But if the sports authorities get all mushy about the teen’s guilt, find an exculpating wedge of amnesty, just as the Court of Arbitration for Sport did on Monday — examining the dilemma through a very narrow lens of culpability and allowing the shy adolescent to compete in Tuesday’s short program despite testing positive for a banned substance — then the medal (medals) will be yielded later. Still radiating toxicity, though, tainted rather than burnished.
As spectral in her possession at some future date as it is phantom-like now: the gold she’ll probably win and the gold she’s already won in the team event.
Can it ever bring her pleasure or would it burn her fingers?
The fingers she laced together and held over her eyes at the end of her “In Memoriam” program on Tuesday evening, covering her tears, the strain of the past few days finally breaking through.
We need reminding, maybe, that this is a child and the ordeal she’s experiencing is akin to child abuse...
The Olympics are not front and center this year. Go figure. I guess President Biden isn't there to damage politically.
February 11, 2022
The U.S. (click here) grabbed more shiny hardware Saturday at the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics.
Lindsey Jacobellis, 36, won her second gold medal of these Games, finishing first alongside American teammate Nick Baumgartner in the debut of mixed-gender team snowboardcross. The Americans were the oldest team in the field with a combined age of 76.
For Baumgartner, 40, who was heartbroken after failing to advance to the men's individual final, it was a second chance to earn his first Olympic medal in what was likely his fourth and final Olympic Games....
February 15, 2022Team USA (click here) continued to add to its medal count at the 2022 Winter Olympics, but was it enough to lift them higher on the leaderboard?
With the help of two Chicago-area speed skaters, the U.S. scored a bronze medal in the men's team pursuit overnight....
1. Norway – 26 (12 gold, 7 silver, 7 bronze)
2. ROC - 20 (4 gold, 7 silver, 9 bronze)
3. Germany- 18 (9 gold, 6 silver, 3 bronze)
4. United States- 17 (7 gold, 6 silver, 4 bronze)
5. Canada- 17 (2 gold, 4 silver, 11 bronze)
The U.S. now sits in a tie for fourth place with 17 medals.
Norway continues to lead the way with 12 gold medals.
An exciting Gold Metalist is Kallie Humphreys.
14 February 2022
By Bryan Armen Graham
Kaillie Humphries of the United States (click here) validated her reputation as one of the best pilots in the history of bobsleigh, surging to victory in the debut of women’s monobob and adding a third Olympic gold to her career haul with a strong chance for a fourth by week’s end.
The 36-year-old, who captured two-woman golds with Canada in 2010 and 2014 before joining the US team in 2019, finished with a four-run combined time of 4min, 19.27 sec to win by 1.54sec, the widest margin in any bobsleigh event in 42 years. She becomes the second athlete to win a Winter Olympic title for two different countries, joining short track speed skater Victor An....
I will be blogging this evening.
I understand that President Biden's sarcasm got him in trouble with Wall Street. That is Joe. He, up to now, has been very sarcastic. That is what got him in trouble with Peter What's His Name from FOX.
That's Joe.
Either you love it or you don't. His sarcasm is actually disgust with the subject he addresses. I can respect that. Of course, we are not going to have bombs falling in the USA. But, President Biden is steadfast in his support of NATO and he is spot on. This is enough. Putin means to move into NATO countries and not stop at Ukraine. A communist regime is trouble for the human being. Not business. Not capitalism. Not the elite. But, average people are chronically having problems and live under a great deal of stress.
I want an investigation to the mental status of the USA woman skier Mikaela Shiffin. What occurred at the Olympic is not at all her norm.
Febuary 9, 2022By Jenna Lemoncelli
Mikaela Shiffrin (click here) is getting support from past and present Olympians after the US alpine skier was brought to tears over her second straight disqualification at the 2022 Olympics.
Retired Olympic champion skier Lindsey Vonn, who’s commentating on the Beijing Games for NBC, said she was “gutted” for Shiffrin after the 26-year-old’s early exit in the first run of the slalom race on Wednesday.
The shocker came two days after Shriffin did not finish the giant slalom race, in which she was the defending gold medalist, after crashing 11 seconds into the opening run....
Beijing - When Eileen Gu won Olympic gold in the Big Air, (click here) sales of her red Anta ski suit, complete with slipdrag reduction technology, surged 20-fold on Chinese e-commerce platform JD.com.
Luckin Coffee sold out of Gu-endorsed drinks, with a spike in cup-holders bearing her image, and the Chinese chain immediately said it would launch more Gu-linked products throughout the year.
The San Francisco-born skier won a silver medal in Tuesday's slopestyle final, earning more praise on Chinese social media for redeeming herself on a third jump after an earlier mistake....
Eileen Gu has a dual citizenship, China and the USA. She is on the China woman's ski team by choice.
In a recent press conference she stated, "I am just living my best life." She is an international model with acceptance by the Chinese people in many of their advertisements. But, she also skies in championship contests globally. She does not apologize for her glamourous life and ski championships. She simply is enthralled with herself.
Her glib attitude about her popularity is ignoring the complete tragedy that exists in China among the people. China is as a known human rights violator. Ms. Gu doesn't speak to that, nor does it effect her focus in the wealths in her life, both financial and athletic elite. She is definitely more Chinese than American in her demeanor and ego.
It is one thing to have talent and win. No one has a problem with that, but, her success in life and her igorance to her status in China is a tragedy all itself. Basically, so long as she is comfortable and happy the world is perfect. In China, the world is far from perfect.
I am also suprised in realizing China has had the Olympic games in only a fourteen years apart, the other being 2008.. That is not all that long. That is only three rotation of games both summer and winter.
Why is it that other countries such as Vietnam have no hope in sponsoring the games. Vietnam's reconstruction after the USA war there is stunning. They host a healthy tourism industry. Why are these countries lagging in prestige? The International Olympic Committee needs to discover ways for less wealthy countries to sponsor Olympics and develop their sports venues. Perhaps engaging them in other international events that will lead to a good effort in competing for sponsorship of Olympic games.
Until later.
Sunday, February 13, 2022
Saturday, February 12, 2022
NATO is standing strong and that is reassuring.
Macron also spoke on Saturday with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz as well as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, and was due to speak with U.S. President Joe Biden.
In the call with Zelenskiy, Macron restated his support for the Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity, the Elysee said.
Scholz is due to visit Kyiv on Monday followed by Moscow on Tuesday, and the Elysee said the French and German positions were "perfectly aligned".
MINSK I (click here)
Ukraine and the Russian-backed separatists agreed a 12-point ceasefire deal in the capital of Belarus in September 2014. Its provisions included prisoner exchanges, deliveries of humanitarian aid and the withdrawal of heavy weapons, five months into a conflict that by that point had killed more than 2,600 people - a toll that has risen to more than 14,000 now, according to the Ukrainian government. The agreement quickly broke down, with violations by both sides...
Representatives of Russia, Ukraine, the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) and the leaders of two pro-Russian separatist regions signed a 13-point agreement in February 2015 in Minsk. The leaders of France, Germany, Russia and Ukraine gathered there at the same time and issued a declaration of support for the deal.
The deal set out a series of military and political steps that remain unimplemented. A major blockage has been Russia's insistence that it is not a party to the conflict and therefore is not bound by its terms. Point 10, for example, calls for the withdrawal of all foreign armed formations and military equipment from the two disputed regions, Donetsk and Luhansk: Ukraine says this refers to forces from Russia, but Moscow denies it has any there....
By Jim Heintz and Aamer Madhani
Washington - President Joe Biden told Russia’s Vladimir Putin (click here) that invading Ukraine would cause “widespread human suffering” and that the West was committed to diplomacy to end the crisis but “equally prepared for other scenarios,” the White House said Saturday. It offered no suggestion that the hourlong call diminished the threat of an imminent war in Europe.
Biden also said the United States and its allies would respond “decisively and impose swift and severe costs” if the Kremlin attacked its neighbor, according to the White House.
The two presidents spoke a day after Biden’s national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, warned that U.S. intelligence shows a Russian invasion could begin within days and before the Winter Olympics in Beijing end on Feb. 20.
Russia denies it intends to invade but has massed well over 100,000 troops near the Ukrainian border and has sent troops to exercises in neighboring Belarus, encircling Ukraine on three sides. U.S. officials say Russia’s buildup of firepower has reached the point where it could invade on short notice....