At launch sites, rockets are leaving a trail of damage to wildlife, vegetation, and water
The post Rockets Are Blasting the Environment appeared first on Nautilus.
At launch sites, rockets are leaving a trail of damage to wildlife, vegetation, and water
The post Rockets Are Blasting the Environment appeared first on Nautilus.
In my article ‘Pipes, Profits and Peace: Toward a Feminist Political Economy of Gas during War’, which was awarded the 2024 AIPEN Richard Higgott Prize for best journal article, I analyse the cessation of government subsidies on gas to the Ukrainian population.
The post Leaving Everyone Behind: The Green Transition amid Violent War appeared first on Progress in Political Economy (PPE).
As part of our preparation to migrate issues from Drupal.org to GitLab on git.drupalcode.org, we are simplifying the access control for who can grant issue credit.
All maintainers of a project now have permission to grant issue credit. In the past, maintainers needed to have the “Write to VCS” or “Maintain issues” role on their project in order to have permission to assign credit on their issues.
Since issues are moving to GitLab, we will no longer have the “Maintain issues” project role managed by Drupal.
Issue 60 of the Nautilus print edition combines some of the best content from our January and February 2025 online issues. Our cover story is a deep dive into wolf reintroduction in the American Northwest—and what we did to the wolves to make it happen—by editor at large Kevin Berger. This issue also includes contributions from theoretical physicist Sabine Hossenfelder, author […]
The post Print Edition 60 appeared first on Nautilus.
Photo by ajay_suresh on Wikimedia
Photo by Freepik
Photo by Freepik
Photo by wayhomestudio on Freepik
Photo by Aldair Donaldo Ordoñez De Yta on Pexels
Photo by MART PRODUCTION on Pexels
In a clash of self-described progressives, GOP donors are pouring money into the race to unseat Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Gainey.
The post Trump Donors Try to Buy Pittsburgh Mayor’s Race appeared first on The Intercept.
Mahra was just 31 years old when she was forced to seek refuge in a camp. A mother of four, and expecting a fifth, Mahra was one of 4.5 million people in Yemen displaced by the Saudi-led war, and one of 21 million people in need of urgent humanitarian aid. Conflict had compounded an already […]
“Do you mind me shouting at you like this, or would you prefer I let you pass without shouting at you?”
“I’m a medical doctor who just looked at your health records, and good news! You’ll never get cancer!”
“Your parents were wrong to name you that!”
“Your name is NOT my name too! I just like shouting at people I don’t know, because I am a small, empty garbage person! I’m gonna stop right after this!”
“How can I make your life easier!?!”
“What does that song even mean!?! Is it just about two guys with the same name? It doesn’t make any sense! Who’s the main character in the song? You or the person who is singing? Is someone walking with you with that name or does the whole world have the same name as you? You don’t have to answer! These questions are rhetorical!”
“Is it okay if I throw you a bag with enough money in it to pay off all your credit card debt?”
“Hey! I have a picture over here that definitively proves who shot JFK, if you want to come see!”
“I understand how all this constant shouting must be a living nightmare for you!”

- by Aeon Video

- by Nicholas Van Dam
Update 2025-03-21: This blog post is extremely long (if you're reading this, you must already know I'm terribly long-winded). I was in the middle of consolidating it with other posts to make a final, single “wrap up” post of the OSI elections when, in the middle of doing that, I was told that Linux Weekly News (LWN) published an article written by Joe Brockmeier. As such,I've carefully left the text below as it stood it stood 2025-03-20 03:42 UTC, which I believe is the version that Brockmeier sourced for his story (only changes past the line “Original Post” have been HTML format fixes). (I hate as much as you do having to scour archive.org/web to find the right version.) Nevertheless, I wouldn't have otherwise left this here in its current form because it's a huge, real-time description that as such doesn't make the best historical reference record of these event.

- by Ronald W Dworkin