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“Justice Alito’s Wife, in Secretly Recorded Conversation, Complains About Pride Flag” — Headline from the New York Times, 6/10/24
Dear Martha-Ann,
I can’t say that I expected to hear from you during Pride month. So, imagine my surprise when, this week, you spilled to an undercover reporter that you’ve been feeling a little left out. It tugs at my heartstrings that you plan to stare wistfully “across the lagoon at the Pride flag for the next month” like some backward Jay Gatsby who has never been invited to a party and whose Daisy currently has her tongue down Jordan Baker’s throat.
American banana company Chiquita has been linked to civilian massacres in Colombia and ordered to pay $38 million in a historic judgment.
The post Chiquita Ordered to Pay $38 Million for Funding Colombian Death Squads appeared first on MintPress News.
Nearly 20 years after the Second Intifada, the Israeli military has resumed airstrikes in the West Bank — and killed 24 children.
The post Israel’s New Air War in the West Bank: Nearly Half of the Dead are Children appeared first on The Intercept.
For the last three weeks, I’ve been talking to the incredible and diverse people of the Holborn and St Pancras constituency as part of my campaign to take on Keir Starmer and become their independent MP. Those conversations have shown that the current genocide in Gaza looms large in the minds of many, alongside the […]
Mozilla, the maker of the popular web browser Firefox, said it received government demands to block add-ons that circumvent censorship.
The post Firefox Browser Blocks Anti-Censorship Add-Ons at Russia’s Request appeared first on The Intercept.
Been There, Smelled That explores the aromas of places around the world. Travel writer Maggie Downs investigates some of the world’s most potent smells, looks at how odor cultivates a connection to place, and presents how humans engage with smells, from scents that have endured generations to the latest innovations in aroma-making.
Years ago, when I was a newspaper reporter at my first job out of college, I wrote a series about a teenager waiting for a heart transplant. When the lifesaving organ finally became available, I was lucky enough to be invited into the operating room to witness the procedure.
I barely remember any of it. In my head, I can only visualize it like a collage of images, as quick and jarring as a trending TikTok. I can’t even picture the room. There’s only a gaping white spot, like a cartoon backdrop that’s been erased. It’s as gone as last night’s dream.
My Monday started with a pleasant surprise that is only possible in cross-timezone collaborations: Ted “tedbow” 1 had made a huge leap forward on #3450957: Prevent modules from being uninstalled if they provide field types used in an Experience Builder (XB) field, where he’s working on the first aspect where XB’s JSON blobs in the database must be queried.
Sit in the bathroom and use your creativity to make it the most exciting place in the entire hotel.
Become frustrated that rearranging the towels has failed to turn the bathroom into the most exciting place in the entire hotel.
Remember that your child’s crib has wheels, and see if you can wheel it into the not-particularly-exciting bathroom without waking them up.
Stop moving the crib in a panic after one of your child’s eyelids briefly flutters open. Spend the next ten minutes silently begging them for forgiveness.
Listen to the peaceful sound of your child’s breathing and feel guilty that it is boring you rather than inspiring you to compose a sonnet.
Wonder if going to the hotel bar would count as negligent parenting, given that you and your child would technically still be in the same building.
Decide that going to the bar counts as negligent parenting, but going to the adjacent hotel room would be totally fine.
Remember that you have no idea who, if anyone, is staying in the adjacent hotel room.