A federal judge on Tuesday (Oct. 25) approved a $14.7 billion settlement in the Volkswagen emissions-cheating case.
Largest auto-scandal settlement in US history approved | NOLA.com
hmmm
What goes through my my mind when I read the news with my morning coffee. …Or for the Simon's Rockers in the group, this is my response journal.
A federal judge on Tuesday (Oct. 25) approved a $14.7 billion settlement in the Volkswagen emissions-cheating case.
Largest auto-scandal settlement in US history approved | NOLA.com
hmmm
Twitter, Spotify and Reddit, and a huge swath of other websites were down or screwed up this morning. This was happening as hackers unleashed a large distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack on the servers of Dyn, a major DNS host. It’s probably safe to assume that the two situations are related.
This Is Why Half the Internet Shut Down Today
hmmm
An unknown attacker intermittently knocked many popular websites offline for hours Friday
How your DVR was hijacked to help epic cyberattack
hmmm
2016 is likely to be the first year in recorded history in which levels of CO2 in the atmosphere remain above the symbolically important threshold of 400 parts per million.
CO2 levels mark ‘new era’ in the world’s changing climate – BBC News
Man-o-schewitz….
Pennsylvania environmental officials said that since rain is predicted to continue, it could be later on Friday night or Saturday before the water recedes and the break area on the pipeline can be found.
A drop in pressure on the eight-inch pipeline was detected by the Sunoco Logistics Control Center shortly after 3 a.m. on Friday. The pipeline was shut down and emergency response personnel dispatched to the scene, Sunoco Logistics said.
Sunoco Pipeline Spills Gasoline Near Pennsylvania River
hmmmm
A broken pipeline in Lycoming County on Friday dumped 55,000 gallons of gasoline into the Susquehanna River.
As the river, swollen with 6 to 8 inches of rain that fell overnight Thursday, rushes south, Lancaster County officials are gearing up to prevent contamination of the local water supply.
“With the amount that spilled, we certainly could see some impact on our intake along the Susquehanna River,” Charlotte Katzenmoyer, director of public works for Lancaster, said Friday afternoon.
hmmm
It took a non-native woman’s arrest to expose the North Dakota Access Pipeline
Shailene Woodley: The Truth About My Arrest | TIME
sigh…
The oil spill, the worst in maritime history, dumped 4.2 million barrels of oil, and officials released 1.8 million gallons of Corexit, a chemical dispersant used to break up the oil, into the Gulf before the well was sealed. Six years later, controversy still rages about the wisdom of carpet-bombing the Gulf with these chemicals, and newly released documents reveal that government scientists expressed concern at the time about the health consequences of mixing such large quantities of dispersants with the millions of barrels of sweet crude. Occupational health experts now believe it created a toxic mix that sickened thousands of locals — including some of the 47,000 people that worked in some capacity on BP’s cleanup operation — crippling them with chemically induced illnesses that doctors are unable to treat.
…“That set off alarms,” recalls Porter, who came to the bleak conclusion that he was being sickened simply by being in the water. He found out later that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration wouldn’t allow its divers in the contaminated waters, according to documents obtained by the Government Accountability Project.
…Combining dispersants with oil unleashes hazardous substances contained in crude, such as heavy metals, benzene, hexane, and toluene, which are known carcinogens that can also cause brain damage. Dispersants like Corexit are a mixture of solvents and surfactants that break down the oil into tiny droplets to make them more easily absorbed into the ground and eaten by microorganisms. But it also makes the toxic parts of the oil small enough to seep through the skin and spread throughout the body.
…Even in May 2010, in the first few weeks of the cleanup, government scientists were already worried about this toxic brew, newly released documents reveal.
…Both the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and BP insist that Corexit itself is as safe as dishwashing liquid; the ingredients in the dispersants are also found in household cleaners, hand lotion, and cosmetics. But the safety manual put out by Nalco, the maker of Corexit, lists some of these chemicals’ health effects: chemical pneumonia, eye irritations, dermatitis, nausea, and internal bleeding. One type of Corexit even contains butoxyethanol, which has been linked to a host of hazards, including respiratory ills, headaches, infertility in women, and miscarriages.
6 years after Deepwater Horizon oil spill, thousands of people are still sick | Grist
Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
Valeant, which acquired the drug in 2013, has raised its price more than 2,700 percent in a single year.
Doctors have toxic reaction to Valeant pricing for a lead poisoning drug
Sigh…
More than 25 previously unpublished “Dead Sea Scroll” fragments, dating back 2,000 years and holding text from the Hebrew Bible, have been brought to light, their contents detailed in two new books.
25 New ‘Dead Sea Scrolls’ Revealed
hmmm
Judge refuses injunction, handover of global DNS etc at midnight
Internet handover is go-go-go! ICANN to take IANA from US govt • The Register
hmmm
There, a few feet down into the sandy soil of what now rims the southern edge of the new Keene Middle School’s athletic field, Goodby was to find the oldest evidence of human habitation in Northern New England and one of the most significant archaeological finds in the northeastern United States.
What he found there was a settlement of four ancient homes dating to between 12,570 and 12,660 years ago, proof that humans were living here thousands of years before conventional wisdom previously held and placing it on a list of the oldest prehistoric communities to be found in the United States. Putting this in timeline perspective, these dates were only a few thousand years after mile-high ice sat atop New England in the Great Ice Age.
Area archaeologist reflects on big Keene find, the ‘most significant’ of a long career
When it comes to giving credit or the benefit of the doubt to peoples who lived more than 300-400 years ago conventional wisdom is 3 steps shy of brain dead.
Female astronomers speak out about a culture of pervasive sexual harassment in academia, especially in the sciences and other STEM fields.
Female astronomers speak out about harassment in STEM – CNN.com
Sigh….
An international team of researchers led by Lund University archaeologists has virtually reconstructed a large house of the Pompeian banker Lucius Caecilius Iucundus.
Wild!
Hungary has taken a bold stand against biotech giant Monsanto and genetic modification by destroying 1000 acres of maize found to have been grown with genetically modified seeds, according to Hungary deputy state secretary of the Ministry of Rural Development Lajos Bognar.
Hungarians Just Destroyed All Monsanto GMO Corn Fields… | Eco Snippets
hmmm
Kristen O’Meara chose not to vaccinate her young daughters because she was a big believer in anti-vaccination research. That changed when all three were stricken with a case of rotavirus, which causes acute stomach distress. A teacher living outside Chicago, she added that she had “scoured everything” about why vaccines might be harmful and had become “pretty convinced.” She chose not to vaccinate based on the results of her research but had read only material that cast doubt.
Anti-Vaxxer Mom Changes Mind After Her Three Kids Fall Ill – Yahoo
Mmmhmmm
Long before the Six Million Dollar Man or Robocop there was Gottfried von Berlichingen, quite possibly the first handicapable warrior.
Prototype: Gotz of the Iron Hand—Fierce Knight, Fearsome Prosthetic | WIRED
Wild!
Stanford University inventor Manu Prakash thinks if every child can have a pencil, then they should have a microscope. So, he built a $1 version.
This MacArthur winner wants every child in the world to own a microscope | PBS NewsHour
So cool!
The fight to put a monster telescope on Mauna Kea is part of a bigger war looming among astronomers.
Big Glass and the Age of New Astronomy | Space | Air & Space Magazine
hmmm
The additional 40 trillion tons is equivalent to over 50,000 Empire State Buildings.
Greenland’s ice melting faster than we thought, study finds
Sigh….
We’re so fucked.
I hope everyone who shrugged and and said who cares it won’t happen until after I die lives long enough to have their shit wrecked by climate change.
Man alive, do I ever hate people who show no regard for others.