InevitableSwing

joined 3 years ago
[–] InevitableSwing@hexbear.net 16 points 5 days ago (4 children)

Somebody needs to create a new initialism: TACO TRUCK. Or meta - TACO TRUMP.

[–] InevitableSwing@hexbear.net 21 points 5 days ago (8 children)

Trump might arrest them and put them in El Salvador Gitmo.

[–] InevitableSwing@hexbear.net 7 points 6 days ago

{███████████████████████ | UNICORNS ARE REAL. This is a test. This is only a test.}

[–] InevitableSwing@hexbear.net 11 points 6 days ago

Cut my life into pieces, this is politicization
Military - with marching
Don't give a fuck if bridge break Abrams sinking
This is the first parade

[–] InevitableSwing@hexbear.net 28 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

ICE's lies are decoupled from reality but it's trivial to lie like that when you hide nearly all of the names of the disappeared.

While some of those detained have not been identified, the agency said that 96 of the 196 arrests had either prior convictions or pending charges.

[–] InevitableSwing@hexbear.net 26 points 6 days ago (1 children)

NYT headlines are getting weirder and weirder.

[–] InevitableSwing@hexbear.net 11 points 1 week ago (1 children)

In an alternate universe there's a popular 1970s glam rock song called "Glitter Weevil".

[–] InevitableSwing@hexbear.net 4 points 1 week ago

Which way is it to Albuquerque?

[–] InevitableSwing@hexbear.net 3 points 1 week ago

The season two finale of The Last of Us.

[–] InevitableSwing@hexbear.net 3 points 1 week ago

IRSSEALTEAMSIX - OP: POPE'S NOSE

[–] InevitableSwing@hexbear.net 50 points 1 week ago (1 children)

It's not exactly - cough - breaking news but holy mother of fuck is the US media garbage. USA Today's reportage is dictation that normalizes this shit.

Trump didn't immediately say how the federal government would use that information, or which part of his administration would manage such lists. USA TODAY has reached out to the White House for more information.

 

It's a bark lynx spider.

 

It gets better. By that I mean worse. The school admins starting lying and saying it was shut down due to copyright issues.

The statement began:

After Friday night’s performance of The Crucible, we received several complaints as to an unauthorized change in the script of the play. Upon investigation, we learned that the performance did not reflect the original script. These alterations were not approved by the licensing company or administration. The performance contract for The Crucible does not allow modifications without prior written approval. Failing to follow the proper licensing approval process for additions led to a breach in our contract with the play’s publisher. The infraction resulted in an automatic termination of the licensing agreement. The second performance of The Crucible could not occur because we were no longer covered by a copyright agreement.

Suddenly, the demonic and disgusting content had been magically transformed into a copyright violation. Three students stated that no words of the text had been changed in any way. The only possible material in the production that might have given the licensor pause was that the production began with a wordless scene of the young women of Salem dancing in the woods at night, enacting what is described by dialogue in the text.

[It's] an interpretive choice that was unlikely to have been in violation of the license since it altered not the text, the spirit nor the intention of the show. Would it have been advisable to have checked with the licensor? Yes. Was it flagrantly out of bounds? I think not.

I enjoyed the first 1/3rd the article which is to that point. But in the last 2/3rd the writer goes on and on and on and on trying to find definitive proof that the school admins are lying. Why bother? They're lying.

 

Researchers have estimated that hundreds of millions of birds die hitting buildings every year in the United States. These strikes are believed to be one of the factors behind an almost 30 percent drop in North American birds since 1970. Chicago is one of the most dangerous cities in the country for migrating birds, according to research by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. And no building was known to be more lethal than McCormick Place’s Lakeside Center.

One particular day at the building in 2013 - ~1,000 birds died.

Then, on Oct. 5, 2023, Dr. Willard climbed the lakefront steps to the building’s walkway on his routine inspection to find it littered with dead and injured birds. Shocked by the sheer volume, struggling to save the living while gathering the dead, he called a colleague for help. “They were continuing to crash as we were picking them up,” Dr. Willard recalled. The casualties were mostly warblers, but also thrushes, sparrows and others. On the way back to the museum, they carried plastic bags bulging with roughly 975 dead birds.

Dots on the windows

Some of the earliest research on how to make glass safer for birds was conducted by Daniel Klem Jr., an ornithologist at Muhlenberg College in Allentown, Pa. He found that falcon silhouettes were not effective. Birds did not register them as predators and simply flew into the adjacent glass. Instead, to effectively deter birds, the glass needed a pattern over its entire surface. A distance of no more than two inches would prevent even tiny hummingbirds from trying to dart through, he said.

Eventually Ms. Clark and her team decided on the dots. The treatment cost $1.2 million, paid for by the state of Illinois. Ms. Clark chose the pattern herself, and it was installed in a hectic three-month period last summer to be in place for fall migration. Visitors don’t seem to even notice the dots from the inside, she said. She knows of no pushback.

[...]

The vast glass windows and doors of the building, called Lakeside Center at McCormick Place, are overlaid with a pattern of close, opaque dots. Applied last summer to help birds perceive the glass, the treatment’s early results are nothing short of remarkable. During fall migration, deaths were down by about 95 percent when compared with the two previous autumns.

[...]

Conservationists are using the building’s success as they continue a longtime campaign to implement a bird-friendly design ordinance in Chicago. “I think that may win the day for us in City Hall,” said Annette Prince, director of Chicago Bird Collision Monitors. “This is not just a maybe fix, this is going to make a significant difference in bird mortality, and McCormick Place is the poster child.”

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