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in reply to Davriellelouna

EU has to come to terms with China if they're serious about climate change. An area where the US is currently just shitting the bed.
in reply to Davriellelouna

Why are we (the EU) happy with 15% tariffs from the US when they just pulled them out of their ass?
in reply to Jack

probably because you, us(Canada), and others are making new deals with reliable partners. I am disappointed in how Carney is handling this but I only know the public stuff, not the "behind the scenes" stuff. He may just be buying time, or he may be capitulating, only time will tell
in reply to Jack

15% tariffs


...is currently just a rumor. Everything is in a state of flux. And still, an agreement with Trump is just a piece of (toilet) paper, as he has proven repeatedly. So, let's see how and if that all plays out.

Also, if things get worse with the current pollling in mind, he'll probably lose the Congress. Either in Nov 2026, or maybe even before if he also loses some of his Rep. backing during the next months.

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in reply to Riddick3001

I think that this is the greater point. 15% is just today's number, but it's better than yesterday's number, and if it came from a deal, it islikely more stable than last week's number.
This is not about the number, it's about slowing tu ngs down to stabilize other options.






in reply to Lemmyoutofhere

WTF are you on about?!? These are civilians! There were children on board!
in reply to Lemmyoutofhere

Yeah and every time, nationalist turbo-libs like you will be there to voice your utter apathy for the deaths of innocent civilians because they are flying over land controlled by monsters with a different flag than the monsters who control your country, a flag whose subjects your country has told you to hate.

Nationalism is a fucking mind virus.

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in reply to PM_ME_VINTAGE_30S [he/him]

Something in the ballpark of 90 % of those civilians support the war of genocide in some form. Some 30 % are against the war, but most of those are angry about how Ukraine was invaded: They would have wanted it done in a much less bloody fashion.

You talk with Russians, and they keep telling you how "you must look at both sides of the situation", in other words trying to defend the genocide their country is doing its best to commit. So, of course at least 5 %, possibly almost 10 % of Russian civilians are innocent, but out of the 44 adults that died, that is statistically about 2 to 4 people in the whole plane, plus the five children. Are we supposed to be very very horrified that 9 innocent people died in a plane crash?

In the other hand, the Russia is doing its Human Safari attacks against civilians, hunting them down with drones for fun. And they are targeting mainly civilian homes in their terror attacks with drones and missiles. If the death of those 7 innocent civilians and 40 guilty civilians (because of course, every death is always a sad thing – always to at least some extent!) helps end the war earlier and that saves the lives of 200 innocent civilians in Ukraine (being attacked by the army most of the plane's passengers were happily supporting), then as a net result that crash has then saved lives of a bit over 150 people. And yes, I prefer 49 dying over 200 dying, absolutely! Especially if those 200 are innocent and about 42 out of those 49 are not. Even if we were to assume somehow all of the 49 were innocent (HOW?! What are the chances for that?!), the balance would still make sense.

And then: They chose to enter a plane, fully aware of the existence of very severe safety problems in Russian aviation. A Ukrainian living in their own home and getting killed there hasn't really chosen their death as a victim of a terror attack. But someone willingly choosing to use the airplane under the current circumstances has made a completely free decision. They could have taken a train or a bus, but they preferred the risk in order to save time. First they decided not to do anything against Putin, in order to have a comfortable and safe life, then they decided to enter a deathtrap.

Nope. Not terribly sad. Not even for any of the approximately four innocent adults on the flight, because they chose the flight. I am sad for the 5 children, though. But even their deaths easily hasten the end of the war enough to save lives of 20 other children, which does diminish (but doesn't remove!) my sadness. It's 5 absolutely innocent people who didn't know of the risks and even if they did, could not do anything to mitigate them, and that's always sad. But 5 innocent children dying unfairly is something that happens more often than once per decade.

This war must end. It will only end when Russians get fed up with it. Everything that pushes them that way is more good than bad.

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in reply to Tuukka R

That's a lot of words to admit that your empathy for others is conditioned on where they come from.
in reply to Tuukka R

Please elaborate what in my text gave you such an impression.


Previous reply:

Are we supposed to be very very horrified that 9 innocent people died in a plane crash?


Yes oh my God some of them were children

So, of course at least 5 %, possibly almost 10 % of Russian civilians are innocent, but out of the 44 adults that died, that is statistically about 2 to 4 people in the whole plane, plus the five children.


Of course the statistically average Russian isn't completely blameless for supporting the Russia-Ukraine war, but that doesn't mean they deserve to die in a plane crash!


Like the entire argument you're making and the fact that you're making it to argue against what I previously is what gave me the impression that your empathy is conditioned on where someone comes from.

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in reply to PM_ME_VINTAGE_30S [he/him]

I see you simply skimmed through my comment and commented without actually reading it.

Yes oh my god some of them were children


As I said in my comment, that is a horrible thing. Please read the comment and then reply again. It is ridiculed that you just randomly accuse people of being heartless without bothering to read what they actually think about the matter.

Also, you can be sad without being very very horrified. Those children were brought to death by their own parents. Why would that not feel bad?

that doesn't mean they deserve to die in a plane crash!


True. I completely agree with you regarding this. As I wrote in that comment. Please, just read it. If somebody is robbing a bank and gets shot in the process, that is a bad thing, because it's a dead human. A bank robber does not deserve death, because nobody deserves death. But, I won't expressly explain that I'm very sad about a robber dying, because the robbery does decrease my sadness. And even if the robber also kills their own child during the robbery, it of course makes me angry at that horrible parent, and sad about a child dying, but it doesn't make me actively write that I'm angry and sad. Because there are other thingsore relevant about the event.

Arguing against a really bad argument does not make the arguer's "empathy is conditioned on where somebody comes from."

If you now read my comment, you will notice that I'm saying my empathy is conditioned on what somebody has done. (And, to clarify: absolutely regardless of where they are from! It tells a lot about you that you even end up assuming it might be because of where that someone is from! That looks a lot like projecting.)

Furthermore: how have you successfully managed to completely skip the connection to the extreme suffering in Ukrainian homes? Based on you apparently projecting there, it's hard to not notice how you're voicing your compete apathy to the death and suffering of innocent civilians in the terror attacks the Russia is now committing on an almost hourly basis.

in reply to Davriellelouna

This is sad, but this is also an direct consequence from Putins attack war.

Sanctions to Russia hurts lot of their ability to get spareparts they need for repairing planes.

Blood from these deaths are on Putins hands.

in reply to MrFinnbean

Are the deaths from Boeing crashes on Trump/Biden's hands?
in reply to 3abas

Indirectly maybe, but I don't think the scenarios are entirely comparable. One is caused by a lack of resources as consequences for a government's decision to be evil. The other is a company that has been given all of the resources they could ask for choosing to squander them out of greed.
in reply to 3abas

I dunno, were those Boeing crashes caused by a war-induced parts shortage?
in reply to 3abas

Possibly. Has there been a specific risk those two have been aware of without forbidding the dangerous operations?
in reply to 3abas

Those are on McDonnell Douglas for destroying the engineering centric environment at Boeing.
in reply to MrFinnbean

What you talk about comrade, Peotr use wire and glue to fix rudder. No problem have a drink vodka my friend.
in reply to MrFinnbean

Ironically these are Ukraine built planes (antonov)


Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Push The Sky Away (2013)


Nick cave è un Grande musicista, questo va detto subito, ad onor del vero. Va detto soprattutto come riparo da pareri contrastanti e come salvaguardia di un "patrimonio" musicale tra i più interessanti degli ultimi trent'anni... Lerggi e ascolta...


Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Push The Sky Away (2013)


immagine

Nick cave è un Grande musicista, questo va detto subito, ad onor del vero. Va detto soprattutto come riparo da pareri contrastanti e come salvaguardia di un “patrimonio” musicale tra i più interessanti degli ultimi trent'anni. Bisogna ricordare infatti che il nostro Nick, tra “Boys Next Door”, “Bad Seeds”, “Grinderman”, “Warren Ellis” e alcune colonne sonore, ha inciso ventisei dischi, quasi uno all'anno, mica... artesuono.blogspot.com/2014/10…


Ascolta: album.link/i/577620744


HomeIdentità DigitaleSono su: Mastodon.uno - Pixelfed - Feddit




Big Pharma is increasingly reliant on Chinese biotech advances


archive.is/rS9Cg

AstraZeneca, Pfizer and other multinational drug companies have spent a record amount on medicines developed by Chinese biotechs this year

AstraZeneca has signed the most licensing deals with Chinese biotechs, at least $13.6bn of licensing deals with five companies so far this year

US pharmaceutical companies AbbVie, Merck, Pfizer and Regeneron also signed multibillion-dollar licensing deals in the first half of 2025.

Pfizer signed the biggest Chinese licensing deal this year, a $6bn agreement with 3Sbio to develop a cancer drug

All this [pharmaceutical] money has gone into China because China has invested in their industry while the US government has not,” Axelsen said.

in reply to schizoidman

The political administration in USA is basically saying they don't want to be a leader in scientific advances. What else do we expect to happen?
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in reply to friend_of_satan

Put us behind the rest of the world so that we would be forced to play catch-up by investing a bunch of money, and then have the government funnel that money into private corporations owned by tech billionaires
in reply to friend_of_satan

US spent the better part of the 20th century becoming a science and technology powerhouse. We are pissing away that advantage at lightning speed.



US contractor recounts gruesome details of Gaza aid delivery




WordPress-ActivityPub v 7.1.0 Introduces Following Capabilities


The latest release of the ActivityPub WordPress plugin introduces new functionality for performing remote follows directly from WordPress. Here's why that's important for the future of WordPress on the Fediverse.


WordPress-ActivityPub v 7.1.0 Introduces Following Capabilities


The ActivityPub plugin team at Automattic has been doing some amazing work. Over the past few years, this single-person project has shifted from a single-person effort to a team of full-time developers. With the release of the 7.x branch of the ActvityPub integration plugin, project devs announced that they would be working on bringing remote following capabilities to the plugin itself.

Today, version 7.1.0 was released with a very early sneak peak at this new feature. While it’s currently hidden behind an “Advanced Options” toggle, it’s now possible to use the ActivityPub plugin to directly follow other Actors on the network.

Screenshot courtesy of ActivityPub for WordPress

This is still a relatively new feature, and the plumbing hasn’t been completely fleshed out yet. Team member Konstantin Obenland explains further in the announcement:

There’s really no functionality around it yet, beyond following accounts from other instances, as we have yet to start processing incoming posts and adding the ability to interact with them. But if you just can’t wait to show your appreciation for other accounts by following them, go wild!


Why is this Important?


The connection from WordPress to the rest of the Fediverse has always kind of been in a weird place. While the main ActivityPub integration for WordPress generally works great for sending articles to subscribers, following people directly from the WordPress dashboard has been messy. Right now, if you wanted to use your WordPress blog as an actual Fediverse account, you would need the following things:

  • Friends – a social dashboard for WordPress, still in the early stages. This piece is primarily used for following other people in the Fediverse.
  • Enable Mastodon Apps – This implements a substantial amount of the Mastodon API, so that you can post microblog updates directly to your WordPress site.
  • Event Bridge for ActivityPub – This technically adds support for federated Events, by converting your site’s events calendar into something people on the network can subscribe to and indicate their attendance.

With these three pieces, it’s possible to cobble together something that comes close to being a complete Fediverse user experience. Still, this process takes time to set up, can be prone to configuration issues, and sometimes has missing features. Having different plugins that all touch the ActivityPub integration can also be harder to test code and report issues.
We use Tusky with our site for social purposes. It’s pretty good, but definitely could be better.
By introducing remote following functionality directly into the ActivityPub plugin, the project team will effectively provide standard mechanisms for other plugins to directly rely on. In the near future, this might mean that you won’t have to rely on Friends to be the broker of your social connections. Instead, Friends can just use what’s already put in place by the core plugin, and focus on ways to just work as a social dashboard.

Also, Starter Packs!


One other thing worth mentioning involves preliminary support for the Fediverse Starter Kits, a proposed recreation of Bluesky’s Starter Pack functionality. While there have been a number of attempts to make something similar for the Fediverse in the past, there has yet to be a Fediverse standard for lists filled with recommended users to follow. However, the WordPress team has put in the effort to support Pixelfed‘s Starter Kit Data Schema as a point of reference.

A screenshot of the importer in action. Credit: Matthias Pfefferle

In all, this release iterates on the current ActivityPub stack for WordPress, and could provide a stable foundation for a lot of future functionality that we’ve all come to expect from platforms such as Mastodon, Misskey, or even Bonfire.

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in reply to Sean Tilley

They always first focus on consuming the free content vs giving any back

in reply to acargitz

Even if their involvement is just a middle finger to Trump, I’m happy it’s getting traction.
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in reply to womjunru

It's not a middle finger to Trump. The Brazilian government has had that position for a long time.
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in reply to Tm12

Ignore. Plug your ears and avert your eyes. Anything bad you see is propaganda. Ignorance is strength.
in reply to Tm12

If you're from a country materially contributing to this madness, ruin your government's day until they stop. Especially if you're from an EU country, push for a repeal of the EU-Israel treaty and sanctions. If you're not, then unfortunately nothing.
in reply to NoneOfUrBusiness

I'm proud to be from a country that wrote a sternly written statement
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in reply to NotSteve_

Hell yeah, buddy! Jolie is THE Queen for signing that sternly worded letter with twenty five other people! So massively proud of her, I could just Kiss her all over. I don't even care that her and Gibeault (my Rep) were completely silent on the issue for the past two years.

Edit: shit, forgot it's Anand now.

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in reply to NotSteve_

China is the king of those.

We don't like this. But we like trade so we literally won't change anything.
in reply to Tm12

At this point? Not much. For americans the last major chance was elections, but too many of us either voted for this or abstained (which allows the R party the most efficient path to arm Israel).
in reply to InternetCitizen2

That's what they want you to think. The people's power doesn't end where the ruling class decides. Elections didn't end the Vietnam war; mass popular resistance did. Most things you believe the government "gave" to you were actually taken by force.
in reply to NoneOfUrBusiness

mass popular resistance did.


Neat, where is it? I am not trying to be an asshole here, but many of my fellow lefties here keep acting as if the elections didn't have a consequence. There aren't mass protests, certainly not at the scale we need them. Insofar as what the relief Palestine needs; nothing is in place and it will take months we no longer have.

in reply to InternetCitizen2

I'm not saying that the election had no consequences; I'm only saying that things can (and usually do) change without elections, so elections weren't really the last chance for anything. Whether they will this time aside, they at least in theory can; the problem is lack of popular will, not lack of opportunity. Again not dismissing the impact of the election, just keeping things in perspective.
in reply to NoneOfUrBusiness

I don't know that the suppression by the government during those protests was anything like what is going on today though. The government has been detaining regular protestors alongside movement leaders/organisers to scare people into thinking that nobody is safe. The Trump administration has even been targeting people for deportation based on the fucking Canary Mission.

Another big difference is the fact that many of the protestors back then were at risk of being directly affected via the draft, whereas the impact of the Palestinian genocide on the majority of Americans is minimal to nonexistent.

in reply to markko

I don't know that the suppression by the government during those protests was anything like what is going on today though.


The 60s and 70s were the height of COINTERPRO and CIA shenanigans so if anything protesters today have it good, but that aside:

Another big difference is the fact that many of the protestors back then were at risk of being directly affected via the draft, whereas the impact of the Palestinian genocide on the majority of Americans is minimal to nonexistent.


True, but we're really not looking at just the genocide here. There's a whole full-speed march to fascism that already is and will continue affecting the majority of Americans, so really what we should be seeing is mass anti-fascist resistance that would naturally have strong anti-Zionist presence. The fact that there's no mass anti-fascist resistance is the big problem here, but that's not due to lack of impact on the average American. Also given that the IDF trains American cops using lessons learned from their subjugation of Palestinians, I'd say there's a fair bit of impact on minority communities.

in reply to NoneOfUrBusiness

What I meant was the difference in who was targeted. My understanding, which could be wrong, is that specific groups (and more specifically, their leaders) were primarily targeted by the operations carried out back then, whereas today they are also detaining/deporting etc people who genuinely have no offenses or ties to such groups. Even Trump supporters and their family members are being persecuted. I think it's these seemingly indiscriminate actions that make the average person less willing to take a stand, especially if they don't feel as though they've been affected badly enough yet to risk sticking their neck out.

In any case it's a terrifying and truly fucked situation.

in reply to Tm12

I've been wondering a lot, for over a year. The solution is to donate money. Right now that's the most important thing you can do, because people are dying of starvation, and this is their only chance to buy something to eat.

And yes, it's really hard to find a legit way to donate. It's not like Ukraine, where there's an easy central donation platform like united24 plus various other foreign platforms. Since the world fails to even acknowledge the genocide, individual people must take the matter into their hands. Everyone. Every single person who considers themselves a human.

Here's an example:
chuffed.org/project/121561-urg…

I briefly talked to one of the kind family members on Mastodon in an attempt to verify whether it's a scam, and it seems very legit. And they really appreciate all donations.

I guess, there are plenty of other similar fundraisers as well. Do some background check, and donate, and share the link!

Another important act was this:
apnews.com/article/greece-isra…

Protest! Show some solidarity towards Palestine.

And last but not least, do vote on elections. Preferably for those who are not completely incompetent for leading your country, and their foreign policy is in its place as well.

in reply to RandAlThor

The Israelis are going to regret this for decades to come. The world will not forget.
in reply to acargitz

They really don't care. They are indoctrinated into thinking they are the victims and the world hates them for being chosen by God.

As long as they exterminate all the Palestinians it's mission accomplished. They have enough puppets in the West to make sure the blowback isn't too severe.

in reply to Mrkawfee

The west is falling. I pray history will bring justice for Palestine. Stay strong comrade.
in reply to acargitz

Only if the world makes them regret it. I wish I could say that with the mountain of documented evidence (mostly by IDF soldiers themselves) that the history will bring justice for Palestine.

But, I didn't think we could be 655 days into a genocide and still have the New York fucking Times running articles saying "it's totally not. Because not enough babies have died yet. Israel could kill so many more babies if they wanted to".

The one thing that will be true with time though is that Israel will collapse. Fascist Ethnostates are by their very nature self destructive and cannot maintain themselves.

I just want to live long enough to see it fall and the children of Palestinian today be able to serve out the justice to the western world that they deserve.

I want everyone from Israeli officials all the way to New York Times writers to be brought to justice and answer for their crimes.

One day; everyone will 'have always been against' this.


And those people that today still spread genocide propaganda will pretend they were always against. It is important we don't let those demons get away with it.

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in reply to wheezy

It won't happen overnight, but it will happen. Support the Hind Rajab Foundation. We'll make the fuckers pay.


The Death Of Industrial Design And The Era Of Dull Electronics


in reply to mesa

Picked a great time to follow my dream as an industrial designer, only to graduate during COVID and realize that not a single company actually cares to improve the user experience of their products or systems.

Feels like I got a more exclusive and more expensive art degree.

in reply to PerogiBoi

Go create something, im not sure the market is but I want non dominant designs and less dark patterns.


Japan trade deal info on Trump's desk was altered by hand with a marker



in reply to Davriellelouna

I know nothing about the intricacies of Ukrainian politics, but from the outside this looks like such a clear and obvious bad decision that I'm wondering his it actually happened.

in reply to burgerpocalyse

As someone who hasn't watched the show since it aired but who has seen it referenced continually on the internet, I definitely expected pocket sand.


Global study links early smartphone ownership with poorer mental health in young adults


in reply to Davriellelouna

snopes.com/fact-check/tech-bil…

Not even the first story to pop up in the search.

in reply to Davriellelouna

Its not the smartphone. Its corporations and social media. The tech has the ability to make people insanely smart. Capitalism and the far right wont allow that.

When I was a kid I loved tech, had a bunch of computers, read tech books, tried to take apart and break or fix stuff. Install tons of ridiculous software to see what it did. Now I don't think kids have true tech interest. They are handed a phone and they let the zucc tell them what to do/buy/date/say. Gross. Poor young people today.

Im not even old. But I guess get off my lawn or whatever, Kewl.


in reply to silence7

The International Court of Justice issued a strongly worded opinion


Gotta love the meaningless symbology of the UN. Sometimes I think it exists just to keep good politicians occupied while the shitty ones really lead.

in reply to silence7

Spoiler Alert: We are absolutely not going to meaningfully address climate change before it's too late. Not going to happen.
in reply to DarkFuture

We already lowered the rate of emissions growth, taking us from 4°C by 2100 to ~3°C by then. Getting more is on us; you can't sit around hoping somebody else acts
in reply to meco03211

2°C is likely to be ecologically and economically quite damaging, and also at the edge of where we can be reasonably assured that agriculture remains viable. Its not an everybody-dies-instantly threshold
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in reply to DarkFuture

History lesson: The same thing was said about the ozone layer. The global community dealt with that.
in reply to Arkouda

Tell that to Israel, who is opening up a new hole with all their missile launches
in reply to SecretSauces

Tell that to Israel, who is opening up a new hole with all their missile launches


You must have me confused with someone who has contact with, and political sway over, Israel.

Can you explain to me how you came to the conclusion that I have the ability to tell Israel anything?



Announcing the Lancet Global Health Commission on anti-corruption in health: a call for a novel approach


Some excerpts:

Corruption—commonly defined as the abuse of entrusted power for private gain—is a pervasive threat to health, health systems, and societies worldwide.1 Corruption compounds inequities, disproportionately harms marginalised populations, and undermines the right to health and the health system by diverting resources from their intended purpose and limiting access to essential services.

Corruption can affect countries at every income level. High-income countries have experienced major corruption scandals, such as during the COVID-19 pandemic.10 These same countries are often complicit in enabling global corruption by hosting financial institutions and tax havens that allow illicit profits to be hidden.

Despite decades of reform, anti-corruption efforts have had limited success.11 Most initiatives emphasise transparency and legal enforcement, yet overlook deeper institutional and political drivers. Focusing solely on sanctioning individuals fails to address underlying systemic incentives and structural weaknesses,1 many of which originate from outside of the health sector. Tackling corruption effectively, therefore, requires engaging with the broader political economy.

The Lancet Global Health Commission on anti-corruption in health will respond to this challenge with a novel approach. Corruption is not merely a moral failure but a deeply embedded structural issue that requires evidence-based, context-specific solutions. We recognise that health systems are shaped by both formal rules and by informal networks, kinship ties, and political allegiances. Tackling corruption could involve high political and practical costs and might even worsen conditions in the short term. The Commission will move beyond punitive approaches to champion pragmatic, politically realistic solutions that build trust, strengthen institutions, and drive progress towards universal health coverage.

The Commission will highlight the mechanisms linking corruption to health outcomes, making it harder for policy makers to ignore root causes. We will examine how governance structures, labour rights, and economic conditions interact with health policy. Our recommendations will address the incentives facing actors at every level—from rural clinics to global financial hubs—and promote the role of civil society in holding power to account. We will identify the opportunities that prompt actors to engage in corruption and will propose ways to strengthen appropriate checks and balances in health systems and beyond. Health institutions need to embed safeguards and early warning mechanisms to foster integrity and resilience. Addressing low pay and poor working conditions is crucial to curbing misconduct driven by desperation. Above all, proposed measures should consider unintended consequences, including the misuse of anti-corruption policies to target political opponents.

Our commissioners, drawn from diverse backgrounds, will rely on evidence synthesis, exemplar case studies (especially those that have had demonstrable results), and extensive stakeholder consultations. By engaging policy makers, health workers, civil society, and researchers, we aim to ensure that our recommendations are practical and adaptable across all contexts. This approach will support stakeholders in navigating political realities and implementing effective, evidence-informed responses to corruption.

We will measure our success not by the publication of a report, but by the movement we want to spark—a movement that catalyses sustained action, fosters accountability and resilience, and ensures that health resources reach those who need them most.

https://www.thelancet.com/journals/langlo/article/PIIS2214-109X(25)00215-3/fulltext?rss=yes




US | Three dead in small plane crash off California coast


All three people aboard a small twin-engine Beechcraft 95-B55 Baron (registration N8796R) that crashed into the Pacific Ocean off Point Pinos, near Monterey, California, have died, officials confirmed. The aircraft departed San Carlos Airport (SQL) at 22:11 on Saturday, July 26, and was last tracked near its destination, Monterey Regional Airport (MRY) at 22:37.

https://www.aviation24.be/miscellaneous/accidents/three-dead-in-small-plane-crash-off-california-coast/




Zelensky signs law destroying independence of Ukraine's key anti-corruption bodies


President Volodymyr Zelensky on July 22 signed into law a bill that effectively destroys the independence of Ukraine's two key anti-corruption institutions, according to opposition lawmakers and watchdogs.

Earlier in the day, the Ukrainian parliament (Verkhovna Rada) approved amendments that grant the prosecutor general new powers over investigations led by the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) and cases led by the Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor's Office (SAPO).

Among other new powers, the prosecutor general could also close NABU's investigations at the legal defense's request.

The protests were still underway when Zelensky signed the bill.

in reply to IndustryStandard

I think this might be a bad thing. That's the depth of my critical thinking even after reading the article.
in reply to charade_you_are

It probably is, on the positive side these anticorruption agencies weren't effective and hired from prosecution anyway. 🙃
in reply to charade_you_are

It all depends on whether or not SAPO really has been corrupted by Russian influence. If so, a little oversight might be a good thing. If not, then this was a very shady move.
in reply to Archangel1313

Yeah, the shadiness is what I immediately jumped to. The move suggested to me that Zelensky and his buddy were trying to hold onto power for the long term but the useful context I'm getting here suggests that it's just as likely that it's a necessary move. Time will tell hopefully.
in reply to IndustryStandard

I am afraid that this, no matter how good/bad this might be will be used by Russians in order to sow division in the west...


Switzerland | Two rescued after small plane crashes into Lake Lucerne


A small aircraft crashed into Lake Lucerne near Kehrsiten NW on the morning of Monday, July 28. Both occupants — a 78-year-old Austrian pilot and a 55-year-old Swiss woman — were rescued alive. The pilot was uninjured, while the passenger was taken to hospital with injuries.

https://www.aviation24.be/miscellaneous/accidents/two-rescued-after-small-plane-crashes-into-lake-lucerne/



Backlash grows after Zelensky strips anti-corruption bodies of independence


cross-posted from: lemmy.zip/post/44586959

Many Ukrainians outside parliament – the Rada - disagree with the decision. Critics say the law will severely undermine the Nabu and Sap's authority and effectiveness.

The creation of Nabu and Sap was one of the requirements set by the European Commission and International Monetary Fund more than a decade ago in order to move towards a relaxation of visa restrictions between Ukraine and the EU.


in reply to schizoidman

Where are the Epstein files? You're not going to distract us.


Passenger Threatens Bomb on easyJet Flight, Shouts Anti-Trump Rant


A 41-year-old man was arrested after threatening to bomb an easyJet flight from London to Glasgow while shouting death threats against Donald Trump.




Israel kills Palestinian journalist and family in Gaza strike


An Israeli air strike killed Palestinian journalist Walaa al-Jabari along with her entire family in Gaza City on Wednesday, raising the number of media workers killed during Israel’s war on Gaza to at least 231.

The strike also killed her husband, Amjad al-Shaer, and four of their children.

Local reports said the force of the blast was so intense it ejected her unborn child from her womb.

Images circulating on social media show a fetus wrapped in a shroud, though Middle East Eye could not independently verify their authenticity.

Unknown parent

lemmy - Collegamento all'originale
Mrkawfee

What they did the last time after the horrors of the Nakba was to cry crocodile tears afterwards. What Ilan Pappe calls "shoot and cry". It's the basis for liberal Zionism.

The colony is built on deceit and self-victimhood.

I fear they will get away with it this time around as well. They will purge social media of their crimes and pin everything on Netanyahu. Then shed tears for what they were "forced" to do because of October 7th.

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in reply to IndustryStandard

Her death brings the total number of journalists killed by Israeli forces since October 2023 to at least 231, according to Gaza’s Government Media Office.


The Committee for Protecting Journalists has been tracking numbers of journalists killed and recently there's been a massive uptick from the average of 80 a year between 2003 and 2022.

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in reply to CaptainBasculin

I agree, she deserves a medal of honor!
in reply to CaptainBasculin

I tried but he didn't come for tea. So I just sprayed the Roundup on the English ivy.


in reply to Davriellelouna

"The fires are often started illegally by plantation owners or traditional farmers to clear land for planting"

Disgusting. Those plantation owners should be hung from their necks for coercing/bribing these 44 people to set the fires.



The mathematics of starvation: Why aid can't fix the lethal shortage of food in Gaza


Archive article: archive.ph/4jbAr
in reply to RandAlThor

Article assumes every single person in Gaza needs aid of 3 meals per day, i.e. are 100% aid dependant

I'm not sure that's true but it might end up that way if Israel continues as it is

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in reply to ryannathans

It is true.

Israel has enacted a total blockade on Gaza. Even before the full blown genocide Israel already starved Gaza for years by limiting calories allowed to enter.

Israel is killing fishermen off the coast of Gaza and systematically destroyed agriculture in Gaza since 2023.

The point you refer to has been reached about two month ago. This is why now people drop in the streets from starvation.

in reply to Saleh

They do grow food, only last week I saw street stalls with fresh produce getting destroyed by the IDF
in reply to RandAlThor

Short answer, it can't get to the palestinians because of the Israeli embargo assisted by US forces. They are gunning them down in line for food, not handing it out to those in need. Genocides tend to not care about the genocidees, not sure y'all are aware of this?!


Outbreak of Chikungunya Virus Poses Global Risk, Warns WHO


in reply to floofloof

More about the virus itself:
who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/…

in reply to FactChecker

I realize that it states "Due to rounding, some answers do not add to 100%", but how the hell does the bar for former colonial power add up to only about 80%? Is there some link that provides more information?
in reply to randomwords

afrobarometer.org/wp-content/u… From the data under the graph. It seems they mistyped 19 instead of 32 when Carnegie did their graphs on the Afrobarometer data.

in reply to Carrolade

I was thinking the same thing reading the article! It's a greasy kind of respect, but the hustle is impressive in its audacity. There are 195 recognized countries in the world this dude could have falsely claimed to represent, but he went the extra mile and made up Seborga and West Arctica.

Incredible.



Le Punizioni dei Pirati nell'Epoca d'Oro della Pirateria


Il più crudele di tutti i pirati fu l’inglese Edward Low, attivo nei Caraibi e nell’Atlantico orientale dal 1721 fino al 1724. “Ned” Low costruì un catalogo di spregevoli crimini. Nel 1722 fece a pezzi e impiccò un gruppo di passeggeri portoghesi tra i quali due frati.

(Cartwright, Mark. “Punizioni dei Pirati nell’Epoca d’Oro della Pirateria.” Tradotto da Omayma Ghendi. World History Encyclopedia. Modificato il ottobre 07, 2021)

Da Wikipedia: William Kidd (Greenock, 22 gennaio 1645 – Londra, 23 maggio 1701) è stato un pirata scozzese. Uno dei più celebri corsari di sempre, era stato incaricato inizialmente di combattere contro i pirati, ma si unì in seguito alla pirateria e finì per essere catturato e giustiziato



‘Total infiltration’: How plastics industry swamped vital global treaty talks


Petrostates and well-funded lobbyists at UN-hosted talks are derailing a deal to cut plastic production and protect people and the planet

Being surrounded and yelled at about “misrepresenting reality” is not how serious United Nations-hosted negotiations are meant to proceed. But that is what happened to Prof Bethanie Carney Almroth during talks about a global treaty to slash plastic pollution in Ottawa, Canada. The employees of a large US chemicals company “formed a ring” around her, she says.

At another event in Ottawa, Carney Almroth was “harassed and intimidated” by a plastic packaging representative, who barged into the room and shouted that she was fearmongering and pushing misinformation. That meeting was an official event organised by the UN. “So I filed the harassment reports with the UN,” said Carney Almroth. “The guy had to apologise, and then he left the meeting. He was at the next meeting.”

in reply to MicroWave

Like the COP meeting to discuss fossil fuel reductions being hosted by petrostates. Human civilization can't save itself because of money.