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Officials issue warning amid concerning spread of toxic 'hammerhead worm': 'Don't squish or cut them'​

Simon Sage / Thu, September 11, 2025 at 6:30 PM EDT

The hammerhead worm is originally from Asia, but has been seen in America since the early 1900s.

What's being done about hammerhead worms?

"Don't squish or cut them. That's how they multiply!" warned the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife.

Instead, they should be captured in a bag and frozen for 48 hours before being disposed of. They can also be drowned in soapy water. Witnesses are encouraged to report sightings to iNaturalist.



In traditional newsprint / newspaper journalism, headlines of lesser priority may have made the front page, BUT "below the fold".
 
The Hill
Opinion

The window for US-China nuclear weapons negotiations is shrinking​

Brian Simboli, opinion contributor / Sat, September 20, 2025 at 1:00 PM EDT

At an August meeting with South Korea’s president, Trump again expressed his vision for drawing down U.S., China and Russia nuclear stockpiles. A few days later, the Chinese foreign ministry balked at this goal.
Trump reportedly has been talking to China about the TikTok deal; perhaps this openness to talks can eventually lead to serious denuclearization talks.
As with Russia, there are many reasons to commence negotiation with China. Given China’s growing nuclear stockpile, the window of opportunity is quickly closing.
The history of nuclear deterrence suggests that entrenchment effects — strategic, economic, political — make significant arms drawdowns extremely difficult. It is, therefore, foresighted and proactive to negotiate now.

China’s foreign ministry claims that Trump’s goal is “neither reasonable nor realistic.” One reason is that “China’s nuclear capabilities are not on the same scale as those of the U.S.”
While China’s nuclear posture is not currently on the same scale, in 2024, the Defense Department said China “will have over 1,000 operational nuclear warheads by 2030, much of which will be deployed at higher readiness levels.”
Assuming this assessment is correct, China’s trajectory belies its claim about not being involved in an arms race. This gives reason to negotiate with China before the odds of success in doing so diminish further.

 
How the U.S. Military Is Amassing Combat Power Near Venezuela
The Pentagon is moving some of its most advanced units and weapons closer to Venezuela as tensions run high between President Trump and Nicolás Maduro.


Not directly related to Venezuela, but potentially of more long term geo-political consequence:

Risks of Military Confrontation in Arctic Increasing, Say U.S. and Russian Officials
John Grady / December 25, 2024 3:41 PM
The Arctic is “where the confrontation of the world’s leading states is unfolding,” the head of the Russian Navy said at a recent forum in St. Petersburg where regional cooperation had traditionally dominated the agenda.

“In addition to political and economic measures to contain Russia in the Arctic, unfriendly states are increasing their military presence in the region,” said Adm. Aleksandr Moiseev, who took command of the Russian Navy in March.
He specifically mentioned the United States’ re-establishing the Second Fleet in 2018 and the 2021 creation of NATO’s Joint Force Command in Norfolk.
Moissev said one reason for the rise in tensions has been Moscow’s suspension from the eight-member Arctic Council, following the invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, and the placing of economic sanctions on Russian financial institutions, businesses and individuals.
The other seven nations in the forum are NATO members.


Russia also seems to be preparing for legal / mining claims to international sea bed. This may be tending to appear less implausible as China attempts to fabricate and occupy "islands" in waters disputed by neighbors.
 
Need ammo in a hurry? No problem.

A Los Angeles-based aerospace startup called Inversion Space has unveiled Arc, its first flagship spacecraft designed to deliver supplies from orbit back to Earth in record time. The reusable reentry vehicle can transport up to 500 pounds of mission-critical cargo to nearly any point on the planet in less than an hour.
 
Don't know where to post this so here it is ....

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Anarcha Westcott was one of several enslaved Black women subjected to repeated experimental surgeries by Dr. J. Marion Sims in 1840s Alabama. Sims, often called “the father of modern gynecology,” developed techniques to repair vesicovaginal fistula, a condition causing severe pain and incontinence after childbirth. However, these procedures were performed without anesthesia — more than 30 times on Anarcha alone — while she was enslaved and unable to consent. Sims justified his actions with the racist belief that Black women “did not feel pain like white women.”

Anarcha, along with other women like Lucy and Betsy, endured unimaginable suffering. Their pain directly contributed to major advancements in women’s medicine, yet their names were erased from history while Sims received accolades, statues, and honors.

Today, Anarcha Westcott’s legacy has been reclaimed. Artists, writers, and historians now honor her as the “mother of modern gynecology,” recognizing her resilience and sacrifice. Memorials and exhibits celebrate her life, restoring her rightful place in history and highlighting the human cost behind medical progress.
 
What was that?

Something from “space” may have just struck a United Airlines flight over Utah​

“NTSB gathering radar, weather, flight recorder data.”
Eric Berger – Oct 19, 2025 1:50 PM

1760960009563.jpeg 1760960045589.jpeg
"... about 17,000 meteorites strike Earth in a given year."

a) The stricken airliner seems to have been landed safely. Thank you captain.
b) Not sure what the deal is with the paperclips in the images. To show scale? They're not to scale.
 
  1. Markets & Finance
  2. Regulation

Runaway Insurance Costs Bring Back Talk of Price Caps​

Increasingly, insurers in both red and blue states are being told to cap prices as lawmakers come under pressure​

By Jean Eaglesham
Oct. 20, 2025 5:30 am ET
Source: S&P Global Market Intelligence
America is in a cost crisis when it comes to home and auto insurance. A number of states have a controversial answer: price controls.
Illinois lawmakers are considering a ban on home insurers hiking rates because of catastrophes in other states. Louisiana recently handed its regulator the power to strike down “excessive” premiums.
https://www.wsj.com/finance/regulat...-talk-of-price-caps-fe4df279?mod=hp_lead_pos5
 
The problem with price controls - if insurers can't charge sufficient premium to pay claims they'll simply stop writing the coverage in question. And if they keep issuing underpriced policies they'll eventually go bust.
 
"The problem with price controls - if insurers can't charge sufficient premium to pay claims they'll simply stop writing the coverage in question. And if they keep issuing underpriced policies they'll eventually go bust."S2 #9
Indeed.
One complication, when policy premiums outpace inflation it bears superficial resemblance to profiteering, a failure of an ostensibly regulated market.

Consumers and legislators alike may wish to know why the cost of insurance should increase faster than the cost of food, or fuel, or perhaps the asset being insured, a car or home.

Shouldn't insurers answer that question?

"Global warming" isn't an adequate answer.
 
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