May Day
I never can get enough of this Vine video. Classic!
Another reason Cait’s candidacy is a ludicrous proposition.
I never knew what egg oiling was.
I never can get enough of this Vine video. Classic!
“People who are vaccinated don’t die.”
Music streaming services are here to stay, and this is an interesting take on how tech iterations that fueled its saturation into American culture will affect said streaming.
The evolution of this early digital musical brain we have now is going to be full of surprises and turns. What is more certain is that technology has always powered music plasticity, and the current state of digitalization might very well be an inflection point from which the pace and range of innovation will be increasingly exciting.
Save the date! Cities across the U.S. are bracing for white supremacist rallies tomorrow.
Clean Speech Minnesota is here.
As more than a dozen states see increases in positive COVID cases, Pfizer announces its vaccine is as effective as one could be ahead of pediatric use.
This guy wants to shit disturb the vote.
Nine MN fishing spots are among the nation’s 100 best.
I’ve seen this meme gather muster the past few weeks.
(S)cientists predict that after many more Americans are vaccinated, society might resemble what followed in the aftermath of the 1918 influenza pandemic, a decade known as the Roaring Twenties, an age striking in its excesses. There were flappers, jazz-age partying, Prohibition (and the flouting of it), working women (with their newly won right to vote), flourishing cities, sexual freedom and gangsters, all fueled by a booming economy.
The audacity of hope.
I’m not terribly familiar with this rapper’s flow and oeuvre, but I do know he’s got mad business skills.
I’m publishing to Doctor Pundit using macOS Ulysses for the first time. Yippee!
A primer on Georgia SB 202, the state law that disenfranchises minority voters in that state. Of course, ramifications are just starting to emerge.
A majority of Republicans are “OK” with same-sex marriage for the first time.
Five years after the landmark Supreme Court decision that made marriage equality the law of the land, 51% of Republicans said they supported marriage equality, according to a Public Religion Research Institute poll that looked at data from 2020. In 2019, 47% of Republicans felt the same way.
The poll, which was released on Tuesday, said that 67% of all Americans support marriage equality. Seventy-two percent of independents back marriage equality, and 76% of Democrats say they are in favor of it. The poll also showed majority support for marriage equality among all the religious groups it surveyed, with the exception of white evangelical Protestants.
Sixty-two percent of Republicans say they favor nondiscrimination protections for LGBTQ people. Eight-five percent of Democrats and 79% of Independents say the same. The Equality Act, federal legislation that would provide safeguards to LGBTQ people in housing, public accommodations, jury service, and more, passed the House in February and is under consideration in the Senate.
Guess I’m okay with 51 percent.
Just how small is a single SARS-Cov-2 virion (viral particle)?
CDC today:
This recommendation to waive quarantine for people with vaccine-derived immunity aligns with quarantine recommendations for those with natural immunity, which eases implementation.
As a healthcare provider, I completed my Moderna mRNA series a couple of weeks ago.
90-year-old man spends $10k on 2 ads in WSJ to tell AT&T CEO about slow net.
Most aren’t satisfied with the current state of the vaccine rollout.
The harrowing bomb scene which led to 1 dead and several injured at a Minnesota medical clinic did not have its genesis in some sort of terrorist act at the hands of the perpetrator. The 67 year-old suspect, later detained by police, left a trail of angst directed not at society at large, but at the clinic at which he received medical care.
Authorities are confident that Ulrich acted alone. He is expected to appear in court Thursday morning after charges are filed along with further specifics about the shooting and his motive likely to be disclosed.
Raymond Zandstra, who rented a room from [suspect, Paul] Ulrich for about 18 months until July, said he was not surprised when he heard law enforcement on television reveal who was in jail.
Zandstra, who now lives in Maple Lake, said Ulrich has been upset that a doctor “wouldn’t give him high doses of painkillers. There would be a month’s worth of painkiller, and he’d have that gone in a week and a half. He’d get a buzz on them.”
He wasn’t without a criminal history.
He had a pending case for minor drug possession; his most recent appearance was on Feb. 5. The records show that an earlier case, in which he was accused of violating a harassment order, was dismissed after he was found mentally unfit to go to trial. An official wrote that Ulrich had previously applied for a permit to purchase a firearm, but was denied. In a presentence report written on the harassment violation order case, a court official argued that it was “highly recommended that (Ulrich) not be allowed to have use or possession of any dangerous weapons or firearms as a condition of his probation.”
Buffalo resident Walter Rohde said he was shocked to hear that his neighbor was the man who shot several people at the Allina clinic on Tuesday. “I just knew him as a kindly old man,” said Rohde, who lives just a few doors down from Ulrich in the same trailer park. “He liked to drink, I can tell you that much.”
Rohde said Ulrich helped him build a shed over the summer, and would often come over to sit at his fire ring in the evenings to chat. “From what I know, a kind old man, retired. And to hear that he was a suspect, what the hell?”
Now, those who knew him are trying to make sense of it all.
Raymond Zandstra, who rented a room from Ulrich for about 18 months until July, said he was not surprised when he heard law enforcement on television reveal who was in jail.
Zandstra, who now lives in Maple Lake, said Ulrich has been upset that a doctor “wouldn’t give him high doses of painkillers. There would be a month’s worth of painkiller, and he’d have that gone in a week and a half. He’d get a buzz on them.”
Urlich was so irate that he put the physician’s name on a sign calling the doctor “a crook and just no good,” and attached it to the mobile home’s shed “facing the main road going to the hospital so everybody could see it.”
Was this an extreme example of the type of patient dependent on chronic opioid therapy, or a man who simply reached a breaking point in a society within which he existed but increasingly feared?
Former FDA chair hints at at sudden increases in vaccine availability by April.
PA Lt. Gov. John Fetterman announces ‘22 US Senate bid, vowing to be “100% sedition-free”.
Thank you to the 37,000 grassroots donors who stepped up.
— John Fetterman (@JohnFetterman) February 8, 2021
Now, it's my turn.
Let's get to work https://t.co/6ZiSPrhnpS pic.twitter.com/rvjKE6z0Y3
The pre-match partying had already begun as the 65,000-capacity stadium prepared to host the annual sporting extravaganza in Florida on Sunday.
As sports fans packed out the streets and bars around Tampa hundreds were seen walking without face coverings through areas where the mayor had reportedly issued a mask-wearing mandate to stop the spread of the virus.
Ten percent of Americans have been vaccinated against the novel coronavirus thus far, a rate of about 1.3M persons daily with at least 1 shot in an arm.
A reason to be optimistic, in a Joe Biden presidency, which, thankfully, is starting its course in an unexpectedly boldly progressive manner.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Sunday the US could see full employment next year if Congress passes President Joe Biden’s proposed stimulus package, but warned the country’s unemployment rate would remain elevated over the next few years without the additional $1.9 trillion in federal support.
I would expect that if this package is passed that we would get back to full employment next year. … The Congressional Budget Office issued an analysis recently and it showed that if we don’t provide additional support, the unemployment rate is going to stay elevated for years to come. It would take (until) 2025 in order to get the unemployment rate down to 4% again.
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