Cannot stop thinking about how researchers put a zoonotic disease laboratory in a place where a lot of zoonotic disease crossovers were happening and now conspiracists are like "what are the chances a zoonotic disease could have come from a place right near this lab??"
This is like looking at a car crash and deciding it was caused by the traffic camera that was installed at a high risk intersection.
Up next: Do sweaters cause cold temperatures in Minnesota? I'm just asking questions.
You never see sweaters in Florida, and THEY'RE warm.
Hawaii: You should really consider the possibility that those volcanoes all escaped from the lab.
It's not just the riot at the Capitol. Police treated BLM and left-wing protesters more harshly than right-wing protesters all through 2020. Even when the left-wing activists were more peaceful.
And even though the preferential treatment never should have existed to begin with, the perceived betrayal could have serious consequences: For public safety in general, and for the left-wing protesters who were already over-policed.
I think the worst part about being a journalist right now is that you finish a story and then you have to go catch up on everything you missed while you were actually reporting/writing.
This is to say that I have absolutely no clue what is happening in DC this morning or anywhere else for that matter.
Actually, no, wait. Sorry. The worst part about being a journalist right now is that half my brain is editing a story on police brutality and race and worrying about the future of the country and half my brain is trying to talk an anxious 5 year old through drawing sheep.
My 5 year old wants to learn sign language as her "Mommy and Me Lesson". I'm struggling here because my spatial reasoning or whatever isn't great and I'm getting stressed trying to get hand positions and movements figured out from pictures/videos. Any suggestions?
Looking for favorite apps/books/websites that might be helpful. I'm sitting here staring at a "Sign Language for Kids" ebook from the library and have no idea whether I'm correctly teacher her how to sign "bread" or if the first Deaf person she meets is gonna be like WTF?
Related question: If we start with the hand spelling alphabet, am I setting her up for a lot of mess, given that that isn't ASL? Or is that useful for her to know first, given that some ASL words are built on hand-spell signs?
I’m still so curious what the original pitch for that “youth who want to work in oil are worried” piece was. And what happened along the way. Because I can imagine an interesting piece about the weird alienation of being the pro-ghg young people.
But to pull that off, you can’t make the narrative about them being sad victims. Either it’s a story about kids out of step with kid culture, or it’s a story about kids struggling w pandemic economy. But if it’s the latter, why oil?
What’s most frustrating about this is that I would love to read (or write) and actual deep dive into the risks of gain of function research. And instead we are getting conspiracist crap that will tar other critical looks with the same crappy brush.
Which, ironically, would look pretty suspicious in and of itself if I were a conspiracist. Can I have 5000 words to explain why I am certain (evidence aside) that this story was intended to discredit real criticism of gain of function research?
I think what is actually interesting about this story ... and what should make all editors pay CLOSE attention... is the way it demonstrates how fact checks can fail as gatekeepers of truth and how editing can go off rails if you don’t know the right questions to ask.
The squash and wild rice stew I made myself yesterday is so good that I am going to share my half-assed "recipe" ...
Started off by roasting 1 Butternut and 1 Kabocha squash. Why those? Because that's what was sitting on top of my fridge and needed to be cooked.
A couple of days later when I finally got around to making the soup, I sauteed up a base of chopped garlic, chopped shallot and chopped leeks - with some salt and white pepper. When that was softened up, I tossed in some chopped red sweet pepper.