I wrote about how growing up I was fed a completely one-sided narrative.
And how there will be no lasting peace or justice if we don’t acknowledge the truth.
The Israeli government has cut off food, water, and fuel to 2 million people inside Gaza as part of its campaign to stamp out Hamas terrorism. Collective punishment is not only contrary to international law, it is inhumane and illogical. It is what my community once endured in World War II, all because of the actions of others who happened to share our ethnicity. Have we learned nothing? How will this possibly help deescalate the violence rather than radicalize many more? It is madness.
@sciencebase Does it distinguish between the Oaks do you know? I think the wasp that makes the apples does but I'm not sure.
@sciencebase Is 'cost' a typo for 'host' or a term I'd not come across before?
@sciencebase What do you think its colours and markings are for? I suppose it can hide in mossy wood.
Some very important points made here. Sunak's wrecking behaviour is absolutely unconscionable
https://open.substack.com/pub/iandunt/p/sunaks-stitch-up?r=igfw&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=email
@davidallengreen Hello compulsory ID cards.
The University of Pennsylvani is acting proud of Katalin Karikó now that she's won a Nobel Prize. But they kicked her out of her tenure track job when she insisted on doing the work that won her that prize:
"She recalls spending one Christmas and New Year’s Eve conducting experiments and writing grant applications. But many other scientists were turning away from the field, and her bosses at UPenn felt mRNA had shown itself to be impractical and she was wasting her time. They issued an ultimatum, if she wanted to continue working with mRNA she would lose her prestigious faculty position, and face a substantial pay cut.
”It was particularly horrible as that same week, I had just been diagnosed with cancer,” said Karikó. “I was facing two operations, and my husband, who had gone back to Hungary to pick up his green card, had got stranded there because of some visa issue, meaning he couldn’t come back for six months. I was really struggling, and then they told me this."
"While undergoing surgery, Karikó assessed her options. She decided to stay, accept the humiliation of being demoted, and continue to doggedly pursue the problem. This led to a chance meeting which would both change the course of her career, and that of science."
Elsewhere she recalled:
“I thought of going somewhere else, or doing something else. I also thought maybe I’m not good enough, not smart enough."
She's now an adjunct in UPenn's neurosurgery department. Will they make her tenure-track now? Luckily she also has a good job at BioNTech.
Both quotes here come from interesting stories. The first is from here:
https://www.wired.co.uk/article/mrna-coronavirus-vaccine-pfizer-biontech
The second is from here:
@sciencebase Bisacodyll moth or clothes moth. Every knitter shits themself if they see one.
@sciencebase I suppose Cinnabar is in the same family
@sciencebase That's the one with Loch Ness Monster caterpillars
@sciencebase Rusty angel of the north?
@sciencebase I feel sure there is a rusty summat but I suppose it's not metallic really.
@sciencebase Moths metallicae, although I'm not sure it's the Nickel Moth.
@freemo In Holland, they call them "sleeping bikes". But they regularly overtake my car.
@freemo Can you estimate its top speed? I guess it will very according to how much coffee and sugar you've had.
Steel industry metallurgical specialist.