TacoButtPlug

joined 2 years ago
[–] TacoButtPlug 5 points 14 hours ago

Maybe do some undercover shit and help us out

[–] TacoButtPlug 2 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

I really just need to go get a firearm. Might end up dead but I'll take em with me.

[–] TacoButtPlug 1 points 21 hours ago
[–] TacoButtPlug 4 points 1 day ago

Would also be great if they changed the law about showing identification while you're only detained.

[–] TacoButtPlug 5 points 1 day ago (3 children)

I'm not above macing them, also

[–] TacoButtPlug 2 points 1 day ago

Didn't they make some nefarious post on their shit intentions earlier this year? Rip mozilla.

[–] TacoButtPlug 5 points 1 day ago

I hope he falls victim to this bullshit

[–] TacoButtPlug 2 points 1 day ago

White trash to the max

 
[–] TacoButtPlug 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I didn't downvote you but in general it's just going to kill industries and make shit more expensive.

[–] TacoButtPlug 2 points 1 day ago

Deep... siggggh.

[–] TacoButtPlug 4 points 1 day ago

There's a telegram channel with 150,000 Israeli citizens who post memes of them pissing on dead Palestinians. Fuck them kids.

 

smh

 

This shit sucks. Be safe if you're protesting tomorrow. WEAR A MASK. They are using facial recognition. DO NOT GO ALONE. Take a friend/s.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/31615310

CBP also said in a statement that its air and marine operations were “not engaged in the surveillance of first amendment activities”, but that they are “providing officer safety surveillance when requested by officers”.

The Department of Homeland Security on Monday posted a video on X that the agency said was DHS drone footage and bore a CBP air and marine operations watermark. It included zoomed in clips of protestors on the streets.

CBP’s confirmation of its drone usage comes after the LA Times also reported that an LAPD helicopter flying over protesters announced to them, “I have all of you on camera. I’m going to come to your house.” The Guardian US contacted the LAPD and has not heard back.

This is not the first time the DHS has flown drones over protests. In 2020, the DHS dispatched drones over at least 15 cities across the US where people gathered to protest about the murder of George Floyd and logged more than 270 hours of surveillance footage. The LAPD has also ramped up surveillance in response to first amendment activity. During the city’s George Floyd protests, LAPD sent requests to Amazon for Ring doorbell footage that specifically sought videos of the protests.

 

Discourse, Flarum, MyBB, phpBB, Simple Machines Fourm, and NodeBB are what I can find. Any yays or nays? More suggestions? Purpose of self hosting for friends, privately.

 

New studies from the United States and Poland detail COVID-19's cardiovascular toll, with one suggesting that infected children face significantly higher odds of conditions such as high blood pressure and heart failure and the other revealing that post-infection heart symptoms are common in adults.

Even kids at low risk had higher rates of heart conditions A University of Pennsylvania–led research team used electronic health records from 19 US children's hospitals participating in the Researching COVID to Enhance Recovery (RECOVER) consortium to estimate the risk of cardiovascular disease 1 to 6 months after COVID-19 infection from March 2020 to September 2023, with at least 6 months of follow-up.

Of the more than 1.2 million participants aged 0 to 20 years, 297,920 (24.6%; 13,646 with congenital heart defects [CHDs]) had COVID-19, and 915,402 (75.4%; 46,962 with CHDs) were uninfected controls. The average patient age was 7.8 years, and 51.4% were male.

The findings were published today in Nature Communications.>

 

COVID-19 infection was linked to a higher risk of new-onset mild and moderate chronic kidney disease (CKD) in US children and adolescents from 2020 to 2023, according to recent findings from the National Institutes of Health's Researching COVID to Enhance Recovery (RECOVER) initiative.

The University of Pennsylvania-led research team assessed data on kidney outcomes from 1.9 million patients aged 20 years and younger with (487,400) and without (1.4 million) COVID-19 at 19 healthcare centers from March 2020 to May 2023, with up to 2 years of follow-up. The average age was 8.2 years, 51.0% were male, and 45% were White.

The results were published late last week in JAMA Network Open.

 

Key takeaways

In cooperation with the Los Angeles County Fire Department, a multidisciplinary team at UCLA will isolate the contaminants on firefighter jackets and assess their effects on human cells.

Firefighters at one station will wear the jackets in rotation for two months, then send them back to researchers, unwashed and coated with debris from their firefights.

Once the chemists isolate the gases and PM from the jackets, Gomperts will test their effects on human cells.

 

Scientists have attempted to map the human cell since the first microscope was invented more than 400 years ago. But many components of the cell still remain uncharted.

“ We know each of the proteins that exist in our cells, but how they fit together to then carry out the function of a cell still remains largely unknown across cell types,” said Leah Schaffer, Ph.D., a postdoctoral research scholar at UC San Diego School of Medicine.

Now, Schaffer and her colleagues at UC San Diego — in collaboration with researchers at Stanford University, Harvard Medical School and the University of British Columbia — have created a comprehensive, interactive map of U2OS cells, which are associated with pediatric bone tumors. They combined high-resolution microscope imaging and biophysical interactions of proteins to map the subcellular architecture and protein assemblies in the cell. The map revealed previously unknown protein functions and will help the researchers understand how mutated proteins contribute to diseases such as childhood cancers. It will also serve as a reference for developing maps of other cell types. The study will be published on April 9, 2025 in Nature.

“Based on cell biology 101 and textbook pictures of cells, you might think that we understand everything about a cell. But what’s remarkable is that for no human cell type do we really have a proper parts catalog and assembly manual,” said co-senior author Trey Ideker, Ph.D., a professor of genetics in the Department of Medicine, an adjunct professor in the Departments of Bioengineering and Computer Science and Engineering, and a member of Moores Cancer Center at UC San Diego.


The mapping projects referenced in this story are really fucking cool:

https://www.proteinatlas.org/

https://musicmaps.ai/u2os-cellmap/

 

Back in 2014, a woman with advanced cancer pushed Adrienne Boire’s scientific life in a whole new direction. The cancer, which had begun in the breast, had found its way into the patient’s spinal fluid, rendering the middle-aged mother of two unable to walk. “When did this happen?” she asked from her hospital bed. “Why are the cells growing there?”

Why, indeed. Why would cancer cells migrate to the spinal fluid, far from where they’d been birthed, and how did they manage to thrive in a liquid so strikingly poor in nutrients?

Boire, a physician-scientist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, decided that those questions deserved answers.

 

"Studies show psychological strain can accelerate tumors — could beta blockers slow them down?"

just an interesting read on correlation of stress and illness

 

Abstract

A well-functioning society requires well-functioning institutions that ensure prosperity, fair distribution of wealth, social participation, security, and informative media. Such institutions are built on a foundation of trust. However, while trust is essential for economic success and good governance, interconnected mechanisms inherent in weakly governed market economies tend to undermine the very trust on which such success depends. These mechanisms include the intrinsic tendency for inequality to grow, media to boost perceived unfairness, and self-interest to gain rewards at the expense of others. These mechanisms, if left unchecked, allow wealth concentration to result in state capture where institutions facilitate further wealth concentration instead of the promoting the common good. As a result, people may become alienated and untrusting of fellow citizens and of institutions. Several democracies now experience such dynamics, the United States being a prime example. We discuss ways in which well-functioning democracies can design institutions to help avoid this social trap, and the much harder challenge of escaping the trap once in it. Successful cases such as the ability of Scandinavian democracies to maintain high-trust, and the US progressive era in the early 20th century provide instructive examples.

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So great how this is paywalled, right? >_<

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