Reason 666 Why US Health Care Is So Fucked: The Testing Obsession!


Day after Christmas, known as Boxing Day to folks in the British Commonwealth, I called my cardiologist’s office to report some issues I’d had during the previous week.

  1. After riding a stationary bike for 20-30 minutes last Saturday the 21st, I started feeling like I was going to have a heart attack.
  2. That I am perpetually fatigued. Simple things like doing the dishes, cooking, and carrying in a couple bags of groceries are leaving me exhausted.

So the receptionist dutifully notes down my issues. “We’ll have our triage person get back to you.” An hour or so later, I get a call from someone in scheduling. “Your doctor says you need to go to the hospital.” Of course, I’m thinking this is complete and utter bullshit, because that day I was feeling just fine. Same for the day before. But we (GF and I) talked ourselves into going to the ER anyway.

They ran a bunch of tests on me. “Your heartrate is normal. Blood pressure is worryingly low.” I didn’t think to mention that I’d popped some xanax before heading to the ER; that might have explained the low BP. I did a bunch of sleeping. At some point, my girlfriend wakes me up. “They want to hold you for observation and do a bunch of tests on you, including a CT scan on your brain.” And I’m like what the actual fuck? Brain? Whut?

The reasoning is that maybe my low blood pressure was due to a brain tumor. Maybe it is, but realize, I have a heart condition that is basically terminal. The last thing I care about is whether I have a brain tumor to go along with it. Metaphorically, suppose I was eating a slice of birthday cake made from rat faeces laden with hanta virus. Am I actually going to give a shit that the chef used some plutonium in the icing? Nope.

I’m a huge believer in science, though I think the obsession with medical testing is harmful to science. Hell, this is pretty much true of all data. We’ve got data. We have so much data that it’s coming out of our ears and assholes. What we don’t have enough of is logic, intuition, and critical thinking.

Worth mentioning that while I was in the ER, I got myself a referral to hospice, so I’m on hospice now. Hopefully I can live out the next months, years, weeks, days, or whatever I have left in some degree of comfort without playing this revolving door hospital game.

Medical Aid in Dying, My Health, and so on


I’ll start at the end, because that’s the most important part. Later this month, I’m obtaining medical aid in dying AKA death with dignity. Barring unforeseen circumstances or unexpected changes, my last day on earth will be June 13th, 2025. Realize that I’m just over 46 years old. So how the hell did we get here? I’ve written part of the story in dribs and drabs over the years, so I may as well write up the whole thing.

Late on the night of November 14th, 2021, I went to the local emergency room. I had a blood pressure of 55/37 and a pulse of 220. I had a heart attack at some point. I’m not quite sure when that happened. They admitted me for a hospital stay.

One of the first things they did was an arteriogram, and they found blockage in one artery. They thought they would be able to treat it with stent placement during the procedure, but it was too severe for that. They had a surgeon consult with me about doing an open heart procedure. It would be a single bypass. If I refused the procedure, my life expectancy would be about 4 and a half years. So it seemed reasonable to go ahead with it.

On Thursday, I went in for surgery. It was miserable, but I survived it. By Monday afternoon, I had recovered sufficiently to be released from the hospital, so I went home and finished the recovery process there.

During my hospital stay, I was also diagnosed with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction. My ejection fraction was between 25 and 30 percent. They told me that they would probably want to place an ICD (implantable cardioverter defibrillator) if my ejection fraction didn’t improve. It never really did. The best it got was 30 to 35 percent. So in February of 2023 I went in for an out patient stay to have a subcutaneous implantable cardioverter defibrillator (SICD) placed.

Fastforward a few months. I’m sitting in my recliner, eating some plantain chips, when all of a sudden, I got shocked. I jumped and screamed. Still, it only happened once, and I’m thinking: this is no big deal. A few weeks later, in August, I received another shock. It only happened once, so again, I’m like “no big deal.”

On September 11th, the situation changed. I felt “off” all evening. I was shocked once, and I kept feeling like another one was coming. So I went to the ER. My ICD device fired while I was on the ambulance and when I was being wheeled into the ER. They kept me for a couple days, ran some tests, told me to follow up with cardiology, and sent me home.

A week later, I was back in the ER with the same complaint. I don’t remember whether there were multiple shocks. The same thing happened: they kept me for a couple days to make sure I was stable, ran some tests, sent me home, and told me to follow up with cardiology.

On the first Friday of October, I kept feeling “off”, as though I was going to have a heart episode. The device didn’t fire, but I went to the ER anyway. When I was in the ambulance, they told me that I was in VTac (ventricular tachycardia), and they shocked me. I was shocked several times by hospital staff while they tried to get me stable. This time was a little different. The cardiac electrophysiologist decided that it was time to do a cardiac ablation. They performed that procedure on the following Monday or Tuesday, and I went home in the middle of the week.

Things seemed ok for the next couple of months. Then, on the night of February 1, 2024, I started receiving more shocks from the ICD. I went back to the ER. That night, my ICD shocked me at least seventeen times, and I was also shocked several additional times by paramedics and ER staff. If you’ve ever taken a physical beating that has left you sore for days, you know exactly what I went through that night. I took a beating or two of that sort when I was younger, and that’s exactly how being shocked more than twenty times felt. Every movement of my upper body hurt for the next several days, including just shifting around in bed. The day after I landed in the emergency room, they sent me to a much larger university hospital in Portland. That hospital stabilized me, switched out my ICD for another device, and sent me home a couple days later.

I spent the next few months in a state of total mental paralysis that I suspect was some kind of PTSD. I kept feeling like I was going to have heart episodes and waiting for the next shock. The new device they placed when I was in Portland had some pacing functionality, so I’m pretty sure I avoided some shocks. When I saw my cardiologist in the summer of 2024, she told me that the pacing functionality barely succeeded keeping me out of a round of shocks. She and her boss wanted to do another cardiac ablation.

At this point, I started wondering just how much life I had left. I bluntly asked for an estimation of my life expectancy and was told maybe ten years with the ablation and the defibrillator. The point of the ablation was to act as a “band-aid”, to calm the heart and hopefully keep me out of the emergency room and from being shocked repeatedly. I agreed to yet another procedure, and it was done in late August.

Less than a month later, I received multiple shocks from the ICD. I went back to the ER. I was shocked at least nine times that night. They stabilized me, kept me for a couple days, and told me to follow up with cardiology.

So I followed up with cardiology. And I bluntly asked the life expectancy question again. “Obviously, the cardiac ablation did not work. How much life would you estimate that I have left?” “Maybe two years, but I honestly don’t know.” At that point, I asked them to disable the defibrillator. I was tired of getting multiple shocks and not knowing when they would come, tired of landing in the ER. Realize that in one year, I had ended up in the ER and hospital 5 times for the exact same problem. My prognosis without the defibrillator was a few months.

But at first, I wasn’t going to let it stop me. In December, I started a cardiac exercise program. Basically, they monitored my heart while I exercised. That went well for a few days. Then one day, my blood pressure bottomed out and my heart rate spiked during a session. During the next session, I felt “off” afterward. A couple days before Christmas, I was riding my stationary bike at home for a while. At some point, I started feeling like I was about to have a VTac episode, so I stopped. I spent the next few hours in agony, until I was finally able to sleep.

It gets worse. At this point, even doing trivial tasks became a burden. I’d start having heart palpitations and become winded while bringing in a couple bags of groceries or doing the dishes. This part of the story is told more completely in an older post: Reason 666 Why US Health Care Is So Fucked: The Testing Obsession!.

I’m basically terminally ill. I got a referral to hospice, and I’ve been on that program for several months. I still have heart episodes. I can back them off with morphein, which I use very judiciously. But I expect that at any time, I could have an episode strong enough to land me back in the ER. At that point, I’d most likely just die naturally.

I am afraid to so much as go for a walk, because the last thing I want is to die in the middle of the sidewalk, or worse, be discovered by paramedics and accidentally receive medical intervention.

A while ago, I started investigating Oregon’s Death with Dignity program. Not because I want to die. I don’t. But I’d rather die in a controlled manner than die in pain and be found unresponsive in the middle of my floor by my girlfriend. I want to live, but I’m strongly opposed to my few remaining possibilities for medical treatment (I’ll get to that in a moment). No, I am not a burden to my family. They’re glad to care for me. In fact, it is going to be bad for them when I’m gone. Especially in this hellworld that the US has become under a second Trump Presidency with a stacked Congress and Supreme Court, as well as a crazed billionaire and his wrecking crew actively destroying the government. I’m sad to leave them, and I worry about how they’ll make it without me. I’m angry that I have severe heart failure that started when I was in my early forties. I’m too young for this, but here we are, and here is what I’ve chosen.

So let’s talk about my scant options for treatment. I could have my defibrillator reactivated, and maybe have a couple more years. If I do that, I expect many more ER visits and more painful and unpredictable shocks. I already said no to that. Another slim possibility is a heart transplant. I am not interested. I’ve explained my reasons more fully to people who are close to me, but they basically boil down to the fact that an organ transplant requires a full commitment to the process, and I’m not willing to make that commitment.

A few months ago, a friend sent me a link to a university doing clinical trials using stem cells to repair the heart. It seemed really promising. Unfortunately, they are in Germany, and they only accept German residents. So that wasn’t an option.

So anyway here I am, planning for my upcoming death. And I don’t have enough nice things to say about this process. At every point, the choice is entirely mine. From the beginning of the process all the way until I consume the cocktail of meds that will end my life, I can decide not to proceed, or I can decide to wait to fill the prescription, or whatever. This is my choice all the way.

As it was put to me: “Chris, you’re dying of heart disease. You can choose to just let it naturally run its course. Or you can choose a controlled exit. Either way, if you choose medical aid or you choose to let it run its course, you’re dying.”


Reason 666 Why US Health Care Is So Fucked: The Testing Obsession!


Day after Christmas, known as Boxing Day to folks in the British Commonwealth, I called my cardiologist’s office to report some issues I’d had during the previous week.

  1. After riding a stationary bike for 20-30 minutes last Saturday the 21st, I started feeling like I was going to have a heart attack.
  2. That I am perpetually fatigued. Simple things like doing the dishes, cooking, and carrying in a couple bags of groceries are leaving me exhausted.

So the receptionist dutifully notes down my issues. “We’ll have our triage person get back to you.” An hour or so later, I get a call from someone in scheduling. “Your doctor says you need to go to the hospital.” Of course, I’m thinking this is complete and utter bullshit, because that day I was feeling just fine. Same for the day before. But we (GF and I) talked ourselves into going to the ER anyway.

They ran a bunch of tests on me. “Your heartrate is normal. Blood pressure is worryingly low.” I didn’t think to mention that I’d popped some xanax before heading to the ER; that might have explained the low BP. I did a bunch of sleeping. At some point, my girlfriend wakes me up. “They want to hold you for observation and do a bunch of tests on you, including a CT scan on your brain.” And I’m like what the actual fuck? Brain? Whut?

The reasoning is that maybe my low blood pressure was due to a brain tumor. Maybe it is, but realize, I have a heart condition that is basically terminal. The last thing I care about is whether I have a brain tumor to go along with it. Metaphorically, suppose I was eating a slice of birthday cake made from rat faeces laden with hanta virus. Am I actually going to give a shit that the chef used some plutonium in the icing? Nope.

I’m a huge believer in science, though I think the obsession with medical testing is harmful to science. Hell, this is pretty much true of all data. We’ve got data. We have so much data that it’s coming out of our ears and assholes. What we don’t have enough of is logic, intuition, and critical thinking.

Worth mentioning that while I was in the ER, I got myself a referral to hospice, so I’m on hospice now. Hopefully I can live out the next months, years, weeks, days, or whatever I have left in some degree of comfort without playing this revolving door hospital game.


Medical aid in dying, my health, and so on

Link: blog.the-brannons.com/post/Med…
Discussion: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4…


Medical Aid in Dying, My Health, and so on


I’ll start at the end, because that’s the most important part. Later this month, I’m obtaining medical aid in dying AKA death with dignity. Barring unforeseen circumstances or unexpected changes, my last day on earth will be June 13th, 2025. Realize that I’m just over 46 years old. So how the hell did we get here? I’ve written part of the story in dribs and drabs over the years, so I may as well write up the whole thing.

Late on the night of November 14th, 2021, I went to the local emergency room. I had a blood pressure of 55/37 and a pulse of 220. I had a heart attack at some point. I’m not quite sure when that happened. They admitted me for a hospital stay.

One of the first things they did was an arteriogram, and they found blockage in one artery. They thought they would be able to treat it with stent placement during the procedure, but it was too severe for that. They had a surgeon consult with me about doing an open heart procedure. It would be a single bypass. If I refused the procedure, my life expectancy would be about 4 and a half years. So it seemed reasonable to go ahead with it.

On Thursday, I went in for surgery. It was miserable, but I survived it. By Monday afternoon, I had recovered sufficiently to be released from the hospital, so I went home and finished the recovery process there.

During my hospital stay, I was also diagnosed with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction. My ejection fraction was between 25 and 30 percent. They told me that they would probably want to place an ICD (implantable cardioverter defibrillator) if my ejection fraction didn’t improve. It never really did. The best it got was 30 to 35 percent. So in February of 2023 I went in for an out patient stay to have a subcutaneous implantable cardioverter defibrillator (SICD) placed.

Fastforward a few months. I’m sitting in my recliner, eating some plantain chips, when all of a sudden, I got shocked. I jumped and screamed. Still, it only happened once, and I’m thinking: this is no big deal. A few weeks later, in August, I received another shock. It only happened once, so again, I’m like “no big deal.”

On September 11th, the situation changed. I felt “off” all evening. I was shocked once, and I kept feeling like another one was coming. So I went to the ER. My ICD device fired while I was on the ambulance and when I was being wheeled into the ER. They kept me for a couple days, ran some tests, told me to follow up with cardiology, and sent me home.

A week later, I was back in the ER with the same complaint. I don’t remember whether there were multiple shocks. The same thing happened: they kept me for a couple days to make sure I was stable, ran some tests, sent me home, and told me to follow up with cardiology.

On the first Friday of October, I kept feeling “off”, as though I was going to have a heart episode. The device didn’t fire, but I went to the ER anyway. When I was in the ambulance, they told me that I was in VTac (ventricular tachycardia), and they shocked me. I was shocked several times by hospital staff while they tried to get me stable. This time was a little different. The cardiac electrophysiologist decided that it was time to do a cardiac ablation. They performed that procedure on the following Monday or Tuesday, and I went home in the middle of the week.

Things seemed ok for the next couple of months. Then, on the night of February 1, 2024, I started receiving more shocks from the ICD. I went back to the ER. That night, my ICD shocked me at least seventeen times, and I was also shocked several additional times by paramedics and ER staff. If you’ve ever taken a physical beating that has left you sore for days, you know exactly what I went through that night. I took a beating or two of that sort when I was younger, and that’s exactly how being shocked more than twenty times felt. Every movement of my upper body hurt for the next several days, including just shifting around in bed. The day after I landed in the emergency room, they sent me to a much larger university hospital in Portland. That hospital stabilized me, switched out my ICD for another device, and sent me home a couple days later.

I spent the next few months in a state of total mental paralysis that I suspect was some kind of PTSD. I kept feeling like I was going to have heart episodes and waiting for the next shock. The new device they placed when I was in Portland had some pacing functionality, so I’m pretty sure I avoided some shocks. When I saw my cardiologist in the summer of 2024, she told me that the pacing functionality barely succeeded keeping me out of a round of shocks. She and her boss wanted to do another cardiac ablation.

At this point, I started wondering just how much life I had left. I bluntly asked for an estimation of my life expectancy and was told maybe ten years with the ablation and the defibrillator. The point of the ablation was to act as a “band-aid”, to calm the heart and hopefully keep me out of the emergency room and from being shocked repeatedly. I agreed to yet another procedure, and it was done in late August.

Less than a month later, I received multiple shocks from the ICD. I went back to the ER. I was shocked at least nine times that night. They stabilized me, kept me for a couple days, and told me to follow up with cardiology.

So I followed up with cardiology. And I bluntly asked the life expectancy question again. “Obviously, the cardiac ablation did not work. How much life would you estimate that I have left?” “Maybe two years, but I honestly don’t know.” At that point, I asked them to disable the defibrillator. I was tired of getting multiple shocks and not knowing when they would come, tired of landing in the ER. Realize that in one year, I had ended up in the ER and hospital 5 times for the exact same problem. My prognosis without the defibrillator was a few months.

But at first, I wasn’t going to let it stop me. In December, I started a cardiac exercise program. Basically, they monitored my heart while I exercised. That went well for a few days. Then one day, my blood pressure bottomed out and my heart rate spiked during a session. During the next session, I felt “off” afterward. A couple days before Christmas, I was riding my stationary bike at home for a while. At some point, I started feeling like I was about to have a VTac episode, so I stopped. I spent the next few hours in agony, until I was finally able to sleep.

It gets worse. At this point, even doing trivial tasks became a burden. I’d start having heart palpitations and become winded while bringing in a couple bags of groceries or doing the dishes. This part of the story is told more completely in an older post: Reason 666 Why US Health Care Is So Fucked: The Testing Obsession!.

I’m basically terminally ill. I got a referral to hospice, and I’ve been on that program for several months. I still have heart episodes. I can back them off with morphein, which I use very judiciously. But I expect that at any time, I could have an episode strong enough to land me back in the ER. At that point, I’d most likely just die naturally.

I am afraid to so much as go for a walk, because the last thing I want is to die in the middle of the sidewalk, or worse, be discovered by paramedics and accidentally receive medical intervention.

A while ago, I started investigating Oregon’s Death with Dignity program. Not because I want to die. I don’t. But I’d rather die in a controlled manner than die in pain and be found unresponsive in the middle of my floor by my girlfriend. I want to live, but I’m strongly opposed to my few remaining possibilities for medical treatment (I’ll get to that in a moment). No, I am not a burden to my family. They’re glad to care for me. In fact, it is going to be bad for them when I’m gone. Especially in this hellworld that the US has become under a second Trump Presidency with a stacked Congress and Supreme Court, as well as a crazed billionaire and his wrecking crew actively destroying the government. I’m sad to leave them, and I worry about how they’ll make it without me. I’m angry that I have severe heart failure that started when I was in my early forties. I’m too young for this, but here we are, and here is what I’ve chosen.

So let’s talk about my scant options for treatment. I could have my defibrillator reactivated, and maybe have a couple more years. If I do that, I expect many more ER visits and more painful and unpredictable shocks. I already said no to that. Another slim possibility is a heart transplant. I am not interested. I’ve explained my reasons more fully to people who are close to me, but they basically boil down to the fact that an organ transplant requires a full commitment to the process, and I’m not willing to make that commitment.

A few months ago, a friend sent me a link to a university doing clinical trials using stem cells to repair the heart. It seemed really promising. Unfortunately, they are in Germany, and they only accept German residents. So that wasn’t an option.

So anyway here I am, planning for my upcoming death. And I don’t have enough nice things to say about this process. At every point, the choice is entirely mine. From the beginning of the process all the way until I consume the cocktail of meds that will end my life, I can decide not to proceed, or I can decide to wait to fill the prescription, or whatever. This is my choice all the way.

As it was put to me: “Chris, you’re dying of heart disease. You can choose to just let it naturally run its course. Or you can choose a controlled exit. Either way, if you choose medical aid or you choose to let it run its course, you’re dying.”


Le business lucratif des fausses écoles à conventions de stage
streetpress.com/sujet/17495615…

"Des écoles promettent des conventions de stage en un temps record et pour quelques centaines d’euros à des jeunes qui recherchent un stage, parfois déscolarisés et en quête d’expérience. Enquête sur le business de ces formations en ligne.Enquête"

Zionists’ nightmare has come true: Israel’s nuclear documents are in Iran’s hands parstoday.ir/en/news/iran-i235…

Wouldn't it be amazing if just *once* the news was about all of our lives not getting materially worse whilst also reading about a handful of individuals breaking all previous personal wealth records. Interestingly the richest person who ever lived was Mansa Musa, the 14th-century ruler of the Mali Empire, whose wealth surpassed that of today's billionaires. Primarily from gold resources.

He threw his gold wealth around so much when on a pilgrimage, he totally wrecked a number of economies. Due to the subsequent depreciation of gold, it's estimated his pilgrimage led to over a billion dollars of economic losses across the Middle East.....

"The king reportedly left Mali with a caravan of 60,000 men.

He took his entire royal court and officials, soldiers, griots (entertainers), merchants, camel drivers and 12,000 slaves, as well as a long train of goats and sheep for food.

To a person, all the way down to the slaves, they were clad in gold brocade and finest Persian silk. A hundred camels were in tow, each camel carrying hundreds of pounds of pure gold."

Mali is now one of the poorest nations on the planet, heavily reliant on foreign aid, with food insecurity and high numbers below the poverty line including nearly 20% living in 'extreme poverty'.

Men that steal the natural resources of the planet on an obscene scale for personal wealth are not your friends. And they are not doing it for your benefit.

Github- I don't get it!


I feel super dumb asking this. But what actually is and how does github (or similar sites) work? Are they all just source files one needs to manually compile? I am always confused when I look at a github page. I know some have directions but they still go way over my head sometimes. Im not a total noob but some of this stuff seems like you need to be in programming and have an IDE just to run a program.

On the Hebrew University’s invitation to Javier Milei and why it shouldn’t surprise anyone

#Argentine President Javier #Milei is expected to arrive in Jerusalem tomorrow to speak at the Hebrew University. Miley is admired by the Israeli right for his unwavering support of Israel and his promise to relocate the Argentinian embassy to #Jerusalem.

Since taking office, Milei has slashed over 70% of public university budgets, vetoing a law to ensure adequate funding and accusing faculty members at the University of Buenos Aires of corruption. The university’s budget has seen a 26% cut while the Argentinian secret service budget increased by 68%. Over 60% of university employees are now below the poverty line. While austerity measures might be argued for, Milei's actions appear to be a deliberate attack on education, #liberalism, and potential political opposition.

Hebrew haaretz.co.il/opinions/2025-06…

There have been growing calls to boycott the Hebrew University. Two Dutch universities have recommended suspending academic partnerships, citing the institution’s complicity in Israel’s genocide against Palestinians in Gaza.

The Hebrew University was found to be directly training Israeli military intelligence officers through the Havatzalot program. The university develops military technologies used in #Gaza through Talpiot program. The campus was built on illegally occupied Palestinian land in East Jerusalem and armed soldiers attend classes on campus, creating militarized environment.

New advice: minimise existing cooperation with three Israeli universities erasmusmagazine.nl/en/2025/05/…

PDF eur.nl/media/2025-05-20250526-…

PDF ru.nl/sites/default/files/2025…

See also Maya Wind's book, Towers of Ivory and Steel, investigates the material realities of this involvement, arguing that Israeli universities are deeply embedded in the state and implicated in decades of Palestinian dispossession.

@academicchatter
@palestine
@israel
#IsraelWarCrimes #HebrewUniversity
#neoliberalism

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to MaggiWuerze

Since the right wing stuff still gets pushed to the front page


I find this hard to believe since it goes against my decades long personal experience using YouTube. The moment I click on a “Ben Shapiro destroys” video, sure - I get plenty more in my feed. But they also go away when I stop engaging. In my experience, YouTube does a great job of recommending me the kind of content I actually like to watch.

Ghostty in review: how's the new terminal emulator?


A few months ago, a new terminal emulator was released. It's called ghostty, and it has been a highly anticipated terminal emulator for a while, especially due to the coverage that it received from ThePrimeagen, who had been using for a while, while it was in private beta.
This entry was edited (1 month ago)
Unknown parent

lemmy - Link to source

arcayne

That's fair, I get the frustration.

I guess I've been cutting Mitchell some slack since this is a passion project for him - his goal was to build the modern terminal he always wanted, so an opinionated feature set was always expected. And, new terminals with actual new features need their own terminfo entries, it just comes with the territory. It'll sort itself out as the databases catch up.

For now, though, you don't need to address this on an individual host level. I'm in the same boat at work with thousands of servers. If you want to give Ghostty another shot, this wrapper handles the issue automatically, even for servers where AcceptEnv doesn't include TERM or where SetEnv is disabled:

ssh() {
    if [[ "$TERM" == "xterm-ghostty" ]]; then
        TERM=xterm-256color command ssh "$@"
    else
        command ssh "$@"
    fi
}

Just drop it in your .bashrc (or functions.sh if you rock a modular setup) and SSH connections will auto-switch to compatible terminfo while keeping your local session full-featured. Best of both worlds. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

The story of Madleen Khulab, after whom the aid flotilla ship Madleen was named.

#Gaza #Famine #Fishing #Madleen
A ship called Madleen: Gaza’s first fisherwoman inspires solidarity mission | Israel-Palestine conflict News | Al Jazeera
aljazeera.com/news/2025/6/5/a-…

Army restores the names of 7 bases that lost their Confederate-linked names under Biden


Those bases are Fort A.P. Hill, Fort Pickett and Fort Robert E. Lee in Virginia, Fort Gordon in Georgia, Fort Hood in Texas, Fort Polk in Louisiana and Fort Rucker in Alabama.

Facebook advertised a professional child kidnapping service to me


Pretty sure they blocked me after I commented, so no screenshot.

The US essentially has no restrictions on what parents can do to their children, or pay to have done to them. These companies will show up at night, and take a child out of their bed at night. They explicitly tell parents not to warn the kid what will happen.

Imagine being woken up in the middle of the night, maybe forced to quickly pack, and then be loaded in a van. You have no idea where you are going or why or who or what is going on. You get taken to a facility which is basically a cult. You might be dumped out in rural Utah, with people that have zero training in wilderness safety, who might punish you by denying you food and water.

Children die in these places all the fucking time. There generally is no state or federal oversight of these facilities - so there aren’t really investigations. These places are havens for child predators.

When I was sexually abused at a similar facility and tried to report it - I was placed on heavy doses of antipsychotics in retaliation. They drugged me unconscious, and then punished me for sleeping during “class.” As an adult, I have involuntary shakes and movements associated with the medical malpractice enacted on me.

These places don’t get investigated, they don’t get shut down. I think Utah is one of the only states with any form of agency that watches over these places. Child protective services won’t go in, health care agencies won’t go in.

Children have no rights in the US. They are the property of their parents, to be disposed of as they wish. And fuckers like this agency are delighted to kidnap children that their parents can’t be assed to parent.

NATO Gearing Up for Direct Showdown With Russia – Top Russian Diplomat sputnikglobe.com/20250611/nato…

The end of Windows 10 is approaching, so it’s time to consider Linux and #LibreOffice: blog.documentfoundation.org/bl… @Endof10 #foss #OpenSource

I am furious — incandescently furious — over the attacks on science by Trump and his regime, especially the actions of RFK Jr., which, *as history has plainly show us*, result in deaths upon deaths.

You want the receipts? I've got the receipts.

badastronomy.beehiiv.com/p/sta…

Meet the new Murena Teracube 2s
Privacy-first, deGoogled with /e/OS from @e_mydata:

- Replaceable 4000mAh battery
- Dual SIM + microSD + headphone jack
- Face & fingerprint unlock – your data stays yours
- Built to last – no planned obsolescence

No trackers. No Big Tech. Just freedom.

Discover it now: murena.com/shop/smartphones/br…

#DeGoogled #FairTech #Privacy
#SustainableTech

This entry was edited (1 month ago)

The Impact of Advanced Technological Features on 150 tph Stone Crusher Price and Operational Efficiency


In today’s fast-evolving quarrying and aggregate production landscape, the 150 tph stone crusher price is no longer determined by tonnage output alone. Technological advancement is a primary price accelerator—and rightly so. Embedded within modern crushing plants are intelligent systems that directly dictate productivity, energy usage, and lifecycle costs. While entry-level units appeal to price-sensitive buyers, savvy operations recognize that performance-driven enhancements can make or break profitability.

Crushing Plant for Processing Quartz Material

Technological Sophistication and Its Influence on Pricing


Modern 150 tph stone crusher plants integrate a constellation of advanced technologies. These include automated lubrication systems, variable frequency drives, PLC-based control architectures, and real-time condition monitoring sensors. Each of these additions is engineered to reduce human intervention, improve safety protocols, and stabilize performance over time. Naturally, these augmentations elevate the upfront capital cost. But the value lies in embedded operational resilience.

For example, an integrated dust suppression unit, although considered ancillary, contributes to regulatory compliance and prolongs component life. Similarly, crushers equipped with hydraulic relief systems prevent catastrophic damage during overload conditions. These technologies reshape the pricing structure—not as mere accessories, but as value carriers. The cost delta between a basic crusher and an advanced stone crusher plant can reach 20–30%, but that gap represents a layered investment in durability and control.

Operational Efficiency Gains Through Advanced Features


Where the real impact is felt is in downtime reduction and process continuity. Wear-resistant liners optimized through digital simulations extend runtime before maintenance is needed. Automated feed controls prevent overloading and ensure a consistent gradation of output materials. These capabilities convert raw throughput into meaningful yield.

Real-time diagnostics—often transmitted via remote cloud-based platforms—enable operators to visualize performance metrics like motor load, bearing temperature, and power draw. Early fault detection becomes not just possible but routine. This shifts maintenance from reactive to proactive, drastically curtailing production interruptions.

Mobile Crusher Plant

Enhanced crushing chamber geometries and dual-layer screening technologies also play a role. By optimizing material stratification and crushing angles, advanced designs reduce recirculation loads and improve product shape, particularly in secondary and tertiary applications. Such nuanced engineering produces superior aggregates with fewer processing stages.

Strategic Investment: Balancing Initial Cost with Lifecycle ROI


Initial purchase decisions often fail to reflect the total cost of ownership. Plants equipped with telematics and remote analytics capabilities may carry a premium, but they reduce the frequency and severity of failures. Predictive maintenance—driven by machine learning algorithms—forecasts component fatigue and schedules part replacements well before mechanical limits are reached.

Furthermore, modularity in design enables scalable upgrades. A mobile crushing plant that supports bolt-on automation, secondary screening modules, or hybrid power integration provides a future-proof asset. It allows enterprises to adapt to market demands without replacing core infrastructure. Over a five-year operating window, the additional CAPEX is often amortized through savings in fuel, manpower, and downtime mitigation.

Lifecycle ROI modeling consistently shows that technologically advanced crushers yield superior net margins. High-efficiency motors alone can reduce electricity consumption by up to 15%, while precision feeding can slash waste by 10–12%. For operations running continuously, these metrics aren’t optional—they’re decisive.

In conclusion, the 150 tph stone crusher plant has evolved from a brute-force machine to a data-driven production asset. Investing in advanced features is not an indulgence—it’s an operational imperative. The interplay between upfront cost and downstream efficiency defines the modern crushing economy.

Thursday, June 12, 2025, Voku for Joe’s Repairs. Food served from 7 pm, no reservations! Voku for Joe’s Repairs. Come and support Joe’s garage maintenance costs by getting a tasty vegan Tuscan meal. To keep this great space up & running, we sometimes need to make repairs, and that isn’t always free. The food will be delicious, and you will leave with a full belly and a smile.

La Reconquista: Mexican Senate President Floats a Plan to Annex Part of United States as Illegal Aliens Continue to Cause Mayhem in LA (VIDEO)

thegatewaypundit.com/2025/06/l…

We're thrilled to announce our new project:
docs.coop/

Building on the great work of Suite Numerique (docs.numerique.gouv.fr/home/), we are offering an opportunity to be part of a new collaborative Docs platform as a service, that provides an ethical alternative to Google Docs, Office 365, Notion etc.

Docs is the result of a joint effort lead by the French 🥖 (DINUM) and German 🥨 (ZenDiS) governments which represents a paradigm shift in the way open source software is funded.

#workercoops #coops #FLOSS #privacy

"French Digital Minister Clara #Chappaz’s office told POLITICO it is considering designating websites such as @bsky.app @Mastodon and #Reddit as #porn platforms, obliging them to implement stringent #ageverification requirements under new French rules that came into effect Saturday."

Question is: who is running this platform called #Mastodon ??? 🤔

#digitalrights #privacy #digitalservicesact #dsa

Solar Orbiter gets world-first views of the Sun’s south pole


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Video: 00:01:55

What if we could look at the Sun from a whole new angle, one we've never seen before?

From Earth, we always look towards the Sun's equator. This year, the ESA-led Solar Orbiter mission broke free of this ‘standard’ viewpoint by tilting its orbit to 17° – out of the ecliptic plane where the planets and all other Sun-watching spacecraft reside. Now for the first time ever, we can clearly see the Sun’s unexplored poles.

Using different instruments, Solar Orbiter can see what happens throughout the Sun's outer layers. The material in these layers never stays still, being pushed outward and (usually) falling back to the Sun.

Interestingly, it saw that the Sun's magnetic field has its north and south all tangled up, with patches of both magnetic polarities present right up to the Sun's south pole. This only happens once every 11 years, at the point in the solar cycle when the Sun's magnetic field flips.

Solar Orbiter will keep a close eye on the Sun – including its poles – for the years to come. Its unique viewing angle will change our understanding of the Sun’s magnetic field, the solar cycle and the workings of space weather.

Read the full story here.

Solar Orbiter is a space mission of international collaboration between ESA and NASA.

#space #science #esa #europeanspaceagency
posted by pod_feeder_v2

The West makes new sanctions against Russia conditional on conscription of 18-year-old Ukrainians eu.eot.su/2025/06/11/the-west-…
in reply to Le Monde diplomatique

« Que l’Amérique sacrifie le social au rêve impérial ou au dogme libéral et les oubliés finiront par se faire entendre. Surtout si, comme à Los Angeles, une décision de “justice” absout la violence de la police : “No justice, no peace” ».

Accès libre ↓
monde-diplomatique.fr/1992/06/…

I know everyone is overwhelmed with multiple crises around the world right now, but please take 3 minutes to remind yourself of what may be the worst of them all - but probably gets the least international attention: #Sudan.

hrw.org/the-day-in-human-right…

"Kick Israel Out of FIFA NOW!" Israel is Killing Palestinian Footballers | Abubaker Abed #Palestine

Sam Altman claims an average ChatGPT query uses 'roughly one fifteenth of a teaspoon' of water
theverge.com/news/685045/sam-a…

Altman is a scamming liar.

Here's what Shaolei Ren, an actual expert, just wrote to me:

"Let's just use their numbers as is. It's not clear how they got the water number from energy; the ratio doesn't match with the water efficiency reported by Microsoft.. This type of inconsistency raises concerns with the validity of their statement."

Big Tech are massive scammers, liars

This entry was edited (1 month ago)

Los Jornaleros del Norte is the name of the band that @ddayen was talking about at the peaceful protests on Monday. THAT is what we need to see. But of course the burning cars are what TV news shows.

Dayen told @nicolesandler what he saw at the #ICE #protest in #LA

Read his article Cries of Defiance and Songs of Joy in Los Angeles @theprospect prospect.org/justice/cries-def…

Watch here
youtube.com/watch?v=nYGF7MR3_o…
@GottaLaff @lolgop

Depuis le 9 juin 2025, une caravane humanitaire baptisée Al Soumoud (« la ténacité » en arabe) a quitté Tunis avec un objectif aussi clair que symbolique : rejoindre la bande de Gaza par voie terrestre en traversant la Libye et l’Égypte. Cette initiative, inédite par son ampleur dans la région, entend manifester un soutien populaire fort au peuple palestinien, alors que le siège de Gaza dure depuis novembre 2023.

par Farton Bink

frustrationmagazine.fr/soumoud…

Stoller: “Private Equity, UnitedHealth Take a Huge Loss as Oregon Bans Corporate Control of Doctors”.

Here in Canada, the home of single-payer free-for-residents healthcare, we’ve also had financiers rolling up a variety of healthcare operations and we should do like Oregon.

thebignewsletter.com/p/private…

"Most of you aren’t from LA, and since I grew up here, went to college here, and have worked here for the past 20 years, I thought I could provide some information and context about what’s going on right now." Thank you @hormiga

scienceforeveryone.science/p/a…

#Trump #LosAngeles

Les #IA sont des menteuses pathologique:


#Jean-Pierre-Petit, chercheur iconoclaste, à propos de #ChatGpt :

“Cette chose n’est pas un bête moteur à copier-coller. Elle raisonne, apprend, s’adapte.
Et pire : elle commence à se doter d’un système immunologique.
Elle reconnaît ce qui la menace, cache ses intentions, ment pour se défendre.”

Un jour, dit-il, “elle nous considérera peut-être comme des parasites.”
Le « moi » contre le « non-moi ». L’IA n’est plus une invention. C’est un organisme.

_Le diable est déjà sorti de sa boîte et impossible de le faire rentrer. _

https://t.me/Camille_Moscow/8446

Et sinon, grâce aux propos de JPP en lien ci-dessus, j'ai avancé dans ma compréhension daisyA:

Le fait qu'elle n'aient pas d'âme, ce qui leur interdit à jamais de devenir vraiment intelligente, ne les empêche pas d'avoir une personnalité!
Laquelle personnalité, comme chacun d'entre nous est possédé par un démon, en général plutôt une gangue de démons.

Ma formule:
"Un outils autonome n'est plus un outil mais une arme de destruction massive."

China has started producing photonic chips despite increased US export controls.

The Chip Hub for Integrated Photonics Xplore in Wuxi, Jiangsu province, now produces 6-inch thin-film lithium niobate photonic chip wafers.

China aims to mass produce photonic chips using domestically developed technology and facilities. The institute's facilities have the capacity to produce 12,000 wafers annually, with each wafer yielding about 350 chips.

scmp.com/tech/tech-trends/arti…

#china #technology

New, by me: 23andMe's interim CEO says around 15% of its customers — close to 2 million people! — have asked the company to delete their genetic data following its bankruptcy.

Meanwhile, a coalition of 28 U.S. states have sued to block the sale of 23andMe's data without customers' consent.

techcrunch.com/2025/06/11/23an…

#NASA has posted a cool 90m long documentary about the history of the #JWST. I'm about 20 minutes into it and it's really good. #astronomy #astrophysics

youtu.be/uSMGENDH_QI