Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Using invasive plants for a useful outcome

 

I'll post the link here to a way of using water hyacinths (an invasive aquatic plant, of course) both to remove nutrient pollution from waterways and to make biodegradable plastics. Previously, about the only thing they'd come up with to make them useful was to feed manatees.

(Nutrient pollution is the excess fertilizer that runs off agricultural fields, and which causes excessive algae growth. Better that the hyacinths use it than the algae, because too much algae leads to eutrophication.

Invasive Species Refined: Bioplastics from Water Hyacinths




Happy day, it's more Michelle Keegan fashion shots

 

I know this is a little late (I'm trying to catch up), but I can't pass this up.

Michelle Keegan is modeling her spring Very (that's the brand) line.

Michelle Keegan shows off her sensational figure in strapless yellow co-ord as she models a slew of stylish outfits from her latest Very collection

The shot below is right out of a romance novel. And I would definitely read that one. 

























Here's where the whole Michelle Keegan spring collection resides:


She doesn't do lingerie (dammit) though she does have a special swimsuit, subject of an earlier blog post here. But in this collection there is a dress that looks like a nightgown a bit, so I'll have to live with that. 


Sunday, April 28, 2024

Lighthouse of the Week, April 28 - May 4, 2024: Ayada Marina, Maldives

 

I'll say this right up front: this isn't a real lighthouse. But it looks like one.  And it's in a great location, fortunately one that's not underwater yet.  

This is the Ayada Marina faux lighthouse, just off the island of Ayada in the Maldives.  That's here; the lighthouse is on the northeast side. You can't see it on the map, but if you look for the little channel into the square harbor, that's where it is. As you can see, above-water bungalows perfect for honeymooning are on the north end of the little island.

Since this isn't a real lighthouse, there's no actual data on it. Based on one picture with people next to it, I'd say it's 20-25 feet high. It doesn't have a light in it, but they do put a light on it. See below.

So, pictures below.







Another ancient sword found in England

 

Apparently this stuff is all over the UK.

This Treasure Hunter’s Latest Find? A 1,000-Year-Old Viking Sword.

"The sword, found in the River Cherwell and identified by an archaeological group that tracks public finds, most likely dates to a period between 850 A.D. and 975 A.D. Mr. Penny said he handed it over to the Oxfordshire Museums Service this week, where it is expected to be put on display after restoration."

The finder was using a magnet to troll over the bottom and pull up anything that stuck to it. I'm impressed there was still enough iron in the sword to allow the magnet to grab it.



Note on the Anthropocene

 









It turns out, geochronologically speaking, that we're still in the Holocene. Still, I have to think that it is overwhelming that the start of the Anthropocene, where humans are the dominant force of change in Earth's ecosphere, occurred mid-20th century.  Time will tell if that's true, and I likely won't be here to find out when it gets officially stamped into existence, but it sure seems obvious.

But officially, it didn't happen yet.

Are We in the ‘Anthropocene,’ the Human Age? Nope, Scientists Say.

A panel of experts voted down a proposal to officially declare the start of a new interval of geologic time, one defined by humanity’s changes to the planet.
“This was a narrow, technical matter for geologists, for the most part,” said one of those skeptics, Erle C. Ellis, an environmental scientist at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. “This has nothing to do with the evidence that people are changing the planet,” Dr. Ellis said. “The evidence just keeps growing.”

Francine M.G. McCarthy, a micropaleontologist at Brock University in St. Catharines, Ontario, is the opposite of a skeptic: She helped lead some of the research to support ratifying the new epoch.

“We are in the Anthropocene, irrespective of a line on the time scale,” Dr. McCarthy said. “And behaving accordingly is our only path forward.”


Saturday, April 27, 2024

Lighthouse of the Week, April 21-27, 2024: Shoreham Middle Pier Range Rear Lighthouse, UK

 

For some reason I was drawn to the south of England for this lighthouse of the week, and this one is directly south of London.  See where that location is.

I noticed this one because of the fancy wind vane on top. 

Not a lot of history for this lighthouse, but it does date back to 1846, per the Lighthouse Directory.

"1846. Active; focal plane 13 m (43 ft); white flash every 10 s. 12 m (39 ft) round limestone tower with lantern and gallery. Lighthouse is unpainted gray stone; lantern is black. ... Located on Brighton Road (A259) near the base of the middle pier in Shoreham-by-Sea, about 8 km (5 mi) west of Brighton."

The pictures below show what it looks like.






I perceive no particular problem with this

 

Following Abbey Clancy and her husband ex-soccer player Peter Crouch is easy if you read the Daily Mail.

And they seem to have the "fun in marriage" aspect down pretty well.

Abbey Clancy makes a VERY racy confession about her marriage to husband Peter Crouch after admitting she enjoys 'walking around nude a lot'

Let's see what else we can find out about that.
"Speaking on their podcast The Therapy Crouch, Abbey and Peter, 43, who have been married since 2011, told listeners they could 'do something random naked' to spice up their relationships. 

Explaining off camera, their producer said: 'Doing something naked is always more fun. It doesn't have to be sex.' 

 Abbey replied: 'I don't know how I feel about the naked thing…' '

You've done that before, you cooked a dinner once,' the former footballer smiled. Abbey continued: ''I'm not prudish. I am naked a lot to be honest.' "

She and Amanda Holden (who also apparently likes the unclothed state) should discuss this at length. While others are listening in.

For visual assistance to envision what it might be like to abide in the Clancy/Crouch household, see below.

 


He was very talented

 












I was saddened to read about the passing of Eric Carmen, a very skilled rock musician with a classical background.  He fronted the Raspberries most notably, 

The Washington Post obituary:  

Eric Carmen, Raspberries frontman who sang ‘Hungry Eyes,’ dies at 74

"A guitarist, singer-songwriter and classically trained pianist, Mr. Carmen drew on influences as varied as Rachmaninoff and the Ronettes, crafting lush pop songs about love, loss and the shamanic power of rock-and-roll."

As the article notes, "All By Myself" features a melody from Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto #2. Since the Post linked to it, so will I.






Sunday, April 21, 2024

Lighthouse of the Week, April 14-20, 2024: Lido Molo Sud (Faro San Nicolò), Italy

 

This is a fairly simple Lighthouse of the Week; I was looking for a red lighthouse in Italy. I happened to find one outside Venice.

This is where it is located. That map shows where it is in relation to Venice.

The Lighthouse Directory provides the basic info:

"1908 (station established 1898 with a buoy off the end of the mole). Active; focal plane 14 m (46 ft); two red flashes every 8 s. 14 m (46 ft) octagonal brick tower with lantern and gallery. The lighthouse is painted red with white stone trim under the gallery; lantern roof is white."

So, that's about it. Pictures are below.






Another side of Emma

 

Nice dress.  I'm advertising for Dallianse.

Emma Dress














In case you want to








Public / pubic service announcement.

The sex positions most AND least likely to result in pregnancy, according to experts... and why wannabe parents should avoid gravity-defying maneuvers

More good stuff on how to plant the seed:
'Studies have revealed that your body undergoes a series of physiological responses during an orgasm which might increase the likelihood of fertilization,' she said.

'One such change is a rhythmic contraction of your pelvic muscles which creates a "pumping" effect that might potentially help sperm move closer to the cervix.'

Ms Goody noted that a woman orgasming thins the mucus membrane lining the cervix and elongates the vaginal canal, 'which prepares the vagina for sex.'

'You're preheating the oven, essentially,' she said.

'The important thing is spending enough time with foreplay. I'd say about 10 to 15 minutes, at least.'
OK by me.



Bond pays bond

 

Actor Pierce Brosnan, who has done a lot of roles (very well), but is likely best known as one of the movie James Bonds, did something he shouldn't have done in Yellowstone National Park. He went off-trail into a sensitive area in the Mammoth Hot Springs thermal area to get a closer look, which he shouldn't have done. 

So he paid a $1500 fine after admitting he did it.

Pierce Brosnan pleads guilty to illegal hiking charge and agrees to pay $1,500 fine for walking into protected Yellowstone hot spring

Sorry Pierce, that's not allowed.




Wednesday, April 17, 2024

Another candidate for highest-level dummy

 

By rights, perhaps the dumbest romance move ever was when Fisher Stevens cheated on a young Michelle Pfeiffer and she dumped him.  

But right up there is Benjamin Millepied cheating on the luminous and brilliant Natalie Portman, who even had children with him, and losing her.

So, it's over.

Natalie Portman's divorce from Benjamin Millepied is FINALIZED after actress quietly filed to end marriage in July 2023 - following cheating allegations against ex-husband

Oh, and she's still marvelous.




Signs of the apocalypse


 








While we worry about the potential for Russia to decide to use nuclear weapons in its war with Ukraine, and we worry about the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Station losing power to run and releasing radiation over a large region of Ukraine and Russia -- we can also worry about radioactivity-proof worms living near Chernobyl.

Great.

Worms living near Chernobyl have developed a new 'superpower', scientists discover

Or as Live Science reports it:

Chernobyl worms appear unaffected by radiation from world's worst nuclear disaster

"Scientists sequenced the genomes of 15 of the CEZ worms exposed to different levels of radiation, along with five from other parts of the world, and were unable to detect any clear signs of radiation damage in the worms from the CEZ. These results are in stark contrast to other animals, including frogs, which have changed physically after radiation exposure at the site."
CEZ is the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone.

When the end comes, the survivors will be worms and roaches.

AUGGH!  That means a lot of Republican politicians will survive! 

To tell the truth

 


A Letter to the Editor in the Washington Post really told the simple truth about the past and present of Mitch McConnell's run in the Senate.

Praise for Mitch McConnell is badly misplaced

"Women have lost a fundamental right to privacy in deeply personal medical decisions during crisis moments in their lives because of Mr. McConnell’s impact on the federal judiciary. He has failed to move the Senate to enact legislation to stem the epidemic of gun violence in our country."


Sunday, April 7, 2024

They did keep this quiet

 


Wonder Woman actress Gal Gadot, who I really wish would have one more movie in the title role, but that is pretty clearly not going to happen -- kept it secret that she and her husband were in the process of adding one more child to their family. News of the birth, and the child, is now a few weeks old, but I thought it worth mentioning.  Her pregnancy occurred out of sight of the prying eyes and typing fingers (and photographic cameras) of the media.

Gal Gadot gives BIRTH! Wonder Woman star, 38, welcomes a baby girl after secret pregnancy that 'was not easy' - as she reveals poignant meaning behind name

The name of the baby girl is Ori -- which means "my light". 

I was just thinking that the "WW" of Wonder Woman makes a good logo -- Gal Gadot (GG) should have her own logo.

It's been done for Gucci; the Gucci logo is the two G's of the founder's name, Guccio Gucci. But surely there are other ways of doing two G's.

(That sounds a bit weird.)  Anyhow, here's an example.





Last-chance tourists

 

For those people who think climate change, aka global warming, is no big deal in modern times, I've got news for you, from the New York Times.

It Just Got Easier to Visit a Vanishing Glacier. Is That a Good Thing?

“Last-chance tourists” are visiting the melting Mer de Glace in Chamonix, France, in droves. A just-opened lift should make that easier. But some worry tourism is only making the problem worse.


Last-chance tourism

"Can a visit to such a site prompt a change in behavior?

Researchers at the Mer de Glace have found that exposure to its fragile environment can inspire people to adopt environmentally friendly behavior — or at least to declare their intention to do so in a questionnaire.

A 2020 survey of summer visitors to the glacier found that 80 percent said they would “try to learn more about the environment and how to protect it.” Another 82 percent said they would stop visiting glaciers if doing so would protect them, while 77 percent said they would reduce their water and energy consumption.

More research would be required to see whether tourists follow through. But drawing on the survey results, the researchers concluded that using last-chance tourism as an opportunity to educate visitors about climate change — while also engaging people’s emotions and showing them concrete steps they can take to protect the environment — could maximize the environmental benefits of this kind of tourism."


But wait -- is it really vanishing/melting?

Sadly, it sure is.


100 Year Time-Lapse of the Mer de Glace

Read the article for the video.  But the picture is enough.











1909 on the left (Spelterini's photograph from a balloon); 2017 on the right. 

"At the area in the foreground of Spelterini's photographs, where the glacier now terminates, the surface has dropped around 100 metres from its position in 1909. Scientists have calculated that the overall volume of the Mer de Glace has diminished by the equivalent of around 700 million cubic metres of water in the last century."





That's a big bone

 

The dog must have been very excited.

A man walking his dog found a rare intact dinosaur skeleton

"Two years ago, Damien Boschetto decided to take his dog for a walk. He and Muffin, a border collie mix, headed over to a forest in Montouliers, a few miles from his home in Cruzy, in southern France.

While Muffin sniffed and explored the trail, Boschetto kept an eye out for fossils — a favorite pastime for him after studying paleontology in college. Soon he spotted something poking out from an eroded cliff. It was a bone. And a big one."
More about the fossil:
"For a titanosaur, this skeleton was on the smaller side. Boschetto estimates the one he uncovered was about 30 feet in length. The sediment level where it was found indicates it lived about 70 million years ago during the late Cretaceous era."


Lighthouse of the Week, April 7-13, 2024: Queensport Lighthouse, Nova Scotia, Canada

 

There are numerous lighthouses in Canada, of course, so it isn't too difficult to find one to feature as the Lighthouse of the Week. This time I returned back to Nova Scotia, on the eastern side, not the western Bay of Fundy side. 

This week's lighthouse is the Queensport, located on Rook Island. It's the only man-made structure on Rook Island, as you'll see in the pictures.  To find out where it is more definitively, click here.  I used the satellite image to locate it, because it's so small it doesn't show up on the traditional map. Zoom in to see how small it really is.  If you zoom all the way in, you can see the lighthouse.

Now, the Lighthouse Directory provides the following information:

"1936 (station established 1882). Active; focal plane 16.5 m (54 ft); white flash every 4 s. 12.5 m (41 ft): lantern and gallery mounted on the center of the roof of 2-story wood keeper's house. Lighthouse painted white; lantern and roof are red. ... The Municipality of Guysborough painted and restored the exterior of the building. The site is managed by a local organization, Keepers of the Beacon. The Keepers also operate the Out of the Fog Lighthouse Museum in Guysborough, where a fine collection of lighthouse artifacts was on display."

There are other web pages with info about this lighthouse.  A couple are below.

Queensport Lighthouse -- Nova Scotia Lighthouse Preservation Society

Queensport Lighthouse - Lighthouse Friends

Queensport Lighthouse - Parks Canada (good information here; excerpt below)

Description of Historic Place

"The Queensport Lighthouse combines a lighthouse and keepers’ dwelling, a popular design for lighthouses in remote areas. The two-storey, wood frame residence is surmounted by a square lantern which is accessible fro"m the second floor of the dwelling. Built in 1936, the lighthouse stands 12.5 metres (41 feet) high and is located on Rook Island, a small island off the shore of Queensport harbour, in Chedebucto Bay."
Four pictures are provided below.






Saturday, April 6, 2024

Death Valley's lake is still there (at least a little of it, probably)

 

Heavy rains in California drained into the basin that is named Death Valley, and there's still a lake there, named Lake Manly.  According to latest reports, the inevitable drying of the lake has taken away a lot of its surface area, so catch while it's still there, if it is.

California rains resurrect a long-dead lake in dry Death Valley

"Thanks to the record-setting rain that has washed over California during the last six months, Lake Manly — which dried up thousands of years ago — has reformed on the floor of Badwater Basin, the lowest point in North America. This unlikely and exceedingly rare comeback is a message from the warming climate, which baked the region in a years-long megadrought and has now flooded it with rain.

At the same time, it is delighting visitors, park rangers and the scientists who have devoted their careers to studying Death Valley and have called the lake’s reappearance one of the most spectacular natural phenomena they have ever witnessed. But perhaps most profoundly, it shows that the desert is a dynamic place, home to complex and vibrant ecosystems — not the desolate and barren expanse of popular imagination."
Lake Manly even has it's own Website!

Here's a view from when it was still there, in January 2024. 




This is a trend to watch

 

Actually, this is a trend that's hard not to watch.

Reported in the Daily Mail's inimitable style:

Raunchy new wedding trend sees brides 'freeing the nipple' in 'naked' gowns - after singer Rita Ora embraced the risqué look for her own nuptials
"Kleinfeld Bridal, the New York City boutique featured on Say Yes to the Dress, has an entire section on its website devoted to the 'sheer see-through wedding gown.'

Styles range from plunging necklines to lacy, bra-baring bustiers and beaded bodices."

This one (not from Kleinfeld) has all kinds of appeal. 



Yes, of course, she's a hot mama

 

Model, wife, and entrepreneur Miranda Kerr, married to Snapchat founder Evan Spiegel, has collaborated with him again to make a baby.  She's 40 -- and still looks, well, hot.  Maybe I'm not supposed to say that, but hey, I'm thinking it, so why not?

Supermodel Miranda Kerr gives birth to her fourth child - a baby boy named Pierre - as she shares her joy over the arrival of her 'little ray of sunshine'

Here she is, pre-delivery.



Mitch the coward

 

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is finally and mercifully going to end his time in the Senate at the end of his term, and as minority leader in November. This comes much, much too late, given all of the damage to the country and democracy he's done.

And, while he's on his way out, he has once again confirmed his cowardice and moral turpitude. 

These two articles go together.

Could Mitch McConnell endorse Trump even though he called him an 'old crow', a 'piece of s***' and mocked his wife? Republican Senator's team in talks with ex-president's aides to announce his backing


McConnell endorses Trump for president. He once blamed Trump for ‘disgraceful’ Jan. 6, 2021, attack

Well, from my vantage point, it's pretty obvious that for once, Trump was right in his assessment of someone. 



Making pantethiene is easy

 

The chemical world has been buzzing about the recent article describing how chemists were able to synthesize pantethiene using chemicals that were likely available on the early Earth. 

Pantethiene is not a brand of cosmetics and hair care products.  Here are the supremely simple basics: 

"The compound, pantetheine, is the active fragment of Coenzyme A. It is important for metabolism – the chemical processes that maintain life."

Be aware that it's not just that pantethiene was important for those early reactions; it's currently a basic part of cellular metabolism now.

So, it got made. 

Birth of Life’s Building Blocks: New Study Synthesizes Key Compound in Lab

(I like this article because it includes a link to the actual reference.)

"A notable earlier attempt to synthesize pantetheine was made in 1995 by the late American chemist Stanley Miller, who had started the field of origin of life experiments three decades earlier, creating amino acids from four simple chemicals in glass tubes.

However, in the later 1995 experiment, the yields of pantetheine were very low and required extremely high concentrations of chemicals that had been dried out and sealed in an airtight tube before they were heated to 100 degrees Centigrade.

Dr. Jasper Fairchild (UCL Chemistry), a lead author of the study, who conducted the work as part of his PhD, said: “The major difference between Miller’s study and ours is whereas Miller tried to use acid chemistry, we used nitriles. It’s the nitriles that bring the energy and the selectivity. Our reactions just run in water and produce high yields of pantetheine with relatively low concentrations of chemicals needed.”

I was curious what pantethiene "looks" like; the molecule is shown below. If you don't immediately recognize the name (or the molecule), you might be more familiar with pantothenic acid, aka vitamin B5. And what does the vitamin do?  "The main function of this water-soluble B vitamin is in the synthesis of coenzyme A (CoA) and acyl carrier protein."



Melissa Satta sighting

 

Going way back in time on this blog, I wrote about Sports Illustrated's swimsuit edition when they featured WAGs (Wives and Girlfriends) of some World Cup players wearing nothing but body paint. The links in the article are dead, but the pictures (the Internet never forgets) are still available. See below.

















In my scholarly discussion of this artistic expression, I noted Abbey Clancy (whom I have also noted many times since) and Melissa Satta.  I've written about Melissa a couple of times since, as she has been the WAG of more than one high-end player, and also had a child with one of them.  Despite the deadness of most of the links in the long-ago article, Melissa still has her Instagram page

Moving on to the present, Melissa was in the news (the Daily Mail kind of news) due to the end of her relationship with high-end tennis player Matteo Berrettini. You can judge from the headline and the article as to her lifestyle choices. 

Tennis star Matteo Berrettini splits from sex addict supermodel girlfriend Melissa Satta after 'very intense' year-long relationship 
- Italian tennis star Berrettini, 27, started dating Satta, 38, in January last year 
- He has now confirmed they have split amicably despite a 'difficult' relationship 
- She once confessed to having sex 'seven to ten times a week' with ex-husband Kevin-Prince Boateng

Now, sex addiction is very serious, and might be something that needs treating. But if not, unless you have the time for your addicted partner, being called upon to perform repeatedly and often might detract from one's high-end sports training. This is what apparently happened with her baby daddy. On the upside, if you're capable and have the time ...

By the way, she was also seen with legendary basketball star Kobe Bryant, which caused some problems with the Bryant marriage at that time.



In case you didn't know

 

What more is there to say on this one?

Republicans who say they support IVF backed a bill protecting life ‘at conception’

The antiabortion bill in the House has no provisions for processes like in vitro fertilization


Excerpts provided below.
"The congressional proposal, known as the Life at Conception Act, defines a “human being” to “include each member of the species homo sapiens at all stages of life, including the moment of fertilization or cloning, or other moment at which an individual member of the human species comes into being.” The bill would also provide equal protection under the 14th Amendment “for the right to life of each born and preborn human person.”
And this:
"The legislation is co-sponsored by 125 Republicans in the House, including Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.), who, in the wake of the Alabama ruling, said in a statement to The Washington Post that he supports efforts to allow IVF treatments because he believes “the life of every single child has inestimable dignity and value.”

They've been trying to have it both ways on this ever since the Alabama decision, but in reality, they can't have it both ways.

It doesn't work this way, by the way.



 

Just one of the things Mike Johnson has done

 







If you missed this in passing, I'm bringing it up now. Mike Johnson, Speaker of the House, hard-right Christian and Trump apologist, recently sponsored California-based pastor Jack Hibbs to be the House Guest Speaker. 

That didn't go over well in a lot of sectors.

Thousands Sign Christian Petition Rebuking Mike Johnson

"In addition to this pushback from his House colleagues, Johnson now faces a growing rebuke from his fellow Christians, with over 12,000 signing off on a petition hosted by Faithful America, a Christian group that backs social justice causes and opposes "Christian nationalism." The petition condemns Johnson's support of Hibbs and calls on him to "stop manipulating the Guest Chaplain program to uplift divisive and hateful figures, and to commit to following the rules of the program moving forward -- including those that require attention to religious diversity and inclusion and to a focus on justice and peace."

Hibbs is a bit problematic.

"Hibbs attended the January 6 MAGA rally in Washington, D.C., that led to the pro-Trump insurrection, preaching that January 6 would go down in history alongside the Revolutionary War," the petition's official page explained. "After the violence, Hibbs even tried to justify the attack on False Prophet Tony Perkins's radio show, falsely claiming that the election was 'manipulated.' He has also previously slurred Jewish [people] as being in a 'stupor' and Muslim Americans as a 'death cult' and a vehicle for Satan."

It's guys like him that keep good Christians voting for really bad politicians. 



 

Chicago sues over climate change

 

I'm not sure how far this will get in the courts.  But it's an interesting move, concerning both climate change and science in general.'

Chicago Sues 5 Oil Companies, Accusing Them of Climate Change Destruction, Fraud

The suit says BP, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, Exxon Mobil and Shell have hurt the city by discrediting science even as their products lead to “catastrophic consequences,” including strong storms, flooding, severe heat and shoreline erosion.

Here's a quote from the article:
"The suit also accuses the companies of deceiving the public by waging campaigns to undermine scientific proof of the climate impact.

In addition to the companies, the city singles out the American Petroleum Institute, which it said since 1988 has led a number of “front groups” that include the Global Climate Coalition and Partnership for a Better Energy Future “to promote climate disinformation and advocacy from a purportedly objective source.”

These groups were organized to cast doubt on climate science and promote consumer demand for fossil fuels, the suit claims."
In short ...




Thursday, April 4, 2024

With an interactive Mimas image!

 

This article, about the unmistakable moon of Saturn, Mimas, potentially having an ocean under its crust, is quite interesting.

But the interactive Mimas image in the article, which you can rotate any which way, is fantastically cool. So read the article and then roll Mimas around a couple of times. 

That's no Moon; It's an Ocean World

"There is no way to explain both the rotation and the orbital motion of Mimas with a rigid core,” Lainey said. “Whatever the size and whatever the shape of the silicate core, there is no way you can have a rigid interior. You must have liquid water and an icy shell that slips on the surface.”

Their simulation suggests that Mimas’s subsurface ocean rests under 20–30 kilometers of ice. As much as 50%–60% of Mimas’s total volume could be liquid water, Lainey said."


Mimas and the rings



What if they have both (it happens)?

 


A new bill in Alabama defines a person's gender as what they are identified as when they are born -- if they have male or female genitals.

The problem with that is;  disregarding any LGBTQ situations, there are people that are born with both (and sometimes neither).  Called "intersex", they cause a bit of hemming-and-hawing in the redneck legislation. 

Alabama lawmakers advance bill that would define male and female based on sperm and ova

What's it say about intersex people?
"The measure would create a vague exemption for people with intersex conditions — saying that individuals with congenital or medically verifiable differences in sex development “must be accommodated” in accordance with federal law — while declaring that such people “are not a third sex.”

Research indicates that the U.S. population of intersex people, born with physical traits that don’t match typical definitions of male and female, is even bigger than that of transgender people."
Hope they don't try to live in Alabama, and obviously none of them want to be born there if they can help it.

(They can't, by the way.)



Godliness?


You can just read the Daily Mail headline and shake your head.

North Carolina pastor sparks fury with sermon saying he'd clear any rapist whose victim was a scantily-clad woman because 'a man's a man'

(Also, remember that Republicans, led commonly by very conservative Christians in many states, have voted for laws that force a woman to carry her rapist's baby to term and birth.  How Christian of them.) 

Let's find an additional quote.

He said: 'You find more women going to those places with shorts, than you will women with pants and dresses put together.

'Try it, if you got time, try it. Have your boy go ahead and try it and watch for it, have your girl go out and watch for it.

'I used to say this, I haven't said this in a long time, you ready: I say if you dress like that and you get raped, and I'm on the jury, he's gone go free, you don't like it do you, I'm right though.

'I'm right, because a man's a man.'

He later apologized on a sign outside the church that said "I was wrong."

That's accurate, at least.


Important news reporting

 

It is important news when model Barbara Palvin models swimwear or lingerie.

In this case, it's swimwear.

Barbara Palvin flaunts her bikini body in $266 ViX Swimwear two-piece... after husband Dylan Sprouse revealed what led to a newlywed spat

(If you don't want to read the article, the spat was that one of them watched a show by themselves that they had apparently agreed they should watch together. So no spoilers!)

Now, back to the swimwear worn by the model.





Lighthouse of the Week, March 31 - April 6, 2024: Oyster Rocks, India

 

Reviewing my lighthouses from different regions of the world, I discovered that I have only featured two from India. The photographic coverage of lighthouse in India is not as good as for other lighthouses in other regions, but I managed to find several of this lighthouse.

The lighthouse is on an island off the coast of the province of Karnataka, which is about halfway between the southern tip and northern mainland, on the west coast.  My location map shows its proximity to the city of Karwar. It is necessary to zoom way, way out to see where in India this is located.

Let's see what the Lighthouse Directory says:

"1864. Active; focal plane 63 m (207 ft); white flash every 10 s. 19 m (62 ft) round masonry tower with lantern and gallery, painted red with one white horizontal band; lantern painted white with a red dome. 2nd order Fresnel lens. ... This is the oldest lighthouse of Karnataka, built by the British to support their new outpost at Karwar following the Indian Mutiny uprising of 1857. The Oyster Rocks are the westernmost of several reefs and islets protecting the harbor of Karwar."

Pictures, as well as a video, are provided below.





















Video: