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alyaza [they/she]
alyaza [they/she] @ alyaza @beehaw.org
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3 yr. ago

Music @beehaw.org

Grammys Introduce New Country Album Category, Best New Artist Rules for 2026

Betterment and Praxis @beehaw.org

Streetwise & Steady: A Workbook for Action Peacekeepers or Event Marshals

Environment @beehaw.org

The Limits of Heat Resilience: Extreme heat is pushing up against our physiological limits. We can’t adapt our way out of the problem—we need to confront it directly.

U.S. News @beehaw.org

RFK Jr. picks new CDC vaccine advisors allied with the anti-vax movement

Politics @beehaw.org

Some Notes on the City of Angels and the Nature of Violence

Politics @beehaw.org

The Strategic Logic of the No Kings Protests

World News @beehaw.org

The Day the Mountains Won: How a Peruvian farmer sued a German coal giant and helped create a legal blueprint to hold fossil producers accountable for climate harms

U.S. News @beehaw.org

Something in the water: how kelp is helping Maine’s mussels boom

U.S. News @beehaw.org

In Chicago’s Food Deserts, Community-Led Markets Fill the Void as Big Chains Falter

World News @beehaw.org

Taiwan's Forestry and Nature Conservation Agency unveils plan to achieve ‘30 by 30’ target

Science @beehaw.org

Top scientists call for permanent ban on high seas exploitation

Socialism @beehaw.org

How To: Organize a Neighborhood Popular Assembly

Socialism @beehaw.org

Minnesota’s Labor Movement is Demanding an End to ICE Raids

Gaming @beehaw.org

SAG-AFTRA union reach "tentative agreement" with game companies that could end the latest voice actor strike

Technology @beehaw.org

New apps help immigrants navigate Trump’s deportation crackdown

U.S. News @beehaw.org

‘Uber for Getting Off Antidepressants’ Launches in the US

Socialism @beehaw.org

Mexican communists launch country-wide campaign to get on the ballot

Socialism @beehaw.org

Los Angeles Demands: ICE Out of Our Communities!

U.S. News @beehaw.org

Politico’s AI tool spits out made-up slop, union says

U.S. News @beehaw.org

State bills are redefining gas as “clean energy”

  • it's very funny because at the absolute most this maybe saves like, what, two steps in the best case? AI is so bad at this stuff that you have to human-edit it into something that looks good most of the time anyways

  • take a week off, you were told the issue politely and this is not an acceptable way to respond

  • the cowardice here is really almost entirely the DEA's; unfortunately, there is a laborious process that stuff like this is obliged to go through, and the DEA have been dragging their feet on every part of that process almost three years now (which is when the study of rescheduling began). this has even and increasingly been against the recommendations of other government agencies, because apparently we stuff all of our drug conservatives in the agency now

  • Swift Current began construction on the 3,800-acre, 593-megawatt solar farm in central Illinois as part of the same five-year, $422 million agreement. Straddling two counties in central Illinois, the Double Black Diamond Solar project is now the largest solar installation east of the Mississippi River. It can produce enough electricity to power more than 100,000 homes, according to Swift Current’s vice president of origination, Caroline Mann.

    Chicago alone has agreed to purchase approximately half the installation’s total output, which will cover about 70 percent of its municipal buildings’ electricity needs. City officials plan to cover the remaining 30 percent through the purchase of renewable energy credits.

  • bluntly: why would an Indian news website use metric to satisfy a bunch of foreigners who don't read their paper over a cultural numbering system that people on the Indian subcontinent have used for centuries without problems and which is almost universally understood across the subcontinent's dozens of languages

  • It’s bizarre but many cities are run by folks with no real knowledge of how cities are run, so it makes sense why it happens.

    i don't think this is particularly true--i think a lot of it just boils down to simple, short-term economic math. frankly, a lot of US land area is in an economic death spiral that makes a Walmart much more appealing than trying to maintain the existing local business community. you can't count on people keeping businesses in the family in the middle of nowhere--but you can safely assume if you bend over enough for Walmart they'll stick around and employ people. lotta mayors will take that consistency every time

  • better fit for the World News or Environmental sections, nothing more

  • When I see a comm called ‘Socialism’ I wouldn’t expext an analysis on the Haji in Saudi Arabia.

    i mean, no offense but: virtually all contemporary subjects are shaped by class conflict or capitalist hegemony and it seems like it'd be a much better use of time for socialists to explicitly and plainly make those connections, than endlessly theorypost or relitigate the anarchist/communist or social democrat/socialist or Trotskyist/ML splits

  • The solution here is to just provide enough cooling methods I would say. I feel putting this in a wider ‘capitalist and climate’ frame is a bit overdone.

    in what way? Saudi Arabia is already so hot (and at times humid) that going outside at all is potentially lethal--in no small part because it is a capitalist petrostate whose existence is predicated on cheap oil warming the planet--which also renders much of the Hajj literally impossible to do in any safe manner since it must be done outside. the climactic and capitalistic ties are fairly obvious here to me.

    also, it's worth noting, the article explicitly notes one problem (of several) with your proposed solution:

    Technological adaptations such as air-conditioning do work. But they are not available to all. Nor are they fail-safe. During a heat wave, many of us turn on the aircon at the same time, using lots of power and raising the chance of blackouts. Blackouts during heat waves can have deadly consequences.

  • Kind of annoying to have to click the damned link if the text can just be in the body of the post. What, do you work for PC gamer?

    no offense but why are you on a link aggregator (and a clone of Reddit in particular) if you're averse to clicking links? that's literally the point of this form of social media: emphasis on sharing interesting links from other places, with the expectation that you'll follow them.

    in any case we strongly discourage the practice of copying the entire article because it's technically copyright infringement, we generally expect people to actually engage with what's posted instead of drive-by commenting, and it's just generally bad form to rob writers of attention and click-throughs for their work.

  • i think contextually this article would make the point that it's directed at white people considering wearing dreads and not other non-white groups, but yes it is pretty corny to effectively frame black people as the only group that has a cultural tradition of locked hair

  • i'm sorry but this is not the place to have a meltdown over this. you're not the center of the universe and not everything is a personal affront to you because it doesn't frame things in a way you would prefer

  • this is, respectfully, the goofiest objection i've ever seen. stop being so fragile over a headline

  • no offense but: i can't believe that a statist society, which gives the state a monopoly on violence, gets to decide who lives or dies

  • you've been having a minor meltdown throughout this thread to anybody who asks you basic follow-up questions. take three days off and stop it

  • Now, we have actual data about the impact of the law. The Shift Project took a comprehensive look at the impact that the new law had on California's fast food industry between April 2024, when the law went into effect, and June 2024. The Shift Project specializes in surveying hourly workers working for large firms. As a result, it has "large samples of covered fast food workers in California as well as comparison workers in other states and in similar industries; and of having detailed measurement of wages, hours, staffing, and other channels of adjustment."

    Despite the dire warnings from the restaurant industry and some media reports, the Shift Project's study did "not find evidence that employers turned to understaffing or reduced scheduled work hours to offset the increased labor costs." Instead, "weekly work hours stayed about the same for California fast food workers, and levels of understaffing appeared to ease." Further, there was "no evidence that wage increases were accompanied by a reduction in fringe benefits… such as health or dental insurance, paid sick time, or retirement benefits."

  • Also, this post says we can discuss it, but you’re already deleting comments you don’t like!

    i'm removing your comments because you don't know what you're talking about--and your reply here, which is similarly nonsensical, does not make me less likely to continue doing this.

  • it would be unfortunate if this were true, but luckily the moratorium started four days after the election result happened so you're just making up a guy to get mad about.

  • this does not strike me as an article worth keeping up between its dubious quality and the (generously) cringeworthy opinions of its writer

  • The Yurok Tribe has released 18 condors into the wild so far, over four rounds of releases. They're doing great, says Williams. "It's been really exciting to watch the flock expand and change in their dynamics." The first couple of cohorts stayed close to home, only exploring within a 30-mile (48km) radius. Now the birds wander as far as 95 miles (152km) away, she adds.

    "It's awesome to see these young birds who've literally never flown in their life because they were reared in facilities with limited flight space, starting to learn the ropes and how to use the landscape to their advantage," says Williams.


    The tribe has a release and management facility to monitor the birds for the foreseeable future – many challenges remain before they become a fully self-sustaining population. The birds are brought back into the facility twice a year for check-ups to ensure they are doing well, and to check the transmitters they're fitted with.


    West believes the key to a true, sustainable condor recovery is education. "The only way to combat a lack of information is to reach out to these communities and empower them with that information," he says. "If [the public] all make the transition to non-lead ammunition, our intensive management efforts could virtually stop overnight."

    Remedying this single issue should allow condors to "again have a meaningful place in modern ecosystems", says West.