2026.02.06

2026-02-06 11:01
lsanderson: (Default)
[personal profile] lsanderson
ICE

‘You’re not going to investigate a federal officer’
It doesn’t happen often, but local law enforcement can arrest and charge federal agents. Legal experts say there’s a moral obligation to at least try to hold federal immigration officers accountable when they violate the Constitution and the law.
By Andy Mannix, Melissa Sanchez and Nicole Foy / ProPublica
https://www.minnpost.com/national/2026/02/youre-not-going-to-investigate-a-federal-officer/

Sahan Journal has the story of Minnesotans who have been transferred to ICE detention centers in Texas and released with no way to return home. “In recent weeks, lawyers have filed a flurry of successful court challenges compelling the government to release their clients, but that has left an increasing number of Minnesotans stranded outside detention facilities far from home,” they report. “In some cases, ICE has refused to return identification cards or work permits to those released from detention, attorneys say.”
https://sahanjournal.com/immigration/ice-detainees-stranded-after-release/

Man arrested in early-morning Minneapolis federal raid is charged with cyberstalking
The 6 a.m. raid, which involved at least 11 officers, took place at Eat Street Flats in the Whittier neighborhood. The man arrested doxxed a “pro-ICE individual,” according to a criminal complaint.
by Joey Peters
https://sahanjournal.com/public-safety/federal-raid-kyle-wagner-detained-whittier-minneapolis/ Read more... )
badly_knitted: (Confused Ianto)
[personal profile] badly_knitted
 



Title: Battle Of The Library

Author: 
[personal profile] badly_knitted
Characters: Jack, Ianto.
Rating: PG
Word Count: 564
Spoilers: Nada.
Summary: Something very odd is going on at the Cardiff public library.
Written For: 
[personal profile] ravenlilyrose’s prompt ‘any, any, vicious fight over a book in the library’, at [community profile] threesentenceficathon.
Disclaimer: I don’t own Torchwood, or the characters.
 
 


[syndicated profile] smbc_comics_feed

Posted by Zach Weinersmith



Click here to go see the bonus panel!

Hovertext:
Anything that deviates from normal is a conspiracy, including when things are precisely normal.


Today's News:
lovelytomeetyou: (Default)
[personal profile] lovelytomeetyou posting in [community profile] halfamoon
Day 5 - The Outlaw  

Title: Sentence
Fandom: 12 Kingdoms | Juuni Kokki
Characters: Nakajima Youko; Rakushun
Rating: Gen
Summary: How could she properly judge the one in front of her for committing the same crimes she did? Youko reflects on her past, when she first arrived in this world.

Story in ao3

A ficlet for once since I tend to write too much hah. The women in this series are so good, each could have a day of her own.
larryhammer: floral print origami penguin, facing left (Default)
[personal profile] larryhammer
I’m an aloha shirt kind of guy. Not all of my wardrobe is brightly floral—I need a few more subdued patterns for less informal occasions, such as starting work in an office where I haven’t confirmed aloha is acceptable business casual wear. But a fair number are, most of them tasteful.

This is mostly by temperament—they signal (though let me asterisk that * ) a laid-back temperament, which is both true and helps me through interactions with strangers. Mostly, as there’s also a practical component. I’ve mentioned this a couple times, but I come across IRL as taller than I do online: I’m 6'4" / 193cm. Finding men’s short-sleeve shirts that are long enough for my torso to stay tucked in is a challenge. (Paradoxically, it’s easier with long-sleeve shirts, as “long” sizes is a thing for those.) Aloha shirts, however, are designed to not be tucked in, and indeed look worse that way. Win!

But then there’s that asterisk: * I’m graying enough, both hair and goatee (which last I’ve been keeping for two years now), that I can sometimes be misidentified as a Boomer, and a Boomer in an aloha shirt signals a different temperament than a younger guy in one. I’m lean enough I don’t entirely lean into that stereotype, but still. I’m older Gen X and … touchy … about being mistaken for a Boomer.

The goatee is starting to annoy me in other ways, anyway, so maybe shaving it will help—it has the most white. Or I could, yanno, suck it up and deal. Be laid-back. Just like the shirts claim.

---L.

Subject quote from We Can Work It Out, The Beatles.
[syndicated profile] nautilus_feed

Posted by Jake Currie

There are monsters lurking in the rivers of southern Japan—giant salamanders that can grow up to five feet long. Second only to their Chinese cousins, these wet-skinned leviathans are some of the largest amphibians in the world. New research into their diet published in Oikos reveals they have a monstrous appetite to match, and one that changes dramatically over their lifetimes.  

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EAT OR BE EATEN: Example of prey items obtained by stomach flushing of a Japanese giant salamander that was roughly 26 inches long. Photo from Duret, C., et al. Oikos (2025).

To study the feeding habits of the Japanese giant salamander, a team of researchers led by study author Clément Duret of the Laboratory of Ecology and Conservation of Amphibians at the University of Liège in Belgium headed to the Ichi River in Hyogo Prefecture. There, they trudged along the riverbanks, plucking up 160 of the beasts, measuring them, and flushing their stomachs to take a peek at their meals.  

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Read more: “In the Land of the Eyeless Dragons

As the salamanders leveled up their size, they leveled up their rank on the food chain, or trophic position, the researchers found. “The results reveal a spectacular dietary transition,” Duret explained in a statement. “Young, small salamanders feed mainly on aquatic insects. Their trophic position is similar to that of secondary consumers, an intermediate level in the food chain, as is the case with most salamanders.” 

Once the giant salamanders crossed the two-foot mark, they were able to feast on crabs, frogs, and fish, catapulting them to apex predator status. This ability to capture larger prey without becoming prey themselves gives them an incredible adaptive advantage, fueling the evolution of stronger jaws and a larger body size.

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The team hopes these new insights will aid in conservation efforts of the species, which is unfortunately flagged as vulnerable. 

It can definitely be lonely at the top of the food chain.

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Lead image: Martin Voeller / Shutterstock

[syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed

Jönköping was once known as Sweden's "Match City" ("Tändsticksstaden") because for over a century that was its most famous export. At one point, a third of the town's workforce was employed in this single industry. Although many might consider matchsticks to be a dull subject, it is clear the residents of this city disagree, as they have turned part of the former Jönköpings Tändsticksfabrik factory into a museum dedicated to them. It is one of only three such museums in the world.

The Match Museum tells the story of matchmaking in Jönköping, which dates back to 1845, as well as across the world. Svenska Tändsticksaktiebolaget, which owned all of Sweden's match factories, once controlled 60-70% of the world's match market. The museum has preserved match-making machines and has opportunities to make one' own matchboxes. There is also a collection of thousands of matchboxes and labels, some of which can be purchased in the gift shop.

Surrounding the museum, the Jönköpings Tändsticksfabrik factory as a whole is the world's only completely preserved historic match factory. It is now home to bars, restaurants, nightclubs, and even a theater and hotel.

sisterdivinium: a smiling bibi from bad sisters (bibi garvey)
[personal profile] sisterdivinium posting in [community profile] halfamoon
Title: Their own idiom
Fandom: Bad Sisters
Characters: Bibi Garvey and Ursula Garvey (Eva, Becka and Grace are also in many of the frames)
Rating: G
Notes: Image-heavy post.
Summary: A collection of Bibi and Urs' glances at one another throughout the show. They certainly do this quite a lot.

At Tumblr, my journal or simply below the cut :)

Read more... )

arboricide

2026-02-06 07:47
prettygoodword: text: words are sexy (Default)
[personal profile] prettygoodword
arboricide (ah-BOR-i-said) - n., an herbicide intended to kill trees or shrubs; (rare) the killing of a tree.


Or as the OED puts it, "the wanton destruction of trees." In memory of the large pine that, until yesterday, stood between our house and the neighbor's, shading us from the southwest. Its destruction was not wanton, however, as it like all too many pines in our neighborhood was dying (bark beetles). Coined in the 1890s from Latin roots arbor, tree + -cidium, killing (from caedere, to cut/kill).

---L.
laughing_tree: (Seaworth)
[personal profile] laughing_tree posting in [community profile] scans_daily
image host

We see that Hector Hammond's been successful at being Hector Hammond in a way that the regular universe version wasn't. If you go way back to the 60s, he started as this great sort of society man, and this great business person. Very quickly, all of that fell apart, because Hal Jordan found him out as the phony he was. And then the next time you see him, he's got a giant head, and, you know, that's his life now. So in some ways, our Hector's, like, more successful than the regular first one. We'll see if he manages to keep that up. -- Al Ewing

Read more... )
linky: Nayuta looking over to Rinne with a smile. (Gotchard Girls Remix: Rinne/Nayuta - Gla)
[personal profile] linky posting in [community profile] halfamoon
Title: Snowed In
Fandom: Kamen Rider Gotchard + Kamen Rider Girls Remix
Pairing/Characters: Rinne/Nayuta
Rating: G
Word count: 200
Content Notes: Fluff, Snowed In
Author's note: Also for the [community profile] tokufemslash prompt meme prompt of "Any: any/any - roadtrip/traveling" and my Fresh Femslash Salad Bar prompts "snowed in & 200 words"!
Summary: Rinne and Nayuta had plans for their trip, until they get snowed in.
Also on Ao3, or read below the cut:

Read more... )
[syndicated profile] nautilus_feed

Posted by Devin Reese

We know that other great apes can do a lot of human-like things. Since Jane Goodall’s pioneering studies of chimpanzees, ethologists have amassed decades of observations of both wild and captive great apes acting in many ways like people. We know that other great apes may use tools; make faces; and show empathy. But questions remain about the limits of their cognition.

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In a study published yesterday in Science, Johns Hopkins University biologists report that a captive bonobo can “play pretend,” which requires imagining things beyond the here and now.

“Imagination has long been seen as a critical element of what it is to be human, but the idea that it may not be exclusive to our species is really transformative,” said study author Christopher Krupenye, a psychology and brain science researcher, in a statement

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We’ve all witnessed young children pretending to interact with imaginary objects, such as sipping invisible tea from a cup. By about age 2, humans engage in pretend scenarios, but to date, there have been no controlled studies of so-called “pretense” in other animals. It’s not an easy task. If you think about it, pretend play requires forming a mental representation of something that’s absent and keeping it distinct from perceptions of reality. 

Read more: “Empathy, Morality, Community, Culture—Apes Have It All

Krupenye and co-author Amalia P.M. Bastos worked with Kanzi, a 43-year-old captive bonobo (now deceased), famous for his groundbreaking language abilities. Kanzi was the first nonhuman ape known to understand spoken English and communicate using more than 300 symbols. The researchers presented Kanzi with an 18-trial session in which he was rewarded with juice for correctly choosing between two clear squirt bottles—one empty and one with juice.

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Next, Kanzi was presented with two clear, empty cups. After researchers pretended to fill them from an (empty) pitcher and then pour the imaginary contents of one cup back into the pitcher, Kanzi had to answer, “Where’s the juice?” Without receiving any rewards this time, he chose the cup still containing the imaginary juice 68 percent of the time, which is significantly more than chance. 

In a related experiment, Kanzi had to choose which clear jar contained pretend grapes after watching a researcher pretend to sample one from each jar, then “empty” one of the jars. Here again, Kanzi chose the jar that still contained pretend grapes significantly more than chance would dictate.  

Kanzi’s behavior showed that he could conceive of absent things, which opens new questions about whether behavior observed in wild apes is also imagination-based. For example, wild female chimpanzees carry sticks around, perhaps as an imitation of how mother chimps carry their children. 

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“The capacity to form secondary representations of pretend objects is within the cognitive potential of, at least, an enculturated ape and likely dates back 6 to 9 million years, to our common evolutionary ancestors,” concluded the study authors.

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Lead image: Patrick Rolands / Shutterstock

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nilchance: original artist terry moore; blonde staring at canvas with nude male and black handprint (fandom)
[personal profile] nilchance
tonight is the night for Eve of Vecna, the d&d game that's a continuation of our Curse of Strahd campaign, and this is a song I've been listening to and thinking of Tali the grave cleric:



rambling under the cut )

Benjamin West

2026-02-06 13:16
poliphilo: (Default)
[personal profile] poliphilo
 The Lewes Meeting House has a copy of this print. It'll be worth a few bob. They have it leaning against a wall, out of sight, out of mind. I love old prints and if I weren't a fine upstanding citizen I'd have waited until no-one was looking and added it to my collection.

mw65663_800x657.jpg.webp

It's called Mr West and his family. The original was painted by Mr West and commemorates a visit of his elderly male relatives to see his new-born second son. The two old gents are Quakers wearing Quaker gear- which is presumably why the Lewes Meeting House aquired it.

Mr West is Benjamin West, the American painter. Born in Pennsylvania, he studied in Italy, as one did, then moved to England where he prospered, becoming court painter to George III and the second president of the Royal Academy, in succession to Joshua Reynolds. He seems to have been an agreeable man. When the American colonies rebelled against the mother country he kept  a discreet silence and wouldn't be drawn.

He is best known for big, splashy paintings of historical events. He did Bible stories, Roman history, medieval history and modern times. and was prolific in producing them. Sadly they are not very much to modern taste, being theatrical, melodramatic and often wildly inaccurate. If you set aside your prejudices it is possible to admire them for their energy and imagination. The best known of them, and one of the most carefully considered is his Death of Wolfe. Wolfe was the general who captured Quebec from the French-  thus securing Canada for the British Empire.  I do rather like it. As West's histories go it is really quite restrained. Wolfe was famous and singular among officers for carrying a rifle- just like a common soldier- and there it is discarded at his feet. West has done his research.

Benjamin_West_005.jpeg

Scrolling through the reproductions of West's work on wikipedia I found a number of rather charming little paintings of everyday subjects which look as if they were done quickly, freely and possibly even for fun. In the first we have some gentlemen in a punt out fishing with what looks rather like a sea battle going on in the far distance. In the second we see some sturdy British peasants reaping corn and canoodling in the vicinity of Windsor Castle while some glittery gentlefolk look on.

Benjamin_West_-_Gentlemen_Fishing_-_Google_Art_Project.jpeg

Harvesting_at_Windsor_by_Benjamin_West,_PRA.jpeg
cmk418: (diane wittlesey)
[personal profile] cmk418 posting in [community profile] halfamoon
Title: After DeeDee
Fandom: OZ (HBO)
Character: Diane Wittlesey
Rating: Teen
Word Count: 306
Summary: Her world changed after DeeDee was born

After DeeDee )
cmk418: (marion)
[personal profile] cmk418 posting in [community profile] halfamoon
Today's theme is Her Own Personal Code.

Here are some ideas to get you started: What rules guide the way she lives her life? What rules guide the way she wants others to live their lives? Was this something she developed over time or something drilled into her as a child? Did religion or a particular mentor play a role in the development of her code of morality?

Just go wherever the Muse takes you. If this prompt doesn't speak to you, feel free to share something that does. You can post in a separate entry or as a comment to this post.

Want to get a jump start on tomorrow's theme? Check out the prompt list in the pinned post at the top of the page. Please don't post until that day.

podcast friday

2026-02-06 07:06
sabotabby: plain text icon that says first as shitpost, second as farce (shitpost)
[personal profile] sabotabby
 There's a lot of good stuff on the podcast feed this week, but look, we all have to be Elbows Up these days or whatever, even though Canada is a fake country, because it's better to be a fake country with healthcare than a fake country with crushing medical debt. So I must proudly wave the flag when Behind the Bastards notices and recognizes an actual Canadian bastard, as they did this week with Romana Didulo, Queen of Canada (Part 1, Part 2).

Her Majesty is not a successful cult leader by American standards; she basically ruined the lives of a few dozen people and hasn't directly killed anyone that I know of, though in terms of indirect deaths through encouraging the spread of covid, she's likely ended at least a few lives. She's a fascinating study, though, in Why People Believe Batshit Things Against Obvious Evidence and Logic, and she's worth learning about for that alone. This is an obvious mentally ill person with no charisma, elevated to fame by some rando on the internet, and enabled by a media ecosystem that considers all opinions equally valid unless they're left-wing opinions. In a better society she'd be given the help she so obviously needs; in ours, her worst tendencies were encouraged and rewarded.

Of course, this is all ancient history from the early 2020s and is of no instructive value now. Just, y'know, interesting to listen to.

ETA: I am remiss in not mentioning that there's a third part to come next week. I had like 10 minutes left in the second episode and did not realize there was MORE ROMANA to come.

Birth injuries

2026-02-06 11:33
ailbhe: (Default)
[personal profile] ailbhe
Well, it's a while since I learned some of the extent of them (first clues were here) and this morning the unfixable one made itself known in a now-do-surprise-laundry way. I had a bit of a cry about it. I note that when I first learned what had happened I thought it was my own fault for not agreeing to a c-section, because it took a LOT of reading to discover that he hadn't sewn me up properly.

So, to politics briefly

2026-02-06 11:13
loganberrybunny: Election rosette (Rosette)
[personal profile] loganberrybunny
Public

The Mandelson affair rumbles on, and we're now at the stage of people considering who might be Labour leader (and PM) by the end of the year. Angela Rayner is probably the front-runner, being actually vaguely human and popular with the Labour grassroots, but HMRC still hasn't decided whether to impose a penalty charge over and above the tax she pays back. Wes Streeting is more centrist but is also perhaps too closely associated with the Labour establishment – and Mandelson is so toxic that this alone might be too much for him.

Who else? I don't know. It's possible someone will come almost out of nowhere, as John Major did after Margaret Thatcher's resignation in 1990.¹ But the pace of politics is far faster what it was a third of a century ago, and the previous assumption – that Keir Starmer would be allowed to stay in post long enough to take the flak for the expected local election and Senedd disasters in May – may not in fact be true. I really don't know at this point, but Starmer surely cannot lead Labour into the next general election.
¹ Major was Chancellor, but few expected him to win the leadership vote.

All over Europe politicians seem to be being toppled like dominoes over the Epstein scandal. Not that I care about that – we must never, ever forget that the reason this is a scandal in the first place is not political infighting but the horrific abuse of hundreds and hundreds of young women and children. But it does give me slight cause for optimism that at least politicians are going. A world in which Mandelson had kept his job after this would be a worse one.
varlaamthecreator: (Default)
[personal profile] varlaamthecreator posting in [community profile] 1character
Character: Misty Monsoon | Rainmaker
Fandom: Toontown: Corporate Clash
Theme Set: Beta
Rating: Teen & Up
Warnings: References to past abuse, heavy canon divergence & OC-insert nonsense

Out on the pier, thinking on how far she's come, Misty joins Midnight in planning their future.
Or: Misty's journey across stormy and sunny skies, finding love transcending both, in 50 sentences. Read over here.

This is also my entry for Siege the Valentines 2026.

Underneath The Water

2026-02-06 07:50
poliphilo: (Default)
[personal profile] poliphilo
 Underneath the water
Six feet deep
There lies Hitler
Fast asleep.

Child's skipping rhyme as recorded by Charles Causeley.


I dreamed I was in the Chancellery at the end of World War II. The papers the Nazis had left behind would need to be sorted through. Then Hitler emerged from wherever it was he'd been hiding and sat down with us.

So many of the great men and women of the past never died in the way history records but faked their deaths and were seen afterwards by "reliable" witnesses. Jim Morrison is alive and working as an electrician in L.A.  Tsar Alexander II went off and became a Holy Man. Joan of Arc married a nobleman. As for Jesus-  well, need I go on?  In the case of Hitler there are still Argentinian country people who remember the elderly German chap who lived with his younger wife on a farm in the hills and used to receive visits from seemingly important folk in big sleek automobiles. There are photos. The moustache has gone. His health wasn't good and he died in the 1960s.

Perhaps the truthiest truth is that there are multiple timelines, billions of them- and there's a certain amount of leakage between them (viz the Mandela effect).  In one timeline Hitler committed suicide, In another he was arrested by the Russians, in a third he has rescued. Perhaps there's even one in which he suffered the fate imagined for him in Tarentino's Inglorious Basterds. Why live out only one version of one's life? Let's rather extract every last drop of juice from the human experience.

The latest "great man" to be both alive and dead is Jeffery Epstein. He wasn't suicided, he was spirited away and is currently living out his life in a luxury villa in Tel Aviv. A great number of people believe this to be the case. Winesses have emerged.....
sami: (Default)
[personal profile] sami
On this day last year I was waiting for my father to die. He had been sedated and was to stay that way.

After I said my final goodbyes to him, my then-ten-month-old son saw me crying. He regarded me thoughtfully for a moment, and then took his finger out of his mouth and stuck it in mine.

His most comforting finger, you understand. His favourite sucking finger. For a pre-verbal infant it felt like such a gesture of love and compassion.

There is a thing that our extended family seem to love doing: giving gifts for the child that he's not old enough for.

This last Christmas (he was then 21 months old, which the astute and mathematically gifted reader will be able to parse as "not yet two") we got multiple gifts for him that are for age 3+.

"Here, have something that you either need to store for over a year or be incredibly hyper-attentive as you supervise, because look, it contains serious choking hazards."

What's even more annoying is that we do a secret Santa thing for the adults in which people give lists of what they want, and I got things that were vaguely adjacent to what I'd asked for but not actually anything in the extremely broad categories I'd listed.

Smol Son's language use is coming along by leaps and bounds. He's suddenly so articulate, forming complex sentences, using adjectives, doing hilarious work with "maybe" and "a little bit". He's also learned that "what do you say" when he demands something means "rephrase that and include the word please".

We've tentatively made progress - or at least acquired new data - on his tummy issues, which is promising.

In language terms he does still a little bit struggle with the thing that's really difficult to explain: pronouns. Explaining I/me/you to a toddler is seriously challenging.

He is obsessed with cricket. He has a little cricket bat and he loves it. He loves pretending to be a cricket bowler. (He also said an English Test bowler was "pretending to be a cricket bowler", which was harsh but arguably fair.)

He has sadly not done something I was finding delightful for a few days: he'd shout: "DOO DOO DOO DE DOO DOO DEEEEE. THAT'S A SONG."

He likes reciting his books as they're read to him.
ysabetwordsmith: A blue sheep holding a quill dreams of Dreamwidth (Dreamsheep)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today's theme is London.

Read more... )

Reading Wrap-up 1/26

2026-02-06 07:02
vamp_ress: (Default)
[personal profile] vamp_ress posting in [community profile] booknook

Duras, Marguerite: Abahn Sabana David. Open Letter Books. 2016.
I've bought this years ago in a bundle with several Duras-books and I must say, I've no idea what I read here. I think the word one uses for something like this nowadays is: word salad. At least it was short.

Riddle, John: Contraception and Abortion from the Ancient World to the Renaissance. Harvard University Press. 1992.
This was delightful. I actually bought this for fic research, but I thoroughly enjoyed it even apart from the excellent info it provided. The author's thesis is that - contrary to popular belief - people in antiquity and well beyond had very detailed knowledge about contraception (and abortion). Later, this knowledge was lost. The assumption is that this loss was caused by Christian religion and its rigid moral standard. Fascinating!

Steinbeck, John: The Grapes of Wrath. Penguin. 2006.
I read "Of Mice and Men" as a teenager and was absolutely blown away. I always meant to give Steinbeck another go and find a few more favourites. I went with "The Grapes of Wrath" because this is argueably his magnus opus. And boy, did I hate it. Maybe it's an unpopular opinion, but this book didn't age well. The most interesting thing about it is the fact that it's widely popular and acclaimed in the U.S. despite its openly communist agenda. (Mind you, not that there's anything wrong with a communist agenda, per se - but my understanding is that the U.S. and communist ideas don't mix well.)

Donaldson, David Santos: Greenland. Amistad. 2022.
This was such a missed chance. The blurb says this is a novel within a novel about E.M. Forster's love affair with an Egyptian tram conductor, but I learnt basically zero about that. Everything about Forster and his affair read like an author self-insert (or maybe a protagonist self-insert, since the protagonist is also the author of the book within a book). I took basically nothing away from the read expect maybe the info that black gay men in New York are obnoxious and annoying. (Sorry to all N.Y. gay men ...)

Moore, Kate: The Radium Girls. Simon & Schuster. 2016.
God, this was painful (pun intended). This is such an important book with such a strong sujet, but the execution wasn't even mid it was infuriatingly bad. The writing had the level of a romance book you buy at a whim at a train station. It was that bad. Moore clearly wanted to write a kitschy novel - every character here (and there are way too many) was introduced by bodily features. Women have dazzling smiles and men have strong arm muscles. Paired with the subject matter of the book this approach made me gag. The book needed to be written, but Kate Moore was the wrong woman for the job, sorry.

Johnson, Denis: Train Dreams. Picador. 2012.
I had never read anything by Denis Johnson but right after finishing this I bought another of his works. This was so good! It deals with the life of a man in the Idaho Panhandle throughout the 20th century. It starts in 1917 and ends in the 1960s with his death. In the nostalgia this evokes it reminded me a little of Harrison's "Legends of the Fall" which is equally panoramic in its approach and shows a time not too long ago but ultimately lost and absolutely alien to us now. Fantastic read!
 

hafnia: Animated drawing of a flickering fire with a pair of eyes peeping out of it, from the film Howl's Moving Castle. (Default)
[personal profile] hafnia
The master list of questions is here — the 16th, 22nd and 24th are all free, if you want to ask anything! :D

Talk about SPACE HEIST (how you came up with the idea, where you currently are in designing it, whatever else you wanna say...?)

Oh, glob, this is a deep pull. Ha. Okay.

For those that aren't in the know, Space Heist is a 2d6 ttrpg I designed and wrote myself. It takes place at a point where humanity has gone to the stars, interstellar travel is common, and people are scattered across the galaxy. Think space stations, alien planets, incredibly advanced tech...

Right, um, anyway. I started writing it about 5 years ago, in 2021. As far as "how did I come up with the idea", uh. People who have been around here a Long Time probably recall different short stories I wrote at various points in time about something I called the "Explorer Corps" — basically, a human-centered operation that was dedicated to "charting the uncharted" and hired the "best of the best" to do it. When I came up with it originally, it was very much, "I need something that works to put scientists into space but isn't NASA".

The very first long-form campaign I wrote/ran was wrapping up in 2021, and my players all wanted to play something science fiction. I'd thought about running TechNoir or Scum and Villainy, and neither one of them really appealed to me. So, instead of running something like Mothership or a Lasers and Feelings hack, I went, "I've been thinking about designing a game", and wrote Space Heist, using all that old Explorer Corps vibes/worldbuilding.

At this point, the player documents are a hot mess, but they're technically done. I have yet to start working on the GM documents beyond some basic notes on setting and how to run the game that are more philosophy than "here's how this works, mechanically". I have run it — I've run a couple of one-shots in it — and i'ts one of the things I get asked to run most frequently, because the people who like it, really like it.

The last couple of playtests, as well as getting more familiar with playing 2d6 systems like PbtA, means that I've got a bunch of thoughts about players and how skills etc work. I need to review and revise the documents, something I'm planning to do in the next month or so. After I revise the player documents (which will be pretty involved), I may run some further playtests (FUN) to see how stuff hangs together, if it does. I also need to actually write the GM guide for this — most of it is just "vibes", but there are some setting things and one-shot ideas that people who run it should be aware of.

It's my goal for this year to go ahead and get it up on itch.io, whether that's being like, "this is in alpha, please give me feedback, you can download it for free", or if I actually do get what I would call a 1.0 release ready and release it as a pay-as-you-want PDF. Right now I'm leaning toward the latter, just because I can't envision myself wanting to do a lot more iterations of it, and the only thing that's really stopping me is the knowledge I have zero artwork for it (but that I would want to either make or commission art — the former is intimidating, but the latter requires money I don't have to dedicate to a project like this right now).

So!

Kind of weird, but it came up in therapy the other day — my therapist asking, like, "so how are you doing at putting more of your stuff out there" (since it's something I have talked about with him pretty extensively — not monetizing projects, specifically, but putting stuff in a place where other people can see it and take joy in it). I said that I was planning to release Space Heist this year, and he was all for it. Guess I'll have at least one person holding me accountable? Heh.
[syndicated profile] askamanager_feed

Posted by Ask a Manager

It’s four answers to four questions. Here we go…

1. My coworker comes to work high

I work in an animal care setting and overheard a coworker casually mention that they had taken an edible about an hour before the end of their shift. They said it didn’t fully hit them until the last few minutes of work, but during that time they were asked to help restrain a patient. They weren’t administering medication in this instance, but they were still performing tasks while impaired. They also mentioned that there have been a few times when they’ve come to work slightly under the influence.

I know some coworkers use substances on their own time, and our workplace doesn’t test or screen for this. I don’t have an issue with what people do off the clock, but using anything before or during a shift — especially in a role involving patient care — feels unsafe to me. At the same time, I don’t want to create problems for others or inadvertently push the workplace toward testing policies that impact everyone.

I’m not sure what the right step is. Should I say something, leave it alone, or approach the situation in another way?

This wouldn’t be the case with all jobs, but because of the nature of this one, it’s a serious safety issue — for the animals and for your coworkers. You need to say something. That would be true even if it had just happened once, but it’s even more urgent because they’re apparently doing it repeatedly.

Talk to your boss about what you heard. It sucks that you have to, but that’s on your coworker, not on you.

2. Interviewer was upset I wouldn’t tell him whether I was married

I’m a female physician. I had a call with a recruiter, and the second question he asked me was, “Are you married?” And then, “What kind of work do they do?” When I asked neutrally, “Oh, why do you ask?” he got very upset that I didn’t want to answer the question and said, “No one has ever done this (refused to answer) in my 25 years of recruiting.” I tried to smooth things over, but then he hung up on me.

Unfortunately I don’t know which organization he is representing and I think he may be the head of his recruiting group so I had no one to report his behavior to. This is unfortunately a question I get asked a lot, and just to avoid this kind of scenario I’ll answer, but I hate having to do that! Is there anything else I can say?

“Oh, why do you ask?” is the exact right response to this kind of question. It’s not illegal for them to ask (a common misconception), but it’s illegal for them to factor in your answer in any way so there’s no reason they need to ask, and it’s a good way to instantly make candidates uncomfortable.

One alternative is to answer what you think they’re really getting at, which in this case was probably something about whether you would be able to devote enough time and focus to the job. So for example, you could say, “Oh, I have great family support for my career, that’s never been an issue.” And if he responded to that by again asking if you were married, at that point I might say, “I’ve never been asked that in an interview before (even though you have) — why do you ask?”

But also, this particular recruiter sounds like a massive tool.

3. My boss says she wants to accommodate immunocompromised people, but won’t hold hybrid staff meetings

I work at a public institution of higher education. I’m immunocompromised, which my managers knows (although she does not know the exact condition). On the days I’m in-person at work (we all work a hybrid schedule), I consistently mask and am very careful about protecting my health. Our quarterly all-staff meetings have been hybrid for several years now, after being totally online during Covid. These have never been particularly fruitful meetings, neither informationally nor for team-building, though my manager wants to make them more useful.

At a meeting last year, she brought up the idea of making our next meeting in-person only. I mentioned that we have immunocompromised and medically vulnerable people on staff (I’m not the only one, but I have tenure and can more easily speak out) and suggested considering ways to make the meetings less risky — like at least making the winter meetings fully online. She asked to meet with me one-on-one to discuss ideas for making the meetings safer and I shared other ideas too, like holding our September and June meetings in a space with windows that open. We have two campus spaces like that where we’ve held all-staff meetings in the past so this doesn’t seem a huge ask.

My manager seems to have taken none of what I said to heart. Our September meeting was in-person only and was in a space where no windows or doors could be opened, though she did have a couple of HEPA filters in the space. But now she is proposing making our February meeting every year all-day and in-person only and making our fall and spring meetings half-day and hybrid. I’m at a loss as to why she would make the meeting during the height of flu and norovirus season in-person and why she asked for my suggestions in the first place if she was going to ignore them.

I know being immunocompromised is a real disability, but I feel like it’s treated like it isn’t because, unlike being a wheelchair user faced with a space only accessible by stairs, I physically can go to these meetings. It’s just at tremendous risk to my health. And I have some colleagues who go to work sick all the time, which makes it even more risky. I’ve already brought this up in meetings with others present and in that one-on-one meeting and it clearly had no effect. Should I just tell her I can’t attend? Talk to HR, which is notoriously unhelpful and their ADA coordinator left last spring? Keep pushing back? I’m already dealing with an illness that gets worse when I’m stressed and I wonder if it’s easier to just take a sick day and skip the meeting to avoid the whole thing. I feel so demoralized at this point.

At a minimum, tell her you can’t attend. Sample language: “I can’t safely attend an all-day in-person meeting, so would it be better for me to call in or skip this one?”

But you could also say, “I know you’d asked for ideas to make these safer for immunocompromised employees, and one thing would be — if one of these has to be full-day and in-person — to make it the fall or spring one, not the February one, since that’s the height of flu season.”

Or even: “I know you’d asked for ideas to make these safer for immunocompromised employees, and I’m curious if you ran into obstacles doing that. I might be able to better tailor ideas if I know more about the constraints we need to work within.”

4. I was laid off and still have my laptop — is there a point where it becomes mine?

I got laid off mid-November, and HR said we’d receive instructions for returning our equipment. While my company access was cut off, and my laptop was remotely wiped, it’s now mid-January and I haven’t heard anything about returning it. I emailed last week asking, and haven’t gotten a response. I live near an office, but the implication during layoffs was that they don’t want laid off employees coming back to the building, understandably.

Is there a point at which the equipment is mine? I’ve seen some advice that at some point you’re within your rights to notify the company that you’ll be disposing of the equipment if you don’t hear from them in X amount of time, but what if you wanted to use it instead of dispose of it?

First, try calling them instead of emailing — just on the principle that if one method of communication doesn’t work, you should try a second method before giving up.

But if you still don’t get a response, contact them and say, “I have not heard back from you about how to return my equipment, despite asking on (date) and (date), so this is notice that I plan to dispose of the equipment unless you arrange otherwise by (date).” If you really want to be safe, you can send that by certified mail. In most jurisdictions, 30-60 days will be considered a reasonable window to offer, and after that you are free to dispose of the equipment as you wish (which you don’t need to volunteer will mean “now it’s for personal use”).

The post interviewer was upset I wouldn’t tell him whether I was married, my coworker comes to work high, and more appeared first on Ask a Manager.

watch Bridgerton with me?

2026-02-06 11:55
tielan: anthony bridgerton and kate sharma dancing at the featherington ball (bridgerton 1)
[personal profile] tielan
Is there anyone who'd be interested in co-watching Bridgerton S4 with me?

I want to watch it, I just need to schedule time to watch it, and have someone else metaphorically "on hand" to keep me from rushing off and doing something else.

Yes, we would have to do some tricksy scheduling to manage it if you're in the (usual) locations of Europe/the US. I'm happy to try to work something out.
cornerofmadness: (Default)
[personal profile] cornerofmadness
When I came home today the ambulance is over all the parking places (I'm now on the ice floe wondering if I'm going to work tomorrow after all). No one was about, no doors open so I don't know who they were here for but we have a lot of 70+ people here. I hope they'll be okay.

My nursing students gave me hope today. They did really well on the micro test for the most part. Out of 37 less than 5 failed. I'm happy with that.

Nearly finished my vampire story.

Speaking of vampires, let me do Tuesday's fannish 50 tonight. I found, by accident, a station showing Buffy the Vampire Slayer. I wanted to talk about her for [community profile] halfamoon which I just don't have time to write for, not with my deadlines. Sigh. I WILL do at least one more but I'm on the struggle bus.

But it occurred to me watching now almost 30 years later (OMFG HOW) that it really hits different than it did then. I always maintained that Joss Whedon wasn't the champion of women he pretended to be back then but I wasn't believed much. I've said this before. I just watched the last few episodes of S3 and the beginning of S4. I know that Xander was meant to be Whedon's avatar which is weird. He's rather incel coded for one but that aside, Xander was never a stand up guy to me. I was also struck about how many age-difference couples there were. I can almost look past Angel (and Spike) as immortals but while the age gap between Wes and Cordy wasn't ridiculous, we don't take too kindly to a mid 20s man trying to date a 17 year old (oh 18 years old, how many times have we heard them screaming that on this show, with her, with COnnor, etc) even in the prom a lot of the dates looked way older than the random girls. Sure that could be bad casting.

Then I remember we now know that they had to protect Michelle Trachenberg from being in the same room with Whedon. Amber Heard told me herself about the pressures put on her.

So do you have any older fandoms that feel different now?

While we're talking about shows, I'm trying to get into a new one, Inspector George Gently. Okay it's not new but new to me. It's interesting but I have never hated a character more than I do in this, at least not in a long time. If I thought Troy was bad in Midsomer Murders, he's a Woke snowflake in comparison to the sergeant in this, Bacchus is frigging awful. Yeah it's set in the mid 60s. I don't expect him to be LGBT friendly. But he's misogynistic, xenophobic and worse, a bully. He uses his job to bully people he doesn't like the Gently has called him out more than once. I'm like either give this man a redemption arc, kick him to the curb or maybe I just need to give up.

I did very little today

2026-02-05 22:37
silver_chipmunk: (Default)
[personal profile] silver_chipmunk
I got a marketing phone call at just before my alarm went off, but then went back to dozing until around 11:00, then finally left bed at 12:00.

Then I had breakfast and coffee as usual, and then I did very little physically, though I kept busy. I answered, at long last, the email I got from Croesos back before Arisia. And then I wrote another email to Isis, she didn't answer the last one I sent but I figured I'd try again.

Then I wrote to John and Denise, to let them know the date of the memorial up at the cottage for Oldest Brother.

Then, since I dodn't have an email address for him, I Facebook messaged Cliff about the memorial.

And then just because I was in a writing mood, I Facebook messaged Herschel. Just because.

I played solitaire on my phone. I puttered online. I phoned L, the person who's name I picked on Saturday at my meeting and left a message.

Finally at 7:00 I Teamed the FWiB. We had a few technical difficulties but finally got going. The connection wasn't great though. L texted and said she'll call tomorrow around 10:00. I assume she means AM.

At 8:30 I got off to call Middle Brother. He is fine, went out to dinner on Monday. He's looking forward to the Superbowl and Valentine's Day.

Then I had to charge my phone while I made dinner. Herschel Facebook messaged me back which was nice.
I had dinner, then went to the bedroom and called [personal profile] mashfanficchick but se couldn't talk then.

I charged my phone til pet feeding time and here i am.

Gratitude List:

1. The FWiB.

2. The other correspondents in my life.

3. My meetings.

4. My family.

5. Made the phone call t L.

6. Middle Brother is safe and happy.

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