Grammar

2026-02-04 21:07
hunningham: Beautiful colourful pears (Default)
[personal profile] hunningham

From The Elements of Eloquence: How to Turn the Perfect English Phrase by Mark Forsyth

adjectives absolutely have to be in this order: opinion-size-age-shape-colour-origin-material-purpose Noun. So you can have a lovely little old rectangular green French silver whittling knife. But if you mess with that order in the slightest you’ll sound like a maniac.

Recently seen in the wild :

On what fucking pink foggy raccoon-ridden planet do you think this happened?

kareila: a lady in glasses holding a stack of books (books)
[personal profile] kareila posting in [community profile] kareila_books
This was a fun, escapist story about two teens with unusual abilities. Genevieve is a scientist whose history of being constantly overlooked has resulted in her being able to literally turn invisible. Ash is a boy with a difficult past who can travel in time. When they cross paths at the 1934 Chicago World's Fair, an explosion seems to unravel time around them, and they find themselves thrown backwards into 1893. They have no idea how to return to their own time, or if their future even still exists. Thematically, the story reminded me of The Watchmaker of Filigree Street, but written for young adults.

I looked up the author online, and she appears to have written two other books set in the same universe, although the three stories don't seem to be intertwined in any way. A Starlet’s Secret to a Sensational Afterlife is about Genevieve's twin sister Henny, and their older sister Ruby is the subject of Murder for the Modern Girl.
merrileemakes: A very tired looking orange cat peering sleepily at you while curled up on a laptop bag (Default)
[personal profile] merrileemakes posting in [community profile] common_nature
Hi [community profile] common_nature, [profile] stonpicnicking_okapi shared their love of this comm as part of February Love Fest and inspired me to join. :)

I have been experiencing nature up close and personal thanks to some frogs. At the end of November, following a rain storm, my Partner and I could hear a frog in our tiny, ornamental garden pond/water feature. We're always so thrilled when this happens!

The next morning when I walked past the pond I saw a pile of bubbles and thought that was cool. The male frog has been making a bubble nest, like a betta fish, pining for a female to come join him (spoiler: I don't know much about frogs).

The next day I went to clean the pond (a bi-weekly feat during summer) and noticed that only only had the bubbles persisted, but some of them had developed little black dots. Oh my god, they're not bubbles they're eggs!
Life, uh, finds a way )

What I'm Doing Wednesday

2026-02-04 14:35
sage: the words "We the People" in purple on a white field with a crowd of protesters in silhouette below. (We The People)
[personal profile] sage
books: Pratchett )

yarning
Sunday I delivered 25 hats to my contact for the children's shelter at yarn group. Had a nice time. Started balaclavas for ICE protesters in Minneapolis with Walmart yarn. Started a donation kickbunny for the new momcat at Kitten Academy. Received yarn today to make more balaclavas. Got an etsy order today for two catnip-silvervine hearts. Yay!

healthcrap
I've had a low grade fever off and on with a constant runny nose and sore throat, and also I bit the crap out of my tongue, on the side at the back, so I've added benzocaine gel to the meds lineup. And thyme tea, since I can't take guaifenisen, which is in all the cold meds. Also, the med I'm titrating off of causes hot flashes as a withdrawal symptom, which can go on for a month after the med is totally stopped. (Grr. I'm so impatient to feel better.) And I need to get those labs done at some point, oops.

#resist
+ https://standwithminnesota.com
+ https://projectreliefme.com (mutual aid in Maine -- the ICE surge in ME is over, but they arrested 200 people there and their families still need help.)
+ Feb 17th: #50501 Protest: Impeach, Convict, Remove, Defund
+ March 28: #50501 No Kings Protest #3

I hope you're all doing well! <333
lightreads: a partial image of a etymology tree for the Indo-European word 'leuk done in white neon on black'; in the lower left is (Default)
[personal profile] lightreads
The Everlasting

3/5. Fantasy about the soldier turned scholar who ends up going back in time (and back . . . and back . . . and back) to meet the lady knight who is pivotal to the founding myth of his nation. Arthurian time travel about nation-building and myth creation and racism.

Man, I don’t know what it is, but I just do not like Alix Harrow books the way I should. Even this one, where the overwrought quality of her writing finally has a story to match its tone. The writing in some sections is notably strong, I should say. But there is something in every single one of her books that I cannot put my finger on, and it just annoys the crap out of me.

I will admit this is structurally clever. The narrative gets rewritten multiple times to create new founding national myths, and she manages that while not being too terribly repetitive, and also establishing a few important touchpoints that orient the reader to how the angle of history has changed in just a few sentences. That is well done.

I still don’t know. The one objection I can concretely point to here is that I don’t like the way this book centers nation-building around the ego and trauma and psychopathy of one single person. The metaphor of it all collapses there, because that’s not how this works. Systems of racial oppression and societal violence don’t form on the whim of a single person, and there is something trite in the way Harrow has her villain reconstructing this nation over and over again based on, like, ten minutes of history that get played out a thousand years before the modern day events. Which is a real objection – I think that is a weakness of the book. But it’s not the thing I found annoying and off-putting, and I still don’t know what that is.

I’d bet on this to go on a bunch of award lists, though, just you wait.

Content notes: Racialized oppression, violence in war and otherwise, discussion of the killing of civilians, mention of stillbirth and sexual assault, something that is not the death of children but awfully close.
[syndicated profile] laughing_squid_feed

Posted by Lori Dorn

Determined bird rescuer Dany of Jupiter.and.frens shared the heartwarming story of a very rare but very stubborn trumpeter swan who had been accidentally shot by a hunter. Dany went to great lengths to reach the injured swan, whom she named BAF. Fortunately BAF’s injuries didn’t cause great harm, however, Dany was presented with the issue of finding a flock for BAF.

There was no pellets anywhere near any internal organs or anything like that. So, it just had to be on antibiotics fora little while. Because he’s a swan, you can’t really release him unless you find a flock. Because they were migrating, that meant he needed somewhere to go.

BAF stayed with Dany for 23 days and then was ready to be released back into the wild. Luckily, Dany found a flock for him.

I was worried that I wasn’t going to find a flock to release him to. And I just spotted this huge flock of white birds. I was screaming in the car. I’m like, “Those are trumpeter swans.”

While Dany was sad to see him go, she knew that BAF would have a good life wherever he wound up.

BAF may have scars but now he has a chance to live his life where he belongs! This was likely a once in a lifetime opportunity for me! What an honour it has been to care for him, to be beat up by him, and to return him to the wild!

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The post Determined Bird Rescuer Saves Rare Trumpeter Swan Who Was Accidentally Shot by a Hunter was originally published on Laughing Squid.

2026.02.04

2026-02-04 11:56
lsanderson: (Default)
[personal profile] lsanderson
ICE

As Minnesota legislative session nears and Operation Metro Surge drags on, lawmakers ready response to ICE
Minnesota DFLers are considering laws similar to ones that passed in other blue states. But they are still likely to see legal (and Republican) scrutiny.
by Cleo Krejci and Matthew Blake
https://www.minnpost.com/state-government/2026/02/as-minnesota-legislative-session-nears-and-operation-metro-surge-drags-on-lawmakers-ready-response-to-ice/

Trump’s border czar says 700 immigration officers to leave Minnesota immediately
About 2,000 officers will remain in the state after this week’s drawdown.
by Steve Karnowski, Associated Press
https://www.minnpost.com/metro/2026/02/trumps-border-czar-says-700-immigration-officers-to-leave-minnesota-immediately/

U.S. Rep. Kelly Morrison visited the Whipple Federal Building on Monday and described the conditions she observed in a video posted to YouTube, KARE 11 reports. “During my visit yesterday, I got confirmation that the facility has no specific medical policy and no real medical care on site. There was not a nurse present yesterday at all. There are no beds, no real blankets, minimal food, extremely cold temperatures. People are in locked cells with leg shackles.” Agents did not answer her questions about how many people are currently being held, and how many had been sent to the hospital over the past week. Via MinnPost
https://www.kare11.com/article/news/local/ice-in-minnesota/no-real-medical-care-representative-describes-conditions-for-detainees-at-whipple-building/89-0995e964-97b1-4d52-97ac-20aaf3b043c5

On Tuesday U.S. citizens who have been affected by the federal immigration crackdown spoke at a public forum organized by Democratic lawmakers in Washington. Renee Macklin Good’s brothers were among the speakers. “[Another] was Aliya Rahman of Minneapolis, who was dragged out of her car by federal immigration enforcement agents three weeks ago. Rahman said she is autistic and has a traumatic brain injury.” Rahman also described conditions at Whipple. “I saw Black and brown bodies shackled together, chained together, being marched by yelling agents outdoors. I continue to hear the word ‘bodies’ because that is how agents refer to us.” Via MinnPost
https://www.mprnews.org/story/2026/02/04/renee-macklin-goods-brothers-others-call-for-ice-reforms-at-public-forum Read more... )

Wednesday reading

2026-02-04 17:42
queen_ypolita: Books stacked to form a spiral (Bookspiral by celticfire)
[personal profile] queen_ypolita
The book group at work is struggling to gather momentum. Intended to be fortnightly, it was pushed from last week to this, and then cancelled at very short notice. The goal is now to try monthly.

Finished since the last reading post
Finished Spinning Silver, which I really liked for its brave protagonists and imaginative story borrowing from folktales and such.

Also finished Challenger. When I originally picked it up, I thought it was unlikely it would tell me anything really new about the accident, but it did such a thorough job from multiple points of view that I feel it actually did.

And also finished From Coast to Coast, which I didn't really warm to at any point, with its contrived plot and shallow characters.

Currently reading
Picked up Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy in the library last week, after failing to locate it there a couple of times before until I found it exactly where the shelf reference suggested it should be. Also started reading The Young Alexander by Alex Rowson. No progress on anything else.

Reading next
I have another library book waiting, so probably that.
[syndicated profile] laughing_squid_feed

Posted by Lori Dorn

Sergii Gordieiev of The Q, who enjoys tinkering around, used his mathematical and engineering skills to build a chainless bicycle drivetrain using a series of connected 3D-printed gears to replace the conventional chain.

In this video, I build a fully working chainless bicycle drivetrain powered by a series of gears – and all system was 3D printed.

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The post Engineer Replaces a Bicycle Chain With a Series of 3D-Printed Gears was originally published on Laughing Squid.

runpunkrun: combat boot, pizza, camo pants = punk  (punk rock girl)
[personal profile] runpunkrun posting in [community profile] fandomcalendar
Photograph of two kingfishers perched on a branch. One is surrounded by a cloud of pink love hearts and the other has a single question mark over its head. Text: Inept in Love, at Fancake.
[community profile] fancake is a thematic recommendation community where all members are welcome to post recs, and fanworks of all shapes and sizes are accepted. Check out the community guidelines for the full set of rules.

This theme runs for the entire month. If you have any questions, just ask!

(no subject)

2026-02-04 16:38
angrboda: Viking style dragon head finial against a blue sky (Default)
[personal profile] angrboda
Well, that was rather a full day.

We started with an appointment with a solicitor regarding setting up wills, which, while unpleasant, turned out to not be as unpleasant as expected. I liked the woman we spoke to. She seemed friendly and had some input on which details might or might not be relevant for us, and some of them were about things we hadn't even thought of.

Finished the day off with a vet appointment for Holly, who has an inflamed tooth. The veterinary nurse agreed with me that it looked Capital S Suspicious, so she's now booked in for the full works. X-rays, teeth cleaning and possibly removal of the bad tooth if they can do it at the same time. She said she could make the booking with extra time for the extraction, but it ultimately depends on what they see on the pictures. If it's more complicated than just the one tooth, it will take too long. I have previously been told it's also a question of there being a limit to how long they can safely keep a cat knocked out. They'll do some blood tests on her at the same time, which is a non-mandatory routine check of organ functions. With several previous kidney-cats, it's not non-mandatory to us.

Roll on the weekend, with book swap day at the library and opera in the cinema!
[syndicated profile] laughing_squid_feed

Posted by Lori Dorn

A beautiful long-haired cat named Theo, who was given a plushie companion tuxedo cat as a kitten, was very happy to find out that he was getting a real-life sibling with a sweet kitten named Zelda. According to their human Alyssa, Theo started treating Zelda in the same way as he did his stuffed animal.

This black and white stuffed cat became his like little baby. …I always felt horrible seeing how happy he got with his stuffed animal and that he didn’t have another cat. …I went to the Austin Animal Center. He was so fascinated by her.  …And then one morning they were in the same bed and he was like already cuddled up with her and he was like treating her in place of said his stuffed cat.

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The post Cat Gives Up His Beloved Plushie Companion for a Real-Life Kitten Sibling was originally published on Laughing Squid.

[syndicated profile] propublica_feed

Posted by ARRAY(0x55be71a5cfa0)

For months, the Trump administration has justified its dramatic midnight raid on a Chicago apartment complex by saying that it had intelligence that the violent Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua had taken over the building. But officials have provided no evidence to back up the claim.

Now, new documents confirm in the government’s own words that what prompted the raid was more pedestrian: allegations that immigrants were squatting in the complex. And the landlord had given federal officials, who were already targeting immigrants in Chicago, the blessing to search the building.

Arrest records for two of the 37 immigrants detained that September night, included in a motion filed Tuesday that’s tied to an ongoing federal consent decree, provide the clearest picture yet of what led to the controversial and aggressive operation, in which agents descended from a Blackhawk helicopter, broke down doors and zip-tied U.S. citizens and immigrants.

The records reveal that agents entered and searched the complex with the “owner/manager’s verbal and written consent.” Agents wrote that they launched the operation “based on intelligence that there were illegal aliens unlawfully occupying apartments.” They said they focused their search on units “that were not legally rented or leased at the time.” That narrative appears word for word in both arrest reports — for a Venezuelan man and a Mexican man.

“It was a brutal lie against the American public,” said Mark Fleming, an attorney with the National Immigrant Justice Center and co-counsel in a lawsuit against the government that led to the consent decree. “This was really about immigrants purportedly occupying apartments unlawfully, which is radically different than the story they told.”

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security makes no mention in the records of Tren de Aragua, even though officials repeatedly cited the gang’s presence in the building as the motivation for the raid. Agents paraded immigrants in front of cameras and called their arrests a victory against terrorism. The government also claimed two of those arrested were gang members but never provided any proof.

A clipping from a document filed in court on Tuesday, with a highlighted paragraph stating: “On Tuesday, September 30, 2025, USBP agents along with OFO Special Response Team Officers assisted by AMO, ERO, and FBI executed a methodical search of an apartment building located 7500 S. South Shore Drive in Chicago, Illinois. This operation was based on intelligence that there were illegal aliens unlawfully occupying apartments in the building. The entry and subsequent search of the premise was facilitated as a result of the/building’s owner/manager’s verbal and written consent./The combined forces search consisted of only apartments that were not legally rented or leased at the time.”
The new documents obtained by ProPublica show that the motive for the federal raid was allegations that immigrants were squatting in the complex. Obtained by ProPublica

ProPublica previously reported, based on interviews and records, that there was little evidence to back up the government’s claims. Even today, four months after the raid, federal prosecutors have not filed criminal charges against anyone who was arrested. 

Over the past few months, ProPublica has interviewed 15 of the immigrants detained that night; all denied gang membership. They and others who lived in the building acknowledged there was criminal activity there, including the murder of a Venezuelan man last summer, but nobody knew of gang members there.

The two arrest records were filed in federal court as part of ongoing litigation over whether the government, during its monthslong deportation campaign in Chicago, violated a 2022 consent decree that limits warrantless arrests. The consent decree is still in place, and the government continues to challenge it.

Government attorneys had previously acknowledged in court that hundreds of immigrants detained last year may have been improperly arrested. 

Following a court order, DHS has been providing administrative arrest records to attorneys who now are demanding the release of some of those immigrants from custody or the removal of restrictions for those who are already out. That includes the Venezuelan man and Mexican man taken during the raid.

In the motion filed Tuesday night, immigrant rights attorneys said that to justify warrantless arrests across Chicago, the government described immigrants as flight risks though they were not. Some of the factors that DHS used to make that determination for the South Shore men — including their “willful disregard for other’s personal property” and their “attempt to flee from law enforcement” — were baseless and contradicted by the arrest narratives, the attorneys wrote.

Even more of the 37 arrests that night may have violated the consent decree, attorneys said, but the cases under review are for those who remain in the U.S. As the weeks and months passed, most of the immigrants detained in the South Shore raid were deported or gave up on their efforts to stay in the country.

The property owner, Trinity Flood, a Wisconsin-based real estate investor, and the management company at the time of the raid, Strength in Management, did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Wednesday morning. Flood and Corey Oliver, the management company’s owner, have repeatedly declined interview requests and have not acknowledged any involvement in the operation.

A DHS spokesperson did not respond to questions Wednesday morning but repeated earlier statements that the raid was performed legally. “Given that two individuals of a Foreign Terrorist Organization were arrested, at a building they are known to frequent, we are limited on further information we can provide,” the spokesperson said.

From the beginning there had been questions about whether Flood and her property manager tipped off the government to get rid of squatters in her building, which had repeatedly failed city inspections in the two years before the raid. 

Last month, state officials launched a housing discrimination investigation into allegations that Flood and Strength in Management used federal agents to illegally force the Black and Hispanic tenants from the 130-unit building in Chicago’s South Shore neighborhood.

In their complaint, state officials wrote that “building management blamed Venezuelan tenants for their own (management’s) failure to provide needed locks and security service, as well as other needed maintenance and repairs, and perpetuated stereotypes about Venezuelan gang members to send a message that tenants born outside of the United States were considered gang associates, even if they were law abiding.”

Within hours of the raid, workers from the management company were tossing tenants’ belongings in the trash and clearing out apartments, the complaint states.

State officials said that they could not provide any additional information on an ongoing investigation, but that they look forward to a response from Flood and Strength in Management.

Several Venezuelan immigrants detained that night said they were angry to learn that the building’s owner and property manager had facilitated federal agents’ entry. “We were paying our rent, doing things the right way,” said Jean Carlos Antonio Colmenares Pérez, 39. “Then suddenly, boom, the government comes in and takes us out. I don’t understand.”

Colmenares spent more than two months in federal custody before he was deported in December.

“They took us out as if we were dogs. As if we were criminals,” said his cousin, Daniel José Henríquez Rojas, 43.

Henríquez was detained for about two months before he was deported. Federal agents also took his wife and then-6-year-son that night and later transported them to a facility in Texas where they were detained for about a month. The family is now back together in Venezuela.

Johandry José Andrade Jiménez, 23, had moved into the South Shore complex with his wife and three young daughters just two days before the raid. Andrade was deported in December. His wife was released with an ankle monitor in Chicago, where she now struggles to support their daughters alone.

“They separated me from my family,” Andrade said. “I feel awful.”

The complex was home to dozens of mostly African American and Venezuelan tenants. While some said they had stopped paying rent because of the dangerous and dilapidated conditions, close to a dozen Venezuelans, including Colmenares, Henríquez and Andrade, told us they were paying rent to people they believed worked for the management company.

But in some cases, that money was going to other tenants who claimed to be the managers. ProPublica interviewed a U.S. citizen who said that he and others moved Venezuelan families into empty units, charged whatever amount they believed was fair and pocketed the money. “We started making them pay rent to us,” the man said.

Flood, who is facing a foreclosure lawsuit, said in court records last fall that her company had invested millions of dollars to repair and maintain the building and on legal fees for evictions. Weeks before the raid, the company obtained court orders to evict squatters.

The building continued to deteriorate after the raid. Oliver testified in court that he briefly hired security people but then fired them after they didn’t do their jobs. In November, a county judge ordered that another company take over management of the building and required that the remaining residents move out.

The post The Real Story Behind the Midnight Immigration Raid on a Chicago Apartment Building appeared first on ProPublica.

duckprintspress: (Default)
[personal profile] duckprintspress
A graphic showing a number of book covers surrounding a photograph of four people, shown from behind, in a friendly embrace with a bright sun silhouetting them. Text reads "Friendship centered SFF Book Bundle 37 books Feb 1st - 15th. Photo Helena Lopes. There's also the itch.io logo.

Our novellette Puppetry by Nina Waters is part of another awesome itch.io bundle, this one featuring 37 books by 37 authors that center friendship! Some of the bundle books are queer, some are not, but all of them put close friends, found family, and other platonic relationships front and central.

The bundle includes 13 fantasy books, 12 science fiction books, 10 scifantasy books, and 2 horror books.

All this can be yours for only $35 USD – less than a dollar per book!

Get your bundle of SFF books focused on friendship on itch.io today!


Keep It Simple, Stupid

2026-02-04 14:00
[syndicated profile] cakewrecks_feed

Posted by Jen

Bride-to-be Coley got engaged in Hershey Park, so for her bridal shower her friends thought it would be fun to have a giant Hershey Kiss cake. Cool idea, right? Especially since, as far as shaped cakes go, a kiss shouldn't be that hard - I mean, it's not like it's a football helmet or anything.

In fact, while looking for a reference just now I found this one by Carrie of Half Baked. It's actually a cupcake, but c'mon: SO CUTE.

 

So just imagine this, only bigger. That's what they wanted for Coley's shower.

Instead, Coley's sister Tammy sent me a picture of what they did get, along with many emphatic assurances that yes, they actually paid for it (though "only" about $60), and yes, it was made by an actual "cake decorator" - though I should note she did put that part in quotes.

The cake was wrapped in tinfoil, a brilliant move on the "decorator's" part if ever I saw one, since that way no one saw the cake's true glory until it came time to serve it at the party.

At which point they unwrapped it to reveal...

 

 

....this:

 

Um...

 Ok, call me crazy, but is that top reminding anyone else of those creepy weed guys in Ursula's lair?

No? Just me?

Ok then.

 

Thanks to Tammy and Coley for the kiss and tell.

*****

P.S. My "related searches" kind of got away from me today, but I think you'll approve:

"Hiss" Punny Cats Parody T-Shirt

Lots more colors and shirt styles available at the link.

*****

And from my other blog, Epbot:

innitmarvelous_og: (T+P+hearts1)
[personal profile] innitmarvelous_og posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks

Creator: innitmarvelous_og
Title: Love Written in the Sky
Fandom: Marvel Cinematic Universe
Characters/Pairings: Pepper Potts, Morgan Stark, Tony Stark/Pepper Potts
Prompt: Star
Word Count/Medium: 1047
Rating: PG
Warning: Angst
Summary: Pepper finds a way to keep Tony close for her daughter and herself. Post-Endgame

Notes: Recommended listening while you're reading this fic is "Stars" by Grace Potter and the Nocturnals.

It was on a Tuesday night when Pepper finally.... )

WWW Wednesday

2026-02-04 09:05
duckprintspress: (Default)
[personal profile] duckprintspress

1. What are you currently reading?

  • I'm still on pause on The World We Make by N. K. Jemisin and The Baker Thief by Claudie Arseneault, tho I expect to resume The Baker Thief today, as I've only got about a week left on my current Libby borrow.
  • 盗墓笔记 by 南派三叔
  • Cooking with Monsters: The Beginner's Guide to Culinary Combat vol. 1 by Jordan Alsaqa and Vivian Truong: started this yesterday, it's fine but the pacing seems very slow, I wonder how long it'll end up being. It's definitely queer - there's an NB character and pronoun sharing - but I'm not sure beyond that yet. Otherwise, it's what it says on the tin, they're going to culinary-combat school to fight and kill and cook monsters.

2. What have you recently finished reading?

  • The Apothecary Diaries light novel vol. 2 and 3 by Natsu Hyuuga: I haven't given up yet lmao. I think it's that when it's good it's really good but other times it drags. Anyway, I've got a hold on vol. 4.
  • Spy x Family vol. 15 by Tatsuya Endo
  • A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow vol. 4 by Makoto Hagino: a little more happened than in last volume, I think we're actually inching toward a relationship now...
  • Entangled Circumstances by Kikuko Kikuya: decent modern BL one shot. Era-typical pressuring the bottom for sex but I expect that.
  • Flip by Ngozi Ukazu: this was interesting, if not what I expected. Based on stuff I thought it would have trans allegory stuff, but it was much more focused on race than gender.
  • Return of the Prince by Junko: I'd give so much for these BL volumes to be clearer about when they're one-shots versus when they're short story collections, sigh.
  • That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime manga vol. 7 by Fuse

3. What will you read next?

Novels: I've got A Drop of Corruption by Robert Jackson Bennett on Libby, so that. Gotta get through all the books I borrowed before they run out.

Physical Graphic Novels: next on my new from-the-library pile is It Rhymes with Takei by George Takei and others.

Libby Graphic Novels/Manga: I've got a couple due within the next week: Killer Queens by David M. Booher and Kase-san and Shortcake by Hiromi Takashima, so I'll start with those and go from there I guess.


FAKE: Fanfic: Gold Star

2026-02-04 13:39
badly_knitted: (Dee & Ryo black & white)
[personal profile] badly_knitted posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks

Title: Gold Star
Fandom: FAKE
Author: [personal profile] badly_knitted
Characters: Bikky, Ryo.
Rating: G
Setting: Early in the manga.
Summary: Bikky has exciting news for his foster father.
Word Count: 300
Content Notes: None needed.
Written For: Challenge 505: Star.
Disclaimer: I don’t own FAKE, or the characters. They belong to the wonderful Sanami Matoh.
A/N: Triple drabble.



fiachairecht: (kristoni)
[personal profile] fiachairecht
Fresh Femslash Salad Bar table year three! My overall level of accomplishment seems to hover around 1-2 fills, so let's see if we can, hm, meet that this year. Exceeding would be nice, but I'm not getting my hopes up.

fiachairecht's salad bar
salad 1 Antihero, Infidelity & failed resurrection
salad 2 Cigarettes, Enemies that Fuck & the villains win
salad 3 Violence, Exes & unable to ever go home
salad 4 Chiaroscuro, Friends with Benefits & the corrupted hero
salad 5 Elbow Length Gloves, Enemies to Lovers & breakup
salad 6 Revenge, Rivals to Lovers & slowly but steadily losing control
salad 7 Femme Fatale, Friends to Lovers & winning the battle but losing the war
salad 8 Paranoia, Established Relationship & time travel break-it
salad 9 Alienation, Unrequited & running away from problems
salad 10 Doomed, Getting Together & giving up


Salad 1 feels like Ripley/Delilah fic ... salad 3 might be Bletchley Circle fic ... salad 8 is absolutely Toni/someone(s) wrestling fic ... I am thinking thoughts!! I do not know that I will write any thoughts. But I like collecting tables so here I am.
lucy_roman: (S&H)
[personal profile] lucy_roman posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks
Title: The Star of the Show
Author: [personal profile] lucy_roman
Rating: Gen
Summary: Hutch is the star of the show but he doesn't want to be
Pairing: Starsky/Hutch
Word Count: 359

The Star of the Show )
darkjediqueen: (Default)
[personal profile] darkjediqueen posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks
Title: Meant To Meet
Rating: PG-13
Warnings: No Warnings Apply
Fandom: S.W.A.T
Relationships: Donovan Rocker/Molly Hicks
Tags: Alternate Universe, Bodyguard Rocker, Movie Star Molly, Getting Together
Summary: They meet in a different way, and the sparks still fly.
Word Count: 3,953


(no subject)

2026-02-04 02:21
amberite: (me)
[personal profile] amberite
You can buy Kirkland Signature paper towels on Temu from a "local vendor", presumably someone drop-shipping them from Costco. They cost about $10 more than the regular price but if you manage to get on the rolling credit deal you only pay for about 10-15% of your whole purchase amount - as long as you don't mess up on claiming the rebate. So next time we're out of paper towels I may get to pay about $4 actual cost. 

The Chinese government is probably subsidizing this purchase from a US middleman to a US buyer, of which most of the price goes into Costco's pocket, since I can't imagine a shoplifting ring going after these packages. (They're volumetrically about the size of my partner, a small adult human. I can barely wrestle them into the shopping cart when I go to Costco in person.) 

Weird time to be alive!

Another seller has a 1.75 oz jar of Maison F Crayssac truffle caviar (list price $25) going for $100. I admire the chutzpah. It'd only be about $12 actual cost after everything averaged out, but I have a tiny jar of potent truffle aioli that I got for $2 at Grocery Outlet and it is already as much truffle as I need in my life. 

Do be aware, not every deal is good at the end of the day, occasionally you will be sent the stupidest substitutions so never rely on a Temu order for a time-sensitive need, and actually "winning the game" takes being thoughtful and methodical. 
js_thrill: goat with headphones (goat rock)
[personal profile] js_thrill
We are on the move again: Going to Tennessee


This is not my favorite of the "Going To..." series. It's not bad, it's just not doing it for me.  Darnielle says this song (and much of the early Mountain Goats catalogue) is about sex, though I wouldn't have thought to describe the song that way myself.

halfamoon challenge

2026-02-04 22:09
tielan: Jyn Erso looking pensive (pensive)
[personal profile] tielan
Pick a female character you know I'll write, and one of the prompts below. Preferably one nobody else has yet chosen.

Day 1 - The Innocent
Day 2 - Guilty Pleasures
Day 3 - The Caregiver
Day 4 - Needs
Day 5 - The Outlaw
Day 6 - Her Own Personal Code
Day 7 - The Lover
Day 8 - Pet Peeves
Day 9 - The Scholar
Day 10 - Acting the Fool
Day 11 - The Explorer
Day 12 - Her Sanctuary
Day 13 - The Ruler
Day 14 - Letting Go

I never manage to write for halfamoon because my stories end up seriously epic. Maybe this off-the-cuff thing will work instead. (Or maybe those will just turn seriously epic.)
[syndicated profile] propublica_feed

Posted by Jennifer Berry Hawes

In July of 1968, Samuel Bowers sat down in his office with fingers poised over his typewriter keys, thoughts filled with fury. As founder and imperial wizard of the White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, he cut a charismatic figure, though one with a militant Christian faith and a hate-filled mind. Just a day earlier, police had killed one of his most trusted assassins and severely injured another. 

Bowers had spent the past few years masterminding bombings at Mississippi’s Black churches and, more recently, synagogues as well. His two foot soldiers now riddled with bullets had bombed the Beth Israel Congregation in Jackson on a foggy night nine months earlier and were en route to bomb a Jewish leader’s home when police gunned them down.

At the typewriter, Bowers pounded out a five-page missive to Thomas Tucker, a local police officer who shot one of the Klan members but had earlier faced suspicions of being a Klan sympathizer himself, journalist Jack Nelson wrote in his 1993 book “Terror in the Night: The Klan’s Campaign Against the Jews.” 

“Mr. Tucker,” Bowers wrote, “the principle of law as it has been twisted and abused by the animals in the Synagogue of Satan, one of which you were guarding and protecting.” The Klanswoman killed, he insisted, was an American Patriot “doing her limited best to preserve Christian Civilization by helping to destroy the body of an animal of Satan’s Synagogue.” 

Flash forward almost 60 years after Bowers wrote his letter. 

On Jan. 10, a whole new generation of congregants at Beth Israel, among Mississippi’s oldest synagogues, awoke to devastating news about their house of worship. Someone had set a fire inside. The blaze had started in the library, destroying it along with sacred Torah scrolls, prayer books and myriad other materials. Smoke had filled the sanctuary. No congregants were injured, but they would not be able to worship there for some time.

Later the day of the arson, a young man with scorched hands faced an FBI agent and others investigating the crime. Stephen Spencer Pittman was born in Jackson in 2006, the year Bowers died. Just 19 years old, he allegedly admitted to investigators that he set fire to the temple due to its “Jewish ties,” according to an FBI agent’s affidavit. He dubbed Beth Israel a “synagogue of Satan.”

A dark, charred room covered in ashes and debris with smoke marks on the brick wall, ceiling and floor. A circular hole in the ceiling brings warm light into the center of the room.
The fire that damaged Beth Israel’s synagogue last month marks the second time in nearly 60 years that the building has come under attack. Courtesy of Beth Israel Congregation

The term refers to biblical passages in which Jesus described Jews in specific communities who were persecuting the early Christians. Antisemites like Bowers had co-opted the phrase to describe Jews broadly as agents of evil plotting against white Christians. He believed that Jews who hadn’t converted to Christianity were “heretics” and their houses of worship therefore legitimate military targets — especially those like Beth Israel, whose rabbi had been linking arms with civil rights protestors. 

Why Pittman, who has pleaded not guilty, used those words remains unclear. But according to the affidavit, after the fire burned the temple, Pittman texted his father, “I did my research.”  

What did that research entail? Little is known so far. It remains unclear whether the teenager knew much about the ideology of the people behind the 1967 bombing or if he followed any of today’s antisemitic influencers.

Pittman, a community college baseball player from Madison, Mississippi, did engage in substantial online activity. He appears to have created profiles on multiple social media platforms where he mostly posted about his sport, nutrition and his Christian faith. Yet, shortly before the fire, an Instagram account that appears to be his posted an antisemitic meme of a cartoon character with a prominent nose, a Star of David affixed to his chest and a money bag in each hand.

And across the online world that Pittman traversed, a crop of young influencers have been spreading antisemitism, often rooted in Christianity. They are attracting millions of followers,  embracing conspiracy theories of global Jewish takeovers and using terms like the “synagogue of Satan” that people like Bowers would well recognize. 

Back Then …

In many ways, the original sin of mass antisemitic disinformation stems from a text called “The Protocols of the Elders of Zion.” Published in the Russian empire in 1903, it claimed to be an insider account of Jews plotting world domination. The tropes in it weren’t new, but the text provided rich fodder to those who embraced its “evidence” that Jews were orchestrating a global plan to amass wealth and eradicate non-Jews. 

“Only we, the Jews, are qualified to rule the world,” the text proclaimed. “We shall surround our government with economists, bankers, industrialists, capitalists — and the main thing — millionaires — for everything will be settled by gold.”

The fact that the text was proven a forgery did little to thwart those who embraced it. Adolf Hitler called the document “immensely instructive.” Klan groups adopted it as a foundational text. 

Bowers used conspiracy theories rooted in “The Protocols” to contend that Jewish puppetmasters were the real masterminds behind the NAACP, the FBI and the young civil rights volunteers pouring into places like Mississippi and Black people were merely their pawns. With that framing, his followers could demean Black protesters and vilify federal agents and Jews, notably those who linked arms with their Black neighbors to demand equal rights — as the rabbi at Beth Israel had increasingly done before Bowers’ henchmen bombed his synagogue and then his home.

A black and white photo of a handcuffed man wearing a black suit and white shirt grins widely as a police officer stands behind him.
Samuel Bowers, founder and imperial wizard of the White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, masterminded multiple bombings in the 1960s, including on Beth Israel in 1967. A year later, an officer arrested him on arson charges connected to the murder of Black civil rights leader Vernon Dahmer. Bettman via Getty

“It’s a way of rationalizing racism and finding a way not to acknowledge Black political agency and power,” said William Robert Billups, a University of Florida historian who hails from Mississippi and published research about Bowers and 1960s synagogue bombers in the Journal of American History.

Some like Bowers, later convicted of murdering a civil rights leader, also imbued their white supremacy with a militant theology known as the Christian Identity movement: Jews weren’t only political and economic threats. They were religious enemies, too, ones seeking to usurp white Christians from their place as God’s true chosen people.

“They didn’t see any daylight between Christianity and whiteness,” Billups said. “They did not believe that Jewish people were fully white and didn’t believe they were fully human.” He wrote in his research that Christian Identity followers believed that Jews’ “innate depravity” drove them to pursue world domination.

Christian Identity adherents tapped biblical phrases like the “synagogue of Satan” to justify their antisemitic views. Because they were religious, references from the Bible “came very easily to their tongues,” said Mark Pitcavage, a senior research fellow at the Anti-Defamation League who has spent three decades studying extremism. 

The phrase appears twice in the New Testament. Both references deal with specific local conflicts between established Jewish communities and the early Christians they persecuted. Jesus was offering support to his faithful as they faced these hostilities, not making blanket statements about Jewish people. 

“Behold, I will make them of the synagogue of Satan who say they are Jews and are not but do lie. Behold, I will make them come and worship at thy feet and to know that I have loved thee,” Jesus assured a fledgling church in one of the passages.

But as Bowers continued typing his letter to the police officer that hot day in 1968, he added, “I just do not know what we Christians can do about these Synagogue of Satan Jews other than to oppose them in every possible way and pray for Divine Relief.” 

… And Now

In 2015, the “alt-right” white nationalist movement ascended to extremist popularity online in the corners of 4chan and 8chan and on burgeoning white supremacist websites like The Daily Stormer, named for the Nazi Party’s newspaper. Followers often posted jokey, racy and racist memes where they could hide behind the plausible deniability of humor. 

That summer, Donald Trump announced his candidacy for president, a move swiftly embraced by The Daily Stormer’s founder and others. The next day, a 21-year-old white supremacist named Dylann Roof drove to Emanuel AME Church, a historic Black congregation in downtown Charleston, South Carolina. 

When Roof arrived, the church’s pastor invited him to join the small group of mostly older women gathered for weekly Bible study. Roof sat with them for about an hour, until the closing prayer. Then he pulled out a pistol.

As he fired more than 70 shots, killing nine people, he said, “Y’all raping all our white women and taking over the nation.” 

Roof had discovered the “great replacement theory.” Adherents believe that an elite group, often Jewish and described in terms such as “globalists,” is orchestrating mass immigration of nonwhites along with social policies that reduce white birth rates and otherwise “replace” whites — and their control of the West.

It’s part of a shift in white supremacist ideology since the civil rights era from preserving white dominance to preventing white extinction. More recently, these notions have also bolstered a crop of influencers circulating versions of the ideology to new audiences. 

In 2017, hundreds of white supremacists and other extremists flocked to the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, brandishing torches and chanting, “Jews will not replace us!” An 18-year-old named Nick Fuentes was in attendance and posted on Facebook that “the rootless transnational elite knows that a tidal wave of white identity is coming.”

The rally proved a launching pad for a career in commentary that now draws millions of followers for whom Fuentes has described the great replacement theory as the “Great Replacement REALITY.” At a “Stop the Steal” rally in 2020, he applauded Trump for standing up to various groups including “the synagogue of Satan.” 

But Fuentes is only one of a slew of influencers who have adopted similar anti-immigration rhetoric and frequently criticize what they perceive as Israel’s power in the United States, particularly related to the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza. (Supporters of the U.S.-Israel alliance contend that the relationship benefits both democracies.)

Candace Owens, whose YouTube channel has 5.75 million subscribers, once worked for the late Charlie Kirk’s Turning Point USA and later at The Daily Wire until she was pushed out last year following conflicts with co-founder Ben Shapiro, who is Jewish. In 2024, she described an anti-Christian global conspiracy. “It does seem that they’re trying to almost now indoctrinate the entire world into their satanic faith. Like I said, it is my belief that this is a synagogue of Satan,” she told viewers. 

Similarly, Andrew Torba, founder and CEO of the social media site Gab, popular with extremists, wrote last fall that the federal government is owned by Israel and “its powerful fifth column of Jewish elites in our country.”

“Naming the group that is the engine of our nation’s subversion isn’t bigotry,” Torba added, “it’s a Biblical diagnosis of a spiritual cancer. It is identifying the modern-day ‘synagogue of Satan’ that Christ Himself warned us about.”

There’s no indication that Pittman, the teenager charged in the Beth Israel fire, was aware of any of these comments.

ProPublica reached out to Fuentes on his website and on X and to Torba through Gab’s general email. We reached out to Owens on her website’s media request portal. (Her website tells users, “We do not allow pornography, incitement to violence or gore, discussions about active drug use and other topics in that vein.”) None responded to requests for comment about the Beth Israel fire and their use of the term “synagogue of Satan.” Torba’s X account posted our emailed questions with the message, “I regret to inform you that journos are at it again.” 

The Anti-Defamation League, which tracks antisemitic incidents including assaults, harassment and vandalism, found an 893% increase over the past decade with particularly large leaps in 2023 and 2024, according to its most recent audit. In 2024, it found 9,354 incidents compared to 1,267 in 2016. The audit also notes that much of the recent surge was related to protests, often on college campuses, against Israeli actions in Gaza, some of which included rhetoric such as “death to Israel.” 

A metal sculpture in the shape of a tree with the Hebrew word for “alive” lies against a wall surrounded by charred material.
Beth Israel’s Tree of Life was destroyed in the fire last month. Synagogue President Zach Shemper says the congregation will make a bigger one to demonstrate “all the outreach of love, compassion and support” they have received. Courtesy of Zach Shemper

“Increasingly, extreme actors in the anti-Israel space have incorporated antisemitic rhetoric into their activism, and it has become commonplace for perpetrators across the political spectrum to voice hatred of Israel or conspiracy theories about the state in a range of antisemitic attacks,” the ADL report says. 

Synagogues also received hundreds of bomb threats, and fears of violence remain a persistent part of what Jewish communities face. Indeed, in the early morning hours of Jan. 10, a man in a hoodie broke a window and slipped inside Beth Israel Congregation. He poured gasoline and ignited a fire near the spot where Klan members had burned the synagogue in 1967. Once again, the people of Beth Israel were left to rebuild from the ashes of antisemitism. Their library and offices will have to be demolished, it appears, but engineers found the sanctuary walls remain structurally sound. 

Since the fire, at least 15 churches have reached out to Beth Israel saying, “Our house of worship is your house of worship,” said Zach Shemper, the synagogue’s president. “There has been such a lovely, almost overwhelming outpouring of love and compassion from our local community.” 

The people of Beth Israel are, for now, holding services in a Baptist church in Jackson, one they opened their doors to in the 1960s, before the bombing. The Baptists needed temporary space then because they had just broken away from a church that refused to let in Black worshippers, and few other houses of worship would open their doors.

The post A Mississippi Synagogue Was Attacked in 1967 and 2026. The Antisemitic Rhetoric Looked the Same Then and Now. appeared first on ProPublica.

[syndicated profile] propublica_feed

Posted by Jake Pearson

New York state lawmakers have introduced legislation to boost spending on the state’s troubled guardianship system by $15 million a year — an unprecedented cash infusion for a bureaucracy that has long struggled to care for the tens of thousands of disabled or elderly New Yorkers who cannot care for themselves.

By law, judges appoint guardians to manage the health and financial matters of people they deem incapacitated, and these guardians are then compensated from the estates of their wards. But there are not enough guardians to serve the roughly 30,000 New Yorkers who need them, and the new bill, called the Good Guardianship Act, aims to help the most vulnerable segment of this population: those who are too poor to pay for a private guardian and who have no family or friends willing to serve.

In the industry, they are known as “the unbefriended,” and the millions in new funding would flow to a statewide network of nonprofit guardians who serve them.

The proposal follows a 2024 ProPublica investigation that revealed how the state’s guardianship system was failing this group in particular by conducting little to no oversight of guardians, some of whom provided substandard care and exploited those they were charged with looking after.

The stories prompted the state attorney general to open an investigation into several guardianship providers and spurred the court system to appoint a special counsel to enact reforms. But advocates said the Good Guardianship Act presents the most promising step to date in improving the system — if it can get the support of Gov. Kathy Hochul.

The legislation mirrors the recommendations of a task force appointed by the governor last summer, yet Hochul has not said whether she supports the plan and did not include any funding for guardianships in the $260 billion executive budget she recently unveiled.

“What’s it going to take for the governor to pay attention to guardianship and realize there’s a viable solution on the table?” said Kimberly George, who runs a nonprofit that serves about 200 New York City wards and helps lead Guardianship Access New York, a coalition of groups that’s pushing the bill in Albany.

A spokesperson for Hochul, a Democrat who is running for reelection, said the governor will review the legislation.

In recent years, Albany has provided just $1 million to help fund a statewide guardianship hotline, which provides advice for people considering guardianship for their relatives or friends. But the Good Guardianship Act would provide considerably more guardians for those who need them, effectively ensuring that qualified nonprofit groups with a history of providing guardianship services are available to be appointed by judges in cases involving the unbefriended.

To ensure that state funding only goes to what the legislation calls “reputable” nonprofits, groups must be in good standing with a state regulator and their guardianship plans and funding requests must be reviewed by a contractor picked by the director of the state’s Office for the Aging.

Assembly Member Charles Lavine, a Long Island Democrat who chairs the Assembly Judiciary Committee and introduced the legislation, expressed confidence that the bill would pass this session, noting it has no opposition and fixes a readily identifiable problem.

“It’s time that we did something to be able to provide those who are in actual, real need,” he said in an interview. “We believe we are working in the right direction.”

Lavine hosted a roundtable last fall focused on confronting what he dubbed “the crisis” in the guardianship system, describing it as being “stretched very, very thin.”

The legislation also has the support of legislative leaders in the state Senate — including its powerful majority leader, Andrea Stewart-Cousins, her spokesperson said.

State Sen. Cordell Cleare, a Harlem Democrat who chairs the Aging Committee, is shepherding the bill through the chamber. It’s on the panel’s agenda for Wednesday and is expected to be adopted.

The post We Found New York’s Guardianship System in Shambles. Now State Lawmakers Say They Have a Plan to Help Fix It. appeared first on ProPublica.

[syndicated profile] propublica_feed

Posted by Audrey Dutton

Idaho is taking steps to bolster its antiquated coroner system following stories by ProPublica that documented how lawmakers have repeatedly failed to fix problems that harm grieving families.

An advisory panel created last year at the request of Gov. Brad Little is developing legislation to require autopsies in a variety of circumstances, including the unexplained death of a child. It would help coroners pay for those autopsies as long as they get a national certification that proves they can meet certain standards.

The legislation would mimic a similar setup in neighboring Washington. An increase in fees on Idaho death certificates would finance the autopsy reimbursements.

A ProPublica review of hundreds of death records in 2024 found that some coroners failed to meet national standards when investigating child and infant deaths, and a state oversight report found Idaho ranked last in the U.S. for autopsies when children or infants died unexpectedly. The state Office of Performance Evaluations cited poor funding as a major problem.

ProPublica’s examination of training records for Idaho coroners also revealed that many failed to get the hours of continuing education required by state law. Further reporting in 2025 examined how potentially suspicious deaths can slip through the cracks of Idaho’s poorly funded system.

The committee working on the legislation includes seven county coroners and a deputy coroner; representatives of city, county and state law enforcement agencies; a deputy county prosecutor; a county commissioner and a tribal member.

Kelli Brassfield, co-chair of the panel and a lobbyist who represents Idaho’s county governments, cautioned that the proposal likely won’t be ready during the 2026 annual legislative session. But this is the first time in decades that coroners and other local and state officials have agreed on a path forward to improve Idaho’s system for investigating death.

Idaho’s death investigation system is almost entirely funded by counties, and county officials have fought past efforts to require autopsies, which can cost thousands of dollars apiece. At the committee’s meeting in January, Brent Mendenhall, a commissioner from Madison County, was enthusiastic about the draft legislation and the push for more autopsies.

“When I hear that a commission or any county has turned down an autopsy, it just makes me shudder,” Mendenhall said at the meeting. “I just think, ‘What are you doing to that family that doesn’t know what happened?’”

Mendenhall said that under the legislation being developed, coroners who have struggled with a small autopsy budget could approach their county commissioners and say, “Here’s the law, and you need to make sure that I can do this.”

The advisory panel working on legislation is co-chaired by Sen. Melissa Wintrow, a Boise Democrat. Wintrow said ProPublica’s reporting raised awareness of the harms done by a faulty system for death investigations.

“Here’s the system going wrong, and your reporting shines a light on it,” she said.

Bingham County Coroner Jimmy Roberts, a member of the panel, told ProPublica that Wintrow has said repeatedly that one of the motivators to get something done about Idaho’s coroner system is that “she doesn’t want to see the coroner system in the media or in the news any longer.”

“I think that speaks volumes,” Roberts said.

Idaho’s governor said more than a year ago that he would support giving coroners more resources to do their jobs right. Lawmakers failed to take him up on it.

Wintrow won modest changes to the coroners system during the 2025 session with legislation that clarified the roles of coroners and law enforcement in death investigations.

Another development in the wake of ProPublica’s reporting is a newly created series of intensive courses for coroners, law enforcement officers and others around the state to learn how to handle child and infant deaths. Funded by a grant from the Governor’s Children At Risk Task Force, the courses this spring will be the most in-depth training of its kind since 2019.

Roberts and Ada County Chief Deputy Coroner Brett Harding will lead the trainings: eight hours of virtual education for coroners statewide and in-person education for coroners in the Boise area and in eastern and northern Idaho. Eastern Idaho is where an infant, Onyxx Cooley, died suddenly and unexpectedly in February 2024. His mother, Alexis Cooley, found him cold and lifeless and called for help, but the baby couldn’t be revived.

Reports released to ProPublica by the coroner who was legally responsible for figuring out why the baby died showed that he did not follow national guidelines. He did not speak with the parents, examine the baby’s body or the scene of the death to search for clues or order an autopsy. That coroner, who has since retired, told ProPublica he spoke with law enforcement officers who responded to the infant’s death and relied on the emergency physician who examined the baby’s body to decide what caused his death.

Alexis Cooley told ProPublica that she hoped the death of her baby would not be in vain, and that sharing his story with the public could set in motion some positive change.

She began to cry when she learned that coroners are working on legislation to improve Idaho’s last-in-the-nation autopsy rate for unexplained child deaths, and that first responders and coroners around the state will get specialized education to handle those cases.

“I’m glad that through my pain and suffering that it’s hopefully lessening the burden on other parents, when a situation like this happens again,” Cooley said. “And it’s amazing that they’re going to be able to get answers and that Onyxx’s case was heard.”

Wintrow, meanwhile, said her committee members’ willingness to work together on a solution to problems is encouraging but that progress is slow and piecemeal in a system with no centralized state agency to develop public policy for coroners. She is working on a pitch to get Idaho a full-time coordinator to fill a role that she has played as a part-time legislator.

The post Idaho Seeks to Improve Its Troubled Coroner System and Lagging Child Autopsy Rates appeared first on ProPublica.

Seasonal cards 2025

2026-02-04 22:19
mific: (Art brushes pencils)
[personal profile] mific
The usual sample of some of my seasonal cards. Hopefully they've all arrived by now, or will very soon. This year I decided to paint people freehand (which means they're all a bit wonky) and then name them after less well known minor deities - it's called the Small Gods series. I had fun, anyway - it's always good to get back into watercolours again (although I use them more like gouache), after mostly working in Procreate the rest of the year. Embellished with metallic paint in various colours, gold, and silver, for a festive touch. Hopefully you can see the sheen a little in the way I've photographed them.

God of Circuses 

God of Ink

God of Extroverts

God of Dramatic Entrances

God of Jump Scares

God of Drizzle

God of Sweaters

God of Naps

God of Woad

God of Flirts

God of Sparrows

God of Nostalgia


autumninpluto: Driving through a highway at night ([gen] night drive)
[personal profile] autumninpluto
Two girls with wildly contrasting outfits sit a few seats apart at a train station's waiting area

人間は、大きな幸せを前にすると急に臆病になる。
幸せを勝ち取ることは、不幸に耐えることより勇気が要る。

Humans suddenly become cowards in the face of great happiness.
It takes more courage to grasp happiness than endure misfortune.

Summary: Momoko is a high schooler who loves Rococo and lolita fashion. She moves to a rural town called Shimotsuma after her father gets into trouble for selling counterfeit clothes. There, she meets a female biker gang (bōsōzoku) member named Ichiko, and the two develop an unlikely friendship.

I rewatched Kamikaze Girls after many years. I remember watching it for the first time when I was around 14 and blogging about it, but that blog seems to have been wiped from the internet for some reason.

Coming-of-age stories seem to hit me a lot harder when I rewatch them as an adult. I think it's because of the nostalgia, coupled with the feeling of knowing that everything will turn out okay.

Yapping about the movie below; CWs: spoilers for the movie (of course) + some screencaps + some social commentary on the bōsōzoku sub-culture and its roots in nationalistic/right-wing ideology.


1518 words )

Rating: 9/10

cahn: (Default)
[personal profile] cahn
Our beloved problematic author, Flavius Josephus, with the wild plot twist in the middle! Is anyone still interested in doing this thing?

I have the Oxford World Classics edition; I looked around and I liked this translation, and it's got copious footnotes. Each "book" is a little less than 100 pages on my kindle, and I think I can probably read about 50 pages every week (we can see how it goes and whether I can go faster or must go slower), so I propose dividing the first "book" into two, and reading half one week and half the next. (I did read the intro this past week, but I'm not sure how much I got out of it.) [personal profile] selenak, would you be able to find a good dividing point of that first book? My goal would be to post every weekend (probably on Sunday, but depending on time) on the reading thereof.

I also feel I should open up this post for general classics discussion if anyone wants it. Depending on how my reading goes I also reserve the right in this post to review whatever other random classics-related or modern-historical-novels-set-in-the-time-of-the-classics reading I do.

I found it!

2026-02-03 22:45
silver_chipmunk: (Default)
[personal profile] silver_chipmunk
Last night after I posted here I kept looking for that knob for my ceiling light. And finally I gave up, turned aroun while sitting on the living room floor, and saw it! In the exact opposite direction from where I was looking and where it logically should have been. I figure that it must have bounced and landed on the bottom step of the step ladder, and when I put the ladder away, I moved it first before I folded it up, and when I folded it up the knob must have fallen off and rolled. So anyway, I found it.

So this morning I woke up with my alarm at 10:00, and once again rolled over and went back to sleept til 12:00. But then I got up, had breakfast and coffee, and then got the step ladder out again and fixed the ceiling light. Thank goodness.

Then I put in a Shipt order and waited for it. When It got here one of the items hadn't arrived, so I notified Shipt and they said I'd get an email but I haven't. Maybe because it was after 5:00 by then. So if I don't get that email tomorrow, I'll contact them again.

I puttered online til 7:00 when I Teamed the FWiB. We talked til I ha to go to my meeting, but then I had terrible technical difficulties getting Zoom to work. Finally did, and we had a small, but good meeting. Both M and S were there.

The Kid finally called, when I was Teaming the FWiB. We discussed the timing of the memorial service for Oldest Brother at the cottage this July. It looks like it will have to be the 18th which I'm not happy about, but we'll do the best we can. I have to let people know... tomorrow.

After my meeting I had dinner, and then went to the bedroom, and lay down an watched a video on my phone that the FWiB sent, the 25 best space movies. I don't know if I agree with the guy who did the list on everything, but it was fun watching.

And then it was pet feeding time so I fed the pets and started here.

Gratitude List:

1. The FWiB.

2. Found the knob!!!

3. And was able to get the light back together without a problem.

4. My meetings and the people there.

5. The Kid finally called and we have a date.

6. Found out from [personal profile] mashfanficchick that The Lincoln Lawyer starts now.

Reading Tuesday

2026-02-03 22:12
troisoiseaux: (reading 11)
[personal profile] troisoiseaux
Read Risk by Dick Francis, a 1977 thriller about an accountant/amateur jockey who wins a major race by sheer accident and is promptly kidnapped; once he escapes, he spends the rest of the book trying to figure out who had him kidnapped - and why - while juggling his regular line of work, riding as a jockey, technically a love triangle?? I guess??, getting kidnapped AGAIN, and having a lot of feelings about tax law. I love characters who are very good at one specific thing/passionate about something seemingly boring/etc. and so I was delighted by the main character, who is the BEST and MOST ETHICAL accountant. He has a tragic backstory for why he's an accountant. An odd, quick, fun read.

In War and Peace, one thing I noticed in the lead-up to the first big battle scene was the way the narrative shifts from exclusively third-person POV to describing the Russian army's position in the first-person possessive: "our right flank", "our infantry", etc. The narrative of the battle itself is less focused on troop movements than individual characters and incidents; orders get waylaid because the adjutant can't be bothered to ride to where there's actual fighting to deliver it, or ignored because the captains of a joint Russian and German unit(?) are too busy grappling for authority between themselves. Nikolai Rostov is surprised to discover that fighting a war actually involves the people on either side trying to kill each other: "Who are they? Why are they running? Can they be coming at me? And why? To kill me? Me whom everyone is so fond of?" (...which, unfortunately for the intended poignancy of the moment, I did 100% read in Miette Voice: you kick Nikolai? You kick Nikolai like the football???)

a very nerdy flex

2026-02-03 21:57
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[personal profile] seekingferret
a Hugo Award for Best Novel meme

Bold if you've read it

2025 The Tainted Cup Robert Jackson Bennett
2024 Some Desperate Glory Emily Tesh
2023 Nettle & Bone T. Kingfisher
2022 A Desolation Called Peace Arkady Martine
2021 Network Effect Martha Wells
2020 A Memory Called Empire Arkady Martine
2019 The Calculating Stars Mary Robinette Kowal
2018 The Stone Sky N. K. Jemisin
2017 The Obelisk Gate N. K. Jemisin
2016 The Fifth Season N. K. Jemisin
2015 The Three-Body Problem Cixin Liu, translated by Ken Liu
2014 Ancillary Justice Ann Leckie
2013 Redshirts: A Novel with Three Codas John Scalzi
2012 Among Others Jo Walton
2011 Blackout/All Clear Connie Willis
2010 The City & the City China Mi�ville
2010 The Windup Girl Paolo Bacigalupi
2009 The Graveyard Book Neil Gaiman
2008 The Yiddish Policemen's Union Michael Chabon
2007 Rainbows End Vernor Vinge
2006 Spin Robert Charles Wilson
2005 Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell Susanna Clarke
2004 Paladin of Souls Lois McMaster Bujold
2003 Hominids Robert J. Sawyer
2002 American Gods Neil Gaiman
2001 Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire J. K. Rowling
2000 A Deepness in the Sky Vernor Vinge
1999 To Say Nothing of the Dog Connie Willis
1998 Forever Peace Joe Haldeman
1997 Blue Mars Kim Stanley Robinson
1996 The Diamond Age Neal Stephenson
1995 Mirror Dance Lois McMaster Bujold
1994 Green Mars Kim Stanley Robinson
1993 A Fire Upon the Deep Vernor Vinge
1993 Doomsday Book Connie Willis
1992 Barrayar Lois McMaster Bujold
1991 The Vor Game Lois McMaster Bujold
1990 Hyperion Dan Simmons
1989 Cyteen C. J. Cherryh
1988 The Uplift War David Brin
1987 Speaker for the Dead Orson Scott Card
1986 Ender's Game Orson Scott Card
1985 Neuromancer William Gibson
1984 Startide Rising David Brin
1983 Foundation's Edge Isaac Asimov
1982 Downbelow Station C. J. Cherryh
1981 The Snow Queen Joan D. Vinge
1980 The Fountains of Paradise Arthur C. Clarke
1979 Dreamsnake Vonda N. McIntyre
1978 Gateway Frederik Pohl
1977 Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang Kate Wilhelm
1976 The Forever War Joe Haldeman
1975 The Dispossessed Ursula K. Le Guin
1974 Rendezvous with Rama Arthur C. Clarke
1973 The Gods Themselves Isaac Asimov
1972 To Your Scattered Bodies Go Philip Jose Farmer
1971 Ringworld Larry Niven
1970 The Left Hand of Darkness Ursula K. Le Guin
1969 Stand on Zanzibar John Brunner
1968 Lord of Light Roger Zelazny
1967 The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress Robert A. Heinlein
1966 Dune Frank Herbert
1966 This Immortal Roger Zelazny
1965 The Wanderer Fritz Leiber
1964 Way Station Clifford D. Simak
1963 The Man in the High Castle Philip K. Dick
1962 Stranger in a Strange Land Robert A. Heinlein
1961 A Canticle for Leibowitz Walter M. Miller, Jr.
1960 Starship Troopers Robert A. Heinlein
1959 A Case of Conscience James Blish
1958 The Big Time Fritz Leiber
1956 Double Star Robert A. Heinlein
1955 They'd Rather Be Right Mark Clifton & Frank Riley
1953 The Demolished Man Alfred Bester

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