July 22, 2023
Mohenjo
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Russia has suspended participation in a deal that let Ukraine ship its grain through its ports on the Black Sea, upending a pact that mitigated a global food crisis. Russia’s exit could again threaten food prices, and food insecurity, worldwide.
Since withdrawing on Monday, Russia has launched strikes against Odesa, one of three critical Black Sea ports that exported Ukrainian grain and other agricultural products under the Black Sea Grain Initiative. On Wednesday, the Russian Ministry of Defense said it would consider any ship bound for Ukraine to potentially be carrying military cargo, suggesting commercial ships could be deemed targets.
The White House said Wednesday it has information indicating that Russia has laid additional sea mines in the approaches toward Ukrainian ports. “We believe that this is rather a coordinated effort to justify any attacks against civilian ships in the Black Sea, and then blame them on Ukraine in what we would consider — and have in the past talked about considering — a false flag operation,” White House National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby told reporters Thursday.
This apparent escalation from Russia is another blow to the grain deal brokered less than a year ago by Turkey and the United Nations. Russia had already been substantially obstructing the deal, but quitting it officially will make it even more challenging to export Ukrainian grain. That could destabilize global food prices and jeopardize the most food-insecure countries and populations, which often rely on agricultural exports. Russia’s decision to quit the deal, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres said, “will strike a blow to people in need everywhere.” On Wednesday, wheat prices surged to some of the highest levels since the invasion in February 2022.
Indeed, this deal existed to help avert a greater global crisis in food security, of which Russia’s war in Ukraine is just one part. Eliminating Ukrainian supplies may tighten agricultural markets and potentially put more pressure on places experiencing hunger emergencies. The World Food Program (WFP) estimates about 345 million people face high levels of food insecurity in 2023, with about 129,000 people potentially confronting famine in places like Burkina Faso, Mali, Somalia, and South Sudan.
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The Turkish bulk carrier TQ SAMSUN, loaded with Ukrainian agricultural products as part of the Grain Initiative, leaves the Port of Odesa, southern Ukraine, on July 16.Yulii Zozulia/Ukrinform/Future Publishing via Getty Images
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July 22, 2023
Mohenjo
Crime, Food For Thought, Human Interest, Medical, missed News, Political, Science, Technical
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July 21, 2023
Mohenjo
Business, Food For Thought, Human Interest, Political, Science, Technical
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AccuWeather meteorologists say the storms could worsen flooding problems and lead to travel issues in parts of the region. However, some drier and cooler weather is expected to develop in the coming days.
A new storm that was swinging through the north-central United States Thursday will eventually reach the Northeast, where it will trigger more downpours that may renew dangerous and damaging flash flooding to end this week, AccuWeather meteorologists warn.
Many locations in the Northeast have experienced relentless rounds of showers and thunderstorms in recent weeks. Some places have picked up one to three months’ worth of rain over the course of just one to three days.
In cities such as Worcester, Massachusetts, and Albany, New York, this month is already one of the wettest Julys on record. This July is currently the fourth-wettest on record in Worcester, with 9.89 inches of rain. Albany has picked up 9.59 inches of rain so far this month and may soon break the monthly record of 9.91 inches that was established in 2009.
As a result of the ongoing downpours, the ground cannot handle any more rain in many locations. Even moderate amounts of rainfall could renew flooding problems on area streams.
“While most areas of the Northeast will see anywhere from 0.50 of an inch to 1 inch of rainfall from Friday to Friday night, the combination of localized downpours, saturated soil, and ongoing high water levels along many streams will increase the risk for flash flooding,” AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Brett Anderson said.
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Flood damaged cars
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July 21, 2023
Mohenjo
Business, Food For Thought, Human Interest, Political, Science, sports, Technical
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That is just about all for another Wimbledon Championships!
What a final day we have had.
At the end of it all, Carlos Alcaraz and Marketa Vondrousova are your men’s and women’s singles champions for 2023.
You can stay on this page to follow the conclusion of the women’s doubles final on Center Court.
Or, head over to our dedicated tennis page to find reports, highlights, and reaction to today’s action.
Thanks for your company over the past fortnight.
Same again next year?
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It’s over!
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July 21, 2023
Mohenjo
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Unprecedented. Landmark. Unique. The superlatives fail to do justice to another potential indictment against Donald Trump − this one for allegedly trying to steal the 2020 election.
The case sails into legally and politically uncharted territory. No former president has ever faced criminal charges, but Trump could face his third case in a year after announcing Tuesday that he is the target of Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith’s investigation into potential election fraud. Another inquiry into election fraud waits in the wings, in Georgia.
Trump has dodged other bullets. He became the first president to be impeached twice and won acquittals in both Senate trials. He has pleaded not guilty in New York court to falsifying business records and in federal court to mishandling classified documents after leaving the White House, and he is trying to stave off trials until after the 2024 election.
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But the latest federal case could be the most serious. The allegations under investigation include trying to overturn the 2020 presidential election after losing the popular and Electoral College vote and disrupting the peaceful transfer of U.S. power for the first time in history.
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Another federal indictment threatens to engulf Donald Trump
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July 21, 2023
Mohenjo
Business, Food For Thought, Human Interest, Political, Science, Technical
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Scientists have identified the geological site that they say best reflects a proposed new epoch called the Anthropocene — a major step toward changing the official timeline of Earth’s history.
The term Anthropocene, first proposed in 2000 to reflect how profoundly human activity has altered the world, has become a commonly used academic buzzword uniting different fields of study.
“When it’s 8 billion people all having an impact on the planet, there’s bound to be a repercussion,” said Colin Waters, an honorary professor at the Geography, Geology, and the Environment School at the University of Leicester and chair of the Anthropocene Working Group.
“We’ve moved into this new Earth state and that should be defined by a new geological epoch,” Waters added.
The AWG, a group currently comprised of 35 geologists, has been working since 2009 to make the Anthropocene part of Earth’s official timeline. The group determined in 2016 that the Anthropocene epoch began around 1950 — the start of the era of nuclear weapons tests, the geochemical traces of which can be found around the world. Since then, the researchers have considered 12 sites that could provide the key piece of evidence needed to support their proposal, nine of which were put to a vote.
On Tuesday, the scientists announced the geological site — Crawford Lake in Ontario, Canada — that best captures the geological impact of the Anthropocene, according to their research.
However, not everyone agrees the Anthropocene is a geological reality — or that researchers have enough evidence to formally declare it a new epoch.
The geologic time scale provides the official framework for our understanding of Earth’s 4.5 billion-year history. Geologists break down our planet’s history into eons, eras, periods, epochs, and ages — with an eon being the largest chunk of time and an age the shortest.
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Crawford Lake in Ontario, Canada, is the geological site that best reflects a new epoch recognizing the impact of human activity on Earth, said geologists of the Antrhopocene Working Group.
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July 21, 2023
Mohenjo
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The James Webb Space Telescope has enabled astronomers to see things they can’t explain.
At least, not yet.
In new research from Webb — the most powerful space observatory ever built — astronomers spent 50 hours peering into the deepest cosmos, and spotted some of the first galaxies ever formed, well over 13 billion years ago. Capturing such a rich cosmic vista, with the faintest objects humanity has ever glimpsed, is an impressive feat. But the data also reveals that these primeval galaxies emitted a phenomenal amount of energy into space — 10 times more than scientists predicted.
The “key” question is how these nascent galaxies achieved this, Pablo G. Pérez-González, an astrophysicist at the Center for Astrobiology in Spain, said in a statement. Strange black holes? Lively stars? Pérez-González is an author of the research, which was published in the scientific journal The Astrophysical Journal Letters.
The Webb telescope is an extremely sensitive instrument, with the ability to capture some of the farthest away light in space. That’s because Webb views a type of light we can’t see, called infrared, which travels in longer wavelengths than visible light. Crucially, ancient light is stretched as the universe expands, meaning it has changed and “redshifted.”
The powerful Webb, then, can see the energy created by early galaxies. The astronomers identified 44 galaxies that likely formed during the first 500 million years of the universe. Originally, this energy was emitted in the form of ultraviolet light, but it has also been stretched to infrared.
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The James Webb Space Telescope captured imagery of some of the deepest, and most ancient, galaxies in the universe. Credit: Pierluigi Rinaldi / Rafael Navarro-Carrera / Pablo G. Pérez-González
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July 21, 2023
Mohenjo
Arts, Crime, Finance, Food For Thought, Human Interest, missed News, Political, Science, Technical
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July 20, 2023
Mohenjo
Business, Food For Thought, Human Interest, Political, Science, Technical
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On November 15, 2022, according to the demographers at the United Nations Population Division, the 8 billionth person on the planet was born.
That 8 billion mark is an estimate — there is no real-time census of everyone alive on Earth at every given moment, which means there’s a margin of error. But someone is or will be Baby 8 Billion.
He or she is most likely to be born in India, which had more than 23 million births in 2021, and which is projected to pass China as the world’s most populous country by mid-2023, according to data released by the UN on Wednesday. And he stands a better than even chance of being a he, since boys naturally outnumber girls at birth by a rate of about 105 to 100; in India, due to a mix of cultural preference for boys and access to sex-selective abortion, that rate is closer to 108 to 100. With an average life expectancy in India of just under 70 years today and rising, our hypothetical Baby 8 Billion stands a decent chance of being alive to witness the dawn of the 22nd century.
How many other human beings will be there with him to see the calendar turn to 2100? If you think it’s tricky to count the number of people alive today, accurately projecting global population nearly 80 years into the future is near impossible, requiring countless estimates about birth rates, death rates, and movement — “sex, death, and migration,” in the words of the demographer Jennifer Sciubba. Estimated global population in 2000 stood at 6.09 billion, which would have been a surprise to the UN demographers of 1973, who projected that it would be almost 410 million larger by the turn of the millennium — an overestimate bigger than the current population of the United States.
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Violeta Encarnacion for Vox
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July 20, 2023
Mohenjo
Business, Food For Thought, Human Interest, Political, Science, Technical
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Back in 2018, my husband Nick and I traveled to Cambodia to teach English. At the time we were living out of our backpacks when I found van life videos on YouTube. I just remember thinking, wow, that would be such a cool way to travel.
It was a seed that was planted in our heads, and I knew when we came home, it was something we wanted to pursue. Then after arriving back home in Canada, we began to build out our van.
We loved the idea of being able to travel, and we knew it would allow us to cut down on the cost of living expenses.
To do it, we began to pick up seasonal jobs, including working in an office, house sitting, and working for a brick and mortar business. Then, when we had enough money saved up, we left our jobs and hit the road.
Now that we’ve lived out of our van for three years, we’ve learned a lot along the way. Although we wouldn’t trade van life for anything,
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Raychel and Nick living their lives in a van. Raychel
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