Home

Trump Tariffs Spark Fears of Clean Energy Supply Chain Chaos

Leave a comment

Click the link below the picture

.

CLIMATEWIRE | Clean energy has gotten steadily cheaper for years thanks to a global network of research facilities and factories.

That’s over now.

President Donald Trump’s decision on Saturday to slap steep tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China signals the birth of a new global trade regime: one focused on nationalist protections, with potentially expensive repercussions for Americans. And although clean energy is a bit player in the president’s trade war, the tariffs could hit the solar, battery, wind, and electric vehicle industries particularly hard.

“It probably slows down the energy transition because it drives up cost, especially the tariffs on China, and creates chaos” in supply chains, said David Victor, a professor of innovation and public policy at the University of California, San Diego. It “probably also introduces a large amount of uncertainty about the credibility of international rules on trade investment, insofar as those seem to matter at all anymore.”

Trump’s order — which is scheduled to go into effect Tuesday — places a 25 percent tariff on goods from Canada and Mexico and a 10 percent tariff on Chinese imports. It imposes a lower levy of 10 percent on Canadian oil imports.

A White House fact sheet posted Saturday night called tariffs “a powerful, proven source of leverage” for stemming the flow of immigration and drugs like fentanyl. The order could significantly increase prices for goods, with organizations like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and American Petroleum Institute raising concerns over the impact on the U.S. economy.

“Energy markets are highly integrated, and free and fair trade across our borders is critical for delivering affordable, reliable energy to U.S. consumers,” API President and CEO Mike Sommers said in a statement.

The tariffs come as clean energy industries race to curb costs in a bid to displace fossil fuels, the main drivers of climate change.

Trade has been a key reason behind the global decline in clean energy costs in recent decades. The average lifetime cost of utility-scale storage fell 83 percent between 2009 and 2024, even after accounting for a post-Covid bump in solar costs, according to Lazard, an investment bank. Onshore wind costs were down 65 percent over that time.

Tariffs threaten those gains. The American Clean Power Association, a trade group, said it was “concerned that increasing the costs of energy production inputs will put upward pressure on consumer energy costs and diminish our capacity to unleash energy abundance.”

“While the fuel relied upon by wind and solar energy — complemented by battery storage — is free, some parts for these machines that harness these renewable resources are manufactured in Canada and Mexico,” the group added.

Roughly three-quarters of the world’s lithium-ion batteries are made in China, according to the International Energy Agency.

.

https://static.scientificamerican.com/dam/m/58a5f91c53f64491/original/Solar-panels-and-wind-turbines-in-field-at-sunset.jpg?m=1738596688.823&w=1000

The president’s new tariffs on Canada, Mexico, and China could hit the solar, battery, wind, and electric vehicle industries particularly hard. Peter Cade/Getty Images

.

.

Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/trump-tariffs-potential-clean-energy-effects-explained/

.

__________________________________________

Adaptive Screens Are Great, But I Still Want My Son To Learn Braille

Leave a comment

Click the link below the picture

.

I was born with nystagmus, a neurological condition that affects my vision, and until I was in my 30s, I’d only met one person that shared it. At a holiday party with my parents when I was probably 8 or 9, my mom pointed out a boy across the room. “He has nystagmus like you,” she said. “But not exactly. Your eyes bop all over your head and his just move back and forth. He also has albinism, which is why his eyes do that. We don’t know what causes yours.” I regarded the ice blond teen across the room. I don’t think we spoke. What would I have said to him? My vision was a point of shame and something I tried to hide. If kids pointed it out, I usually ended up in tears.

My son inherited my nystagmus. It’s given me the unusual opportunity to watch how people react to his vision as a window into how the world reacts to me. Being able to watch my child closely — the flickering of his eyes as he nursed, the tilt of his head as he searched for me among the waiting moms (yes, they were always all moms) at school pickup, as he struggled to read the routes on the approaching buses just like I did — these were moments of familiarity but also of novelty, as I observed how the world observed him. The social stigma of appearing disabled trained out of me many of the behaviors that mark him as “different,” movement patterns that I have no personal recollection of, but can pick up from the family photos in which I always was tilting my head, my eyes struggling like his do to make contact with the aperture of the lens.

In some ways, it has given me the opportunity to revisit my own childhood experience of disability. And one of my main regrets, if I have any, is that I never learned braille. According to the National Federation of the Blind, only about 10% of blind and low-vision children in the U.S. are learning braille. Much of this is due to our bias toward learning through sight, and so children who have any vision are pushed toward text magnification as a replacement. But like me, every person I’ve asked who is blind or low-vision wishes they’d been taught braille as a child or, if they’d been introduced to it, wish they’d been pushed to gain true fluency. Access to language is power. That’s why I’m determined to make sure my kid learns it.

In middle school, I learned to hate public speaking. I was in every sense an “overachiever,” so I remember preparing fastidiously for my first presentation in English class, where we had to present instructions about how to perform a skill or task for our classmates. I had rainbow pastel index cards where I’d written my presentation talking points.

Then I got my grade. It wasn’t perfect. I’d been marked down because I held the note cards in front of my face and I’d failed to make eye contact with my classmates. It wasn’t so much the grade that bothered me, but the awareness that when I spoke publicly, my disability was super visible. In my attempt to assimilate and be “normal,” I feared that visibility more than anything else. From that point on, any kind of speaking in front of other people made me extremely nervous. I dreaded when other people had to watch me talk and avoided it as much as I could.

There are moments where my throat catches as I watch my kid encountering situations l can remember from my own childhood.

It wasn’t until my mid-30s when I started to work with other disabled people and from their comfort with themselves and speaking publicly, I pushed myself to get through my shame. But even with this new confidence, public speaking is still a struggle for me. The more stressed I get, the more my eyes move and so I stumble over words and easily lose my place.

To compensate, I stopped using written notes for my presentations. Instead of reading from my book at author’s events, I used slides with images to prompt me through the outline of my presentation.

Then I watched as a blind advocate read a proclamation at a public hearing using braille. Her presentation was flawless — the kind of flawlessness I’d been dreaming of since my stumbles in middle school. I wanted that skill. But braille, like any language, is difficult to learn in adulthood. If I worked really hard at it, maybe someday I’d be able to read it fluently enough to crib notes for a talk, but I’d never have the speed of someone who learned it as a child.

In the 1820s, braille was created by and embraced by students at the National Institute for the Blind in Paris. But soon their sighted educators tried to stop its adoption, at one point burning all the braille books. These educators preferred a language that they too had access to, like raised letter shapes embossed on the page. Braille was harder for sighted educators to read and it threatened their control and their careers.

.

https://imgix.bustle.com/uploads/getty/2025/1/28/41ff51e0/getty-ed000944.jpg?w=1320&h=872&fit=crop&crop=faces

Scott T. Baxter/Photodisc/Getty Images

.

.

Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.romper.com/parenting/braille-blindness-vision-screens?utm_source=pocket_discover_parenting

.

__________________________________________

Bonobos Can Tell When a Human Doesn’t Know Something

1 Comment

Click the link below the picture

.

A few captive bonobos recently faced a seemingly simple task: locate a tasty snack hidden under one of three cups. Because bonobos are brainiacs, pinpointing the cup with the treat should have been no sweat.

But there was a wrinkle: the apes were relying on a human, not another member of their own species, to flip over the correct cup. What’s worse, this person sometimes did not see where the food was placed. So the bonobos took it upon themselves to point out the correct cup to their human partner.

“The bonobos knew when their partner was ignorant, and they communicated proactively to make sure that their ignorant partner still made the correct choice,” says Christopher Krupenye, an evolutionary cognitive scientist at Johns Hopkins University, who helped run the experiment.

Krupenye and his graduate student Luke Townrow described the bonobos’ behavior in a paper published today in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA. Their findings provide compelling evidence that the apes can infer someone’s ignorance and also act to help clear up the confusion.

The ability to infer the mental states of others is often referred to as theory of mind. Humans utilize theory of mind to successfully communicate and coordinate with one another. For example, intuiting when someone lacks certain information helps us determine when and how to share knowledge.

Researchers have proposed that humans’ closest evolutionary cousins, chimpanzees and bonobos, may also possess theory of mind. But few have examined this idea in controlled experimental environments, according to the authors.

Krupenye and Townrow worked with three male bonobos living at Ape Cognition and Conservation Initiative, a research center in Des Moines, Iowa. During the experiment, one of the male bonobos would sit across from Townrow as a treat, like a grape or a peanut, was placed under one of three cups on the table between them. If Townrow flipped over the correct cup, the bonobo would receive the reward.

In some trials, Townrow could see the treat being placed under the cup. In others, his view was blocked by cardboard. Once the treat was stashed, he would wait 10 seconds before flipping over a cup.

The bonobos appeared to know when Townrow had his eye on the treat. In the trials where he had observed the placement of the treat, the apes patiently waited for him to flip over the correct cup. In the trials where Townrow’s view was blocked, however, the bonobos pointed toward the correct cup in an effort to fill him in on what he had missed. “They got the task immediately and knew where to point,” Townrow says.

.

https://static.scientificamerican.com/dam/m/5143ec34ba2d6e3b/original/female-bonobo.jpg?m=1738610578.458&w=1000

Female bonobo. Anup Shah/Getty Images

.

.

Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/bonobos-can-tell-when-a-human-doesnt-know-something/

.

__________________________________________

Feeling Burnt Out? Here’s Why “Slow Parenting” Might Be Right for Your Family

Leave a comment

Click the link below the picture

.

Between ever-evolving technology, social media influence, and a society that thrives on competition and instant gratification, parents these days are stressed. That’s where slow parenting comes in. Slow parenting emphasizes the importance of stepping back from the fast-paced world of modern parenting and instead focusing on spending meaningful time with your kids. There’s no need to pack their days with activities, sports, and social events to help them thrive—sometimes, all you need are the little moments when you can relax, connect, and appreciate each other’s company.

A slow parenting approach is not about doing less or being hands-off—it’s about being more present and mindful while remembering that childhood is not a competition or a race, but it is fleeting. Those moments you share with your kids should be treated as precious. Here, we look at what slow parenting entails, the pros and cons, and how to be a slow parent in an increasingly fast-paced society.

What is Slow Parenting?

Slow parenting is a parenting style that encourages parents to take a break from the constant need to plan outings and extracurricular activities. The idea is that without a packed schedule, kids have more time to play, explore, and develop at their own pace. And for parents, its an opportunity to take a break from the high-speed, competitive world of modern parenting, which demands more and more of parents’ time and energy. 

At its core, the slow parenting style emphasizes quality over quantity—how your time is spent is more important than the number of activities you participate in.

“You can just take a step back, follow [your child’s] lead, and [let them] show you what they’re really interested in and what they’re curious about,” says Liz Conradt, Ph.D., a clinical and developmental psychologist and Associate Professor of Pediatrics at Duke University. 

Slow Parenting Characteristics

These are some of the most common traits of slow parents: 

  • They are patient regarding their children’s interests, avoiding the urge to rush them into activities or sports. “A lot of times kids will say, ‘I want to do this,’ or ‘I don’t want to do that,’ [so] then you let them develop their own passions and interests,” says Dr. Conradt.

  • They appreciate quality time with their kids—even if that means spending more time at home. 

  • They are flexible and open to changing plans or adjusting schedules based on their children’s needs, rather than sticking to a rigid routine—perhaps even sharing some characteristics with Type B parents.

  • They believe childhood is not a competition, focusing instead on their children’s well-being and personal growth rather than comparing them to their peers.

  • They prioritize strengthening the parent-child bond over constantly trying to schedule activities to keep them busy.

  • They don’t feel the need to keep their kids busy all the time—relaxation and downtime are a priority.

.

https://www.parents.com/thmb/30AY8ZTG9JusZjAFoje3xamhQis=/750x0/filters:no_upscale():max_bytes(150000):strip_icc()/slow-parenting-GettyImages-1506935230-eab04c69e3634093b55b84f48f478ea7.jpgParents/Getty Images

.

.

Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.parents.com/slow-parenting-8776471?utm_source=pocket_discover_parenting

.

__________________________________________

AI’s Energy Demands Threaten a Nuclear Waste Nightmare

2 Comments

Click the link below the picture

.

Long in decline, the U.S. nuclear industry is hoping for resurrection at two sites of its greatest failures: Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania and the Hanford Site in Washington state. Nuclear power, the industry claims, will help satisfy the surging power demands from data centers and the growing AI economy. But such a wrong turn ignores the long-unresolved problems of radioactive nuclear wastes that AI cannot wish away.

In September Constellation Energy announced plans to restart a shuttered reactor at Three Mile Island, prodded by Microsoft, which will need many gigawatts of power to perform extensive AI calculations in its expanding fleet of data centers. Amazon followed suit and announced in November that it will invest $334 million to develop small modular nuclear reactors (SMRs) at Hanford, site of the world’s first plutonium-production facility.

Google and Meta are also hoping to bring nuclear power back. In October 2024 Google announced it eventually plans to purchase 500 megawatts of electricity from Kairos Power, which is developing a novel SMR in Oak Ridge,

Tenn., on the site of the national lab that long refined uranium for the nuclear industry. And Facebook parent Meta is seeking bids for nuclear power plants for its data centers.

These tech giants recognize that the next generation of microprocessors to be used for AI calculations at data centers will require oodles of electricity to power and cool them. A single Nvidia Blackwell chip, for example, can draw up to two kilowatts, more than what is needed for a typical house. Cram thousands of them in servers inside a data center, and they will need as much power as a small city.

So-called hyperscale data centers require over 100 megawatts (100 MW)—a sizeable fraction of the output of a major power plant. And that power should be cheap, steady, and reliable.

An authoritative December 2024 report from the U.S. Department of Energy, written by energy experts at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, is especially illuminating. The growth in U.S. data-center energy usage over the next five years, they state, would correspond “to a total power demand for data centers between 74 and 132 [gigawatts].” That would represent some 7 to 12 percent of the U.S. electricity consumption forecast for 2028.

Where on Earth is all this power going to come from? Given the challenges electric utilities face in supplying electricity to meet other growing needs, including electric vehicles, it’s small wonder that big tech has turned back to the atomic nucleus. But the power demands outlined in the DOE report would require building or resurrecting the equivalent of at least 40 Three Mile Island reactors over the next five years. That’s impossible.

.

https://static.scientificamerican.com/dam/m/329986eef4cb26e3/original/three_mile_island_cooling_towers_at_sunset.jpg?m=1738282800.501&w=1000

Three Mile Island Nuclear Generating Station in Londonderry Township, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania was shutdown following the partial meltdown of its Unit 2 reactor (TMI-2) on March 28, 1979. Andre Jenny/Alamy Stock Photo

.

.

Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/ais-energy-demands-threaten-a-nuclear-waste-nightmare/

.

__________________________________________

7 Phrases That Teach Kids How To Be Assertive

Leave a comment

Click the link below the picture

.

Teaching kids how to share, take turns, and be considerate of others is often top of mind for parents and caregivers. But kids also need to learn to how be assertive and stand up for themselves — even if that’s a skill parents don’t talk about as often.

“Assertiveness is all about teaching kids to express their needs and boundaries confidently without being aggressive,” said Ann-Louise Lockhart, pediatric psychologist, parent coach, and owner of A New Day Pediatric Psychology. “[This] equips kids with skills to make it through challenges like bullying, peer pressure and interpersonal conflict.”

We talked to experts about phrases parents can teach kids so they’re able to verbalize their feelings, develop confidence and set boundaries — all while still being respectful.

Why is it important to raise kids who are assertive?

It’s important “to teach our kids to be assertive so they can advocate for both themselves and others,” said Amy McCready, founder of Positive Parenting Solutions and author of “The ‘Me, Me, Me’ Epidemic — A Step-by-Step Guide to Raising Capable, Grateful Kids in an Over-Entitled World.” “Kids need to learn this skill in childhood so they can carry it with them through their teenage years and into adulthood.”

Knowing how to be assertive also helps kids be open with their emotions and avoid bottling them up, she explained.

“Assertive communication [also] creates healthier relationships in both personal and professional life and … more successes in all areas of life,” added Lisa Schab, licensed clinical social worker and author of “Cool, Calm, and Confident: A Workbook to Help Kids Learn Assertiveness Skills.”

Teach kids simple phrases that are direct, but not aggressive.

“I don’t like that. Please stop.”

Whether your kid is being pushed on the playground or teased by a friend, this simple and clear phrase sets an instant boundary.

“By saying, ‘I don’t like that,’ your child acknowledges their emotions, which helps them own their perspective without blaming or shaming,” Lockhart said. “The follow-up, ‘Please stop,’ is a firm yet polite demand for a specific behavior to end.”

.

https://img.huffingtonpost.com/asset/6786c94b1500002600b599d5.jpeg?ops=scalefit_720_noupscale&format=webpmgorthand via Getty Images

.

.

Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/phrases-that-teach-kids-how-to-be-assertive_l_6786c317e4b0a673540f8292?utm_source=pocket_discover_parenting

.

__________________________________________

Watch a Frog Walk on Water with High-Speed Belly Flops

Leave a comment

Click the link below the picture

.

If you flick a flat stone toward a pond at just the right angle, it skips across in a series of smooth jumps. Inch-long cricket frogs also seem to skitter over the surface of water with physics-defying grace. But when Talia Weiss, then a bioengineering graduate student at Virginia Tech, filmed the frogs with a high-speed camera, she saw a very different picture.

“The motion is so fast that if you look at it with the naked eye, you really can’t tell the difference,” Weiss says.

For a new study in the Journal of Experimental Biology, Weiss and her co-authors recorded skittering cricket frogs from above and below the surface at 500 frames per second and then played the videos back much more slowly. The researchers found that instead of hopping with just their feet breaking the surface, as older studies had described anecdotally, the frogs were actually doing a series of belly flops—sinking for a fraction of a second and then kicking themselves upward with each jump.

Rather than actually skittering across water like basilisk lizards do, the frogs were “porpoising”—leaping from the water as they swim. Weiss says their legs may be too slow for true surface hopping.

“To jump on the water surface, you have to have your legs retracted and ready to push down again by the time you’re approaching the water in every jump,” she explains. “And these [frogs] don’t prepare for their landing at all; they sort of just belly flop. They don’t retract their legs fast enough to immediately jump again” from the surface itself.

“Fast animal movements can be really deceiving,” and the new camerawork reveals what the frogs are actually doing, says Jasmine Nirody, an organismal biologist at the University of Chicago, who was not involved in the study. By carefully analyzing such motions, “we can think about how we might be able to use [the frog’s] strategy in various bioinspired robots,” she adds. “Now we know what to look for.”

.

A small frog sits on fingertips of a blue gloved hand

Graduate researcher Talia Weiss observes a cricket frog, whose unusual locomotion lets it appear to skip across the water’s surface.  nJake Socha

.

.

Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/watch-a-frog-walk-on-water-with-high-speed-belly-flops/

.

__________________________________________

5 Unusual Things Neurologists Do Every Day To Lower Their Risk Of Dementia

Leave a comment

Click the link below the picture

.

Because we are living longer than previous generations did, there is a higher likelihood that people will experience brain deterioration.

A study published in January showed that an estimated half a million people may be diagnosed with dementia this year. By 2060, the number is predicted to reach 1 million cases annually.

The aging population may be living with lifestyle chronic diseases like high blood pressure and type 2 diabetes, which also raise a person’s dementia risk. “We estimate that about 40% of cases of dementia are preventable through lifestyle and other factors,” said Dr. Meredith Bock, neurologist and chief medical officer at Remo Health. Just because you carry a gene that puts you at a higher risk for developing dementia doesn’t mean that you will.

“There’s certainly a benefit to lifestyle interventions, both at reducing the time of onset of dementia or potentially getting it at all,” Bock said.

Some of these interventions, like getting plenty of exercise or doing brain puzzles, are well known. Others, however, may not be. Below, neurologists share the behaviors they do daily to keep their risk of dementia low, which may seem unusual to some:

They walk to their colleague’s office instead of sending an email.

Instead of being glued to a chair in front of a computer at work, Dr. Gabriel Leger, a neurologist at UC San Diego Health, is very intentional about getting up and moving to break up prolonged sitting periods.

“If I’m not with patients, I’m more likely to stand up and go across the building to speak to somebody instead of sending an email just because it gets me off the chair and makes me more active,” Leger said.

Our bodies weren’t designed to be still for prolonged periods, explained Leger. A 2023 study of nearly 50,000 adults revealed that 10 hours or more of sitting per day is linked to increased dementia risk.

They interact with people IRL as often as possible.

Another reason Leger will discuss a matter with a colleague face-to-face instead of simply sending an email is that interacting with other people helps preserve brain function.

“The more social interaction you have, the more connections your brain is making,” Leger said. Socializing with others is a protective factor to reduce your risk of Alzheimer’s disease. He added that it is as much a stimulator of brain connections as education.

“When you have a typical conversation, there are a lot of different cognitive domains you may be drawing on, comprehending language, speaking, following a story, and a lot of behavioral aspects, socio-emotional cues that you’re picking up on and responding to,” Bock explained. “Social interactions are also just really good for mood, which is also closely related to cognition.”

If they have pets, they really commit to caring for them.

Leger owns two dogs and two cats. With dogs in particular, “you interact with them socially, you are obligated to take them out every day for a walk, and they force you to interact with other dog owners,” Leger said.

“You have a responsibility and are maintaining the sense that ‘There’s something that I need to do. I need to feed my dog. I need to make sure that they’re well.’ It’s a bit like parenting, where that sense of purpose is kept.”

.

 

https://img.huffingtonpost.com/asset/67990e8e150000250056b54b.jpeg?cache=plzyAqlwbE&ops=scalefit_720_noupscale&format=webp

F.J. Jimenez via Getty Images Caring for pets can have brain-protecting benefits.

.

.

Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/dementia-habits-neurologists_l_679903a6e4b0e3bbf46cd87f?utm_source=pocket_discover_health

.

__________________________________________

Trump Funding Freeze Could Set Disaster Recovery Back ‘for Years’

Leave a comment

Click the link below the picture

.

CLIMATEWIRE | The federal government Tuesday shut down the online system it uses to distribute billions in disaster aid after President Donald Trump ordered agencies to freeze the flow of public money, alarming officials who are struggling to respond to catastrophes.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency cut off access to the online portal, which funnels roughly $30 billion a year to states for disaster expenses ranging from debris cleanup to infrastructure repairs, following Trump’s expansive order to halt federal funding as the White House scrutinizes spending programs, Todd DeVoe, emergency coordinator for Inglewood, California, told POLITICO’s E&E News.

“We may see recovery delayed for years,” said DeVoe, who is second vice president of the International Association of Emergency Managers in the United States. “The grant portal where we do all grant work is inaccessible.”

FEMA did not respond to requests for comment. The spending pause outlined by a memo released late Monday by the Office of Management and Budget was causing confusion within the disaster agency, according to people within FEMA who were not authorized to speak to the press. A federal judge blocked Trump’s spending freeze on Tuesday evening, minutes before it was scheduled to take effect, until Feb. 3.

“It’s going to slow things down when there’s already frustration with how long it takes for communities to recover,” former FEMA chief of staff Michael Coen told E&E News, referring to the funding disruption. “It’s just one more thing they now have to deal with.”

The spending pause was scheduled to take effect at 5 p.m. Tuesday, four days after Trump assailed FEMA and the Biden administration for the response to Hurricane Helene in North Carolina in late September. The freeze affected programs across the government as the administration undertook a sprawling review to ensure they comply with Trump’s executive orders, including cutting off funds for diversity, equity and inclusion.

A halt to FEMA spending could affect every state that has been hit by a major storm, wildfire or other disaster in the past decade or more as they wait for the federal government to reimburse them for recovery projects. FEMA pays 75-100 percent of rebuilding costs and is still reimbursing states for disasters that occurred two decades ago.

“They’re kind of in limbo right now, trying to figure out if they’re going to be funded or not,” DeVoe said. The pause could “really impact low-income states and communities.”

A lot depends on how long FEMA withholds funding. “If this is just a short pause,” DeVoe said, “there may be no harm, no foul.”

It’s unclear how a halt will affect recovery efforts related to the wildfires in Southern California or from Hurricanes Helene and Milton, which battered Florida, Georgia and South Carolina in addition to North Carolina.

Southeastern states are still cleaning up debris left by the hurricanes, but they have not yet sought reconstruction aid from FEMA. The California wildfires are still active. FEMA has agreed to pay a large share of cleanup costs for the hurricanes and fires and for emergency housing.

.

https://static.scientificamerican.com/dam/m/187d93440dbf0503/original/Hurricane_Helene_destroyed_homes.jpg?m=1738168305.263&w=1000

A person assesses damages of his house after Hurricane Helene made landfall in Horseshoe Beach, Florida, on September 28, 2024. Chandan Khanna/AFP via Getty Images

.

.

Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/trump-funding-freeze-could-set-disaster-recovery-back-for-years/

.

__________________________________________

The trouble with ‘donating our dopamine’ to our phones, not our friends

Leave a comment

Click the link below the picture

.

It’s the Friday evening of a long work week. Maybe you sit down on the couch and start to scroll on social media. A friend texts you to cancel the dinner you planned, and a part of you is relieved, happy even. Now you can stay home and order in.

Journalist Derek Thompson says this turn toward isolation can’t entirely be blamed on COVID-19. “We are now in the midst of an anti-social century,” he says.

In his most recent article for The Atlantic, Thompson writes that the trend toward isolation has been driven by technology. Cars, he says, “privatized people’s lives” in the second half of the 20th century, by allowing them to move from dense cities into more sprawling suburbs. Televisions, meanwhile, “privatized our leisure” by keeping us indoors. More recently, Thompson says, smartphones came along, to further silo us.

“Smartphones make our alone time feel more crowded than it used to be, at the same time that our smartphones make crowds feel more lonely than they used to be,” he says. “When you’re at a party, it’s easier than ever, arguably, to take out your phone, look into your palm, and suddenly, from an experiential standpoint, you’re not at a party at all.”

In 2023, Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy issued a report about America’s “epidemic of loneliness and isolation.” But Thompson makes a distinction between the two.

“If loneliness is an instinct to be around people, I would argue that [the] kind of social isolation that we’re seeing is the opposite of loneliness, choosing to be alone,” he says. “We’re choosing to spend more and more time with ourselves, more and more time, year after year, without feeling that special, important biological cue to be around other people. And that, I think, is something to be quite worried about.”

Interview highlights

On the need for communal spaces

Between the early 1900s and 1950, we built a ton of what the sociologist Eric Klinenberg calls “social infrastructure.” We built library branches and community centers and public pools, and we built places for people to spend time outside of their home and their work. In the last 50, 70 years, we haven’t built nearly as much of this stuff. … “Third space,” or “third place” … it’s not your home and … it’s not your work. And so it’s a place that you choose to be with people you’re not related to and you’re not financially obligated to be around. … These places build community. …

.

https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/dims3/default/strip/false/crop/6720x3778+0+0/resize/1100/quality/85/format/webp/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fnpr-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F4d%2F38%2Fd6b775d94256afd071617121bf63%2Fgettyimages-1399752872.jpg

SeventyFour via Getty Images

.

.

Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.npr.org/2025/01/29/nx-s1-5276197/loneliness-isolation-derek-thompson-atlantic?utm_source=pocket_discover_health

.

__________________________________________

Older Entries Newer Entries

Amor Entre Estrellas

¡Bienvenido de vuelta viajero!

Heart of Loia `'.,°~

so looking to the sky ¡ will sing and from my heart to YOU ¡ bring...

Michael Ciullo

CEO and Founder of Nsight Health

Nelson MCBS

Catholic News, Prayers, HD Images, Rosary, Music, Videos, Holy Mass, Homily, Saints, Lyrics, Novenas, Retreats, Talks, Devotionals and Many More

Global geopolitics

Decoding Power. Defying Narratives.

Talk Photo

A creative collaboration introducing the art of nature and nature's art.

Movie Burner Entertainment

The Home Of Entertainment News, Reviews and Reactions

Le Notti di Agarthi

Hollow Earth Society

C r i s t i a n a' s Fine Arts ⛄️

•Whenever you are confronted with an opponent, conquer him with love.(Gandhi)

TradingClubsMan

Algotrader at TRADING-CLUBS.COM

Comedy FESTIVAL

Film and Writing Festival for Comedy. Showcasing best of comedy short films at the FEEDBACK Film Festival. Plus, showcasing best of comedy novels, short stories, poems, screenplays (TV, short, feature) at the festival performed by professional actors.

Bonnywood Manor

Peace. Tranquility. Insanity.

Warum ich Rad fahre

Take a ride on the wild side

Madame-Radio

Découvre des musiques prometteuses (principalement) dans la sphère musicale française.

Ir de Compras Online

No tiene que Ser una Pesadilla.

Kana's Chronicles

Life in Kana-text (er... CONtext)

Cross-Border Currents

Tracking money, power, and meaning across borders.

Jam Writes

Where feelings meet metaphors and make questionable choices.

emotionalpeace

Finding hope and peace through writing, art, photography, and faith in Jesus.

WearingTwoGowns.COM

The Community for Wounded Healers: Former Medical Students, Disabled Nurses, and Faith-Fueled Pivots

...

love each other like you're the lyric to their music

Luca nel laboratorio di Dexter

Comprendere il mondo per cambiarlo.

Tales from a Mid-Lifer

Mid-Life Ponderings

Creative

Travel,Tourism, Life style "Now in hundreds of languages for you."

freedomdailywriting

I speak the honest truth. I share my honest opinions. I share my thoughts. A platform to grow and get surprised.

The Green Stars Project

User-generated ratings for ethical consumerism

Cherryl's Blog

Travel and Lifestyle Blog

Sogni e poesie di una donna qualunque

Questo è un piccolo angolo di poesie, canzoni, immagini, video che raccontano le nostre emozioni

My Awesome Blog

“Log your journey to success.” “Where goals turn into progress.”

pierobarbato.com

scrivo per dare forma ai silenzi e anima alle storie che il mondo dimentica.

Thinkbigwithbukonla

“Dream deeper. Believe bolder. Live transformed.”

Vichar Darshanam

Vichar, Motivation, Kadwi Baat ( विचार दर्शनम्)

Komfort bad heizung

Traum zur Realität

Chic Bites and Flights

Savor. Style. See the world.

ومضات في تطوير الذات

معا نحو النجاح

Broker True Ratings

Best Forex Broker Ratings & Reviews

Blog by ThE NoThInG DrOnEs

art, writing and music by James McFarlane and other musicians

fauxcroft

living life in conscious reality

Srikanth’s poetry

Freelance poetry writing

JupiterPlanet

Peace 🕊️ | Spiritual 🌠 | 📚 Non-fiction | Motivation🔥 | Self-Love💕

Sehnsuchtsbummler

Reiseberichte & Naturfotografie