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50501 Hawaii @50501.chat

‘No Kings Day’ protesters rally against Trump at Hawaii Capitol

50501 Virginia @50501.chat

Hundreds gather in Roanoke for ‘No Kings’ protests

50501 Virginia @50501.chat

As Trump’s military parade takes to the street, so do thousands of ‘No Kings’ protesters in Hampton Roads

50501 Virginia @50501.chat

Thousands rally in Richmond for ‘No Kings Day’ protest against Trump administration

50501 Virginia @50501.chat

‘No Kings’ protesters in Virginia and San Francisco struck by motorists

50501 Florida @50501.chat

'Refuse tyrants!' Thousands rally in Tallahassee for 'No Kings' protest

50501 Florida @50501.chat

Floridians gathered in more than 70 cities for 'No Kings Day' protests

50501 Florida @50501.chat

Tampa Bay residents gather in 1,000s at ‘No Kings’ protests across region

50501 Texas @50501.chat

‘No Kings’ protest draws up to 20,000 in Austin despite ‘credible threat’ to Texas lawmakers

50501 Texas @50501.chat

Thousands join 'No Kings' protest in Austin as arrest is made after threat against Texas lawmakers

50501 Texas @50501.chat

Photos: “No Kings” protests across Texas

50501 Maine @50501.chat

Thousands in Maine march at ‘No Kings’ rallies to protest Trump policies

50501 Maine @50501.chat

Hundreds of protestors gather in Bangor for ‘No Kings’ rally

50501 New Hampshire @50501.chat

Photos and video: Concord ‘No Kings’ protests bring new voices

50501 New Hampshire @50501.chat

‘No Kings’ protests draw crowds across NH, nationwide

50501 South Dakota @50501.chat

"No Kings" protests erupt in Rapid City

50501 South Dakota @50501.chat

What to know about 'No Kings' protests planned in South Dakota and across the country for June 14

50501 South Dakota @50501.chat

GALLERY: Sioux Falls ‘No Kings’ protests

50501 North Dakota @50501.chat

Large turnout for ‘No Kings’ protest outside Fargo City Hall

50501 North Dakota @50501.chat

Thousands join North Dakota No Kings rallies, including many first-time protesters

  • Unsubstantiated by Snopes is not the same as false.

  • Alex de Vries predicted that current AI technology could be on track to annually consume as much electricity as the entire country of Ireland (29.3 terawatt-hours per year). For comparison, the Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index suggests Bitcoin uses 141-160 terawatt-hours (TWhs) of electricity annually. That’s ~0.7% of the world's consumed electricity in 2022. The process of minting cryptocurrency is a very public activity, so the numbers are difficult to fudge. The cost of bringing extremely expensive nuclear reactors back online and driving demand for environmentally destructive Uranium mining and processing suggests de Vries' guess was conservative.

    I'm reminded of Jevon's Paradox as applied to energy generation. I hope the AI bubble pops before much more investment goes into nuclear energy.

  • The petro-billionaire people who brought you "The Line" are joining up with the badly conceived Octopus Crane Tower idea people to bring you something that definitely will never be built and probably has deep conceptual flaws.

    The important take away from this performance art is that the people causing global warming and who stand to benefit from pumping even more carbon into the air to are working on clever solutions to reverse it, and you can continue living your life as if things will eventually return to the pre-climate crisis status quo.

  • ABC News is a brand of Disney Advertising.

    Manufacturing Consent has this to say about Disney news media:

    Ben Bagdikian notes that when the first edition of his Media Monopoly was published in 1983, fifty giant firms dominated almost every mass medium; but just seven years later, in 1990, only twenty-three firms occupied the same commanding position.

    Since 1990, a wave of massive deals and rapid globalization have left the media industries further centralized in nine transnational conglomerates-Disney, AOL Time Warner, Viacom (owner of CBS), News Corporation, Bertelsmann, General Electric (owner of NBC), Sony, AT&T-Liberty Media, and Vivendi Universal. These giants own all the world's major film studios, TV networks, and music companies, and a sizable fraction of the most important cable channels, cable systems, magazines, major-market TV stations, and book publishers. The largest, the recently merged AOL Time Warner, has integrated the leading Internet portal into the traditional media system. Another fifteen firms round out the system, meaning that two dozen firms control nearly the entirety of media experienced by most U.S. citizens. Bagdikian concludes that "it is the overwhelming collective power of these firms, with their corporate interlocks and unified cultural and political values, that raises troubling questions about the individual's role in the American democracy."

  • Voice of America (VOA) is a state media network funded by the United States of America, whose purpose is to project soft power through journalism.

    In 2005, the Washington Post reported that suspected Al-qaeda operatives were flown into Thailand to be detained and tortured. VOA's remote relay radio station in Udon Thani province has been widely suspected to be the torture site.

  • Manufacturing Consent has this to say about PBS:

    Globalization, along with deregulation and national budgetary pressures, has also helped reduce the importance of noncommercial media in country after country. This has been especially important in Europe and Asia, where public broadcasting systems were dominant (in contrast with the United States and Latin America). The financial pressures on public broadcasters has forced them to shrink or emulate the commercial systems in fund~raising and programming, and some have been fully commercialized by policy change or privatization. The global balance of power has shifted decisively toward commercial systems.

    James Ledbetter points out that in the United States, under incessant right-wing political pressure and financial stringency, "the 90s have seen a tidal wave of commercialism overtake public broadcasting," with public broadcasters" rushing as fast as they can to merge their services with those offered by commercial networks." And in the process of what Ledbetter calls the "mailing" of public broadcasting, its already modest differences from the commercial networks have almost disappeared. Most important, in their programming "they share either the avoidance or the defanging of contemporary political controversy, the kind that would bring trouble from powerful patrons."

  • That looks great! Where is this?

  • These structural factors that dominate media operations are not alI-controlling and do not always produce simple and homogeneous results... The beauty of the system, however, is that such dissent and inconvenient information are kept within bounds and at the margins, so that while their presence shows that the system is not monolithic, they are not large enough to interfere unduly with the domination of the official agenda.

    --Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky, "Manufacturing Consent"

  • El Pais is a brand of PRISA, an advertising and media conglomerate with headquarters in Madrid, Spain.

  • Voice of America (VOA) is a state media network funded by the United States of America, whose purpose is to project soft power through journalism. In 2005, the Washington Post reported that suspected Al-qaeda operatives were flown into Thailand to be detained and tortured. VOA's remote relay radio station in Udon Thani province has been widely suspected to be the torture site.

  • Yeah, not a lot of discussion in the community :/

  • I can't find !abc -- I guess it overlaps with another community like !abolition so you can't mouse-over it.

  • This distinction is important. I've seen a lot of greenwashing about hydrogen as a renewable energy source, but it is only a non-carbon producing form energy storage, and is almost entirely energy stored from processing fossil fuels.

  • The Democrat's still haven't updated their party platform on climate change since before Joe Biden was elected. It sits, frozen in time, with nuggets like "We will take immediate action to reverse the Trump Administration’s dangerous and destructive rollbacks of critical climate and environmental protections." and "We will rejoin the Paris Climate Agreement" like those things are a step forward rather than a return to the catastrophic status quo.

    Hopefully Camila Thorndike can change that.