Bookmarks 2025-12-24T07:16:56.054Z
by Owen Kibel
30 min read
Bookmarks for 2025-12-24T07:16:56.054Z
-
Elon Musk Slams The Atlantic Over D&D Article / X Added: Dec 23, 2025
Site: X (formerly Twitter)
-
Elon Musk on X: "@threelinestudio The Atlantic is a fake publication kept alive only by Laurene Jobs using her dead husband’s money for something he would despise" / X Added: Dec 23, 2025
Site: X (formerly Twitter)
-
Site: X (formerly Twitter)
-
Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS reveals weird wobbling jets in rare sun-facing tail | Space Added: Dec 23, 2025
Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS reveals weird wobbling jets in rare sun-facing tail
Site: Space
3I/ATLAS may have moved away from Earth as it makes its way out of the solar system, but this interstellar intruder continues to delight and surprise astronomers.

-
Quote of the day by Einstein: 'Life is like riding a bicycle. To keep your balance...' - The Economic Times Added: Dec 23, 2025
Quote of the day by Einstein: 'Life is like riding a bicycle. To keep your balance...' - The Economic Times
Albert Einsteins quote, “Life is like riding a bicycle. To keep your balance, you must keep moving,” highlights the idea that progress, however slow, is essential for maintaining stability. Stagnation often leads to imbalance, while steady movement encourages clarity and confidence, making it a timeless lesson for navigating lifes challenges.
“Life is like riding a bicycle. To keep your balance, you must keep moving.” This timeless quote by Albert Einstein offers a simple yet profound lesson about life, resilience and growth. Though brief, the message continues to resonate with people navigating uncertainty, change and everyday challenges.What Is the Meaning of This Albert Einstein Quote?Through this quote, Albert Einstein compares life to riding a bicycle. Balance, he suggests, does not come from standing still but from constant movement. In practical terms, this means progress, no matter how slow, is essential to maintaining stability in life.Einstein’s words highlight an important truth: stagnation often leads to discomfort, fear and imbalance, while movement brings clarity and confidence.Why This Quote by Albert Einstein Still Matters TodayIn today’s world, where people often feel stuck due to personal, professional or social pressures, this quote feels especially relevant. From career setbacks to emotional struggles, life rarely offers perfect conditions. Yet, Einstein reminds us that waiting for everything to be ideal is not the solution.Whether it is learning a new skill, starting over after failure, or simply taking small daily steps, forward movement is key to staying mentally and emotionally balanced.Life Lessons Hidden in Einstein’s Bicycle MetaphorThe bicycle metaphor is powerful because it is relatable. Anyone who has learned to ride a bicycle knows that stopping completely often leads to falling. Similarly, in life, fear of failure can hold people back.Einstein’s quote encourages persistence over perfection. It reassures us that progress does not need to be dramatic. Even slow, steady movement is enough to maintain balance and direction.How This Quote Applies to Career, Health and RelationshipsIn careers, the quote suggests continuous learning and adaptability. In health, it highlights the importance of consistent habits rather than sudden transformations. In relationships, it reminds us that communication and effort are necessary to maintain balance.Einstein’s wisdom fits seamlessly into modern life, making the quote relevant across age groups and professions.Why Albert Einstein’s Quotes Remain Universally PopularAlbert Einstein’s quotes endure because they are rooted in human experience, not just science. His ability to express complex ideas in simple language makes his thoughts accessible to everyone.This quote, in particular, reflects Einstein’s belief in growth, curiosity and perseverance, values that remain essential in every era.Quote of the Day by Albert Einstein“Life is like riding a bicycle. To keep your balance, you must keep moving” is more than a motivational line. It is a gentle reminder to embrace motion, accept change and trust the process of life.In moments of doubt or hesitation, Einstein’s words encourage us to take the next step, because balance comes from movement, not stillness.

-
James Woods TEARS UP Over Rob Reiner, Slams People Celebrating His Murder - YouTube Added: Dec 24, 2025
James Woods TEARS UP Over Rob Reiner, Slams People Celebrating His Murder
Site: YouTube
MyPillow.com/Tim OR mypillow.com Promocode Tim for up to 80% OFF And FREE SHIPPINGSUPPORT THE SHOW BUY CAST BREW COFFEE NOW - https://castbrew.com/Join - htt...

-
President Trump, Susie Wiles, VP Vance & More! A Special Best of PF1 - YouTube Added: Dec 24, 2025
President Trump, Susie Wiles, VP Vance & More! A Special Best of PF1
Site: YouTube
Get the real stories not the Vanity Fair spin in this special WH cabinet edition of Pod Force One. Miranda Devine has had an incredible year interviewing the...

-
Scientists Released Caged Mice Into The Wild, And an Incredible Thing Happened : ScienceAlert
Added: Dec 24, 2025Scientists Released Caged Mice Into The Wild, And an Incredible Thing Happened
Site: ScienceAlert
Dozens of laboratory mice allowed to roam a large outdoor enclosure returned to a typical level of mouse anxiety after just one week, researchers observed, suggesting that 'rewilding' may prevent lab-induced fear responses from developing in the first place.

-
NASA satellite gazes into Medusa Pool photo of the day for Dec. 24, 2025 | Space Added: Dec 24, 2025
NASA satellite gazes into Medusa Pool | Space photo of the day for Dec. 24, 2025
Site: Space
The South Sandwich Islands were born from a tectonic collision, forged by volcanism and relentlessly reshaped by ice, wind and waves.

-
Scientists Have Just Revealed What Color the Diplodocus Really Was, Guess What It Actually Was!
Added: Dec 24, 2025Scientists Have Just Revealed What Color the Diplodocus Really Was, Guess What It Actually Was!
Site: The Daily Galaxy - Great Discoveries Channel
Is this what Diplodocus really looked like? Fossil breakthrough stuns experts!

-
Woman Suffers AI Psychosis After Obsessively Generating AI Images of Herself
Added: Dec 24, 2025Woman Suffers AI Psychosis After Obsessively Generating AI Images of Herself
Site: Futurism
A woman working for a generative AI image startup says the tech led her into a manic bipolar episode, which triggered psychosis.

-
Donald Trump calls for immediate cancellation of Stephen Colbert's show Added: Dec 24, 2025
Trump says CBS should put Colbert ‘to sleep’
Site: The Hill
President Trump on Wednesday suggested CBS should cancel late night host Stephen Colbert’s show immediately, rather than let him remain on air through May as planned. “Stephen Colbert i…
President Trump on Wednesday suggested CBS should cancel late night host Stephen Colbert's show immediately, rather than let him remain on air through May as planned. "Stephen Colbert is a pathetic trainwreck, with no talent or anything else necessary for show business success," Trump posted on Truth Social. "Now, after being terminated by CBS, but left out to dry, he has actually gotten worse, along with his nonexistent ratings. Stephen is running on hatred and fumes ~ A dead man walking! CBS should, 'put him to sleep,' NOW, it is the humanitarian thing to do!" In a subsequent social media post, Trump pondered which of the networks had "the worst Late Night host, CBS, ABC, or NBC???" "They all have three things in common: High Salaries, No Talent, REALLY LOW RATINGS!" Trump posted. Trump has repeatedly railed against late night hosts who criticize him and make him the focus of their jokes, complaining in particular about Colbert, ABC's Jimmy Kimmel and NBC's Seth Meyers. CBS announced in July it was canceling “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert,” calling it a “financial decision.” But the announcement drew scrutiny given Colbert's approach to Trump and because it came weeks after Paramount Global, the parent company of CBS, agreed to settle a high-profile lawsuit brought by Trump. Colbert is set to have his final show next May.

-
Trump Lashes Out At Colbert, Late Night Hosts And ‘Negative’ Newscasts Added: Dec 24, 2025
-
Trump says broadcast licenses should be terminated if networks are "almost 100% Negative" about him - CBS News Added: Dec 24, 2025
Trump says broadcast licenses should be terminated if networks are "almost 100% Negative" about him
President Trump said TV broadcast licenses should be revoked if newscasts and late-night shows are almost entirely negative about him and the GOP.
Washington — President Trump said early Wednesday that TV broadcast licenses should be revoked if newscasts and late-night shows are almost entirely negative about him and the GOP. "If Network NEWSCASTS, and their Late Night Shows, are almost 100% Negative to President Donald J. Trump, MAGA, and the Republican Party, shouldn't their very valuable Broadcast Licenses be terminated? I say, YES!" Mr. Trump said in a post on Truth Social in the wee hours of the morning. The post came minutes after the president criticized "The Late Show" host Stephen Colbert, calling him a "pathetic trainwreck, with no talent or anything else necessary for show business success." The show is set to end in May 2026."Now, after being terminated by CBS, but left out to dry, he has actually gotten worse, along with his nonexistent ratings," Mr. Trump continued. "Stephen is running on hatred and fumes ~ A dead man walking! CBS should, 'put him to sleep,' NOW, it is the humanitarian thing to do!"The president also directed his ire at late-night hosts more broadly. "Who has the worst Late Night host, CBS, ABC, or NBC???" Mr. Trump said in another post. "They all have three things in common: High Salaries, No Talent, REALLY LOW RATINGS!"Mr. Trump has repeatedly voiced frustration with late-night hosts. The president floated revoking TV broadcast licenses for networks that cover him negatively earlier this year, saying in September that the decision to revoke their licenses should be up to Brendan Carr, the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission. At the time, ABC had suspended Jimmy Kimmel over a monologue comment about the suspect in Charlie Kirk's assassination.The FCC did not immediately respond to a request for comment. ABC, CBS and NBC also did not respond to a request for comment.The FCC is an agency that issues eight-year licenses to individual broadcast stations, many of which are owned and operated by television networks. Carr said during a Senate hearing earlier this month that it's "not formally an independent agency." Axios reported that during Carr's testimony, the word "independent" was removed from the agency's website. The FCC states on its website that "Broadcasters – not the FCC or any other government agency – are responsible for selecting the material they air." It also notes that "The First Amendment and the Communications Act expressly prohibit the Commission from censoring broadcast matter."

-
America, Growing More Productive Each Quarter | National Review Added: Dec 24, 2025
America, Growing More Productive Each Quarter | National Review

-
Trump's 'Golden Age' has arrived for the top 10 percent - POLITICO Added: Dec 24, 2025
Trump's 'Golden Age' has arrived for the top 10 percent
Site: POLITICO
The robust GDP numbers reported this week mask the extent to which wealthy Americans are driving growth.
-
Why 4.3% GDP growth proves the 'vibecession' theory is historically wrong | Fortune Added: Dec 24, 2025
Why 4.3% GDP growth proves the 'vibecession' theory is historically wrong | Fortune
Site: Fortune
Go beyond the grocery receipt: reality has math and the economy is recovering right now, period.

-
Site: X (formerly Twitter)
-
Site: X (formerly Twitter)
-
Site: X (formerly Twitter)
-
Site: X (formerly Twitter)
-
The Minaj Moment, Vance vs Crockett, Creepy New Epstein Photos, and Charles Murray's Faith Journey - YouTube Added: Dec 24, 2025
The Minaj Moment, Vance vs Crockett, Creepy New Epstein Photos, and Charles Murray's Faith Journey
Site: YouTube
Start 2026 right and subscribe now to "After Party with Emily Jashinsky":YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@AfterPartyEmily?sub_confirmation=1Apple: https://p...

-
Stephen Miller calls for firing of '60 Minutes' producers Added: Dec 24, 2025
Stephen Miller calls on CBS News to fire ‘60 Minutes’ producers over ‘revolt’
Site: The Hill
White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller on Tuesday urged CBS News to fire the producers of “60 Minutes” for launching a “revolt” against Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss, who recently pulled a s…
White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller on Tuesday urged CBS News to fire the producers of “60 Minutes” for launching a “revolt” against Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss, who recently pulled a segment focused on Venezuelan men deported to the El Salvadoran CECOT prison. “They know that these are monsters, who got exactly what they deserved. Because under President Trump, we are not going to let little girls get raped, and murdered anymore,” Miller said during an appearance on Fox News’s “Jesse Waters Primetime.” “And every one of those producers at '60 Minutes' engaged in this revolt, fire them. Clean house, fire them. That’s what I say, Charlie,” he told guest host Charles Hunt. Weiss has defended her decision to pull Sharyn Alfonsi’s piece, alleging it was not “ready” to air. Alfonsi said the piece needed comment from Trump administration “principals” like Miller. On Tuesday, Miller said he was unaware that CBS reached out to request a comment from him. "I don't remember anybody reaching out to me, of course as you know people put things into comms inboxes and general feedback comments but I don't remember getting anything," Miller said. "But more fundamentally this is another pathetic '60 Minutes' hatchet job, they're trying to tell sob stories about Tren de Aragua gang members who drill holes in people's hands..." Miller continued, citing the murder of Jocelyn Nungaray, a 12-year-old killed in Texas in 2024, allegedly at the hands of two men in the country illegally. Alfonsi's report highlighted some Venezuelan men sent to CECOT, who say they were falsely accused of being associated with the Tren de Aragua gang, now designated as a foreign terrorist organization, and who were never convicted for committing a crime. Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Maryland resident, was one of the hundreds imprisoned overseas, who lawyers say was wrongfully deported and inadvertently tied to gang activity. Still, Miller says CBS producers should recognize that the men deported were dangerous. "You have these '60 Minute' producers who are living in comfort and security, living in their West End condos trying to make us feel sympathetic for these monsters...," the White House deputy chief of staff added. "I'll make a deal, we will pick someone at random that we sent to CECOT, a random lottery drawn, and they will spend one day overnight in your apartment. Who's taking that deal at '60 Minutes?' Nobody," he said. Weiss said remarks from the Trump administration would have provided more context to Alfonsi's segment. “Holding stories that aren’t ready for whatever reason — that they lack sufficient context, say, or that they are missing critical voices — happens every day in every newsroom. I look forward to airing this important piece when it’s ready,” Weiss said in a statement. Alfonsi said in a memo on Sunday night that her requests for comments from White House officials were directed toward the El Salvadoran government, which never provided a response to her inquiry. “Our story was screened five times and cleared by both CBS attorneys and Standards and Practices,” Alfonsi wrote in her note, which was shared with multiple media outlets. “It is factually correct. In my view, pulling it now—after every rigorous internal check has been met, is not an editorial decision, it is a political one.” Despite the segment’s dismissal from U.S. television, a 13-minute version of her interview with CECOT prisoners aired in Canada and circulated online. Men told stories about being physically and sexually abused from their first day behind bars. Lawmakers on Capitol Hill have railed against the decision to pull the story from the airwaves and have questioned the intent behind the move. “What is happening to CBS is a terrible embarrassment and if executives think they can build shareholder value by avoiding journalism that might offend the Mad King they are about to learn a tough lesson,” Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) wrote on the social platform X. “This is still America and we don’t enjoy bulls‑‑‑ like this.” Former Rep. Adam Kinzinger (Ill.), a Republican and leading Trump critic, posted screenshots of him canceling his membership to Paramount+, the company’s direct-to-consumer streaming service. “State owned media,” the former congressman wrote in a string of social media posts blasting the network. This story was updated at 11:53 a.m.

-
Video shows humanoid robots being delivered for border patrol duty - Earth.com Added: Dec 24, 2025
Surreal humanoid robots are set to begin border patrol duties between China and Vietnam
Site: Earth.com
Surreal humanoid robots are set to begin border patrol duties between China and Vietnam

-
Multimodal LLMs Basics: How LLMs Process Text, Images, Audio & Videos Added: Dec 24, 2025
Multimodal LLMs Basics: How LLMs Process Text, Images, Audio & Videos
For a long time, AI systems were specialists confined to a single sense.

-
Ancient Exoplanet With Molten Surface Holds On To Atmosphere Against All Odds
Added: Dec 24, 2025Ancient Exoplanet With Molten Surface Holds On To Atmosphere Against All Odds
Site: The Daily Galaxy - Great Discoveries Channel
An ultra-hot exoplanet just 1.6 million kilometers from its star, has managed to retain a thick atmosphere for billions of years.

-
Antarctica completely collapsed 9,000 years ago in a similar climate - Earth.com Added: Dec 24, 2025
Part of Antarctica’s ice sheet collapsed 9,000 years ago under similar climate conditions as today
Site: Earth.com
New research shows that warm ocean currents triggered a rapid collapse of part of East Antarctica’s ice sheet 9,000 years ago, offering clues about future sea level rise.

-
'What the heck is this?' James Webb telescope spots inexplicable planet with diamonds and soot in its atmosphere | Live Science Added: Dec 24, 2025
'What the heck is this?' James Webb telescope spots inexplicable planet with diamonds and soot in its atmosphere
Site: Live Science
Scientists using the James Webb telescope observed a distant exoplanet with an atmosphere of soot and diamonds, challenging all explanations.

-
Raindrops form 'sandballs' as they roll downhill, contributing more to erosion than previously thought Added: Dec 24, 2025
Raindrops form 'sandballs' as they roll downhill, contributing more to erosion than previously thought
What happens as a raindrop impacts bare soil has been fairly well-studied, but what happens to raindrops afterward is poorly understood. We know that the initial splash of raindrops on soil contributes to erosion, but a new study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, finds that the journey of the raindrop downhill might have an even bigger impact on erosion than the initial splash.

-
President Trump Participates in NORAD Santa Calls - YouTube Added: Dec 24, 2025
President Trump Participates in NORAD Santa Calls
Site: YouTube
Palm Beach, FL

-
'Little Foot' fossil might be a completely new human species - Earth.com Added: Dec 24, 2025
Fossil named "Little Foot" may belong to a completely new human species unknown to science
Site: Earth.com
Scientists reexamining the Little Foot fossil find it may represent a previously unidentified human species.

-
(1) Dogan Ural on X: "How to edit images on X with Grok https://t.co/RPmbNCYbHY" / X Added: Dec 24, 2025
Site: X (formerly Twitter)
-
Site: X (formerly Twitter)
-
Site: X (formerly Twitter)
-
Site: X (formerly Twitter)
-
Site: X (formerly Twitter)
-
Kumar: Rebuttal to Larry Stone's 'The assessor is not a political position' - San José Spotlight
Added: Dec 24, 2025Kumar: Rebuttal to Larry Stone's 'The assessor is not a political position' - San José Spotlight
Site: San José Spotlight
For decades, residents of Santa Clara County have endured inconsistent assessments, a broken appeals process and unprocessed refunds — all from an Assessor’s Office that has refused to modernize, standing in stark contrast to Silicon Valley’s cutting-edge innovation while maintaining a laser focus on extracting higher tax revenues from the very people who elected the assessor.

-
Researchers Finally Prove “Crazy” Vitamin B1 Theory From 1958 Added: Dec 24, 2025
Researchers Finally Prove “Crazy” Vitamin B1 Theory From 1958
Site: SciTechDaily
A research team has managed to “bottle” a highly reactive carbene in water, overturning a major assumption in chemistry. Chemists have pulled off a feat long considered impossible: they created a normally ultra-reactive molecule called a carbene and kept it stable in water for months, a result th

-
Consciousness May Require a New Kind of Computation - Neuroscience News
Added: Dec 24, 2025Consciousness May Require a New Kind of Computation - Neuroscience News
Site: Neuroscience News
A new theoretical framework argues that the long-standing split between computational functionalism and biological naturalism misses how real brains actually compute.

-
Global warming could trigger the next ice age | ScienceDaily Added: Dec 24, 2025
Global warming could trigger the next ice age
Site: ScienceDaily
Scientists have uncovered a missing feedback in Earth’s carbon cycle that could cause global warming to overshoot into an ice age. As the planet warms, nutrient-rich runoff fuels plankton blooms that bury huge amounts of carbon in the ocean. In low-oxygen conditions, this process can spiral out of control, cooling Earth far beyond its original state. While this won’t save us from modern climate change, it may explain Earth’s most extreme ancient ice ages.

-
Quote of the day by Friedrich Nietzsche: 'Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster' - The Economic Times Added: Dec 24, 2025
Quote of the day by Friedrich Nietzsche: 'Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster' - The Economic Times
Friedrich Nietzsches quote of the day warns how the act of fighting evil can itself reshape a persons character if done without self-awareness. Written in Beyond Good and Evil in 1886, the line reflects his concern that prolonged confrontation with wrongdoing may erode moral boundaries and lead individuals to adopt the very traits they oppose.
In a world where power, conflict, and moral battles dominate both public and private life, certain philosophical reflections help in dealing with them. Today’s quote of the day comes from German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, whose work often examined how human behaviour changes under pressure. His line, “Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster,” reminds us that the struggle against wrongdoing can itself carry serious moral consequences if not approached with self-awareness.What the quote is really warning againstAt a basic level, Nietzsche’s statement cautions against moral transformation during conflict. He suggests that when individuals set out to fight cruelty, corruption, or injustice, they may slowly absorb the same aggression or lack of restraint they oppose. The danger lies not in confronting evil, but in allowing that confrontation to justify harmful behaviour, unchecked anger, or abuse of power.This idea is closely tied to the second line from the same passage, where Nietzsche refers to gazing into an abyss. In that metaphor, the abyss represents darkness, violence, or moral decay. His point is that prolonged focus on such forces can begin to shape a person’s mindset. Over time, the boundary between fighting evil and becoming shaped by it can erode, often without the individual realising it.126120414 Where and when Nietzsche wrote itThe quote appears in Beyond Good and Evil, first published in 1886. It is located in Chapter IV, titled “Aphorisms and Interludes,” specifically aphorism 146. In this work, Nietzsche used short, direct reflections to challenge conventional thinking around morality, truth, and human motivation. Rather than offering rules, he pushed readers to examine their own assumptions and behaviour.Nietzsche’s concern here is psychological as much as moral. He believed that people often underestimate how deeply their environment and struggles influence their character. Fighting injustice, in his view, requires constant self-examination to avoid becoming hardened, cruel, or obsessed with domination.126103458 Nietzsche’s philosophical approach to moralityAccording to the Stanford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy, Friedrich Nietzsche was known for his uncompromising criticism of traditional European morality and religion. His work frequently relied on psychological analysis to expose what he saw as hidden motives behind accepted values. This approach placed him among thinkers who questioned whether moral certainty always reflected genuine ethical strength.Nietzsche argued that moral ideas were often shaped by power structures and fear rather than truth. This belief explains why he warned against moral crusades that ignore self-reflection. For him, the real challenge was not simply opposing what one sees as evil, but resisting the internal corruption that such battles can create.126084271 As noted by Britannica, Nietzsche’s influence extends far beyond philosophy into psychology, literature, and cultural criticism. His writings continue to resonate in modern discussions around leadership, justice, activism, and authority. The quote remains relevant in situations where people justify harmful actions by claiming a higher moral goal.By stressing the risk of becoming what one opposes, Nietzsche places responsibility squarely on the individual. His words urge readers to fight wrongdoing without abandoning restraint, empathy, or self-awareness. More than a warning, the quote serves as a reminder that moral integrity must be protected even in the face of serious conflict.Nietzsche’s early life and education also played a significant role in shaping his philosophy. Born in 1844 in Röcken, Saxony, he grew up in a household deeply rooted in Lutheran piety, with his father and maternal grandfather both serving as pastors. After his father’s death in 1849, Nietzsche was raised mainly by women and received a rigorous classical education at the Domgymnasium in Naumburg and later at Schulpforta, one of Germany’s leading Protestant boarding schools.

-
How 2025 became the year of comet — The rise of interstellar 3I/ATLAS, an icy Lemmon and a cosmic SWAN | Space Added: Dec 24, 2025
How 2025 became the year of comet: The rise of interstellar 3I/ATLAS, an icy Lemmon and a cosmic SWAN
Site: Space
Highlights from a cometary trio that captured our imaginations.

-
Literary Hub » Making Sense of Middle Earth: Exploring the World of J.R.R. Tolkien Added: Dec 24, 2025
Making Sense of Middle Earth: Exploring the World of J.R.R. Tolkien
Site: Literary Hub
My first interest in J.R.R. Tolkien was apparently caused by the infamous Barbara Remington artwork used for the covers of the Ballantine mass-market editions. When my father bought his paperback…

-
Bless our billionaires — the wealth they create makes us ALL richer | New York Post Added: Dec 24, 2025
Bless our billionaires — the wealth they create makes us ALL richer
Site: New York Post
An Axios-Generation poll found, “College students prefer socialism to capitalism.”

-
At least 20% of Mamdani appointees tied to anti-Zionist groups, ADL says | The Times of Israel
Added: Dec 24, 2025At least 20% of Mamdani appointees tied to anti-Zionist groups, ADL says
* * *

-
How one musician has used technology to turn 200 Swiss sounds into the wildest music project of the year
Added: Dec 24, 2025How one musician has used technology to turn 200 Swiss sounds into the wildest music project of the year
Site: Supercar Blondie
This musician created a song using nothing but natural sounds captured in Switzerland for what is probably the most fascinating music project of the year

-
Cats meow more at men than women to get their attention — and it's a sign they are master manipulators | Live Science Added: Dec 24, 2025
Cats meow more at men to get their attention, study suggests
Site: Live Science
A small study reveals that cats greet male owners more vocally than female ones. But the findings could be a result of cultural norms among the participants, rather than a universal cat behavior, scientists say.

-
States see possible warning signs amid steady Obamacare sign-ups - POLITICO Added: Dec 24, 2025
States see possible warning signs amid steady Obamacare sign-ups
Site: POLITICO
While sign-ups are above 2024, some states are concerned about higher terminations, fewer new enrollees and more consumer calls for help. If Congress fails again to extend enhanced subsidies in January, they say enrollment could drop.
-
Nick Fuentes vows to oppose Vivek Ramaswamy's Ohio governor bid | Fox News Added: Dec 24, 2025
Nick Fuentes vows to oppose Vivek Ramaswamy's Ohio governor bid | Fox News

-
Don’t Hate Karoline Leavitt Because She’s Beautiful - WSJ Added: Dec 24, 2025