Saturday 9 October 2021

Farmer who acted in self defense, arrested for murder, Glencoe

 

South Africa: Farmer who acted in self defense, arrested for murder, Glencoe

Oorgrens veiligheid


Garth Millin Simpson (68), a farmer in the Glencoe area near Dundee, in the KwaZulu Natal area of South Africa was arrested and charged with murder on Thursday 30 September 2021. However a cell phone video doing the rounds on social media shows the firearm being fired when the farmer was attacked by the deceased and a group that had gone with him to the farm.

There was a dispute regarding cattle that had apparently been impounded on the farm.

In the video it shows how a group attacked Simpson and were assaulting him while attempting to take the firearm from the elderly farmer.

In the video it is seen that a serious assault starts to take place and it is clear that the deceased kicks the farmer in the chest while hanging onto the rifle barrel in an attempt to take it off of him.

The deceased, Qiniso Dlamini (17) was fatally wounded when a shot went off during the scuffle.

A murder case was being investigated by Glencoe police.

Dlamini’s family are calling for a thorough investigation into the murder and for justice to be served. Meanwhile Simpson, who clearly acted in self defense has been remanded in custody pending his bail application on 6 October 2021.

Simpson who also is suffering from a medical condition was refused access to a specialist after recommendation by a doctor and has been transferred to Ladysmith prison.

Information supplied by Oorgrens veiligheid

https://southafricatoday.net/south-africa-news/kwazulu-natal/farmer-who-acted-in-self-defense-arrested-for-murder-glencoe/

Among Europe’s dirtiest: ‘Green’ biomass power plant in Yorkshire burning ‘renewable’ wood emits MORE CO2 than UK’s coal – report

 

Among Europe’s dirtiest: ‘Green’ biomass power plant in Yorkshire burning ‘renewable’ wood emits MORE CO2 than UK’s coal – report


Among Europe’s dirtiest: ‘Green’ biomass power plant in Yorkshire burning ‘renewable’ wood emits MORE CO2 than UK’s coal – report
A supposedly “carbon neutral” Drax biomass power plant is the UK’s leading source of CO2 emissions, and belches out more harmful carbon and particulate matter than some of Europe’s dirtiest coal plants, according to a new report.

Renewable energy firm Drax describes its plant in North Yorkshire as a “purely renewable” facility, boasting that it has slashed its carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by 90% since 2012. The plant burns biomass – pellets of compressed wood – and received £832 million ($1.13 billion) in direct government subsidies last year, on top of an estimated £258 million ($351 million) in carbon tax breaks.

Yet the energy generated at Drax is far from green, a new report by environmental think tank Ember claims. While the UK and EU consider biomass power “carbon neutral,” this assessment is based on the assumption that biomass emissions are offset by the planting of new trees.

This forest regrowth takes time, and the European Academies’ Sciences Advisory Council (EASAC) reported earlier this year that switching plants from coal to biomass – as was the case at Drax’ Yorkshire facility – would not cause any drop in emissions for at least three to five decades. 

“Such technology is not effective in mitigating climate change and may even increase the risk of dangerous climate change,” the EASAC stated.

In the UK, wood burning plants like Drax’ currently spew out more CO2 than coal plants, including coal used in steel production. Drax is the country’s top emitter, releasing 13.3 million tons of CO2 into the atmosphere per year, compared to the entire coal sector’s yearly emissions of 10 million tons.  

Data shows that Drax is Europe’s third-worst emitter of CO2, behind Germany's Neurath and Poland’s Bełchatów coal plants. It is also Europe’s fourth-worst emitter of PM10 particulate matter, coming in behind three coal plants in Poland and Romania. It is the only biomass facility to rank in Europe’s top ten CO2 and PM10 emissions lists.

A Drax spokesman responded to Ember’s report by describing the think tank’s figures as “inaccurate and completely at odds with what the world’s leading climate scientists at the UN IPCC [Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change] say about sustainable biomass being crucial to delivering global climate targets.” The company says that its carbon emissions are “biologically sequestered,” meaning they are technically counted as zero under the previously-mentioned EU and UK assumptions of forest regrowth.

However, critics suggest that the scientific consensus on “sustainable” biomass may soon change.

“Recent science demonstrates that burning forest biomass for power is unlikely to be carbon neutral – and there’s a real risk that it’s responsible for significant emissions,” Ember Chief Operating Officer Phil MacDonald stated. “Before the government spends more taxpayer money on biomass, we should make sure we know we’re getting the emissions reductions that we’re paying for.”


https://www.rt.com/uk/537069-carbon-neutral-biomass-emissions-drax/

 

Academics Claim Single Family Home Neighborhoods Have Legacy of Racism


The Builder website reported in 2013 that the majority of Americans prefer single family homes, according to a 2011 Community Preference Survey from the National Association of Realtors:

Detached, single-family homes are the end goal for the majority of Americans. While 80 percent of the population would prefer to live in a single-family home, seven in ten Americans (70 percent) actually do. Apartment and condo living is only preferred by 8 percent of the population, yet two in 10 Americans (17 percent) live in an apartment or condo.

But not just any single-family home will do….Americans also show consensus on certain community factors. 53 percent would like to live in an area that is “away from it all,” versus “in the center of it all (34 percent).”

The saying “good fences make good neighbors” rings true to the majority of Americans as well. “Privacy from neighbors” was consider somewhat important to 87 percent of the population, while 45 percent considered privacy very important.

A more recent report in the City Journal in 2019 showed this is still the case with younger Americans preferring single family homes:

Since 2010, 80 percent of millennial population growth has been in the suburbs. Some of this is simply demographics: most people with young children, or contemplating the prospect of having children, prefer single-family houses. Nearly three-quarters of millennials want single-family detached houses, according to a 2019 report on homebuyer preferences by the National Association of Homebuilders. A 2018 Apartment List survey found that 80 percent of millennials aspire to homeownership.

But left-wing academics at Berkeley analyze everything in society through the lens of race — so much so that the study it published comes from its Othering and Belonging Institute.

The study makes the case that segregated neighborhoods are based on racism and the San Francisco Chronicle advances the narrative, reporting on “single family homes nestled in hilly woodlands, populated by affluent, mostly white families.”

And the reason that San Francisco’s Chinatown is 89 percent Asian is not because of a sense of community but because “many experienced anti-Chinese racism outside of Chinatown, so over time, the area became a segregated enclave,” the Chronicle reported.

The Chronicle reported on the Institute’s findings:

Using population figures from the 2020 census, the Institute examined the racial demographics of every neighborhood in the nine-county Bay Area and how each compared to its surrounding metropolitan area (the Bay Area has three metropolitan statistical areas centering on San Francisco, San Jose and Napa). They used these numbers to calculate a “divergence index” score for each neighborhood. The more a neighborhood’s racial makeup differed from its metro area, the higher its “divergence index”.

Most neighborhoods on the list are disproportionately Black and Hispanic compared to the overall Bay Area. For instance, Hunters Point in San Francisco is 50 percent Black, despite the metro area being 7 percent black; the western part of Oakland’s Webster neighborhood is almost 91 percent black and Hispanic, while the metro overall is under 30 percent black and Hispanic.

But dozens of neighborhoods are over 80 percent white and highly segregated, even if they don’t make the top 10. One, the town of Ross, is a 15-minute drive from Marin’s Canal Area. Its residents can expect to live nearly nine years longer than Canal residents, according to a 2012 report by the American Human Development Project. Eight out of the Bay’s 10 most segregated white-majority neighborhoods are in Marin.

The Chronicle interviewed Dorothy Lazard, a black librarian at the Oakland Public Library.

“Segregation isn’t as blatant as it once was, black water fountain and white water fountain,” Lazard said. “And because of that, I feel like we need to get a little more nuanced in our attempts to eradicate segregation.”

Queen Elizabeth Has Secret Tunnel in Palace Leading to Top London Bar, Report Says

 

Queen Elizabeth Has Secret Tunnel in Palace Leading to Top London Bar, Report Says

Britain's Queen Elizabeth views exhibits in the renovated Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders Museum at Stirling Castle as part of her traditional trip to Scotland for Holyrood Week, in Stirling, Scotland, Britain June 29, 2021 - Sputnik International, 1920, 09.10.2021
This is not the first time that local media has reported on secret passages used by the monarch. In 2015, the show Good Morning Britain revealed that a mirror in the White Drawing Room in Buckingham Palace is in fact a secret door that leads to the Queen’s private chambers and is used by the monarch to make a surprise entrance.
Have you ever sat tired on a cold and rainy evening wondering what it would be like if it were possible to instantly get to your favourite bar (restaurant) without spending an hour crammed inside public transport? Well, it turns outs it is possible, you just have to be the Queen of the United Kingdom and 15 other Commonwealth realms, or her close friend.

According Richard Eden, an editor at the Daily Mail, the monarch has a secret (not anymore, Your Highness) tunnel in a palace that leads straight to a top London bar, said to be her favourite. Mr Eden revealed he had learned this information while partying with Jack Brooksbank, husband of Queen Elizabeth’s granddaughter Princess Eugenie.

"There is one to Dukes Bar from St James's Palace. I haven't used it yet, but I'd love to check it out", Brooksbank said, as per the journalist.

The news left many users excited.

While others criticised Jack Brooksbank for leaking the family secret.

St James’s is the most senior royal palace and although Queen Elizabeth II spends the majority of her time at Buckingham Palace as well as Windsor and Balmoral Castles, St James’s is the monarch’s royal court.

Dukes Bar is located inside the Duke Hotel and is famous for its martinis, dubbed "one of the world’s best" by The New York Times.

Reports say Her Majesty regularly drinks alcohol, with some outlets suggesting that the Queen drinks four strong cocktails a day. Royal insiders, however, suggest that the number is exaggerated. 


Reports say Her Majesty regularly drinks alcohol, with some outlets suggesting that the Queen drinks four strong cocktails a day. Royal insiders, however, suggest that the number is exaggerated.

According to the Queen’s cousin Margaret Rhodes, the monarch’s favourite drink is gin.

"She takes a gin and [wine-based aperitif] Dubonnet before lunch, with a slice of lemon and a lot of ice. She will take wine with lunch and a dry Martini and a glass of champagne in the evening", Rhodes said.

Royal pundits have suggested that the Queen’s moderate use of alcohol might be one of the secrets to her longevity and mental wellbeing.

https://sputniknews.com/20211009/queen-elizabeth-has-secret-tunnel-in-palace-leading-to-top-london-bar-report-says-1089795941.html

Health & Science News: Anxiety surged during pandemic, particularly among women - study

 

Anxiety surged during pandemic, particularly among women - study


Young people suffered as school closures kept them away from friends, and many women found themselves bearing the brunt of household work and facing an increased risk of domestic violence.



It's been quite the stressful pandemic year (photo credit: UNSPLASH)

It's been quite the stressful pandemic year  (photo credit: UNSPLASH)

The COVID-19 pandemic led to a surge in anxiety and major depressive disorders across the world, particularly among women and young people, a study published in The Lancet on Friday found.

Young people suffered as school closures kept them away from friends, and many women found themselves bearing the brunt of household work and facing an increased risk of domestic violence, the researchers said.

The study, led by academics at the University of Queensland, Australia, recorded 76 million additional cases of anxiety disorders and 53 million of major depressive disorder as COVID-19 spread in 2020.

"Sadly, for numerous reasons, women were always more likely to be worse affected by the social and economic consequences of the pandemic," study co-author Alize Ferrari said.

"Additional caring and household responsibilities tend to fall on women, and because women are more likely to be victims of domestic violence, which increased at various stages of the pandemic."

COVID-19 related stressors survey resutls (credit: BEN GURION UNIVERSITY OF THE NEGEV)

COVID-19 related stressors survey resutls (credit: BEN GURION UNIVERSITY OF THE NEGEV)

School closures and other curbs limited "young people’s ability to learn and interact with their peers," she added.

The research included 48 previously conducted studies from around the world and pulled together their findings in a meta-analysis to quantify the prevalence of mental health disorders in 204 countries and territories in 2020.

That made it "the first global insight into the burden of depressive and anxiety disorders during the pandemic," the authors of a linked comment piece who were not involved in the study said.

It found there was an estimated 28% increase in cases of major depressive disorder, to 246 million cases, up from an estimated 193 million cases had the pandemic not happened.

There was a similar 26% increase in estimated cases of anxiety, with an estimated 374 million cases compared to 298 million without the pandemic.

The authors of the study warned that there was a lack of high-quality data on the impact of the pandemic on mental health in many poorer countries, adding extrapolated estimates for those countries should be interpreted with caution.


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Political cartoon of the day: Along for the ride

 

Political cartoon of the day: 

Along for the ride




https://www.foxnews.com/politics/cartoons-slideshow

Google, YouTube will no longer allow ads on content pushing ‘climate change denial,’ saying it ‘contradicts scientific consensus’

 

Google, YouTube will no longer allow ads on content pushing ‘climate change denial,’ saying it ‘contradicts scientific consensus’

Google, YouTube will no longer allow ads on content pushing ‘climate change denial,’ saying it ‘contradicts scientific consensus’
Google and its subsidiary YouTube will no longer monetize content that goes against the “scientific consensus” on global warming, removing all ads from posts with inaccurate claims in an effort to combat “climate change denial.”

The Big Tech behemoth announced the move in a Thursday blog post, updating its policies on ads and monetization in order to “ensure a brand-safe environment” for advertisers, and to “protect users” from “unreliable claims” as well as “fake medical cures or anti-vaccine advocacy.”

“Our advertising and publisher partners … have expressed concerns about ads that run alongside or promote inaccurate claims about climate change,” it said, noting that this is not only bad for business, but impacts content creators as well.

That’s why today, we’re announcing a new monetization policy for Google advertisers, publishers and YouTube creators that will prohibit ads for, and monetization of, content that contradicts well-established scientific consensus around the existence and causes of climate change.

While the company did not offer a detailed definition of the proscribed content, it cited a few examples, including posts that deem climate change “a hoax or a scam,” as well as “claims denying that long-term trends show the global climate is warming, and claims denying that greenhouse gas emissions or human activity contribute to climate change.”

Enforcement of the new policy will combine “automated tools” as well as “human review,” Google added – though YouTube’s algorithmic decision-making system is not exactly known for its high degree of accuracy, resulting in numerous bans by mistake over the years. 

Advertisements and monetization will still be allowed for other climate change-related content, including public policy debates and discussion of “new research” (so long as researchers – Ivy League-educated or otherwise – don’t question the prevailing “consensus” on any particular issue, that is). 

Nonetheless, the company insisted that it would “look carefully” for “context” to distinguish between the actual dissemination of false claims and the mere discussion of those claims, such as attempts to rebut or debunk them.

Google and YouTube’s updated ad policies come after the latter platform declared it would ban all “harmful vaccine content” late last month. The move was part of a broader push against so-called ‘misinformation’ that got underway after the 2016 US presidential election, rapidly escalating in the years since, with the 2020 presidential raceCovid-19 pandemic and January 6 Capitol riot all supercharging an internet-wide censorship campaign. 

Tens of thousands of users across dozens of platforms have been banned en masse in recent years – seeing periodic ‘purges’ over alleged disinfo, ‘conspiracy theories’ and ‘hate speech’ – while content creators who veer outside the scope of establishment opinion increasingly face de-monetization and issues with advertisers.

https://www.rt.com/usa/536920-google-youtube-climate-change/

Friday 8 October 2021

Earth's Core not solid? (a physicist I saw on my walks used to tell me about this :)

Earth's 'solid' inner core may not be so solid after all! Ball-shaped mass 3,200 miles beneath the surface contains both mushy and hard iron, study claims

  • Earth's inner core is not solid but actually contains mushy and hard iron — study
  • Researchers claim core is made up of a range of liquid, soft, and hard structures
  • Because the inner core is so inaccessible, they used earthquake waves for study
  • How seismic waves travel can identify minerals, heat and density of Earth's layer

No human or machine has ever been 3,200 miles beneath Earth's surface because the depth, pressure and temperature make it inaccessible.

But scientists have long believed that our planet's inner core was solid, in contrast to the liquid metal region surrounding it.

Now that's been brought into question by a new study that claims the ball-shaped mass, which is responsible for Earth's magnetic field, contains both mushy and hard iron.

Scientists have long believed that our planet's inner core was solid. Now that's been brought into question by a new study that claims the ball-shaped mass contains both mushy and hard iron. Earthquake waves (pictured) were used as the basis for the research

Scientists have long believed that our planet's inner core was solid. Now that's been brought into question by a new study that claims the ball-shaped mass contains both mushy and hard iron. Earthquake waves (pictured) were used as the basis for the research

FOUR LAYERS OF THE PLANET EARTH

Crust: To a depth of up to 70km, this is the outermost layer of the Earth, covering both ocean and land areas.

Mantle: Going down to 2,890km with the lower mantle, this is the planet's thickest layer and made of silicate rocks richer in iron and magnesium than the crust overhead.

Outer core: Running from a depth of 2,890- 5,150km, this region is made of liquid iron and nickel with trace lighter elements.

Inner core: Going down to a depth of 6,370km at the very centre of planet Earth, this region has been thought to be made of solid iron and nickel. But this new study suggests that it contains both mushy and hard iron.

The research has been led by Rhett Butler, a geophysicist at the University of Hawaii, who suggests that Earth's 'solid' inner core is, in fact, made up of a range of liquid, soft, and hard structures which vary across the top 150 miles of the mass.

Earth's interior is layered like an onion. The iron-nickel inner core is 745 miles in radius, or about three-quarters the size of the moon and is surrounded by a fluid outer core of molten iron and nickel about 1,500 miles thick.

The outer core is surrounded by a mantle of hot rock 1,800 miles thick and overlain by a thin, cool, rocky crust at the surface. 

Because the inner core is so inaccessible, researchers had to rely on the only means available to probe the innermost Earth — earthquake waves. 

'Illuminated by earthquakes in the crust and upper mantle, and observed by seismic observatories at Earth's surface, seismology offers the only direct way to investigate the inner core and its processes,' said Butler.

As seismic waves move through various layers of Earth, their speed changes and they may reflect or refract depending on the minerals, temperature and density of that layer. 

To better understand the features of the Earth's inner core, Butler and his co-author Seiji Tsuboi, a research scientist at the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, used data from seismometers directly opposite the location where an earthquake was generated. 

They used Japan's Earth Simulator supercomputer to assess five pairings to broadly cover the inner core region: Tonga and Algeria, Indonesia and Brazil, and three between Chile and China. 

A cut-away of Earth's interior shows the inner core (red) and liquid iron outer core (orange). Seismic waves travel through the Earth's inner core faster between the north and south poles (blue arrows) than across the equator (green arrow)

A cut-away of Earth's interior shows the inner core (red) and liquid iron outer core (orange). Seismic waves travel through the Earth's inner core faster between the north and south poles (blue arrows) than across the equator (green arrow)

Because the Earth's inner core is so inaccessible, researchers had to rely on the only means available to probe the innermost Earth — earthquake waves (stock image)

Because the Earth's inner core is so inaccessible, researchers had to rely on the only means available to probe the innermost Earth — earthquake waves (stock image)

'In stark contrast to the homogeneous, soft iron alloys considered in all Earth models of the inner core since the 1970's, our models suggest there are adjacent regions of hard, soft, and liquid or mushy iron alloys in the top 150 miles of the inner core,' said Butler. 

'This puts new constraints upon the composition, thermal history, and evolution of Earth.' 

The researchers said this discovery of the inner core's diverse structure could offer important new information about the dynamics at the boundary between the inner and outer core, which impact the Earth's magnetic field.

'Knowledge of this boundary condition from seismology may enable better, predictive models of the geomagnetic field which shields and protects life on our planet,' said Butler.

The researchers now plan to model the inner core structure in more detail using the Earth Simulator supercomputer so they can see how it compares with various characteristics of Earth's geomagnetic field.

The research has been published in the journal Science Direct.

EARTH'S LIQUID IRON CORE CREATES THE MAGNETIC FIELD 

Our planet's magnetic field is believed to be generated deep down in the Earth's core.

Nobody has ever journeyed to the centre of the Earth, but by studying shockwaves from earthquakes, physicists have been able to work out its likely structure.

At the heart of the Earth is what was thought to be its solid inner core, two thirds of the size of the moon, and made mainly of iron. However, this new study disputes this.

At 5,700°C, this iron is as hot as the Sun's surface, but the crushing pressure caused by gravity prevents it from becoming liquid.

Surrounding this is the outer core, which is a 1,242 mile (2,000 km) thick layer of iron, nickel, and small quantities of other metals.  

The Earth's magnetic field explained
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The metal here is fluid, because of the lower pressure than the inner core.

Differences in temperature, pressure and composition in the outer core cause convection currents in the molten metal as cool, dense matter sinks and warm matter rises.

The 'Coriolis' force, caused by the Earth's spin, also causes swirling whirlpools.

This flow of liquid iron generates electric currents, which in turn create magnetic fields.

Charged metals passing through these fields go on to create electric currents of their own, and so the cycle continues.

This self-sustaining loop is known as the geodynamo.

The spiralling caused by the Coriolis force means the separate magnetic fields are roughly aligned in the same direction, their combined effect adding up to produce one vast magnetic field engulfing the planet.