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Accused Israeli Embassy Killer Pleads Not Guilty, Demands Jury
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Accused Israeli Embassy Killer Pleads Not Guilty, Demands Jury

'I did it for Gaza'
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Texans Can Sue Abortion Pill Distributors Under Bill Awaiting Governor’s Signature
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Texans Can Sue Abortion Pill Distributors Under Bill Awaiting Governor’s Signature

'Most effective pro-life defense'
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SciFi and Fantasy
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A Spider’s Unsung Industry: Appreciating Kamaji of Spirited Away
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A Spider’s Unsung Industry: Appreciating Kamaji of Spirited Away

Column Anime Spotlight A Spider’s Unsung Industry: Appreciating Kamaji of Spirited Away Hats off to the hardest working spider-person in all of anime! By Leah Thomas | Published on September 4, 2025 Credit: Studio Ghibli Comment 0 Share New Share Credit: Studio Ghibli I just started a new job in Tokyo. On day one, I had the not altogether uncommon experience of encountering a devout arachnophobe. I say “devout” because this person, like quite a few others I’ve met, brought up her hatred for spiders unprompted. “If I see one, I will kill it immediately.” If a penchant for arachno-cide is an unfair measure of human compassion, then go ahead and call me biased: I immediately question the character of anyone who squishes a spider. For spider-killers, I reserve the same targeted disdain I also direct at people who brag about using ChatGPT, scalp Pokemon cards, or take off their shoes and socks on airplanes.  Is this fair? Probably not. I know there are primal reasons why so many people loathe spiders. According to Vanessa LoBue, Ph.D., writing for Psychology Today, some research supports the idea that human beings’ fear of spiders is a holdover from prehistoric times, when spiders and snakes were among our most dangerous predators. “Research from my own lab at Rutgers has shown that adults, children, and even babies are really fast to detect the presence of a snake or spider in a series of photographs—faster than we are to detect other objects, like flowers and frogs.” Maybe there’s some merit to that, but she also goes on to say that babies love animals, and, in studies like this one here, play among snakes quite happily. But regardless of whether the fear is learned or not, the act of killing a spider is a choice. My mother, a passionate gardener, revered spiders almost as much as she feared them. She knew they were the ideal predators to place among her daylilies, skillful slayers of mites and aphids and mosquitoes to boot. Though she shrieked and hopped on chairs like a character out of an old cartoon whenever she spotted them, she instructed us kids to “take them outside,” rather than kill them.  As a child I was pretty fond of spiders, maybe because I was and am a Halloween enthusiast, or because like most Michiganders I used to climb trees and encounter them there, or because I read and watched Charlotte’s Web and wept for her, or because there always used to be a spider or two hanging out above our showerhead when I was a kid, like a bonus pet. That affection has not gone away. People learn this, and then it falls to me to capture the office critters that inevitably slip in and get cozy in Japanese workplaces.  I take a certain pride in the act of spider rescue missions, in slapping a paper cup down over one and pushing a notecard between the cup and the flooring and spiriting her away outside. It’s even better when the cup is clear plastic, so I can show her off to shuddering coworkers or delighted students along the way. After, I am careful to roll-step out the door so she doesn’t get too jostled and then find a nice leaf to place her on. I don’t know if they actually care, and sometimes their silk clings to the cup, and they rappel down instead. Sometimes I apologize to them. “Sorry, but you have to stay out here.” In my own home, this is certainly true, as I harbor a furry feline beast who thinks spiders might be fancy kibble. Sometimes a spider does surprise me, or jump out at me, and my heart stutters. And of course I’m not especially pleased when I walk right through a giant, unseen web on a trail or in my own apartment stairwell. But even as I’m cussing and pulling gunk from my hair and face, I find myself admiring the industry.  What? Overnight, little spider, you wove a web from the apartment railing to the door? A distance 100 times your length in a matter of mere hours? I’m a writer with obsessive hyperfocus tendencies: like many authors, I have spent entire weekends awake in front of a keyboard, sleeping hardly at all. But have I ever possessed one ounce of a spider’s sheer perseverance?  Itsy-Bitsy Chihiro Credit: Studio Ghibli Look, maybe I get a bit romantic about these little creatures, but I am far from the first to do so. In many cultures, spiders are symbols of good fortune. According to Swedish superstition, killing a spider will summon a rainstorm. In the UK, finding a money spider in your hair is not a disaster but an omen that money is coming your way. And yes, here in Japan, spiders are, much like worker bees, symbols of diligence and luck. This idea has made its mark on animation, as well, and I doubt any spider in Japan is quite as beloved as the mustachioed spider-man (no, not that one, but a man who is a spider) from Spirited Away. At my last job, one of my coworkers, juggling too many plates and saucers and cups and glasses and frying pans and whatever other metaphorical teaching commitments said, “I wish I were Kamaji! I need eight arms!” I laughed, because I also love and admire Kamaji, and despite his rather small role in a very beloved, fantastical story, he’s pretty unforgettable. Like many characters in Miyazaki’s works, Kamaji has an uncanny verisimilitude to him, like he’s someone you met once when you were a child. He has grandfather energy in the best way.  If anyone needs reminding—or has somehow lived a life without enjoying the undisputed masterpiece that is Spirited Away—Kamaji, a many-limbed yokai, is among the first to show the protagonist, Chihiro, begrudging kindness when she wanders into the spirit world. After she crosses the bridge to the bathhouse, assisted by a mysterious boy named Haku, who tells her to ask for Kamaji, she clambers trepidatiously down a treacherous staircase that clings to the walls beneath the bathhouse and tiptoes into the yokai’s domain: the boiler room. Kamaji is clearly too busy working to worry about a little mortal girl, his long grey arms working the bellows and the mortar and reaching into drawers for herbs and pulling bathwater request tokens from hooks that descend from the towering onsen above. Chihiro asks for a job, and he tells her he has all the workers he needs in the form of magicked little creatures made of soot. He commands his soot sprites to shift heavy coal into the furnace, and continues pulling levers and sipping straight from a teapot without stopping.  Credit: Studio Ghibli Chihiro, almost as stubborn as Kamaji and far more desperate, tries to work anyway, hauling one heavy block of coal towards the fire. When she almost gives up, he calls out to her with some gruff encouragement: “Finish what you started!” When she does exactly that, he softens, and thereafter, he is an unwavering ally of the little human girl, causing trouble in the spirit onsen. Is it only because he respects her dedication, or is it something more? Is he representative of notoriously brutal Japanese work ethic, or perhaps of Miyazaki himself? What, exactly, has led this mysterious old spider to work so arduously in such miserable conditions, trapped working in a dark, hot room while those above him enjoy their ghostly spa days? Well, of course, there is no official answer to these questions. But in admiring Kamaji, I looked into what inspired his creation, and stumbled into yet another fascinating saga of Japanese history and folklore. Those Who Hide in the Ground Kamaji is based on a yokai known colloquially as tsuchigumo. Tsuchi means “soil” or “earth,” and kumo (gumo) means “spider.” Tsuchigumo is not the only spider-inspired yokai, or even the most popularly depicted. That distinction falls to Jorōgumo, an enormous spider that transforms into a beautiful woman in order to lure men to their deaths.  Kamaji’s tsuchigumo has another origin. Language evolves in Japan as it does everywhere, and “tsuchigumo” has come a long way from where it started, thanks in part to how handily Japanese lends itself to wordplay. Tsuchigumo is probably a play on “tuchi go mori,” which means “those who hide in the ground.” This was a derogatory term used to describe rebellious Japanese clans as far back as 1500 years ago. Some of these clanspeople, also known as kuzu, are believed to have lived in the cavern systems in Nara, back when the capital was called Asuka. These clans resisted the rule of the Yamato empire, digging their heels in to defy both imperialism and the arrival of Buddhism. While historically, the Asuka period is known as something of a Japanese renaissance, ushering in new art, architecture, and literacy, for those clans who wished to retain Shintoism and traditional ways of living, it must have been a daunting time. Over the course of less than two hundred years, Japan changed not only its name and primary religion, but also shifted from a diverse collection of divergent clans to an empire.  And any ruler knows, when a minority is giving you trouble, the best retaliation is dehumanization: Spread descriptions of the shamanic people who defy your rule as dirt-scrabblers, as grubby monsters with long arms, as stubborn and bestial in their nature and bearing, and then let hyperbolic whispers and rumors do the rest. While tsuchigumo wasn’t a documented yokai until many centuries after these clans had been routed out and eliminated, the term’s continued use and adaptation is a testament to the notoriety of the word. Tsuchigumo grew, morphing from an insult aimed at a despised minority to the name of many-legged creatures who, according to the earliest stories, devour thousands of people and stash their victims’ skulls in their abdomens.  In a sense, however negative the connotations, the kuzu legacy lives on, contorted by this new definition. It is always hard to say how much of Miyazaki’s symbolism is deliberate and how much is incidental to his art, but in this case, even the name of Kamaji’s inspirational “species” proves remarkably tenacious.  The Spider’s Tenacity Credit: Studio Ghibli Monstrous spiders have not lost their hold over the imagination of Japanese artists. In Dororo, Tezuka wrote of a vicious spider demon masquerading as a beautiful village chief. Rui, a formidable antagonist in Demon Slayer, is a demonic spider. Every monster-girl fetish anime boasts a sexy spider lady. In general, these characters are cunning, duplicitous, and selfish. But another anime, the isekai So I’m a Spider, So What? adopts a less disparaging approach to incorporating an arachnid character. When a classroom full of students die in an explosion and they wake up reincarnated in another world, one girl finds herself trapped in the body of a spider. The author of this fairly popular story, Okina Baba, is a self-described hikkikimori, and certainly knows how it feels to be trapped in the shadows. Is it surprising that the story of a spider making the best of her circumstances would be one Baba would want to write and explore? Like the kuzu in their caverns, people trapped in darkness do not give up on living, persisting however best they can. Kamaji is the quintessential embodiment of so many of these abstract ideas. He works, if not tirelessly, but without apparent resentment or payment; for a creature like Kamaji, the option of not working does not occur. He has all those arms and the ability to use them, and whatever circumstance brought him to a life of glowing goals and hard labor, he does not falter in his work. A spider’s work is her gift and curse; she rebuilds the web because that is all she knows, but she never does it poorly. Is Kamaji’s labor wasted because he does not enjoy the spoils of it? Does Miyazaki, after toiling tirelessly on yet another film that postpones his endless promises of retirement, seem happy about his work? Notoriously, no. No, the famed curmudgeon does not generally appear happy about most things, even though he brings humanity so much joy. Spiders are ingenious, creative creatures. But they are also sinister and duplicitous. According to Japanese superstition, seeing a spider in the morning means you will welcome a guest, but seeing a spider at night means a thief will visit you. To appreciate spiders is to appreciate duality, or contradiction.  The spirit world that Chihiro enters operates by a fundamental rule: in order to survive and retain her humanity, she must work. If she does not, she, like her parents before her, will become livestock. While being forced to work may make these characters—and the rest of us out here in the real world as well—occasionally feel a bit like livestock, but work that you find meaningful can also allow for a sense of purpose. I am so far from wishing a life of labor on anyone in the world, and I am as anti-capitalist as they come. But I have found that in those moments when I do my job well and others benefit from it—be it a student or a reader or any stranger—I am grateful to be alive, and grateful to have made something.  Credit: Studio Ghibli And those who work the hardest are often the most appreciative of the moments when the work stops. Chihiro sits on a balcony with a friend, enjoying a meat bun after a successful day working the baths, looking out at a train that crosses a spectral sea. Kamaji, more than once, is seen slumbering under a quilt, the levers still before him, there before the boiler. A life of hard work is not easy or fair, but it is not without its merits. And a spider never questions that, because it is a spider. It makes and remakes and makes again. Miyazaki, time and again, writes stories that illustrate this human conflict. He crafts movies that champion humanity’s ingenuity and work ethic, but warn against the dangers of a life overwhelmed by work, centered on laboring rather than living. In The Wind Rises, engineer Jiro Horikoshi, inspired by a real person, is admirable because he doggedly pursues a goal, but also worthy of criticism because the planes he works so hard to design are tools of war. In Princess Mononoke, Lady Eboshi works incredibly hard to support her people, mining iron ore at the expense of nature, ruthlessly damaging an ancient, sacred forest. Kamaji works far too hard for his own good, and for what? To offer baths and relaxation to countless fortunate spirits, people he will never meet? We learn he has held onto train tickets to elsewhere for more than forty years, but he does not hesitate to give them to Chihiro. At any time, he might have left the bathhouse behind; he could have escaped the darkness of the boiler room, the thankless hours and poor compensation, but he did not. Perhaps he valued having a purpose and dedicating himself to it, or perhaps there are other reasons—we don’t find out much about his past, and his secrets and motivations remain his own. But even Kamaji pauses his routine in order to lay his blanket over a sleeping child.  Credit: Studio Ghibli Anthropomorphizing spiders is a little silly, I know. Spiders are not considering existential nonsense when they build their webs. But maybe, instead, spiderifying people is a valid experiment, if only because it reminds us that it is all too easy to fall into a working life that resigns us to living in darkness, hidden from the sun and isolated from the people who are helped by or otherwise benefit from our labor. That is not a life to be ashamed of, but nor is there anything wrong with taking those tickets to elsewhere. Wherever spiders go, webs are made: wherever people go, a life is made. No matter what, life is likely to be a mostly unbroken procession of some kind of work or another.  Recently, I got on the train to elsewhere. I left behind a safe, beloved city to pursue the unknown, and I don’t know yet whether it was a great or terrible decision. But I am comforted by the thought that I brought my arms and mind and motivation with me, the tools for rebuilding webs. So many of us die without achieving our goals, but hell, sometimes working towards them is its own achievement. We keep at it, in our caverns or schools or boiler rooms or offices or bedrooms. The result is a life that is, if not well-lived, is never wasted.[end-mark] The post A Spider’s Unsung Industry: Appreciating Kamaji of <i>Spirited Away</i> appeared first on Reactor.
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‘Blatant Disregard for the Law’: GOP Sounds Alarm on Maine Democrat Admitting Non-Citizens Registered to Vote
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‘Blatant Disregard for the Law’: GOP Sounds Alarm on Maine Democrat Admitting Non-Citizens Registered to Vote

As the Trump administration prepares an executive order to ban mail-in voting and require voter identification, Maine’s Democrat secretary of state admitted non-citizen residents are registered to vote in her state. “I’m sure there are, in some isolated incidents, some non-citizens may be on the rolls,” said Shenna Bellows, who is running for Maine governor in 2026. Maine's Secretary of State Shenna Bellows accidentally admits that non-citizens are registered to vote in Maine. But Democrats insisted this is impossible and never happens.. pic.twitter.com/tJFAzDrZ4j— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) August 29, 2025 This comes after Maine refused to comply with Department of Justice’s recent request to ensure Maine’s voter rolls are clean. “Shenna Bellows fully admitted that non-citizens are registered to vote in Maine’s elections, and yet she refuses to clean up the voter rolls,” Republican National Committee press secretary Kiersten Pels told The Daily Signal. “Bellows is undermining Maine voters with her lack of transparency and blatant disregard for the law.” In July 2025, the DOJ requested information from Bellows regarding Maine’s maintenance procedures for complying with the statewide voter registration list provisions of the National Voter Registration Act. The act requires each state to make available for inspection “all records concerning the implementation of programs and activities conducted for the purpose of ensuring the accuracy and currency of official lists of eligible voters.” Bellows refused to comply with the DOJ’s letter. “The Gulf of Maine is awfully cold, but maybe that’s what the DOJ needs to cool down,” she said. “So, here’s my answer to Trump’s DOJ today: go jump in the Gulf of Maine.” Though Bellows was unwilling to work with the DOJ, she did send Maine’s voter rolls to ERIC, a far-left non-profit that has faced data privacy breach concerns. Shenna Bellows, who unconstitutionally tried to remove Trump from the ballot, now says Trump is "throwing the Constitution out the window."While she continues to talk tough about not providing the DOJ with voter data to help secure Maine's election, she DOES send Maine's voter… pic.twitter.com/c5ftKRVpOk— The Maine Wire (@TheMaineWire) August 29, 2025 Bellows has opposed Republican election integrity in the past. In 2024, she attempted to remove President Donald Trump from Maine’s primary election ballot, comparing blocking Trump from the ballot to rejecting candidates who do not meet other prerequisites, like the constitutional age requirement. “Her failure to act and reckless partisanship shows she’s more interested in attacking President Trump than protecting Maine’s elections,” Pels said. The post ‘Blatant Disregard for the Law’: GOP Sounds Alarm on Maine Democrat Admitting Non-Citizens Registered to Vote appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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Banks Urges GOP to Be Working Class Party
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Banks Urges GOP to Be Working Class Party

Sen. Jim Banks, R-Ind., declared his support for the Republican Party “as the party of the working class” on Thursday at the National Conservatism Conference. “Rising GDP and a soaring stock market are great, but real success is what ordinary people care about the most is measured by the strength of our families and what we’re passing on to the next generation,” Banks explained. The Indiana legislator told the assembled group of conservative leaders that he feared that the “American Dream is slipping out of reach for way too many Americans.” “[I]n 1950 half of Americans owned a home and were married by the age of 30. Can you believe it that today, that number is only 12%,” he articulated.  Banks is a freshman senator having taken office in January. He previously served in the House of Representatives from 2017 to 2025 and in the Indiana Senate from 2010 to 2016. The Indiana senator then outlined efforts he was leading in the Senate to strengthen the American family. He discussed introducing legislation to stop companies from buying up homes to artificially increase their prices, stop health care monopolies from price gouging, and to enshrine into federal law President Donald Trump’s tariffs. The former Navy officer also detailed how he supported legislation to double the child tax credit and had asked the Justice Department and Federal Trade Commission to investigate price gouging in the fire truck and health care industries.  “We have the chance to be the party that preserves the American Dream for ordinary, everyday, hard-working people,” Banks noted. “[I]t’s why I’m also calling for an overhaul of the H1B visa program to stop tech companies from passing over American graduates to hire cheaper foreign workers,” the Indiana senator said. Banks warned that the transformation of the GOP into the party for workers still had its opponents inside the Beltway. “There are some in Washington, and I’m meeting a number of them in the United States Senate, on my side of the aisle, who are still resistant to embrace the America First agenda. They want us to keep spending tax dollars on NPR and woke foreign aid. They care more about sweetheart tax breaks for corporations than delivering tax cuts for working families. And there are way too many squishy Republicans still in Congress today who want to undo President Trump’s tariffs,” the senator said. “They are also pushing amnesty, and they want to sell out American workers for cheap labor. We can’t let them do that. We need to continue to build this strong movement and change the way that Washington operates,” Banks continued. “I understand what hard working families in my state want from their government. It’s not complicated. They want us to close the border. They want us to stop selling out to China and stand up to them for ripping us off and stealing our jobs. They want good paying jobs that allows them to buy a home, raise a family, and live the American dream. Those are the people that we’re fighting for,” the Indiana senator concluded. The post Banks Urges GOP to Be Working Class Party appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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Do you miss the 1970s?
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Do you miss the 1970s?

Do you miss the 1970s?
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England Trials Smartphone Rail Payment System with Real-Time Phone Location Tracking
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England Trials Smartphone Rail Payment System with Real-Time Phone Location Tracking

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. A new GPS-based rail fare system is set to launch in England that will track passengers’ movements via their smartphones and charge them after the fact, eliminating the need to buy tickets up front. While it’s being promoted as a step toward a simpler, more efficient travel experience, the system fundamentally relies on real-time location tracking, drawing attention to the increasing role of surveillance in routine public services. The trial started on September 1 on East Midlands Railway routes between Leicester, Derby, and Nottingham. Later in the month, it will be extended to Northern Rail services in Yorkshire, including stops in Leeds, Sheffield, Harrogate, Doncaster, and Barnsley. A total of 4,000 spots are available for those who register through train operator websites. Participants will use an app that generates a barcode for scanning at ticket gates. Once scanned, the phone’s GPS activates, logging the passenger’s movements throughout the day. The system then calculates the cost based on distance travelled and bills the passenger at day’s end. Operators say the fare will always be the cheapest possible for the route taken. Rail minister Lord Peter Hendy has described the current ticketing structure as “far too complicated and long overdue an upgrade to bring it into the 21st century.” He added, “Through these trials we’re doing just that, and making buying tickets more convenient, more accessible and more flexible.” “By putting passenger experience at the heart of our decision-making we’re modernizing fares and ticketing and making it simpler and easier for people to choose rail,” he said. While officials continue to frame the scheme as a win for convenience and pricing, the technology brings a new layer of routine surveillance into an already data-heavy transit environment. The bigger concern isn’t just the tech itself, but how easily this kind of tracking is becoming routine. Getting from A to B is now about generating a detailed record of where you go, when you go, and how often. That data builds up fast, and it doesn’t just sit in a silo. It can be linked to names, behaviors, patterns, and even the people you travel with. As this kind of system spreads, avoiding constant monitoring in public spaces gets harder. There’s also no clear line around how this data will be handled. Who gets access, how long it’s kept, and what else it might be used for are all open questions. The pitch is all about convenience, but skipping the ticket queue might come at the cost of giving up control over where your data ends up. Once your location history is logged, it rarely stays put. It can be passed around, analyzed, and folded into systems that reach far beyond rail travel. If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post England Trials Smartphone Rail Payment System with Real-Time Phone Location Tracking appeared first on Reclaim The Net.
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Senator: The Founders Were Same as Ayatollahs? UPDATE: Americans Disagree
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Senator: The Founders Were Same as Ayatollahs? UPDATE: Americans Disagree

Senator: The Founders Were Same as Ayatollahs? UPDATE: Americans Disagree
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West Coast States Form New Health Alliance To Give Vaccine Advice, Saying CDC Is Now “A Political Tool”
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West Coast States Form New Health Alliance To Give Vaccine Advice, Saying CDC Is Now “A Political Tool”

The new alliance has been formed in response to the recent spate of changes at the federal public health agency.
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Science Explorer
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Shakespeare's Skull Is Missing
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Shakespeare's Skull Is Missing

Shakespeare's grave includes a "curse" warning against disturbing his bones, but centuries later his head appears to have gone missing.
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