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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
3 w

The Ancient Woodland Practice Boosting British Biodiversity
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reasonstobecheerful.world

The Ancient Woodland Practice Boosting British Biodiversity

Every year, around the middle of summer, Alex Lack finds himself surprised by the buzz in Bradfield Woods, the forest he manages in Suffolk, a county in eastern England. Standing in a glade on a warm summer day, insects flit busily between shrubs and wildflowers. Hundreds of red admiral, peacock and brimstone butterflies float through the air.  “There’s a constant hum of things flying around,” says Lack, who works with Suffolk Wildlife Trust. “It’s extraordinary.”  Today, woodlands cover only 13 percent of the U.K.’s land area. But for centuries, much of Britain would have looked like Bradfield Woods — and hosted a similar melange of invertebrates, small mammals and plants of all sizes. “Half the countryside must have been like this at some point,” Lack says. Eery 25 years, many of the trees in Bradfield Woods are cut down to the ground and then allowed to sprout and regrow. Credit: Jack Cripps The U.K. is facing a precipitous decline in biodiversity, with one in six species at risk of disappearing. But Bradfield Woods is teeming with life, including endangered dormice, threatened nightingales, 370 flowering plant species and more than 400 types of fungi. This forest is a refuge in part because every 25 years, many of the trees are cut down to the ground and then allowed to sprout and regrow, an ancient practice called coppicing. Bradford Woods has been managed this way for more than seven centuries — and now, the practice is being reinvigorated across Britain, from urban marshes to northern forests. Coppicing, Lack says, is “probably still the best thing you can do for a broadleaf woodland of this type as a management tool from a biodiversity point of view.” The process is simple: Hardwood, deciduous trees — such as oak, ash and birch — are cut back to the stump, leaving some of the larger trees to grow into maturity. New shoots emerge from the stool, as the stump is called. Then, after the sprouts grow into slim, straight poles — a period that could range from a couple years to 25 years — they get cut back to the stool. That leads the tree to regenerate new sprouts, and the process begins again. An old tree waiting to be cut again at Bradfield Woods. Courtesy of Suffolk Wildlife Trust Coppicing may have been practiced in England as early as the Neolithic period. A trackway built in the fourth millennium B.C. in England had a foundation of long wooden poles of the type that are harvested through coppicing. Written records from the Roman empire describe coppiced forests across Europe. For thousands of years, coppicing supplied people across the continent with timber for building material and fuel, according to Keith Kirby, visiting researcher in the Department of Biology at Oxford University. Firm and springy ash wood became tool handles. Sheep were held in pens built from coppiced hazel. Oak coppice was an important supply for charcoal and an ingredient for tanning leather. Through medieval times, most woodland across Britain was probably coppiced, according to Kirby — each tree species cut back at a different time interval based on its properties. And this cycle of coppicing had a big impact on the region’s plants and animals. Weighed down by negative news? Our smart, bright, weekly newsletter is the uplift you’ve been looking for. [contact-form-7] Each time the trees are cut back to the stump in a particular area, the forest floor is flooded with light. Low-growing vegetation, like grasses and wildflowers, spring up in the warm, bright clearing — attracting pollinators and insects. Brambles and shrubs take root, giving refuge to migratory birds. Eventually the shoots of the coppiced trees grow up and begin to cast the area into shade, until the trees are cut back again. “You’ve got a patchwork of open woodland, dense thickets where it’s just regrowing, and then slightly older stuff,” Kirby says. “That’s really good for a whole range of species.”
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100 Percent Fed Up Feed
100 Percent Fed Up Feed
3 w

Chinese National Who Formerly Worked At Cancer Center Accused Of Attempting To Steal US-Funded Research
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Chinese National Who Formerly Worked At Cancer Center Accused Of Attempting To Steal US-Funded Research

A Chinese researcher who formerly worked at the MD Anderson Cancer Center was charged for allegedly attempting to steal U.S.-funded cancer research and take it to China. Authorities arrested Yunhai Li, 35, at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston in July after border patrol discovered confidential medical records on his laptop during an inspection. Li was scheduled to board a flight to China. “Former MD Anderson cancer researcher Yunhai Li charged with Theft of Trade Secrets (third degree felony) and Tampering with a Government Record (class A misdemeanor),” the Harris County District Attorney stated. “Theft of Trade Secrets carries a penalty of two to ten years in prison and fines up to $10,000. Tampering with a Government Record is punishable with up to a year in jail and a $4,000,” it added. Former MD Anderson cancer researcher Yunhai Li charged with Theft of Trade Secrets (third degree felony) and Tampering with a Government Record (class A misdemeanor). Theft of Trade Secrets carries a penalty of two to ten years in prison and fines up to $10,000. Tampering with… pic.twitter.com/q2NdtbYcVt — Harris County District Attorney (@HarrisCountyDAO) August 25, 2025 More from the New York Post: The Chinese national, who was employed as a researcher at MD Anderson Cancer Center since 2022, was reportedly working on a vaccine to prevent breast cancer from spreading before abruptly quitting on July 1 and uploading the nearly-completed research to a Chinese server on his computer. “Houston is proudly home to some of the most groundbreaking medical institutions in the world – publicly funded centers that are saving lives each day thanks to their innovative research,” District Attorney Sean Teare said in a statement. “We have zero tolerance for any attempts that hurt our nation and our community’s ability to pioneer critical medical breakthroughs.” Prosecutors said Li uploaded his research to his personal Google Drive while employed at the cancer center, and when caught by the institution, deleted the files and proved he had done so. But Li – whose potentially life-changing work was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Department of Defense – was also being paid by Chinese entities and had shared his files to a similar drive on a Chinese server called Baidu, court documents showed, Fox 26 reported. “We were able to detain him as he was trying to get on a flight to China,” Teare said, according to FOX 26 Houston. “There was a pretty good chance that he was going to get deported or leave the country – so we needed to file something. We needed to make sure that he was going to stay here, the information was going to stay here, and he was going to be held accountable,” he added. MORE – Li said he downloaded about 90 gigabytes worth of files and folders for research funded by the NIH and DOD and intended to "continue his research" in China. His research visa was approved by the U.S. State Department.https://t.co/m4FaO3DfeF — Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) August 26, 2025 FOX 26 Houston shared additional details: Documents say on the Baidu drive, investigators found, “unpublished research data and articles representing trade secrets, including material-restricted confidential research data, writings, drawings and models.” “That intellectual property stays with us, so we can save lives,” said Teare. Documents also say Li was receiving grant funding through the National Natural Science Foundation of China as well as performing and publishing research for The First Affiliated Hospital of Chongqing Medical University prior to and during his employment at MD Anderson, saying Li did not disclose the conflict of interest. In the documents is a sworn statement signed by Li admitting to the acts, saying in the text, “I believe I have the right to possess and retain this data.”
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BlabberBuzz Feed
BlabberBuzz Feed
3 w

Democrats Realizing That Americans Don't Have Empathy For Criminals
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Democrats Realizing That Americans Don't Have Empathy For Criminals

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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
3 w

The woke party’s favorite costume: Moderation
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The woke party’s favorite costume: Moderation

I usually enjoy David Harsanyi’s critiques of the left. But in a recent column, he drew a distinction I can’t accept. Quoting Rahm Emanuel’s plea for Democrats to rally behind “Build, baby, build!” Harsanyi praised politicians he believes embody a centrist alternative to the party’s radicals: Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, Virginia gubernatorial candidate Abigail Spanberger, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, and North Carolina Gov. Josh Stein.Harsanyi presented these figures as the future of a Democratic Party that might rediscover moderation. He contrasted them with open socialists like New York City's Zohran Mamdani, whom he regards as the party’s worst tendencies made flesh. In his telling, Beshear, Spanberger, Shapiro, and Stein represent a kind of Democratic “loyal opposition” that conservatives should welcome.Abigail Spanberger shows how the Democratic ‘moderate’ label works: not as a rejection of cultural radicalism but as a smoother delivery system for it.That picture collapses under scrutiny. On social questions, the supposed moderates fall squarely in line with the party’s most zealous activists. Beshear, though personable and pragmatic on some issues, is an LGBTQ fanatic who promotes woke causes across Kentucky. Spanberger has been a reliable ally of the gender-identity movement and has now gone so far as to support biological men competing in women’s sports. Stein in North Carolina vetoed four separate bills meant to curb DEI excesses and limit radical gender programs in his state.These aren’t minor disagreements tucked around the edges. They reveal a deeper truth: The “moderates” whom Harsanyi and Fox News commentators now flatter are not moderates at all. They dress the same ideology in calmer rhetoric. Spanberger, the supposed pragmatist, sounds indistinguishable from Tim Walz or Mamdani when she explains her social positions.So why do some on the right elevate them? Because these Democrats don’t call themselves socialists, don’t chant slogans for Hamas, and don’t traffic in the same racial agitation as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Jasmine Crockett, or Omar Fateh. But the distinction is cosmetic. On gender, DEI, and race politics, the so-called moderates embrace the same policies.This misreading exposes a larger problem on the right. For years, the Republican establishment avoided direct confrontation on cultural issues, preferring to rally donors around national defense, Israel, or deregulation. On marriage and gender, Republicans surrendered the ground years ago. When the Supreme Court decided Obergefell v. Hodges in 2015, Conservatism Inc. shrugged. Now, some seem relieved to pretend “moderates” in the Democratic Party represent a saner alternative. They don’t.And the Democrats know it. Clinton-era strategists at the Third Way think tank now tell their party to tone down the woke jargon and talk more about housing or infrastructure. But Third Way doesn’t advise abandoning cultural radicalism — only camouflaging it. The goal is simple: Keep core constituencies like college-educated white women and black urban voters while soothing independents with bread-and-butter messaging. Beshear, Stein, Spanberger, and the others know their futures depend on that balancing act.This is where Republicans must stop indulging illusions. They will be forced to fight on this terrain whether they like it or not.RELATED: Radical left poised to redefine America’s cities Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty ImagesIn Virginia, Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears — a black conservative who supports Trump’s immigration policy and holds traditional views on marriage and gender — trails Spanberger despite Spanberger’s increasingly open embrace of the left’s cultural program. In Northern Virginia’s suburbs, her positions do not hurt her. They energize her base. The clearer she becomes, the more firmly those voters rally to her side.That is the lesson Republicans cannot ignore. Spanberger shows how the Democratic “moderate” label works: not as a rejection of cultural radicalism but as a smoother delivery system for it. Sears, to her credit, understands the stakes. She knows she cannot avoid the social questions. If she does, she loses. Her only path forward is to expose Spanberger’s record and force voters to confront it.What’s happening in Virginia is the same fight Trump is waging nationally — against a cultural left entrenched in the administrative state, NPR, and the universities. These battles connect. They will not fade, and the right cannot win them by pretending “moderates” exist in the Democratic Party.If Republicans cling to that illusion, they won’t just lose a governorship here or a Senate seat there. They will lose the defining fight over culture, identity, and the moral core of the nation. The Democrats’ so-called moderates are not the antidote to radicalism. They are the mask that allows it to advance.
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YubNub News
YubNub News
3 w

Novak Djokovic Is Trying to Solve Riddles at the US Open but Is Back in the 3rd Round
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Novak Djokovic Is Trying to Solve Riddles at the US Open but Is Back in the 3rd Round

Novak Djokovic of Serbia celebrates match point against Zachary Svajda of the United States during their Men's Singles Second Round match on Day Four of the 2025 US Open at USTA Billie Jean King National…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
3 w

Daniil Medvedev Is Fined $42,500 for Unsportsmanlike Conduct and Racket Abuse for US Open Outburst
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Daniil Medvedev Is Fined $42,500 for Unsportsmanlike Conduct and Racket Abuse for US Open Outburst

Daniil Medvedev, of Russia, bottom right, reacts next to chair umpire, Greg Allensworth, left, after a photographer ran onto the court during a match against Benjamin Bonzi, of France, in the first-round…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
3 w

US Open Foes Taylor Townsend and Jelena Ostapenko Get Into a Tense Back-and-Forth After Match
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US Open Foes Taylor Townsend and Jelena Ostapenko Get Into a Tense Back-and-Forth After Match

Alex de Minaur, of Australia, top in black, serves to Christopher O'Connell, of Australia, during the first round of the U.S. Open tennis championships, on Aug. 26, 2025, in New York. Frank Franklin II/AP…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
3 w

Amish Woman Accused of Killing Her 4-Year-Old Son by Throwing Him Into an Ohio Lake
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Amish Woman Accused of Killing Her 4-Year-Old Son by Throwing Him Into an Ohio Lake

People stand over the site where investigators say 40-year-old Ruth Miller of Millersburg, Ohio, drove a golf cart into Atwood Lake, Ohio Aug. 23, 2025, after she allegedly killed her 4-year-old son by…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
3 w

White House Fires CDC Director Just Weeks Into the Job After She Refuses To Resign, Clashes With RFK Jr. Over COVID Vaccines
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White House Fires CDC Director Just Weeks Into the Job After She Refuses To Resign, Clashes With RFK Jr. Over COVID Vaccines

The new director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Susan Monarez, has been fired by the White House after she refused orders to resign. Ms. Monarez, who was just weeks into the job, had…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
3 w

Hegseth Announces Chinese Nationals No Longer Service Pentagon’s Cloud Systems
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Hegseth Announces Chinese Nationals No Longer Service Pentagon’s Cloud Systems

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth gives an update on Microsoft employing Chinese nationals to write code for Pentagon cloud systems on Aug. 27, 2025. @SecDef via X/Screenshot via The Epoch TimesU.S. Defense…
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