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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
6 w

WHITE HOUSE ADVISOR ON THE MANIPULATION OF SPACE-TIME
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www.sgtreport.com

WHITE HOUSE ADVISOR ON THE MANIPULATION OF SPACE-TIME

by Joseph P. Farrell, Giza Death Star: Every now and then, as regular readers of this website are aware, I receive an article or story from someone that vaults it immediately into the “finals-must-blog” folder. That’s certainly the case with today’s story which was shared with us by none other than Catherine Austin Fitts, whose […]
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
6 w

An Environmental Triumph 400 Million Years in the Making
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reasonstobecheerful.world

An Environmental Triumph 400 Million Years in the Making

Each planting season, Claudia Bashian-Victoroff ventures out into Bole Woods, a 70-acre old-growth forest on the outskirts of Holden Forests & Gardens in the Cleveland suburbs, in search of fungi. But as she navigates the sugar maples, chestnut oaks, American beech and western red cedar that tower overhead, she focuses not on the forest floor but on what lies beneath.  Kneeling beside a stand of maples, she clears away the leaf litter to reveal the topsoil and digs up the first few inches, where the vast majority of soil microbes are active. Laced throughout, weaving an intricate, microscopic web, are the mycorrhizal fungi she’s after — fungi that have spent 400 million years learning to live in symbiosis with plants, including the trees throughout Bole Woods and at least 80 percent of all species on the planet.  Bashian-Victoroff doesn’t need much soil. A single spoonful can contain miles of fungal hyphae and filaments, engaged in an ancient evolutionary exchange with the trees to which they’ve bonded. The fungi gather up water and nutrients, and deliver them to the trees. In return, they receive carbohydrates developed through photosynthesis, which they fix into the soil as they grow. A pine root colonized by mycorrhizal fungi sends a network of white filaments into the surrounding soil in search of water and nutrients. Credit: Mike Amaranthus. It’s a prosperous cycle, and Bashian-Victoroff is among a growing global community of researchers and conservationists taking advantage of this relationship to restore forests and other degraded ecosystems. Their goal: Promote the health of the soil beneath our feet and the plants it supports, sequester carbon and make agriculture more sustainable.  The soil in Bole Woods is part of a novel experiment in forest soil transfer that began when Cuyahoga County embarked on an effort to revive its declining tree canopy. In Cleveland, the portion of land covered by trees has fallen to 18 percent as a result of development and disease, with scientists suggesting 30 percent as a minimum target.  As one of the county’s partners on the project, Bashian-Victoroff, a fungal ecologist at Holden and a PhD student at Cleveland State University, has given some 600 new trees a boost by planting each of them with 50 grams of soil, gathered from the nearby old-growth forest and teeming with fungi ready to lend a helping hand. By utilizing soil from Bole Woods, she’s hoping to harness the power of locally-adapted fungi to help the trees grow bigger and survive longer. Weighed down by negative news? Our smart, bright, weekly newsletter is the uplift you’ve been looking for. [contact-form-7] “We’re taking advantage of associations that have been happening between trees and fungi in our environment for thousands of years,” Bashian-Victoroff says. Claudia Bashian-Victoroff takes preliminary size measurements of inoculated trees before planting them at restoration sites around Cuyahoga County. Credit: Sarah Kyker, HF&G. Holden first experimented with soil transfer nearly a decade ago, using the method to help bring forest back to land that had been used for years as a golf course. It proved successful, establishing healthy new fungal communities that Bashian-Victoroff thinks of as “a great insurance policy for trees.” Because mycorrhizal fungi are small and supple enough to penetrate soil more effectively than plant roots, they offer myriad protective benefits to their symbiotic partners, including support in times of nutrient or pathogen stress, drought tolerance and shelter from toxic substances through the absorption of heavy metals.  This winter, Bashian-Victoroff plans to analyze the urban trees planted with soil from Bole Woods to understand how their growth compares with control subjects, as well as their soil nutrient content and the fungal community’s composition. Because mycorrhizal fungi rely on their plant counterparts just as much as plants rely on them, their populations are diminished in disrupted ecosystems, making restoration projects like the one in Cuyahoga County a vital — if underappreciated — act of fungal conservation.  They are also an act of climate mitigation, considering that the carbon drawn down by mycorrhizae to develop their fungal networks is equivalent to more than one-third of annual global fossil fuel emissions.  “There’s no better way to sequester carbon from the atmosphere and address the climate crisis than protecting and restoring our soils,” says Evan Buckman, a consultant with the Soil Food Web School, which has taught farmers in more than 100 countries how to reintroduce fungi to promote soil health.  Mycorrhizal fungi can be an important part of a broader suite of climate solutions, says Anne Polyakov, a fungal conservation and restoration scientist with the Society for the Protection of Underground Networks, or SPUN, which recently used machine learning to map the planet’s mycorrhizal networks in an effort to promote conservation. These benefits, including enhancing the effectiveness of reforestation efforts like the one Bashian-Victoroff is undertaking in Cleveland, make mycorrhizal fungi a critical part of healthy ecosystems, Polyakov says. They “are often the quiet, invisible drivers of whether restoration succeeds or struggles,” she says, knitting together soil and carrying out their critical resource exchange. At Rhizocore Technologies, a nascent U.K. company focused on woodland regeneration, all of that restorative potential gets bound up in small pellets the size of a sugar cube, packed full of locally adapted soil fungi. The company provides them to its dozens of partners — landowners, conservation nonprofits and forestry agencies — to be planted with saplings as a subterranean support system. In just a few short years, Rhizocore has treated more than 600,000 trees across the U.K., Europe and Australia, reporting improved survival and growth rates in its field trials. Sitka spruce, a key timber species in the U.K, has shown a 20 percent increase in both survival and growth rates with the pellets, Rhizocore says. In the effort to rebuild damaged ecosystems, “it’s got to start from the soils upwards,” says Petra Guy, a Rhizocore data scientist. Potato plants from a field trial in Idaho. The plant on the right came from a field inoculated with mycorrhizal fungi and received 30 percent less fertilizer. The one on the left came from a field not inoculated with mycorrhizal fungi and was given a full complement of fertilizer. Credit: Mike Amaranthus. In the agricultural context, mycorrhizal fungi are a boon as well, improving plant productivity by up to 40 percent and resiliency to environmental stresses while fixing carbon and reducing farmers’ reliance on the fertilizer inputs that have become an environmental crisis.  Mike Amaranthus, a former soil scientist at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, calls mycorrhizal fungi a “low-tech solution” for growing nutrient-dense foods and sinking carbon into the soil. In 1995, he founded Mycorrhizal Applications, an Oregon-based manufacturer of mycorrhizal inoculants — fungi introduced to soil at the time of planting to support plant development — that the company sells to farmers, foresters and horticulturists. Today, that company is part of a billion-dollar inoculant industry. For farmers, a healthy mycorrhizal population can form part of the answer to the pressing questions that have complicated the task of growing food sustainably for both people and the planet. Where other solutions may be good for the bottom line but harmful to the environment, fostering rich, vibrant soil dense with fungal diversity can promote both goals at once.  “You can have higher yields, higher productivity and lower costs when you invest in working with nature instead of against her, and invest in feeding life into the soil rather than fighting it with chemicals,” Buckman says. Although soil fungi aren’t a silver bullet, Amaranthus says, they’re an important tool in a variety of settings. That’s due, in part, to their ability to cycle nutrients from plants to soil and back again, including phosphorus, a critical building block that is otherwise immobile in soil. “They’re basically the stomach of the plant,” he says. Try as we might to develop methods to support plant health, “there’s nothing we can do that’s more efficient” than the work naturally performed by soil fungi, soil biologist Kris Nichols says. Wait, you're not a member yet? Join the Reasons to be Cheerful community by supporting our nonprofit publication and giving what you can. Join Cancel anytime Nichols is fond of quoting Field of Dreams, offering a reminder that “if you build it, they will come.” By creating a hospitable environment for mycorrhizal fungi to flourish — whether that means cover cropping in agricultural fields so fungi always have plant life to lean on, or planting trees with locally adapted fungi — farmers and conservationists can make the most of their expansive capabilities.  They’re still learning how best to harness those benefits because, despite their practically primordial history, soil fungi were only identified in the relatively recent past. The German botanist and biologist Albert Bernhard Frank reported on their widespread diversity in 1885 and first coined the term “mycorrhiza.” In that sense, says Polyakov, mycorrhizal fungi are “both ancient partners and a very modern scientific puzzle”.  The post An Environmental Triumph 400 Million Years in the Making appeared first on Reasons to be Cheerful.
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Country Roundup
Country Roundup
6 w

Government Shutdown: What Closes and What Stays Open
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tasteofcountry.com

Government Shutdown: What Closes and What Stays Open

From Social Security to small biz loans — here’s what stays running (and what doesn’t) if lawmakers fail to make a deal. Continue reading…
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One America News Network Feed
One America News Network Feed
6 w

The suspect in Charlie Kirk’s killing appeared in court for a second time
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The suspect in Charlie Kirk’s killing appeared in court for a second time

The suspect in Charlie Kirk’s killing appeared in court for a second time
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One America News Network Feed
One America News Network Feed
6 w

Eric Trump says his father put him to work as a kid instead of being handed an easy life.
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Eric Trump says his father put him to work as a kid instead of being handed an easy life.

Eric Trump says his father put him to work as a kid instead of being handed an easy life.
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One America News Network Feed
One America News Network Feed
6 w ·Youtube News & Oppinion

YouTube
NATIONAL GUARD DEPLOYED TO PORTLAND AS OREGON SUES TRUMP ADMINISTRATION
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
6 w

Super Bowl platforms anti-ICE DRAG QUEEN rapper Bad Bunny to troll MAGA
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www.theblaze.com

Super Bowl platforms anti-ICE DRAG QUEEN rapper Bad Bunny to troll MAGA

From Bruce Springsteen to Britney Spears, the NFL used to platform legends at Super Bowl halftime shows — but that has irrefutably changed.In 2026, rapper Bad Bunny will headline the 2026 Super Bowl halftime show, and BlazeTV host Jason Whitlock believes the choice is a slap in the face to not only President Donald Trump and MAGA supporters — but to Americans everywhere. “They have selected a Latin, gay, hip-hop, gangster, trap music, no-english-speaking rapper to perform at the Super Bowl this year. His name is Bad Bunny. I had heard the name,” Whitlock says.“And once you start going down the rabbit hole, this is a demonic rapper selected by Jay-Z and the National Football League to promote demonic activity. And I think it’s a reaction in part, partially, to what the Charlie Kirk assassination sparked,” he continues, noting that it was a “terrific moment of religious revival.”“And the Super Bowl this year is in Northern California, and that is the headquarters of Gavin Newsom and Kamala Harris and Nancy Pelosi and just this whole revolutionary Marxist left-wing. That’s their headquarters, Northern California,” he explains.Whitlock loves football but unfortunately is having to come to terms with the NFL now being “a part of a demonic movement” that’s been run by Jay-Z since 2020.“This is an unapologetic drug dealer,” Whitlock says of Jay-Z. “Says that he was involved in violence and murder, but we’ve placed him on a pedestal. Him and all of his demonic music. We’ve placed him on a pedestal in the National Football League. The most powerful force in American culture.”“And so Bad Bunny, Puerto Rican rapper, not one song does he sing in English. Not one. So we’re about to have a halftime show where most of the audience will have no idea what’s going on,” Whitlock adds.“But I guarantee you, Bad Bunny’s going to put on a drag show at halftime because that’s how he got there. By redefining masculinity, by dressing in women’s clothing, by pretending, well, ‘I’m not gay, I’m sexually fluid,’” he continues.In one music video, Bad Bunny does dress in drag, going as far to wear what appears to be pounds of makeup and giant fake breasts.“The National Football League is going to put on a halftime drag show,” Whitlock says, disturbed. “I can’t do it. And I’m telling you, I love football, but I fear God more than I love football. They’re grooming our babies. We’re going to pay a price for this.”Want more from Jason Whitlock?To enjoy more fearless conversations at the crossroads of culture, faith, sports, and comedy with Jason Whitlock, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
6 w

Gavin Newsom’s ‘fascist’ slur echoes in the streets
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www.theblaze.com

Gavin Newsom’s ‘fascist’ slur echoes in the streets

Over the weekend, California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) called White House adviser Stephen Miller a “FASCIST” — all caps — on X. His official press office account repeated the smear. Hours later, a horrific shooting struck a Latter-day Saints church service in Michigan. The two events were unrelated, but the juxtaposition raised an obvious question: Why inflame the public with reckless language at a moment when violence already runs high?Meanwhile, Attorney General Pam Bondi unsettled conservatives weeks earlier when she said she would prosecute “hate speech.” After decades of watching universities and the media brand nearly every Christian or conservative position as “hate,” many asked whether Bondi was simply turning the same weapon around. Should the right fight with the left’s tactics, or should it fight with righteousness?We don’t need to wait for courts. The most powerful judgment comes from ordinary Americans who say, peacefully and firmly: Enough.Bondi later clarified: She meant only speech that incites violence. That matters. But it also forces a deeper look at what counts as incitement under the First Amendment.What the Supreme Court saysThe leading case is Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969). The Supreme Court ruled that government may not punish “advocacy of the use of force or of law violation” unless the speech is:directed at inciting imminent lawless action,intended to produce that violence, andlikely to succeed.That’s why the classic “fire in a crowded theater” illustration works: If you yell “fire” without cause, and people are trampled, your “speech” helped cause the injuries.But political and cultural debate is different. The court has given enormous latitude to speech in the public square, even when it is crude or inflammatory.Where the line blursTwo other principles complicate matters.First, libel law: False statements that damage a reputation can lead to civil liability, though public figures face a higher burden (which is why so many crazy National Enquirer stories survive lawsuits).Second, known risk: If a public figure keeps using rhetoric he has been warned may incite violence, and violence follows, he could face legal exposure.That’s where Democrats like Newsom invite scrutiny. They lecture the public about “toning down rhetoric,” yet hurl the same charges themselves. At the attempted assassination of Charlie Kirk, one cartridge bore the phrase, “Hey fascist! Catch!” Democrats know this language fuels hatred. They keep using it anyway. At best, it is hypocrisy. At worst, it edges toward the standard they want to impose on conservatives.The moral dimensionHypocrisy is ugly, of course, but it isn’t illegal. Nor should it be. The First Amendment protects the right to be foolish, offensive, and wrong. The remedy for bad speech is not government censorship but the judgment of a free people.Conservatives do not need to silence their opponents. They can simply withdraw support: Stop watching their shows, stop buying their books, stop supporting their advertisers, and stop voting for their candidates. Hypocrites can keep talking into the void.RELATED: The right message: Justice. The wrong messenger: Pam Bondi. Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty ImagesAnd we can model a better way. Instead of trading insults, use arguments. Expose false assumptions and dismantle them in public view. That was Charlie Kirk’s example, and it is the model conservatives need to multiply.Marxist professors may keep their jobs, but let them lecture to empty classrooms. Late-night hosts may keep sneering, but let them do so without advertisers. That is how a free people governs the public square — by choosing what to reward and what to ignore.Discernment over censorshipChristians and conservatives should not wait for government to police “hate speech.” That path leads only to disappointment, or worse, to censorship of our own beliefs when power changes hands.Instead, take practical steps:Teach young people how to spot manipulative rhetoric and defeat it with arguments.Withdraw money, time, and attention from those who abuse free speech.Support institutions that foster open debate rather than silencing it.If Democrats someday cross the Brandenburg line and face legal consequences, so much the better. But we don’t need to wait for courts. The most powerful judgment comes from ordinary Americans who say, peacefully and firmly: Enough.
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YubNub News
YubNub News
6 w

Iowa School Board Yanks License of Superintendent Arrested by ICE
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yubnub.news

Iowa School Board Yanks License of Superintendent Arrested by ICE

Des Moines schools Superintendent Ian Roberts in September 2025. School district officials said they didn’t know Roberts was in the country illegally WOI Local 5 News via APThe Iowa Board of Educational…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
6 w

Louisiana Issues Arrest Warrant for California Doctor Who Mailed Abortion Pills
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yubnub.news

Louisiana Issues Arrest Warrant for California Doctor Who Mailed Abortion Pills

Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill talks with the media in front of the Hale Boggs Federal Building in New Orleans on May 19, 2025. David Grunfeld/The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate via AP,…
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