General Purpose News Thread

Broken_Erika

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A thread for news that doesn't fit into any other thread that i know about
No Politics PLS

Rockalina the turtle meets member of her own species for the 1st time in 48 years​

The rescued turtle spent decades on a kitchen floor in New Jersey, subsisting mainly on cat food

RockalinaNPebble.jpg


Rockalina the turtle has had a transformative year.

When wildlife rescuers first laid eyes on her back in February, they weren’t sure she’d last the night.

After nearly 50 years living on a kitchen floor in New Jersey, the eastern box turtle had developed ingrown nails, several deformities and dry, sloughing skin. She was too weak to even keep her eyes open.

But 11 months later, she’s thriving at a wildlife sanctuary, soaking up the sun and feasting on worms and berries.

And now, for the first time since she was plucked from the wild in 1977, she has a companion of her own species — a wee baby turtle named Pebble.

“They're doing good,” Chris Leone, Rockalina’s caretaker, told As It Happens host Nil Kӧksal. “They’re a lot of fun to watch.”

‘It looked like a mummy’​

Leone is the founder of Garden State Tortoise, a New Jersey reptile breeding and rescue facility. He first met Rockalina nearly a year ago, when a woman reached out for help.

Her husband’s aunt and uncle had recently died, she said, and she was unsure what to do about the turtle who lived in their home.

The creature, she said, had the run of the house, but resided primarily in the kitchen, where she believes it ate a diet of mostly cat food.

She told Leone the couple’s son had found the turtle outside in 1977 when he was a boy and took her home. He had disabilities that prevented him from caring for his new pet, so the responsibility fell to his parents.

“Now, there was really nobody to take care of the turtle,” Leone said.

But eastern box turtles, he says, aren’t meant to live in a house. They are natural forest dwellers, who like tree cover, lots of humidity and ponds to soak in.

“A linoleum kitchen floor couldn't be any further from what this animal needs,” Leone said. “The animal looked like it was deceased. It looked like a mummy.”

The hard kitchen floors, he said, caused the bones in Rockalina’s fingers to grow “upwards and backwards,” he said.

“That caused the nails to grow in the complete opposite direction and curl over completely to the point where they were actually starting to grow back into her feet,” he said.

Her beak was misshapen, her skin was pale and flaking off, and cat hair had become entangled around one of her legs, cutting off circulation.

“We thought the foot was going to have to be removed,” Leone said. “Once we got her into good shape, we learned that although the leg will always be disfigured, it doesn't have to be amputated and she can actually use it to pivot on.”

Road to recovery​

Over the last 11 months, Garden State Tortoise has documented Rockalina’s recovery on YouTube, where she’s gained a lot of fans.

Because she’s doing so well, staff decided it was time to give her a friend. Eastern box turtles, Leone says, live in colonies and it’s important they socialize with their own kind.

Enter Pebble, a brand new turtle hatched at the facility, just for Rockalina. The duo, Leone says, seem to be hitting it off.

In their supervised interactions so far, they seem curious about each other — sniffing each other and craning their necks to get a good stare.

“Curiosity is a good trigger to know that they're feeling good,” Leone said.

Leone urges people not to remove turtles from their natural habitats. But he says it’s too late for Rockalina to go back to the forest where she’d be unable to defend herself from predators.

So the staff are doing their best to make her as happy as she can be for her remaining days, of which there could be many.

“She could go another 50 years, believe it or not.”
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/asithappens/rockalina-turtle-9.7018623
 

イノシシ20頭「横断」 青森県東通村「稔りふれあいロード」で住民が目撃​

Residents spot 20 wild boars crossing Mino Fureai Road in Higashidori Village, Aomori​


18日午後3時45分ごろ、東通村蒲野沢地区の「稔(みの)りふれあいロード」で、道路を横切る約20頭のイノシシが目撃された。村は同日、村公式LINE(ライン)や防災無線で目撃情報を周知し、住民に注意を呼びかけた。
At 3:45PM on the 18th, Gamanosawa, Higashidori Village reported via its official LINE (messaging app) account and emergency information services for residents to take caution after approximately 20 wild boars were spotted crossing Mino Fureiai Road.

目撃した地域住民によると、イノシシの群れは田んぼがある西側の山手から、畑がある東側の田名部川方面に向かった。現場周辺に民家はないが、畑で作業するため自転車に乗る人やジョギングをする人がいるという。
According to a witness, the board were crossing the road from a field near the mountain on the west side toward a farm near the east side on the Tanabu River. While there are no homes in the area, farm workers regularly use bicycles and there are joggers.

イノシシの大きさは大型犬ほどの個体から小柄なものまでさまざまだった。地域住民は「最初はクマだと思った。車が近づいても平気な顔で歩いていた」と話した。
The boars were varied in size from approximately large dog to small. “I thought they were bears at first. Even though they noticed my car, they just kept walking normally,” reported a local resident.
 

Danish postal service to stop delivering letters after 400 years​

PostNord’s decision to end service on 30 December comes after fear over ‘increasing digitalisation’ of Danish society

The Danish postal service will deliver its last letter on 30 December, ending a more than 400-year-old tradition.

Announcing the decision earlier this year to stop delivering letters, PostNord, formed in 2009 in a merger of the Swedish and Danish postal services, said it would cut 1,500 jobs in Denmark and remove 1,500 red postboxes amid the “increasing digitalisation” of Danish society.

(More on link)

Some company called Dao (no, not the chemicals people) will be delivering letters. I would think that delivering letters would be one of the primary functions of a post office.
 

Central Alberta farmers amazed to welcome triplet calves for 2nd year in a row​

Lucky 7 Cattle Co. bucks the odds, lives up to its name

Mere hours after Albertans welcomed in the new year with shouts of, “Three, two, one,” Lucky 7 Cattle Co. owner Stacey Simpson was incredulously counting upward: “One, two, three?”

Simpson, a purebred Red and Black Angus cattle farmer outside of Sedgewick, Alta., a town about 150 kilometres southeast of Edmonton, said she wasn’t surprised her five-year-old heifer Dukey was showing signs of labour three hours into 2026.

But what did catch her off guard was that Dukey’s symptoms continued, even after birthing two calves.

“Just on my way out of the maternity pen, my dad looked at me and said, ‘I think you better try again,’” Simpson told CBC News. “I kind of rolled my eyes and I’m like, ‘OK, we’ll check.’

“Sure enough, I’m shoulder-deep in this cow and I can just feel the tips on the feet on the third calf coming.

“I’m like, ‘Oh no, here we go again.’”

Dukey’s triplets, dubbed Carla, Darla and Marla, were born healthy, an outcome Simpson and her family are grateful for. The odds are already long for triplet calves to be born, and it’s even more rare for them to survive.

Incredibly, Carla, Darla and Marla are not Lucky 7’s first set of thriving triplets.

Dukey’s own mother calved the farm’s first trio only last year. Hewey, Dewey and Louie are all still part of the Lucky 7 herd and, according to Simpson, their birth was even more remarkable.

“All three of those calves presented correctly on delivery, so she probably could have had all three of those calves unassisted.”

Simpson’s sister Kylie, who is also a Lucky 7 farmer, noted they only “run 35 cows.”

“The odds of it happening are so slim, period. But to have it happen twice is mind-blowing,” she said.

Unlike their counterparts, the future of Carla, Darla and Marla — and their genes — at Lucky 7 Cattle Co. is still to be decided; they may be kept for breeding or sold to the highest bidder.

But in the meantime, Stacey Simpson said she is happy to keep milking the novelty of such a rare occurrence. A video posted to Lucky 7 Cattle Co.’s Facebook page, showing the mother and her calves, had garnered almost two million views as of Thursday, as well as comments from people who live on other continents.

“We’ll probably keep up with Marla, Carla and Darla throughout the year just because we’ve gained a huge social media following from it,” Simpson said.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/sedgewick-triplet-calves-9.7041247
 

Nuclear bunker nears collapse due to erosion​

9c9950f0-f087-11f0-92ac-9f1b3a47bd73.jpg.webp


A nuclear bunker is "just a few days" away from falling into the sea due to coastal erosion.

The brick building, near Tunstall on the East Yorkshire coast, is thought to be about 70 years old and was designed as a look-out post in the event of nuclear war.

Amateur historian Davey Robinson, who is filming its final days, said: "We live on one of the most eroded coastlines in Europe and this bunker hasn't got long left, perhaps just a few days," he said.

East Riding of Yorkshire Council urged people to avoid the area, both at the cliff top and on the beach, and "always maintain a safe distance to the base of eroding cliffs due to the risks associated".

East Yorkshire has some of the fastest eroding coastline in the UK, according to the Environment Agency.

Robinson and his partner Tracy Charlton have visited the site at Tunstall for the last nine mornings in the expectation that the bunker will fall into the sea.

"We are posting the footage on our YouTube channel and it's getting interest from around the world," Robinson said.

The clifftop bunker is one of a number of nuclear monitoring posts around the UK coastline, according to the historical research group Subterranea Brittanica.

Known as the Tunstall ROC (Royal Observer Corps) Post, it is believed to have been built in 1959 and decommissioned in the early 1990s.

Robinson said it contained sleeping and "very basic" living facilities.

"It was designed so that people could live inside it and just wait for a nuclear explosion to register and they could tell other people in other bunkers around the country," he said.

"It never got used thank goodness."

The Holderness coastline is eroding at an average annual rate of about 6.5ft (2m), according to the Environment Agency.

Approximately 3 miles (5km) of land is thought to have been lost since Roman times, including 23 villages, according to Internet Geography.

Robinson said the Tunstall bunker "adds a lot of meaning" to this process.

"It's a symbol of erosion in this area," he said.

"This whole area is eroding at a rapid rate and to see an actual physical thing moving it just shows what's happening really."

Charlton said they intended to keep visiting the site and filming the bunker in the days ahead as it "only had days left" before falling into the sea.

"We're invested in this and I guess we're obliged to keep visiting for the sake of the thousands of people who are now watching our videos on the YouTube channel," she said.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4g0dp65v77o
 
IIRC @Aiken_Drumn is from Yorkshire; maybe he has been there and seen them.
 
Kaja Kallas believes 9/11 was justified
View attachment 755378
Sounds like someone has had a good bit of late night philosophical discussions about individual ethics/personal responsibility in WWII Germany… and has grown weary of apologetics and moral equivalence edgelordery and subtext denying….

That’s my hot take
 

Midnight Oil drummer, co-founder Rob Hirst dead at 70​

Hirst was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2023

Australian band Midnight Oil announced on Tuesday that Rob Hirst, their powerhouse drummer and co-founding member, has died at age 70.

"After fighting heroically for almost three years, Rob is now free of pain — 'a glimmer of tiny light in the wilderness.' He died peacefully, surrounded by loved ones," the band said in a Facebook post. The band included a callout for donations to charities focused on research, support, and awareness concerning pancreatic cancer.

The band's longtime members Peter Garrett, Jim Moginie and Martin Rotsey said in another post: "We are shattered and grieving the loss of our brother Rob. For now there are no words but there will always be songs."

Midnight Oil's origins stretch back to the early 1970s, with band members living in Sydney and Canberra in the early years. The band's self-titled debut album was released domestically in 1978. They released four more albums before 1987's Diesel and Dust established them as a socially conscious band with an international presence.

"We take on, headlong, all the things that you're supposed to avoid," Hirst told United Press International in 1988.

"We fight the battles that we jointly feel we have to fight and we win some and we lose some," he added.

Anthem for Indigenous rights spurred success​

The band's call for repatriation of Indigenous lands, Beds Are Burning, was the biggest smash from Diesel and Dust, reaching No. 1 on Canadian charts and the top 20 on the Billboard charts in the U.S. Dreamworld and Dead Heart, from the same album, also received airplay on rock and alternative radio stations.

As a live act, the band were arresting. Garrett, six-foot-six in height with a shaved head, thrashed madly about the stage, while Hirst laid down what a Toronto Star reviewer deemed "thunderous rhythms" in a 1996 concert review.

Album releases Blue Sky Mining and Earth and Sun and Moon burnished their reputation, with songs Blue Sky Mine, Forgotten Years, Truganini and My Country becoming sturdy additions to their catalogue and live sets.

Hirst shared in many of the songwriting credits, said to have crafted the music for most songs along with Moginie, while Garrett was the primary lyricist.

The band proved popular in Canada, and they were invited by The Tragically Hip to take part in the Kingston, Ont., band's first edition of the Another Roadside Attraction festival in 1993. The two bands, along with Crash Vegas and Daniel Lanois, assembled in a Calgary studio that year to record Land, with proceeds going to the defence of environmentalists fighting logging in Clayoquot Sound in British Columbia.

As with several bands, the advent of the internet and streaming cut into international sales figures, but Midnight Oil continued to release albums until 2002 when Garrett, who studied law at university and first tried to enter federal politics in 1984, plunged in with both feet. He was elected to represent the Labor Party in Australia's House of Representatives in 2004 and later became environment minister in Kevin Rudd's government, and minister of early childhood under Labor prime minister Julia Gillard.

During that time, Hirst kept busy with the fourth and final album from the side project Ghostwriters, which originated in 1990 and even saw him moving to the front of the stage on other instruments.

Garrett eventually left politics, and Midnight Oil periodically reformed for tours and albums. Their most recent album was 2022's Resist, which they supported with shows around the world, including in Toronto and Vancouver.

PM, musicians pay tribute​

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese called Hirst the "real deal" while paying tribute on Tuesday.

"As the beating heart of Midnight Oil, he showered us with the generosity of his talent and his spirit," Albanese posted on social media. "Rob was amazing to listen to and every bit as phenomenal to watch. His power and energy was so incredible you got exhausted just looking at him, but Rob kept on going."

Australian musicians, including Jimmy Barnes and members of INXS and Hoodoo Gurus, also offered condolences on social media.

"We played with them countless times and they were always powerful and amazing. Rob was one of the best drummers I've seen," said INXS bass player Garry Gary Beers in an Instagram post.

Hirst received the cancer diagnosis in April 2023, and endured chemotherapy and a gastric double bypass after that.

In October, Hirst told domestic media outlets he was putting up the Ludwig drum kit he owned and used as far back as the band's second album in 1979 up for auction. It fetched $90,000 ($84,000 Cdn) and proceeds were to go to two charities, including one that supported Indigenous musicians.

Hirst reflected on the band's legacy to the Sydney Morning Herald in late 2025.

"I’m happy we were among those bands — U2, Billy Bragg, all the First Nations musicians here and overseas — pushing the case for justice."
https://www.cbc.ca/news/entertainment/music-obit-hirst-midnight-oil-9.7053107
 
Sounds like someone has had a good bit of late night philosophical discussions about individual ethics/personal responsibility in WWII Germany… and has grown weary of apologetics and moral equivalence edgelordery and subtext denying….

That’s my hot take

I don't fully disagree with her tbh but the idea that she would apply that logic to the crimes of 'western' governments is laughable. Even though Putin is a dictator and the US elects its war criminals.
 
I don’t think she would even apply it outside of Russia. It’s just something she said to keep Russians out.

As far as you consider ordinary citizens culpable, does that include yourself?
 
To continue my hot taking... For my part, I'm thinking, yes...

Paradoxically, ironically... I'm not exactly sure how to describe it... but the past several years have made me feel like I have a little more insight into the zeitgeist of the WWII German citizenry then I'd ever had previously... and paradoxically, if anything I feel more empathetic and simultaneously even less sympathetic to their plight. In other words... I feel like I have a better (albeit imperfect, obviously) perspective on what they were experiencing as a society and as individual members of that society, and as a result, I'm even more disgusted, disappointed, and unsympathetic to them. We (Muricans) suck... They were even worse. They were definitely responsible for what they let their government become, and I'm not inclined to let them off the hook or shed any tears for the doom that they brought upon themselves.

Call up the Guard Gov. Tim, its the least you can do. Will no one rid us of this turbulent buffoon? They say "Father Time is undefeated"... well "hurry down the chimney tonight"...
 
I’m not trying to lead you into something you don’t want to say, but from my understanding the collective responsibility assigned here would also have to fall on the German Jews for their plight.

The Russians who want to flee to Estonia to avoid conscription, to what extent would we say they are not victims themselves? It’s why I’m not in agreement with the Estonian PM’s view, and think it is just a cynical political play to not say the quiet part out loud.

Furthermore, if the Russian people are collectively responsible for the war in Ukraine, then why would anyone deny the goal then is to destroy Russia? If they have this shared responsibility, then why stop at Putin and the inner circle? It strikes me as getting dangerously close to the kind of thinking that motivates people like Netanyahu in Israel, of whom I think many in this thread are decidedly against, so I don’t know how these are squared up because they seem to me to be very similar.
 
The goal is not to “destroy Russia” that would be silly.

The goal is to prevent them from dominating Eastern Europe, keeping them out (of Estonia)seems a logical first step.

Wherever a Russian goes misery usually follows.

It is often easy for people in Western Europe to merely observe the issues and conflicts faced by their post-communist and post-Soviet counterparts in the East. But we should all ask ourselves: Would I be able to shake the belief that if it weren’t for the Russian and Russian-speaking minority, the war wouldn’t have happened? Would I be able to, despite the differences, remain firm in the belief that we are in this together—that this is our fight, and only together can we win it?
 
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The goal is not to “destroy Russia” that would be silly.
I think we got some wires crossed somewhere, probably on my end resulting from confusing language. I’m not saying the goal is to destroy Russia, I’m saying it seems like a plausible wanted objective of someone who thinks that Russians as a people are collectively responsible as a whole.

The goal is to prevent them from dominating Eastern Europe, keeping them out (of Estonia)seems a logical first step.

Wherever a Russian goes misery usually follows.
I would agree except I would not place the blame on Russians as a people, not in such a way so as that they are all supporters of their government.

What I find disagreeable here is the Estonian PM’s position that people are responsible for “their state” even in cases where they cannot exercise meaningful control. Would she have said that about North Korea, or the Estonian SSR historically?

Getting back to the part I agree with, there has been a precedent of a country having a Russian minority population, being a former SSR, and having Russia intervene militarily under the guise of protecting them: Ukraine twice and Transnistria since the 1990’s.
 
I would not say every single Russian is individually responsible for the attrocities of every Russian autocrat, but as group they carry a moral responsibility to see their nation does not inflict misery on its neighbours.

Like the Germans, French and indeed US Americans.
 
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