Weird News of the World Thread

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Bugs Have Already Evolved Immunity to GMO Corn

Well that certainly didn't take very long. According to a study published Monday, the Western Corn Rootworm (actually a beetle larvae) has already developed a resistance to not one but two strains of generically modified corn thanks to the over-reliance and improper implementation of the crops by farmers in Iowa.

Researchers first discovered that the worms were growing resistant to the Cry3Bb1 strain of Bt Corn back in 2009. Two years later, researchers subsequently found the worms chomping on a second strain of Bt Corn, mCry3A, in an adjacent field—spurring fears that the worms may have developed cross-resistance to both strains due to their close proximity to one another.

Turns out both Cry3Bb1 and mCry3A when managed incorrectly don't produce enough toxin to kill the largest and healthiest of rootworms, which quickly led the population to select for larger, more robust (and therefore more toxin-resistant) specimens. So now Iowa has bigger, more destructive rootworms that can shrug off the effects Bt Corn's toxins. Nature, it seems, has indeed found a way.

http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2014/03/12/1317179111

Natural selection at it's finest
 
i have a feeling that roaches will eventually render us extinct.
 
Watch a scuba diver instantly put a shark to sleep with this neat trick

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He is Aquaman!
I'm going to CA this summer to start my shark research. I have no idea whether tonic immobility actually works on my species, however...will be fun to try.
 
That's true! I just couldn't resist the opportunity to be pedantic...as usual.
Pedantic is practically a requirement on the internet. Or being over the top and completely irrational. Bonus points are awarded if you do both.
 
Court Rules That Encouraging Suicide Is Legal

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William Melchert-Dinkel (pictured), a former nurse in Minnesota, served a year in prison for encouraging two people (who did commit suicide) to commit suicide. Yesterday, the state supreme court said that what he did was not a crime.

The particulars of Melchert-Dinkel's case are even worse than they sound: he not only used the internet to encourage two people— a 32 year-old man in England and a 19 year-old woman in Canada— to kill themselves, he also "posed as a young, suicidal, female nurse and tried to persuade the victims to hang themselves while he watched via webcam." That is odious human conduct by any measure. But was it criminal?

The Minnesota Supreme Court said no, writing that "the State may prosecute Melchert-Dinkel for assisting another in committing suicide, but not for encouraging or advising another to commit suicide." From the Wall Street Journal:

Certain speech is beyond First Amendment protection, such as fraud, incitement of a violation of the law, and speech that plays a key part in a crime. The court rejected the state's contention that Mr. Melchert-Dinkel's words fit those exceptions. Suicide isn't illegal in Minnesota, so his speech couldn't have incited a crime or been integral to criminal conduct, Justice Anderson wrote.
Here we have an example of a case in which the details of an individual's conduct may be bad, but our notions of justice and morality cause us to defer to a good, larger principle. In what other sorts of cases might this framework apply?

http://online.wsj.com/news/articles...788065518?mod=WSJ_WSJ_US_News_5&mg=reno64-wsj

Man what a sick individual. I've lost an uncle and a cousin to suicide and if a person is serious about it they are going to do it. But what kind of weirdo want's to encourage people to do this and watch? And I find it bizarre that this is legal
 
Male Strippers Stop an Armed Robbery With Their Bare Hands and Chests

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An armed meth head was no match for Australia's premier male stripping troupe, the Thunder From Down Under, who recently took a gunman down thanks in part to the strength of their "dynamic dance routines, barely there costumes, state-of-the-art lighting and chiseled abs."

According to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, an unidentified male between 25 and 30 broke into the Thunder From Down Under dressing room at the Excalibur Hotel in Las Vegas and stole some of the performers' personal belongings.

According to an arrest report, the man, who is being identified only as a "John Doe," was witnessed wandering around the backstage and auditorium area of the show wearing a SWAT hat and shoes and a firefighter's shirt.

Several people noticed him but just assumed he was a new dancer.
When performers noticed their makeup and costumes were missing, they confronted him and tackled him to the floor. At some point he pulled out a firearm.

The gun was fired during the struggle, but police said no one was hit. One person received a powder burn from the impact of the shot and was treated at the scene.
According to FOX, the show went on with its regular performance the next night.

http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/las-vegas-police-trying-id-man-thunder-down-under-fight

I think we just found the plot for Magic Mike 2
 
He didn't participate but he did encourage. It's a fine line but one that has to exist where it can otherwise be abused to unfairly arrest other people citing this as an example of it not being covered by First Amendment rights.
 
This Is the Most Expensive Dog in the World

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A Chinese businessman bought a Tibetan Mastiff puppy for $2 million this weekend, the most money anyone has ever spent on a dog.

Tibetan Mastiffs—known for being ferocious, loyal, and protective—are apparently a thing among Chinese millionaires. But sale prices generally tend to max out in the low six figures.

"They have a relatively short life expectancy and are not especially rare, so it's quite puzzling why they are fetching such a high price in China," the president of the American Tibetan Mastiff Association told the AP in 2010.

An "industry insider" told the AFP that many of the higher-priced sales are "just breeders hyping each other up, and no money actually changes hands."

The businessman told reporters he intended to use the dog for breeding.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/...al&utm_source=***********&utm_campaign=buffer

Thos are some awesome looking dogs but 2 million seems a bit ridiculous
 
Europe's Most Potent Sperm Donor Has Successfully Impregnated 98 Women

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Ed Houben, a single Dutch gentleman with a knack for getting ladies pregnant, has built his livelihood on just that. He's fathered 98 children since 2002, succeeding even in some cases where doctors have failed.

In a BBC profile, Houben said he started out going to sperm banks, but after the Netherlands banned anonymous donation, he switched over to the "traditional way" of helping women get pregnant: having sex with them. He's never looked back.

Women and couples have traveled from across Europe to solicit Houben's services, which he advertises online.

Asked whether husbands were uncomfortable with his method of sperm donation, he told the story of a family he recently helped: "They came here three times and now they have a baby. They are beyond these feelings of 'Ooh, there's a stranger sleeping with my wife.'"

Houben no longer bothers making his clients sign contracts, which probably wouldn't protect him anyway. He spends time getting to know the families, and sometimes even the kids he's fathered.

Houben also keeps a spreadsheet that he can show his progeny later in life to prevent the possibility that they might unknowingly sleep together.

"If, later on, one of my children meets someone who doesn't know who his natural father is, he can consult this list," he told the BBC.

Eventually, he'd like to retire from the sperm game and start a family of his own. But for right now, he's really enjoying his job.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-26636166

On paper it sounds like the best job in the world but in reality I'm thinking not so much
 
Who would pay for that guy's genes? Surely there are better-looking sperm donors in Europe.
 
A Tequila Sweetener Could Help Reduce Diabetes and Obesity

Tequila is the answer to many of life's problems—and now, a sweetener made from the stuff might just be the answer to our diabetes and obesity pandemics, too.

New research suggests presented at the 247th National Meeting of the American Chemical Society (ACS) suggests that a sweetener made from agave—the plant used to make tequila—can help lower blood glucose levels. That's because agavins, the kind of sugar found in the plant, act like dietary fiber, so they taste sweet, but can't be broken down by the body. (They're not to be confused with agave syrups, which are actually similar to high-fructose corn syrups.)

These agavin compounds are long strings of fructoses, usually found in fruit, but their size makes them impossible to break down. The researchers also found that agavins increase the production of GLP-1, a hormone that triggers the production of insulin by slowing the rate at which the stomach empties.

Combined, that means that the body perceives sweetness in the mouth but suffers none of the negative side effects of consuming sugars. And, because they can't be broken down like other sweeteners, agavins come saddled with none of the negative effects associated with artificial sweeteners, either. The only downside? They're aren't quite as sweet as their artificial counterparts—but given their other benefits, adding more shouldn't necessarily be a problem.

http://www.mdconnects.com/articles/801/20140317/tequila-sweetener-cure-diabetic-sweet-tooth.htm

Is there any problem you can't solve with tequila?
 
Russia Takes Control of Ukraine's Combat Dolphin Program

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As Russia seizes control of Crimea, one of the stranger things it will be taking over is a unit of trained military dolphins run by the Ukrainian Navy since the fall of the Soviet Union. Ukraine had planned to disband the program in April due to a lack of funds, but Russia has decided to keep it running.

The combat dolphin program—one of only two in the world, along with the U.S. Navy's dolphin unit in San Diego—is run out of a facility in Sevastopol. There, trained dolphins have learned to attack enemy divers and attach buoys to underwater targets, including mines.

Engineers at the facility were also building technology to convert readings from the dolphins' underwater sonar into visual cues an operator could read on a monitor, but they ran out of funding. A source told RIA Novosti that the dolphins are currently wearing very outdated equipment.

The source also revealed that the same facility is training sea lions. Combat sea lions. They're real.

http://en.ria.ru/military_news/2014...litary-Dolphins-to-Serve-in-Russian-Navy.html

I think this is one of the top 5 all time headlines I've ever posted
 
Gotta make sure to close that dolphin gap.
 
The Facebook Drones Are Coming, Zuckerberg Confirms

Facebook's Internet.org initiative is working on a fleet of drones, satellites, and lasers, with the aim of "beaming internet from the sky" to every person potential Facebook user in the world.

Mark Zuckerberg announced the drone program in a Facebook post, where he also touted Internet.org's progress toward worldwide connectivity over the past year, including adding 3 million new users to the internet in Paraguay and the Philippines.

Zuck writes that to take this mission further, Internet.org is going to need new technology. That's where Facebook's new Connectivity Lab, which includes engineers from NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab and Ames Research Center, comes in.

Today, Facebook also acquired the team from U.K. startup Ascenta, some of whom worked on the longest-flying solar unmanned drone. The Zephyr stayed airborne for 2 weeks back in 2010, and still holds the world record.

This isn't the first hint of Facebook's internet drone ambitions: Earlier this month, the company was reportedly looking to buy Titan Aerospace for $60 million. Titan's Solara aircraft can theoretically stay aloft for 5 years between recharges. Importantly, they're not "drones," either—they're low-atmospheric satellites, which puts them at a high enough altitude to eschew FAA regulation and launch from the U.S.

A deal between Facebook and Titan was "confirmed" to CNBC, but hasn't yet been made official.

https://www.facebook.com/zuck/posts/10101322049893211?stream_ref=10

Well internet should be available for everyone just not sure how I feel about a private company controlling that
 
Concrete-Dissolving Bacteria Are Destroying Our Nation's Sewers

Underground in places nobody likes to look, bacteria are doing terrible things to our sewage pipes. The concrete pipes that carry our waste are literally dissolving away, forcing engineers into a messy, expensive battle against tiny microbes.

"The veins of our cities are in serious trouble, and they're in serious trouble because of corrosion, and this corrosion has been unanticipated and it's accelerating," said Mark Hernandez at a symposium on the microbiology of the built environment in Washington DC yesterday. Hernandez is a civil engineer, but he's meeting with microbiologists because this problem is bacterial. Essentially, it's an infection of the nation's sewage system.

The sewer as a microbial ecosystem

Here's what's going on. One set of microbes emits hydrogen sulfide, the gas that is also responsible for raw sewage's unpleasant smell. This gas fills the empty space between the top of the pipe and the water flow. Another set of microbes living in this headspace turns hydrogen sulfide to sulfuric acid, which eats away at concrete, leaving behind gypsum, the powdery stuff you find in drywall.

"Essentially what we're ending up with is wet drywall," said Hernandez. This is one reason the American Society of Civil Engineers has gave our wastewater infrastructure a D grade.

The current solution is to put plastic liners into the concrete pipes, a process that is almost as expensive as digging them up entirely. But if the problem is microbial, perhaps the solution is, too?

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When Hernandez and his team sequenced bacteria living in the headspace of different pipes, they found only three or four species—an extremely remarkable lack of diversity. With so few actual problematic microbes, there could be a way justto target them specifically with some type of antibiotic or even bacteria-infecting viruses.

The solution they settled on was shotcrete—a type of concrete that can be sprayed onto the inside of pipes—embedded with small amounts of charcoal and bacteria-killing metals like chrome. As the acid ate through this concrete, metal would be released. Based on Hernandez's tests, this concrete did hold up better against sewage microbes—suggesting a promising solution to corrosion.

Designing water pipes for—rather than against—bacteria

But gatherings of microbiologists can be funny things these days. With the technological ability to sequence bacterial samples from every table top, belly button, and shoe, we've come to understand that everything is covered in millions of bacteria—mostly unknown, mostly benign, some even beneficial. Instead of just trying to kill the few harmful ones, perhaps we can build environments that encourage the growth of others, which then keep out the bad ones—an ecological and architecture version of prebiotics.

That was the premise of a talk at the same symposium by Amy Pruden, a professor of civili engineering at Virginia Tech. If sewers are the veins of our cities, than drinking water pipes are the arteries. Pruden talked about how the very design of our drinking water system could be prebiotic to encourage the growth of good microbes and discourage the ones that cause disease. There are, after all, an estimated 10 to 100 million free-floating organisms in every quart of drinking water. "We can't continue to fool ourselves that drinking water is sterile," she said.

Like all research into how prebiotics, especially in a context outside of the human gut, it's still very conceptual. But there are so many factors that can be designed or engineered to manage the microbiome of the water system: chlorine or chloramine as disinfectant, plumbing configuration, pipe material, temperature of the water heater, and on and on.

It helps to think of the whole water system—from drinking water to waste water—as one interconnected microbial ecosystem. The chemicals that we add in every stage affect the ecosystem, whether it's the chlorine to disinfect drinking water, the antibiotics flushed down the toilet, or the metals that might protect our concrete pipes. And it's important because we then rely on those microbes to treat out sewage. Sewage treatment plants? They're basically a series of tanks that let bacteria do the work of breaking down our waste. In laying down miles of water pipes, we've created an entire microbial ecosystem under our feet.

https://www.signup4.net/public/ap.aspx?EID=MICR95E&OID=147

I had no idea they could break down concrete
 
Microbes can break anything down given enough time. They are versatile little buggers.
 
​Lime Prices Hit Historic Highs, Panic Ensues

The market has soured on cheap citrus: In the past year, the price of limes—or, as experts are calling them now, "green gold"— has skyrocketed, reaching heights never before seen.

Some places, like Texas, have seen prices quadruple in just the last few weeks alone; nationwide, the prices have more than doubled in the past year.

"We're at an unprecedented price point," Ronnie Cohen, the vice president of sales for Vision Import Group, a produce importer based in New Jersey, told USA TODAY. Forty pound boxes cost about $40 last year; now, they're more than $100, Cohen said.

"This is something we've never seen for any fruit or vegetable," a buyer for Hardie's Fruit and Vegetable Co. in Dallas said, adding that now he pays more than $100 per box, compared to just $20 last month.

"The prices are insane," Dave Samuels, of Ingardia Bros. Produce in Santa Ana, Ca., told the Press-Enterprise.

Bad weather combined with supplies hoarding has caused a crop shortage in Mexico, raising prices and, according to Cohen, causing some in the "lime community" to describe the fruit as "oro verde," or "green gold."

Experts are divided on how long the crisis will last. Cohen said the harvest in May will bring some "price relief," though the wholesalers who spoke with Reuters said the high prices will continue indefinitely.

Those hardest hit by the shortage are the Mexican restaurant owners in Texas, many of whom were eager to share their sense of lime dread with reporters.

"I'm still gonna buy limes," Joe Lancarte, a Dallas restaurant owner, told NBC Dallas-Fort Worth. "I'm just not gonna put them on every single glass, probably, if it gets to that point."

http://articles.chicagotribune.com/...es-20140327_1_lime-prices-mexican-restaurants

I have a feeling this is going to affect my margaritas
 
Darth Vader Will Run For President of Ukraine

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In perhaps the most unexpected turn of events in Ukrainian politics, RT News says that Darth Vader, Sith Lord of the Galactic Empire, has declared himself a candidate in the Ukrainian presidential election. The political force is strong with this one.

While the Sith lord generally resides in a galaxy far, far away, he seems to have particular interest in Ukrainian politics. As he told RT News, "I am prepared to take responsibility for the fate of this country, if fellow citizens do me this high honor. I alone can make an empire out of a republic, to restore former glory, to return lost territories and pride for this country," Vader said.

The dark lord has the backing of the Internet Party of Ukraine, which was established in 2007 and has already filed the necessary paperwork for Vader to appear on the May 25th ballot. Vader, currently the chairman of the Internet Party, has also made the required monetary deposit of 2.5 million Ukrainian hryvnia ($225,225) required for candidacy. One assumes Emperor Palpatine is among his financial backers.

[YT]X9h4VA3bc-8[/YT]

Awesome
 
He'd have my vote if I were Ukrainian.
 
Will Grand Moff Tarkin be Minister of Defence, or are they going with Admiral Akbar?
 
Crows are smarter than toddlers

Some species of birds, especially in the crow family, are eerily good at logic puzzles involving tools, and this week, a new study in PLOS One from the University of Auckland reveals more about that those remarkable skills. Researchers tested New Caledonian crows with a series of trials inspired by Aesop’s fable “The Crow and the Pitcher,” involving dropping stones into a partly filled pitcher to raise its water level. The birds, it turned out, are as good at some of the tasks as 5-7 year-old children.

New Caledonian crows were already known to be a particularly gifted species when it comes to tools, suggesting an ability to plan ahead and think critically about new situations. They can use a stick to reach a treat that’s out of their reach, for example, something that never seems to occur to most non-human animals. And they don’t just use tools, they create them. In a landmark 2002 experiment, investigators watched as a crow called Betty spontaneously bent a piece of wire into a hook to snag some food. (It was the first time she’d ever encountered wire, but that wasn’t going to keep her from lunch.) For researchers looking to understand how and why tool use evolves, New Caledonian crows are rock stars.

In the new study, the investigators used a set of tasks in which six wild crows had to drop different objects into water-filled tubes to make a floating treat—a cube of meat—rise within reach. The question: Did they understand the principles of water displacement well enough to get the treat?

The first five tasks tested the crows’ understanding that dropping objects into a sand-filled tube doesn’t bring the treat within reach, while dropping them in water does; whether, given the choice between dropping objects that sank or floated, or were solid or porous, they’d figure out which got them the treats fastest; and whether they could recognize that different water levels and tube widths presented better or worse options for getting what they were after.

The final task involved a bit of trickery that even young children don’t always understand. Three water-filled tubes protrude from a table top, but under the table’s surface, two of them are connected by a pipe. A treat in the central tube—which is too narrow for the displacement objects—can be reached only by dropping objects into the tube that’s connected. In one prior study using this task, most eight-year-old children succeeded, but not, in most cases, because they inferred the existence of the secret connector. Rather, they simply learned through experimentation that dropping objects in the connected tube got them to their goal. Eurasian jays given the same task fail, even though they succeed at other tasks involving volume.

The crows flew through the first few tasks easily. They grasped the sand task and the floating versus sinking principles as quickly as 5-7 year-old children do, and, notably, seemed to realize that not all sinking objects are equal; in the porous versus solid task, they favored the solid objects, which displaced more water. Confronted with narrow and wide tubes with more water in the wide tube, they used the one with more water to achieve their goal. But when both had the same amount of water, they usually just kept dropping objects into a given tube until they got a snack, showing no sense that one might get them the treat faster. In the central tube conundrum, they never figured out how to get the treat to come into reach.

These are tantalizing signs that the crows do understand how volume displacement works, but that their understanding is fairly rigid. It may be that the crows focus on the properties of the objects they’re dropping in the water, while tube width and how that affects water level is Greek to them. Their response to the central tube task, in turn, reveals that as with jays, their understanding of the basics of how the world should work, quite useful in more straightforward situations, might fail them when things take an unexpected turn. The study used only a few crows, so there’s plenty more work to be done to confirm and expand on these results. But it’s an interesting glimpse of where the limits of New Caledonian crows’ understanding lies, and is another step along our exploration of the largely unmapped world of the animal mind.
Time
 
Gas Station Worker Gets Fired After Note to His Boss Goes Viral

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A gas station worker knew the note he left for the manager after his overnight shift was going to get him fired, but he wrote it anyway.

When Joe Blumm's shift at a West Michigan BP station ended Thursday morning, his boss never showed up to take over for him. After waiting more than an hour, he locked up and went home, leaving this note on the door (along with a preemptive "help wanted" sign).

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"Fire me if you must," he wrote.

She did, on Friday. But not before someone saw the note and posted it to Reddit, causing it to spread across the internet over the weekend.

"I know I struck a chord with a lot of disgruntled low paid employees who get the short end of the stick," Blumm told Fox 17.

He hopes being slightly internet-famous for quitting his job will help him find a better one.

As for the manager, she admitted she was late Thursday morning, but also claimed Blumm never called her.

"I had it," Blumm said. "I had enough of that unprofessional atmosphere, having to deal with that tardiness and have it come down on me."

http://fox17online.com/2014/03/28/b...e-left-note-that-got-him-fired/#ixzz2xXtgNNrw

Why would your employee need to call you for you being late? That makes no sense, respect to this guy for shaming an obviously incompetent boss
 
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