2019年5月31日 星期五

Slate Money: The Panda Edition


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This week, Slate Money talks about Trump’s trade wars with China and Mexico, the Fiat Chrysler–Renault merger, and MacKenzie Bezos’ giving pledge.

And in the Slate Plus segment: the JPMorgan paternity leave lawsuit.

Email: slatemoney@slate.com
Twitter: @felixsalmon, @Three_Guineas, @EmilyRPeck

Podcast production by Jessamine Molli.



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Former NASA Commercial Crew Manager Pleads Guilty to Another Felony

NASA OIG Semiannual Report: October 1, 2018 to March 31, 2019

Update: Former NASA Commercial Crew Director Mango Pleads Guilty to Federal Felony, earlier post (23 November 2013)

"This court document (actually it is two documents) contains the details of what Ed Mango's case is all about including his plea agreement."



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At Least 11 Dead in Virginia Beach Shooting at Government Center

What It Will Take to Stop the Destruction of India’s Democracy

NASA Selects First Commercial Moon Landing Services for Artemis Program

NASA has selected three commercial Moon landing service providers that will deliver science and technology payloads under Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) as part of the Artemis program.

May 31, 2019
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Slate Spoiler Specials: Fleabag


On the Spoiler Special podcast, Slate critics discuss movies, the occasional TV show, and, once in a blue moon, another podcast, in full spoiler-filled detail. This week, Marissa Martinelli, Heather Schwedel, and Inkoo Kang spoil Fleabag Season 2. Is the hot priest really that hot? Should there be a Season 3? Is the show deserving of all the hype? You can read Willa Paskin’s review here. You can also check out past Spoiler Specials, and you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts. Note: As the title indicates, spoilers galore.

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Email: spoilers@slate.com

Podcast production by Danielle Hewitt.

Engineering by Cameron Drews.



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This Week in Brexit: How Do You Solve a Problem Like Nigel Farage?

Good Omens Is the End of the World for Dorks

Hubble Sees a Galaxy Bucking the Trend


This luminous orb is the galaxy NGC 4621, better known as Messier 59. Located in the 2,000-strong Virgo cluster of galaxies within the constellation of Virgo (the Virgin), Messier 59 lies approximately 50 million light-years away from us. via NASA https://go.nasa.gov/2XhMyKr

What the Fate of Two Democratic Attempts at Health Care Reform Tells Us About the Future of Fixing Insurance

Hit Parade: The Invisible Miracle Sledgehammer Edition


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When a band member leaves to go solo, usually it means the band’s best days are over. That’s what everybody thought when Peter Gabriel left Genesis in the ’70s. Except not only did the band survive—fronted by drummer-turned-singer Phil Collins, it got bigger. Then Collins went solo … except he didn’t ditch Genesis. In fact, his success made it bigger—it became one of the definitive pop bands of the 1980s, as Collins’ monstrous drum sound took over pop music. By middecade, current and former members of Genesis—even side projects from its guitarists—were all competing head to head on the Billboard charts. On Hit Parade, we explore the knotty family tree of Genesis, the unlikeliest group ever to become a Hot 100 juggernaut.

Email: hitparade@slate.com



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Why Are Right-Wingers So Obsessed With Electromagnetic Pulses?

Report: Hundreds of Migrant Children Detained at Border Patrol Facilities Beyond Legal Time Limits

ISS Daily Summary Report – 5/30/2019

Bio-Monitor: A crewmember doffed and stowed the BioMonitor hardware. Although the ISS is equipped with health and life sciences research tools, the existing instrumentation for continuous and simultaneous recording of several physiological parameters is lacking. To tackle this issue, the Bio-Monitor Commissioning activity tests the Bio-Monitor facility; a wearable garment capable of monitoring relevant physiological …

May 31, 2019 at 12:00AM
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The Best Movies and TV Shows Coming to Netflix, HBO, Amazon Prime, and Hulu in June

Dear Care and Feeding: Should I Tell My Newly-Out Daughter That I’m Bi?

Think You’re Smarter Than Slate’s Man Up Host? Find Out With This Week’s News Quiz.

We Tricked Ourselves Into Believing Game of Thrones Mattered

The Price to Pay to Live in America’s Biggest Cities


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California is full.” That’s effectively what some residents and lawmakers in the state said when they chose to punt on a bill that would build more financially sane housing across its biggest metropolitan areas. What does the story of that bill tell us about policymaking for housing and transportation in America? And in a state where homelessness is increasing at an alarming rate, how long will it take California to build the housing it desperately needs?

Guest: Farhad Manjoo, a New York Times opinion columnist, who covers technology, global affairs, and culture

Podcast production by Mary Wilson, Jayson De Leon, and Ethan Brooks.



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Slate’s Mistakes for the Week of May 27


In a May 28 Brow Beat, Sam Adams misstated that Booksmart was distributed by Annapurna Pictures. It was produced by Annapurna and distributed by United Artists Releading.

Slate strives to correct all errors of fact. If you’ve seen an error in our pages, let us know at corrections@slate.com. General comments should be posted in our Comments sections associated with each article.



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The Oracle Mueller Hath Spoken


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Virginia Heffernan welcomes back MSNBC’s Matt Miller to talk about Robert Mueller’s statement this week, Attorney General William Barr’s ideology, what Donald Trump has accidentally revealed in doublespeak during the aftermath, and more.

Follow Trumpcast on Twitter: @realtrumpcast

Podcast production by Melissa Kaplan with help from Merritt Jacob.



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2019年5月30日 星期四

Ignoring The Artemis Generation

NASA: Sustained presence on the moon will be a good investment, OpEd, Janet L. Kavandi, USA Today

"The Artemis Generation changes that. Our nation must take the next giant leap so long promised. As a female astronaut, I followed pioneers like Sally Ride to space and helped solidify their gains. Women's next frontier will be the moon. Nothing will inspire the next generation more than a sustained presence on the moon leading to deep space exploration. Our return to the moon also drives new technologies. And the scientific discoveries of recent years leave no doubt the moon has much more to reveal about Earth and our solar system."

Keith's note: Its hard to argue with anything in this OpEd. It makes mention of the "Artemis Generation" - a phrase coined by Jim Bridenstine. But who is the Artemis Generation? Is it the people currently working in the space business? Is it the students in school who will come of age as the Moon landings happen? Or is it a much broader segment of the population - one that NASA yearns to reach but never manages to contact? NASA has yet to define this. But that does not stop NASA from trying to read the minds of the Artemis Generation and second guess what sort of memes will tickle their fancy when it comes to the whole Moon 2024 thing.

Alas, in true NASA fashion, NASA continues to talk about the Artemis Generation as something they have decided to define. However they have yet to actually talk to the Artemis Generation. Newspaper OpEds only reach people who still read newspapers - paper or online. Is it on Reddit? Snapchat? Instagram? If NASA is trying to reach the next generation of people who will directly benefit from Artemis then they need to start using the modalities that they use. Moreover, NASA needs to go outside its usual confort zone - the "choir practice amongst the usual suspects" that I often refer to.

You'd think that the Space interest groups would do this. But they only talk to each other. The National Space Society is having its ISDC event in DC next week. Is it being webcast? No. Why bother telling the rest of the taxpaying public how space is an important thing that they should support? Yet Jim Bridenstine used his own cellphone to livestream a speech he made at an agricultural fair in California earlier this year. The Coalition for Deep Space Exploration, the Space Foundation, the Aerospace Industries Association, the Commercial Spaceflight Federation, the AIAA, and so on - powered by millions of big aerospace dollars - could all be meeting with NASA to help reach the Artemis Generation and reach out beyond familiar territory. If they are I see no evidence that they are going to do anything. They never have. I doubt they ever will. They only exist to make sure money goes to their membership.

NASA's embryonic outreach efforts for Artemis/Moon 2024 are suffering from echoes of Apollo. It is perfectly fine to try and rekindle the same sort of excitement that I saw as a young boy during Apollo. But to assume that the same marketing psychology that worked with Apollo i.e. saying that it is important because NASA and the White House thinks it is important - is going to miss the mark with the real Artemis Generation. Did NASA use the same mindset to promote Apollo in the 1960s as was used to market aviation when the Wright Brothers were making their first flights? No. Similarly, heavily leaning on the Apollo mindset 50 years later is simply not going to work today.

NASA loves to broadcast what they think people should hear. Rarely do they ask what people want to hear, listen, and then adjust their message accordingly.

When NASA can reach the young people walking out of a Walmart in "Flyover Country" with a message about Artemis/Moon 2024 that resonates with their reality - only then will NASA have truly tapped the Artemis Generation - and be able to utilize their interest to help move the program forward. In the mean time their outreach efforts are just talking points on Powerpoint presentations that NASA civil servants bounce off of one another in windowless conference rooms about what they think people should find interesting or important - not what people in the real world actually think to be interesting or important.

During Thursday's NASA Advisory Council meeting Jim Bridenstine, who seems to have endless, relentless energy when it comes to promoting Artemis, asked the NAC membership what they thought was important about going back (or "forward") to the Moon. While they all had interesting things to say they all said pretty much what Janet Kavandi said. No one in the room was at the cusp of the beginning of a career. No one was from a middle class family. No one was seemingly from the Artemis Generation. More choir practice.

NASA has an unusual historic moment lying ahead of itself: the Apollo 11 50th anniversary. I have lived in metro Washington, DC for 33 years. I was at the big events for the 20th, 30th, and 40th anniversaries. I know how these things are planned. There will be a global focus on everything NASA says and does for a week in July. If the 50th anniversary events focus on elderly Apollo astronauts on a stage before an audience of adoring, aging baby boomers talking about how great Apollo was and maybe we should all do it again - since we miss Apollo - then Artemis will die before it is even born.



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Raptors Prove Beating the Warriors Is Easy (If You Make Every Clutch Shot and Play Insane Defense)

Trump Now Says, Not at All Hysterically, He’s Going to Slap Tariffs on Mexico Over Illegal Immigration

Terrorism Might Be Scarier, But Russia and China Pose the Real Threat to the U.S.

Getting an Opportunity to Give Your Presentation

No description available

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NASA Will Announce Commercial Lunar Payload Services Selections On Friday

NASA to Announce Selection of Science Commercial Moon Landing Services, Hold Media Teleconference

"NASA will announce the next major step in the Artemis program's lunar surface exploration plans during a NASA Science Live broadcast at 1 p.m. EDT Friday, May 31. The announcement will air on NASA Television and the agency's website. Paving the way to return astronauts to the surface of the Moon, and ultimately Mars, NASA will announce the selection of the first commercial Moon landing service providers that will deliver science and technology payloads as part of the agency's Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS). These missions will acquire new science measurements and enable important technology demonstrations, whose data will inform the development of future landers and other exploration systems needed for astronauts to return to the Moon by 2024."



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NASA to Announce Selection of Science Commercial Moon Landing Services, Hold Media Teleconference

NASA will announce the next major step in the Artemis program’s lunar surface exploration plans during a NASA Science Live broadcast at 1 p.m. EDT Friday, May 31.

May 30, 2019
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We Don’t Need Science to Know 13 Reasons Why Had Problems

What Parts of Parenting Really Matter Anyway?


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On this week’s episode: Two of the hosts take their leave of the show with a discussion of what really matters in parenting. On Slate Plus, favorite moments and lessons learned.

Recommendations:

• Gabe recommends the Melendy Quartet by Elizabeth Enright.

• Carvell recommends the family activity Link Roundup.

• Rebecca recommends games like Assassin for high-schoolers.

Join us on Facebook and email us at momanddad@slate.com to tell us what you thought of today’s show and give us ideas for what we should talk about in future episodes. Got questions that you’d like us to answer? Call and leave us a message at 424-255-7833.

Podcast produced by Jess Jupiter.



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There’s Bipartisan Support for Election Security. Mitch McConnell Won’t Let It Happen.

New Data Shows Police Use More Force Against Black Citizens Even Though Whites Resist More

Netflix’s Always Be My Maybe Is Culturally Specific and Also Hysterical

Why Do Children Keep Dying in U.S. Custody? Maybe Because Nobody Is Holding CBP Accountable.

Despite Righteous Anger Online, Millennial Turnout Doubled in the 2018 Election

It’s HAL’s World, We Just Live In It

Bibi Is Not As Powerful as We Thought He Was

New Hampshire Legislature Overrides Veto, Abolishes Death Penalty

ESA Prepares for ExoMars Rover 2020 Launch at Mars and on Earth

Preparations for the ExoMars rover mission are in their final stages. ESA made two announcements today: ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter is shifting orbit, and they officially opened a new Rover Operations Control Centre (ROCC) in Turin, Italy.

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Pennsylvania Students to Speak with NASA Astronaut on International Space Station

Students from Pennsylvania will have an opportunity to speak live with a NASA astronaut aboard the International Space Station at 1:40 p.m. EDT Monday, June 3.

May 30, 2019
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Tiffany Haddish Secretly Recorded What People Said About Her After Auditions

Clarence Thomas Just Voted With the Liberals in a Big Consumer Rights Case. Why?

GAO Report Cites Major NASA Project Delays

GAO Report to Congress: NASA Assessments of Major Projects

"The cost and schedule performance of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA) portfolio of major projects continues to deteriorate. For this review, cost growth was 27.6 percent over the baselines and the average launch delay was approximately 13 months, the largest schedule delay since GAO began annual reporting on NASA's major projects in 2009. This deterioration in cost and schedule performance is largely due to integration and test challenges on the James Webb Space Telescope (see GAO-19-189 for more information). The Space Launch System program also experienced significant cost growth due to continued production challenges. Further, additional delays are likely for the Space Launch System and its associated ground systems. Senior NASA officials stated that it is unlikely these programs will meet the launch date of June 2020, which already reflects 19 months of delays. These officials told GAO that there are 6 to 12 months of risk associated with that launch date."



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LightSail 2 Arrives in Florida

Next Stop: Space!

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ISS Daily Summary Report – 5/29/2019

Russian Segment (RS) Extravehicular Activity (EVA) #46: Today CDR Oleg Kononenko and FE-4 Aleksey Ovchinin exited the Docking Compartment (DC)-1 airlock and completed the following tasks during today’s successful 06 hour 01 minute EVA: Installation of MRM2-FGB Handrail Removal of sensor mock-ups from MRM HR6005 Removal of TEST exposure units #15 & #16 installed on …

May 30, 2019 at 12:00AM
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New Memo Reveals the Census Question Was Added to Boost White Voting Power

Surround Sound - Orion Service Module for Artemis 1 Undergoes Acoustic Tests


Surround Sound - Orion service module for Artemis 1 undergoes acoustic tests via NASA https://go.nasa.gov/2HMS1Uh

NASA TV Set to Air US Cargo Ship Departure from Space Station

Filled with more than 4,200 pounds of valuable scientific experiments and other cargo, a SpaceX Dragon cargo spacecraft is set to return to Earth from the International Space Station Monday, June 3.

May 30, 2019
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Why Do So Many Researchers Still Treat Race as a Scientific Concept?

What Fleabag Understands About Sisterhood


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On this week’s episode of the Waves, Hanna, Noreen, and Slate’s Rachelle Hampton take on Curvy Wife Guy, who’s back in the spotlight thanks to the release of his new music video, “Chubby Sexy.” They unpack the controversy and what it reveals about the state of the body positivity movement as a whole. Then, incels are seeking out plastic surgery to achieve their image of the ideal man, driven by a warped understanding of what women want—and by their own brutal dissections of one another’s appearances. Is this new “male-on-male” gaze unique to incels, or is it part of a larger shift in the way men think about their bodies? Finally, the hosts discuss the new season of Fleabag, reflecting on its frank depiction of sisterhood and refreshing approach to both platonic and romantic love.

In Slate Plus: Was coverage of Elizabeth Warren’s undisclosed legal work sexist?

Other items discussed on the show:

• Robbie Tripp’s “Chubby Sexy
• “People Are Applauding This Man for Celebrating His Wife’s Curves on the Internet” by Morgan Murrell in BuzzFeed
• “Two Days With Curvy Wife Guy, the Most Controversial Man in Body Positivity” by Rebecca Jennings in Vox
• “My Afternoon With ‘Curvy Wife Guy’ ” by Madison Malone Kircher in New York magazine
Shrill starring Aidy Bryant
• “Body Neutrality Is a Body Image Movement That Doesn’t Focus on Your Appearance” by Leigh Weingus in HuffPost
• “How Many Bones Would You Break to Get Laid?” by Alice Hines in the Cut
• “Incels’ Obsession With Looks Is Based on Fake Math” by Rebecca Jennings in Racked
• “A Very Offensive Rom-Com” by Yowei Shaw on NPR
• “The End of Empathy” by Hanna Rosin on NPR
• Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s Fleabag
Killing Eve starring Sandra Oh and Jodie Comer

Recommendations

Noreen: Sally Rooney’s Normal People

Hanna: S.H.E., the Search Human Equalizer

Rachelle: Eve’s Bayou starring Samuel L. Jackson

This podcast was produced by Danielle Hewitt. Our production assistant is Alex Barasch.

Please remember to like our Facebook page. Send your comments and recommendations on what to cover to thewaves@slate.com. And come to our brunch in New York on June 8!



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Trump Says Russia Helped Him Get Elected … and Then Immediately Says the Opposite

NASA Advisory Council Meeting Today/Tomorrow

NASA Advisory Council Meeting

"Thursday, May 30, 2019, 10:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.; and Friday, May 31, 2019, 8:30 a.m.-12:00 noon, Eastern Time. The agenda for the meeting will include reports from the following: Aeronautics Committee; Human Exploration and Operations Committee; Regulatory and Policy Committee; Science Committee; STEM Engagement Committee; Technology, Innovation and Engineering Committee"



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Taking an Anti-Moon 2024 Position While Pretending Not To

Moon 2024?, American Astronomical Society

"We have decided against taking an official position on NASA's Artemis proposal at this time. It is still very early, and we do not think that the benefits of public opposition to an ill-defined and untested proposal outweigh the use of political capital, at least not yet. We are clearly opposed to the Pell Grant offset on principle, and we have serious concerns about the proposed transfer authority and the as-yet undefined scientific content of the proposed crewed Artemis lunar program. The House Appropriations Committee responsible for NASA is working toward a 7% increase for NSF and a 4% increase for NASA SMD in FY20, which is a reassuring sign of their continued strong support for space sciences."



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When They See Us Is a New Kind of Must-See TV

Help! Should I Tell My Co-Workers I Saw Their 18-Year-Old Son on a Porn Site?

Ask a Teacher: My Child’s Teacher Yells All the Time. Is This OK?

Like Climate Change and College Debt, the California Housing Crisis Is Generational Warfare

Why Society Goes Easy on Rapists

Trevor Noah Finds the Perfect Metaphor to Explain Mueller’s Press Conference and It’s Herpes

Mueller Finally Used His Voice. Did Everyone Just Hear What They Wanted to Hear?


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Listen to What Next via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, TuneIn, Stitcher, Overcast, Google Play, or iHeart.

Special counsel Robert Mueller breaks his silence to reiterate the conclusions of his investigation’s report—and remind the American people to read it.

Guest: Slate’s Dahlia Lithwick, host of the Amicus podcast.

Podcast production by Mary Wilson, Jayson De Leon, and Ethan Brooks. 



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2019年5月29日 星期三

Imprisoned NASA Employee Serkan Golge Released By Turkey

Turkish-American NASA scientist released from Turkish prison, AP

"Serkan Golge, a Turkish-American scientist imprisoned in Turkey for nearly three years, has been released. Morgan Ortagus, a U.S. State Department spokeswoman, welcomed the decision but declined to discuss why he was released. However, she told reporters Wednesday it was the "right thing to do." Golge was on a family visit in southern Turkey when he was arrested in the aftermath of a failed coup, which Turkey blames on U.S.-based cleric Fethullah Gulen."

- NASA Employee Imprisoned By Turkey For No Reason, earlier post
- NASA MSFC Employee Tries To Make Serkan Golge's Past Disappear, earlier post



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The Navy Reportedly Tried Hiding USS John McCain Warship With a Tarp During Trump’s Visit

Robert Mueller’s Statement Gave Us Nothing New. But the Response From Democrats Definitely Did.

Louisiana’s GOP-Controlled State Legislature Passes Restrictive Abortion Ban. Its Democratic Governor Says He’ll Sign It.

Trump Betrays America Again

Israel’s Heading Back to the Polls for Unprecedented Second Vote After Netanyahu Unable to Form Government

An Insurer Just Squashed the Effort to Create a Public Option in Connecticut

Ma Is the Best Kind of Trash

Mueller Should Still Testify to Congress, and His Statement Suggests He’s Willing

I Must Declare My Love for James Holzhauer, the Roger Federer of Jeopardy!

The Angle: A Bunch of Things We Already Know

I Just Died of Boredom Reading Democratic Leaders’ Responses to the Mueller Press Conference

Ansel Elgort Mourns His Mother in The Goldfinch Trailer

When Your Apocalypse Bunker Has a Home Theater


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In this episode, April Glaser is joined by Max Read, an editor and writer at New York magazine who writes the column Life in Pixels.

First, April and Max talk to Patri Friedman, founder of the Seasteading Institute, which he started in 2008 with seed funding from PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel. Seasteading is the process of forming new societies on the open ocean, and it’s getting a lot of attention from Silicon Valley.

Then, Robert Vicino joins the show to talk about his company, Vivos, which designs and builds high-end bunkers to help people ride out natural disasters and other potential catastrophes. Vicino talks about his clientele and the concerns that drive people to buy fancy underground apartments.

Stories discussed on the show:

Don’t Close My Tabs:

Max: “The Messy Truth About Social Credit” and “Bullet Time”

April: “Inside the Brutal, Petty War Over Donald Trump’s Wikipedia Page

Podcast production by Cameron Drews

You can follow April @Aprilaser and Max @Max_read. If you have a question or comment, you can email us at ifthen@slate.com.

If Then is presented by Slate and Future Tense, a collaboration among Arizona State University, New America, and Slate. Future Tense explores the ways emerging technologies affect society, policy, and culture. To read more, follow us on Twitter and sign up for our weekly newsletter.



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We’re Running Out of Spectrum for Both New and Old Technologies

Fact-Checking Booksmart: Could a Lesbian Really Confuse Those Two Holes?

Life After Who Wants to Be a Millionaire


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On Slate Plus, the hosts discuss how to end a TV show.

Go to Slate.com/cultureplus to learn more about Slate Plus and join today.

This week, Dana, Steve, and Julia take on Booksmart, a charming teen comedy that marks Olivia Wilde’s directorial debut. The film’s handling of female friendship and queerness feels specific and real, but is that undercut by its avoidance of class issues and teenage cruelty? Next, Justin Peters shares his experience as one of the biggest money-losers in Who Wants to Be a Millionaire history, reflecting on its legacy and the future of game shows as a whole. Finally, the gabbers are joined by K. Austin Collins to discuss his and Dana’s new podcast, Flashback, and why older movies are worth revisiting.

Links to some of the things we discussed this week:

• Olivia Wilde’s Booksmart
• “Booksmart Is More Than Just a Queer, Gender-Flipped Superbad” by Dana Stevens in Slate
• Greta Gerwig’s Lady Bird
• John Hughes’ The Breakfast Club
• “Spoiler Specials: Booksmart” by Jeffrey Bloomer, Christina Cauterucci, and Dana Stevens in Slate
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire
• “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Was My Lifeline” by Justin Peters in Slate
• “I Wanted to Be a Millionaire” by Justin Peters in Slate
Flashback
• “Introducing Flashback” by Dana Stevens in Slate
Gaslight starring Ingrid Bergman
• Barbara Loden’s Wanda

Endorsements

Dana: The audiobook of Jared Yates Sexton’s The Man They Wanted Me to Be

Julia: Lawrence of Arabia starring Peter O’Toole

Steve: West Taghkanic Diner in Ancram, NY, “Unreasoning Vigour” by Stefan Collini in the London Review of Books, and Hi-Phi Nation’s “Uncivil Disobedience

Outro: “Irish Waltz” by Stefan Netsman

This podcast was produced by Benjamin Frisch. Our production assistant is Alex Barasch.

Feel free to email us at culturefest@slate.com or interact with us at @SlateCultFest on Twitter. You can follow all of Slate’s culture coverage by signing up for our newsletter and liking our Facebook page.

Want more of the Culture Gabfest?

Come see Steve and Dana live in New York on June 8 as part of Slate Day. Get your tickets for pop culture trivia, a Hit Parade Dance party, and much more here.



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Trump? Bolton? Pompeo? It’s Impossible to Tell Who Speaks for the United States Now.

Mueller Spoke. Part of America Heard Laurel, and Part of America Heard Yanny.

Why Does Jimmy Kimmel Live Keep Doing This?

What’s Fact and What’s Fiction in the Elton John Biopic

How to Travel at (Nearly) the Speed of Light


Learn about the three ways to travel at (nearly) the speed of light. via NASA https://go.nasa.gov/2MdN6zT

Robert Mueller Was Telling Nancy Pelosi to Begin Impeachment Proceedings

The People Have Voted on 2007 OR10's Future Name!

Gonggong is the fan favorite name for this icy distant world, but the International Astronomical Union's (IAU) Committee for Small-Body Nomenclature has the final say.

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Former Federal Prosecutors Agree on Trump


To listen to this episode of Trumpcast, use the player below:

Listen to Trumpcast via Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify, Stitcher, or Google Play.

Virginia Heffernan welcomes back Mimi Rocah, former federal prosecutor for the Southern District of New York and MSNBC legal analyst, to talk about the letter about the Mueller report she’s spearheaded signed by former federal prosecutors, Barr’s ongoing damage to rule of law, defiance of subpoenas, speaking in mobster code, and more.

Further reading

Justin Amash Twitter thread on Barr

Adam Schiff on C-SPAN: It’s Not OK

Follow Trumpcast on Twitter: @realtrumpcast

Podcast production by Melissa Kaplan with help from Merritt Jacob.



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The Department of Energy Is Now Calling Fossil Fuels “Molecules of Freedom” and “Freedom Gas”

Robert Mueller Delivers Statement Emphasizing That He Did Not Clear Trump of Obstruction

What Hollywood Gets Wrong About Black Men


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Listen to Man Up via Apple PodcastsSpotifyTuneInStitcherOvercastGoogle Play, or iHeart. Read the introductory essay here.

Growing up, Cord Jefferson never really saw himself reflected in the characters on TV. Now, he’s a script editor for shows like Master of None and The Good Place. Aymann talks with Cord about what happens when you don’t relate to the characters you’re supposed to on your television screen.

Contact us about this and other topics by leaving a voicemail at 805-626-8707 or emailing manup@slate.com. We may feature you on the show. And please tell us what you think by leaving a review on Apple Podcasts.

Podcast production by Cameron Drews and Danielle Hewitt.



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Here’s What Twitter’s Smartest Liberals and Conservatives Are Saying About Mueller’s Surprise News Conference

ISS Daily Summary Report – 5/28/2019

JAXA Mouse Mission: The crew prepared the spare transportation cage for Mouse mission operations. The purpose of this mission is to analyze any alterations of the gene expression patterns in several organs and the effects on the germ-cell development of mice exposed to a long-term space environment.  Bio-Monitor: A crewmember doffed and stowed the Bio-Monitor …

May 29, 2019 at 12:00AM
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OIG Report on NASA Europa Missions

NASA OIG Audit: Management Of NASA's Europa Mission

"Despite robust early-stage funding, a series of significant developmental and personnel resource challenges place the Clipper's current mission cost estimates and planned 2023 target launch at risk. Specifically, NASA's aggressive development schedule, a stringent conflict of interest process during instrument selection, and an insufficient evaluation of cost and schedule estimates has increased project integration challenges and led the Agency to accept instrument cost proposals subsequently found to be far too optimistic. Moreover, Clipper has had to compete with at least four other major JPL-managed projects for critical personnel resources, causing concern that the project may not have a sufficient workforce with the required skills at critical periods in its development cycle. ... In addition, although Congress directed NASA to use the SLS to launch the Clipper, it is unlikely to be available by the congressionally mandated 2023 date and therefore the Agency continues to maintain spacecraft capabilities to accommodate both the SLS and two commercial launch vehicles, the Delta IV Heavy and Falcon Heavy. ... We also believe that requiring the Agency to pursue a Lander mission at the same time it is developing the Clipper mission is inconsistent with the NRC's recommended science exploration priorities."



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White Campground Manager Pulls Gun on Black Mississippi Couple Trying to Have a Picnic

Department of Justice Announces Surprise Robert Mueller Press Conference for 11 A.M.

Dear Prudence Podcast: Help! I Hate Hosting Overnight Guests. My Husband Thinks I’m Rude.

The Genealogy Database Famous for Helping to Solve Cold Case Murders Will Now Allow Cops Access to Investigate Less-Serious Crimes

Help! My Husband Isn’t Having an Affair After All. Can I Divorce Him Anyway?

Dear Care and Feeding: My First-Grader Joined a Gang of Bullies Writing Mean Notes About Other Kids

Throwing a Milkshake at Brexit


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It was the election that was never supposed to happen in the U.K. in the first place. Several delays, a few milkshakes, and a resignation later the British found themselves voting over the weekend for European Parliament. How did Brexiteers and Remainers fare in this past weekend’s vote? And what does it mean for the U.K. and Europe writ large?

Guest: Josh Keating, international editor at Slate.

Podcast production by Mary Wilson, Jayson De Leon, and Ethan Brooks.



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2019年5月28日 星期二

Game of Thrones Star Kit Harington Has Reportedly Checked Into Rehab

M95: Spiral Galaxy with an Inner Ring


Why do some spiral galaxies have a ring around the center? First and foremost, M95 is one of the closer examples of a big and beautiful barred spiral galaxy. Visible in the featured combination of images from Hubble and several ground based telescopes are sprawling spiral arms delineated by open clusters of bright blue stars, lanes of dark dust, the diffuse glow of billions of faint stars, and a short bar across the galaxy center. What intrigues many astronomers, however, is the circumnuclear ring around the galaxy center visible just outside the central bar. Although the long term stability of this ring remains a topic of research, observations indicate its present brightness is at least enhanced by transient bursts of star formation. M95, also known as NGC 3351, spans about 50,000 light-years, lies about 30 million light years away, and can be seen with a small telescope toward the constellation of the Lion (Leo). via NASA https://go.nasa.gov/2JLBi5G

Trevor Noah Thinks Maybe Donald Trump Shouldn’t Team Up With Kim Jong-un

The First Time We Impeached a President

McConnell Says He’d Confirm an Election-Year Trump Supreme Court Nominee Because He’s a Republican and Obama Wasn’t

Are the Warriors Better Without People Asking if the Warriors Are Better Without Kevin Durant?


Listen to Hang Up and Listen with Stefan Fatsis:

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Become a fan of Hang Up and Listen and join the discussion of this episode on Facebook.

In this week’s episode of Slate’s sports podcast Hang Up and Listen, Gene Demby and Stefan Fatsis are joined by Bruce Arthur of the Toronto Star to discuss the upcoming NBA finals between the Toronto Raptors and the Golden State Warriors. Lindsay Gibbs of ThinkProgress and the Athletic breaks down the start of a WNBA season featuring new stars, missing stars, and a looming labor fight. Finally, sportswriter Howard Bryant discusses Marcus Stroman, Tim Anderson, and the history of policing black players in Major League Baseball.

Here are links to some of the articles and other items mentioned on the show:

Follow Gene Demby on Twitter.

Follow Bruce Arthur on Twitter and read his column after the Raptors defeated the Milwaukee Bucks to win the Eastern Conference championship.

• FiveThirtyEighty says the Raptors are a 55 percent favorite to beat the Warriors.

• Kevin Durant and Stephen Curry say the Warriors are not better without Durant.

Follow Lindsay Gibbs on Twitter and subscribe to her podcast about women’s sports, Burn It All Down.

• Read Lindsay in ThinkProgress on female athletes exerting leverage and in the Athletic on Liz Cambage engineering a trade to Las Vegas.

• The WNBA is paying injured star Breanna Stewart to be a league “ambassador.”

• In the Ringer, Michael Baumann wrote that the WNBA is at a crossroads.

Follow Howard Bryant on Twitter; buy his latest book, The Heritage; and read his Twitter thread on policing black players in baseball.

• Boston Red Sox manager Alex Cora criticized Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Marcus Stroman for “competing a certain way.”

Stroman defended Chicago White Sox outfielder Tim Anderson after Anderson was suspended for calling a white pitcher who threw at a him a “weak-ass f—— n—–.”

• Read Stephanie Apstein’s profile of Anderson in Sports Illustrated.

• In the New York Daily News, Louis Moore wrote that Anderson is “fighting for black autonomy.”

Hang Up and Listen’s weekly Uncle Dennises:

Stefan’s Uncle Dennis: On Bill Buckner, who died Monday at age 69.

On this week’s Slate Plus bonus segment, Gene and Stefan talk to Lindsay Gibbs about hiring only women to cover women’s sports.

Podcast production by Jessamine Molli and Danielle Hewitt.

You can email us at hangup@slate.com.



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Trump’s Transportation Secretary Pledged to Divest From Road Materials Company Doing Business With Government. She Didn’t.

The Trippy, Mind-Bending Rise of GIFs on TV Shows

Farewell To Long-term Climate Change Predictions

Trump administration orders government agency to stop predicting long-term climate change impacts, The Independent

"The Trump administration has told a major US government department to end predicting what the long-term effects of climate change will be on the country. Director of the US Geological Survey (USGS) James Reilly - a White House-appointed former oil geologist - ordered that scientific assessments only use computer-generated models that track the possible impact of climate change until 2040, according to The New York Times. Previously the USGS modelled effects until the end of the century, the second half of which is likely to see the most dramatic impacts of global warming. The order is likely to impact the US government's National Climate Assessment, an interagency report produced every four years which outlines the projected impact of climate change in every corner of US society."

Keith's note: NASA is one of the agencies participating in The National Climate Assessment. It is only a matter of time before these edicts affect NASA. Alas, NASA will continue to study long term climate trends on other planets - just not the one we live on.



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In My Opinion, the President of the U.S. Should Not Brag About Foreign Leaders Taking His Side Against Democrats

Did Those Navy Pilots See UFOs? Yes! (But They Were Not Flown by Aliens.)

The Late Tony Horwitz’s Great Confederates in the Attic Seems Even More Crucial Today

The Angle: The Brutal Inside Story Behind Donald Trump’s Wikipedia Page

NASA Finally Starts To Talk About Its ISS Commercial Plans

Study Input Informs NASA Course for a Vibrant Future Commercial Space Economy

"New insights from companies in the growing space economy are helping NASA chart a course for the future of commercial human spaceflight in low-Earth orbit. Input the companies provided to NASA as part of the studies will inform NASA's future policies to support commercial activities that enable a robust low-Earth orbit economy. NASA selected the following companies to complete studies about the commercialization of low-Earth orbit and the International Space Station, assessing the potential growth of a low-Earth orbit economy and how to best stimulate private demand for commercial human spaceflight."

Summaries of each company's proposals

Keith's note: I got a note with these links from NASA HQ PAO today after I had been tweeting complaints about an ISS presentation by Robyn Gatens and Sam Scimemi at the NAC HEO committee today. Up until today NASA had only made hints as to what the studies they asked for actually said. Oddly neither Gatens or Scimemi made any mention that this material had been publicly released. PAO knows more about ISS commercialization than the ISS program senior management does, so it would seem. Also, if you go to the CASIS webpage they make no mention of any of these things.



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Help! How Do I Tell My Kids About Grandma’s Drug Problem?

Bernie Sanders Is Really Not That Rich for Someone His Age

Missouri Could Become the First State Without an Abortion Clinic Since Roe v. Wade

Clarence Thomas Pens Screed Comparing Women Who Obtain Abortions to Eugenicists

Jezero Crater, Mars 2020's Landing Site


This false color image shows part of an unnamed crater in Mars' Arabia Terra. via NASA https://go.nasa.gov/2YVxxy3

Curiosity Gazes Upon Noctilucent Clouds Over Gale Crater

Wispy clouds of stunning beauty fly over Curiosity every evening.

from Planetary Society Blog http://bit.ly/2wvTLKR
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Booksmart Was Set Up for Failure

Britney Spears Seeks Renewed Restraining Order Against Former “Manager”

Join Us for an Event on Data, Power, and Governance

My Husband Hated a Racy Burlesque Show We Attended. Is He Gay?

Sell Your Data. Earn Passive Income. What Could Go Wrong?

Amazon Is Shopping for Office Space In Manhattan, Proving HQ2 Haters Pretty Much Entirely Right

William Barr’s New Authority to Declassify Anything He Wants Is a Threat to National Security

The Romance Languages


Listen to Lexicon Valley Episode No. 162:

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John McWhorter on how the peculiarities of Latin persist in its descendant languages. What does an ancient, undecipherable manuscript say—and not say—about Latin and its spawn?

You’ll find every Lexicon Valley episode at slate.com/lexiconvalley.

Send your thoughts about the show to lexiconvalley@slate.com.



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You’re Gonna Fall in Love With Beanie Feldstein and Kaitlyn Dever

NAC Human Exploration and Operations Committee Meeting

NASA Advisory Council Human Exploration and Operations Committee Meeting

"DATES: Tuesday, May 28, 2019, 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.; Wednesday, May 29, 2019, 8:00 a.m.-12:00 noon, Eastern Time."



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No, NASA Is Not "Going to Mars very soon".

AP FACT CHECK: Trump promises not just the moon, but Mars

"TRUMP: "Prime Minister Abe and I have agreed to dramatically expand our nations' cooperation in human space exploration. Japan will join our mission to send U.S. astronauts to space. We'll be going to the moon. We'll be going to Mars very soon."

THE FACTS: Not very soon. The U.S. will almost certainly not be sending humans to Mars in his presidency, even if he wins a second term.

The Trump administration has a placed a priority on the moon over Mars for human exploration (President Barack Obama favored Mars) and hopes to accelerate NASA's plan for returning people to the lunar surface. It has asked Congress to approve enough money to make a moon mission possible by 2024, instead 2028. But even if that happens, Mars would come years after that. International space agencies have made aspirational statements about possibly landing humans on Mars during the 2030s."



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The Director of Tony Awards Favorite Hadestown on Why Tragedies Are Worth Telling

This One’s for the Ladies Is More Than Just a Real-Life, NC-17 Magic Mike

Goop’s New Podcast for Men Is an Extraordinarily Goopy Response to the Culture of “Toxic Masculinity”

Inside the Brutal, Petty War Over Donald Trump’s Wikipedia Page

Trump’s Freewheeling Policies Don’t Usually Pass Muster in Court—but That Could Change


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Listen to What Next via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, TuneIn, Stitcher, Overcast, Google Play, or iHeart.

Everywhere President Donald Trump turns, he’s finding himself hemmed in by the courts. But could upcoming rulings from the Supreme Court make lower court judges take a more expansive view of the president’s executive powers?

Guest: Slate writer Mark Joseph Stern

Podcast production by Mary Wilson, Jayson De Leon, and Ethan Brooks. 



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2019年5月27日 星期一

Stars, Dust, and Gas near NGC 3572


Star formation can be colorful. This chromatic cosmic portrait features glowing gas and dark dust near some recently formed stars of NGC 3572, a little-studied star cluster near the Carina Nebula. Stars from NGC 3572 are visible near the bottom of the image, while the expansive gas cloud above is likely what remains of their formation nebula. The image's striking hues were created by featuring specific colors emitted by hydrogen, oxygen, and sulfur, and blending them with images recorded through broadband filters in red, green, and blue. This nebula near NGC 3572 spans about 100 light years and lies about 9,000 light years away toward the southern constellation of the Ship's Keel (Carina). Within a few million years the pictured gas will likely disperse, while gravitational encounters will likely disperse the cluster stars over about a billion years. via NASA https://go.nasa.gov/2YOTn6p

Army Gets Heartbreaking Answers After Asking, “How Has Serving Impacted You?”

GOP Congressman Defends Accused War Criminal, Says He Also Took Photo of Dead Enemy

So Far, Models Are Predicting a Trump Victory in 2020

Britain’s EU Elections Cleared Up Nothing About Brexit

North Korea: John Bolton is a “War Monger” and “Structurally Defective Guy”

Trump Cites Ian Bremmer Tweet as Example of Why Libel Laws Need to Change

A Veteran of the Nixon Impeachment Hearings Makes the Case for Booting Trump From Office.

Trump’s Judge Whisperer Promised to Take Our Laws Back to the 1930s

What Was the Deal With That Infamous Serena and Osaka Match?


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What’s it like to be the president of the U.S. Tennis Association? On this episode of Women in Charge, Allison Benedikt talks to Katrina Adams, former president of the U.S. Tennis Association, about the pressures for Americans to win championships, how being the first black woman leader of the USTA shaped the way she did the job, and that infamous Serena and Osaka tennis match.

You can email us at womenincharge@slate.com.

Podcast production by Jessica Jupiter.



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The Well-Endowed Guys I’ve Been With All Seem to Have the Same Problem. What Am I Missing?

How to Talk About Your Salary With Co-Workers

How I Uncovered the True Identity of Linda Taylor, America’s First “Welfare Queen”


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This is Episode 3 of The Queen. Listen to Episode 1 here and Episode 2 here. Subscribe to the show via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, TuneIn, Stitcher, Overcast, Google Play, or iHeart.

A decade before she became known as the “welfare queen,” Linda Taylor put herself at the center of a different Chicago scandal. Upon the death of gambling kingpin Lawrence Wakefield, Taylor posed as the heir to his sizable fortune. The ensuing court proceeding was full of lies and surprise witnesses. That heirship hearing would ultimately reveal Taylor’s real identity and offer a window into her troubled past.

Tell us what you think by leaving a review on Apple Podcasts or sending an email to thequeen@slate.com.

The podcast is based on Josh Levin’s new book, The Queen: The Forgotten Life Behind an American Myth.

Podcast production by Emma Morgenstern.



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2019年5月26日 星期日

The Lonely Island’s Unauthorized Bash Brothers Experience Isn’t the First Time Someone Wrote a Novelty Song About Mark McGwire and Jose Canseco

Hope Hicks Is Facing an Existential Question

Buttigieg: “No Question” Trump Falsified Disability Status to Avoid Serving in Vietnam War

German Official Warns Jews Against Wearing Kippah in Public due to Rising Anti-Semitism

What’s It Like to be a New Comedy Cellar Comic?


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This week, Laura Bennett is talking to Ian Fidance, a comic who was passed at the Comedy Cellar just last year. For an up-and-coming comic and a lifelong comedy fan like Fidance, joining the tightknit community of the cellar is a true joy and honor. But as you’ll hear, it’s one you really have to earn.

You can email us at working@slate.com.
Podcast production by Jessamine Molli.



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Poll: Support for Abortion Rights Increases as Restrictive Laws Spread

Sarah Sanders: Trump, North Korea’s Kim “Agree in Their Assessment” of Biden

2019年5月25日 星期六

A Solar Prominence Eruption from SDO


One of the most spectacular solar sights is an erupting prominence. In 2011, NASA's Sun-orbiting Solar Dynamic Observatory spacecraft imaged an impressively large prominence erupting from the surface. The dramatic explosion was captured in ultraviolet light in the featured time lapse video covering 90 minutes, where a new frame was taken every 24 seconds. The scale of the prominence is huge -- the entire Earth would easily fit under the flowing curtain of hot gas. A solar prominence is channeled and sometimes held above the Sun's surface by the Sun's magnetic field. A quiescent prominence typically lasts about a month, and may erupt in a Coronal Mass Ejection (CME) expelling hot gas into the Solar System. The energy mechanism that creates a solar prominence is still a topic of research. After our Sun passes the current Solar Minimum, solar activity like eruptive prominences are expected to become more common over the next few years. via NASA https://go.nasa.gov/2VT3XY5

Conan O’Brien: There’s More to Germany Than Crossbow Murder Sex Cults, Says German Board of Tourism

Bong Joon-ho’s Parasite Wins the Palme d’Or at Cannes

Trump Implies He Trusts North Korea’s Kim More Than His Own People

Owners of Noah’s Ark Replica Sue Insurers Over Rain Damage

Jon Voight Thinks Donald Trump Is “The Greatest President Since Abraham Lincoln”

Pope Francis Says Abortion Is Never OK, Compares it to Hiring “a Hitman to Resolve a Problem”

Trump Defies Congress, Moves Forward With Weapons Sales to Saudi Arabia

Ex-GOP Lawmaker: Trump Is “Illegitimate President,” Should Be Impeached

Judge Blocks Trump From Using Defense Department Funds to Build Border Wall

Chief Justice John Roberts Is No Friend of Roe, but Is He Its Best Hope?


A swath of draconian abortion laws has been passed by states across the country in the past few weeks, but Alabama outdid them all. Legislators there are clearly hoping Justice Brett Kavanaugh will nullify Roe v. Wade with a stroke of the pen, but there are quite a few other factors at play here, and this week Dahlia Lithwick is joined by just the right women to explore those factors. Professor of law Melissa Murray of NYU discusses the history and significance of Roe, and CNN legal analyst Joan Biskupic, who also authored the new book The Chief: The Life and Turbulent Times of Chief Justice John Roberts, joins Dahlia to dissect Roberts’ record and reservations when it comes to reproductive rights.

To listen to this episode of Amicus, use the player below:

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I Highly Endorse This Method of Getting Rid of Your Blackheads

Help! My Stepfather Made Me Get an Abortion as a Teen. I’m Still Angry.

How Will People Behave in Deep Space Disasters?

Read Sci-Fi Author Elizabeth Bear’s New Short Story About Panic in Space

Animal Liberation Activists Are Disruptive and Uncivil—and Maybe Right


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In Australia, vegan and animal liberation activism has recently become intense and disruptive, invading farms, restaurants, and city centers. They’re doing everything from rescuing animals to blocking traffic and occupying steakhouses. Some argue that these new activists are needlessly victimizing innocent farmers, business owners, and consumers. Others argue that the activists are only doing what’s necessary to stand up for the innocent victims of farmers, business owners, and consumers.

For any cause, when change does not seem to happen—or happen quickly enough—and activists feel a moral urgency, movements can turn to more confrontational styles of protests, or “uncivil disobedience.” Is this morally defensible, or is civility a must in any kind of protest?

Guest voices include Kimberley Brownlee, Chris Delforce, Candice Delmas, Lauren Gazzola, Paula Hough, David Jochinke, Joanne Lee, Brian Leiter, Clare McCausland, Tyler Paytas, Jacy Reese, Jeff Sebo, and Peter Singer.

Slate Plus content: A full bonus episode featuring Barry talking with Stephen Metcalf of Slate Culture Gabfest about the philosophical issues raised in the episode. Barry and Stephen try to come to terms with whether they think we can separate the morality of activist tactics from the morality of their causes.

For all back episodes from Seasons 1 and 2 of Hi-Phi Nation, visit www.hiphination.org.

Facebook: www.facebook.com/hiphination/
Email: hiphination@slate.com
Twitter: @hiphination



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2019年5月24日 星期五

Slate Money: The Temperature Edition


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This week, Slate Money discusses Robert Smith’s major gift to the graduating class of Morehouse College, why office air conditioning might be a detriment to productivity, and the debate around carbon offsets.

And in the Slate Plus segment: IPO underwriters.

Email: slatemoney@slate.com
Twitter: @felixsalmon, @Three_Guineas, @EmilyRPeck

Podcast production by Jessamine Molli.



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Insane SpaceX Starlink Satellite Train Flyover Video

Keith's note: I am wondering if the satellite spacing is some sort of binary message to Richard Branson or Jeff Bezos ...



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Cops Is Just Crimesploitation

$500 Wet Suits, Drones, Seal Contraception: Shark Fever Has Arrived on Cape Cod

The Angle: Remainer Theresa May Is, in Fact, Leaving

For Some Of Us It Is Deja Vu All Over Again In Outer Space

Let's Stop Going in Circles - And Go Somewhere (2002).

"Between the time I was 2 and when I turned 14 humanity went from zero spaceflight capability to putting humans on the Moon. To me, my first vision of spaceflight was one where quantum leaps were to be expected. I knew this because I saw these leaps happening before my own eyes. That expectation took a firm hold of me and hasn't left me - or many of my generation. Yet we, and the generation that has followed us, have been cheated of what could have been done in space.

In the following three decades we have yet to send humans back to the Moon. Indeed, it would probably take us longer to recreate the ability to "land humans on the Moon and return them safely to the Earth" than it did to do so the first time. As for sending humans to Mars - it was 20 years or so away when I was a kid. Thirty years later it is still that far off - if not further.

As for the ISS, we could have built this - and should have built this - a decade ago. Now that the ISS has managed to become reality we need to refocus it - and ourselves - towards the true exploration of space. We need to go somewhere for a change. We can't sit at home - or drive around the block - and call ourselves "explorers"."



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