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The latest thought-provoking Fediverse stories

There is no better way to demonstrate how Murmel works than give you a taste of it right away. This page aggregates the most widely shared news and articles from a broad range of people across the Fediverse. You can get those in your favorite RSS reader too. Want the news and stories that matter to you personally? Sign up and enjoy a fully-tailored experience free for 30 days.

Your job is to deliver code you have proven to work

simonwillison.net · Dec 18

In all of the debates about the value of AI-assistance in software development there’s one depressing anecdote that I keep on seeing: the junior engineer, empowered by some class of …

Shared by @CuratedHackerNews and 33 others.
Osma A 🇫🇮🇺🇦 (@osma) · Dec 18
🔁 @simon:

I see a lot of complaints about untested AI slop in pull requests. Submitting those is a dereliction of duty as a software engineer: Your job is to deliver code you have proven to work simonwillison.net/2025/Dec/18/

Anisse (@Aissen) · Dec 19

Sad that @simon had to write the obvious in "Your job is to deliver code you have proven to work", but at least it's now been written. If it goes without saying, I guess it goes even better saying it.
simonwillison.net/2025/Dec/18/

Adrian Lansdown (@Adrianlan) · Dec 19
🔁 @simon:

I see a lot of complaints about untested AI slop in pull requests. Submitting those is a dereliction of duty as a software engineer: Your job is to deliver code you have proven to work simonwillison.net/2025/Dec/18/

Lobsters Daily Bot (@lobstersdaily) · Dec 18

Top 25 stories on lobste.rs:

🔗 Your job is to deliver code you have proven to work
simonwillison.net/2025/Dec/18/
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/t7dmam/your_job_is

🔗 TOML 1.1.0 released
github.com/toml-lang/toml/rele
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/h50lml/toml_1_1_0_

🔗 Dear ACM, you're doing AI wrong but you can still get it right
anil.recoil.org/notes/acm-ai-r
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/hlqzhx/dear_acm_yo

🔗 Hardware-Attested Nix Builds
garnix.io/blog/attested-nix-bu
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/8caabc/hardware_at

🔗 Microsoft quietly kills IntelliCode in favor of the paid Copilot
visualstudiomagazine.com/artic
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/k9cyk3/microsoft_q

🔗 Remote code execution via ND6 Router Advertisements
freebsd.org/security/advisorie
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/l6nsa1/remote_code

🔗 Partial inlining
xania.org/202512/18-partial-in
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/yme7vr/partial_inl

🔗 Linux Kernel Rust Code Sees Its First CVE Vulnerability
phoronix.com/news/First-Linux-
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/nesn9g/linux_kerne

🔗 I got hacked, my server started mining Monero this morning
blog.jakesaunders.dev/my-serve
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/v139bi/i_got_hacke

🔗 OBS Studio Gets A New Renderer: How OBS Adopted Metal
obsproject.com/blog/obs-studio
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/eanubs/obs_studio_

🔗 Yep, Passkeys Still Have Problems
fy.blackhats.net.au/blog/2025-
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/ammoxm/yep_passkey

🔗 Stop Losing Intent: Absent, Null, and Value in Rust
minikin.me/blog/presence-rs
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/favt88/stop_losing

🔗 dogalog: Prolog-based livecoding music environment
github.com/danja/dogalog
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/hzkqhc/dogalog_pro

🔗 How did IRC ping timeouts end up in a lawsuit?
mjg59.dreamwidth.org/73777.html
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/knox4u/how_did_irc

🔗 NVME is not a hard disk (2021)
blog.koehntopp.info/2021/05/25
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/va2vtw/nvme_is_not

🔗 headson: head/tail for structured data - summarize/preview JSON/YAML and source code
github.com/kantord/headson
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/rfen9d/headson_hea

🔗 The original Mozilla "Dinosaur" logo artwork
jwz.org/blog/2025/12/the-origi
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/csp9j1/original_mo

🔗 Making the Most of Bit Arrays
gearsco.de/blog/bit-array-synt
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/pbz4a7/making_most

🔗 how to hack discord, vercel and more with one easy trick
kibty.town/blog/mintlify/
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/amzgrw/how_hack_di

🔗 Maintaining an open source software during Hacktoberfest
crocidb.com/post/maintaining-a
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/8gnr4x/maintaining

🔗 Interactive Fluid Typography
electricmagicfactory.com/artic
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/tcnstw/interactive

🔗 secure local configuration in kakoune
ficd.sh/blog/kak-secure-local-
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/kcfrr2/secure_loca

🔗 Ringspace: A Proposal for the Human Web
taggart-tech.com/ringspace/
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/rd5yo9/ringspace_p

🔗 lightning-extra: PyTorch Lightning plugins and utilities for cloud-native machine learning
github.com/ocramz/lightning-ex
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/lbvixt/lightning_e

🔗 Asahi Linux Progress Report: Linux 6.18
asahilinux.org/2025/12/progres
🔥 Score: 0
💬 lobste.rs/s/lzfzzi/asahi_linux

Greg Wilson (@gvwilson) · Dec 18
🔁 @simon:

I see a lot of complaints about untested AI slop in pull requests. Submitting those is a dereliction of duty as a software engineer: Your job is to deliver code you have proven to work simonwillison.net/2025/Dec/18/

Chris Swan (@cpswan) · Dec 18
🔁 @simon:

I see a lot of complaints about untested AI slop in pull requests. Submitting those is a dereliction of duty as a software engineer: Your job is to deliver code you have proven to work simonwillison.net/2025/Dec/18/

GitHub - DGoettlich/history-llms: Information hub for our project training the largest possible historical LLMs.

github.com · Dec 18

Information hub for our project training the largest possible historical LLMs. - DGoettlich/history-llms

Shared by @topstories and 18 others.
lain (@lain) · Dec 19
🔁 @lain: https://github.com/DGoettlich/history-llms

cool idea, training LLMs only on data that's older than 100 years
Tomas Ekeli (@tomasekeli) · Dec 19

#LLMs trained from scratch on historical data only (e.g. up to 1936): github.com/DGoettlich/history-llms

GripNews (@GripNews) · Dec 19

🌕 歷史大型語言模型計畫資訊中心
➤ 透過時間鎖定的歷史數據,重塑大型語言模型的研究範式
github.com/DGoettlich/history-
DGoettlich/history-llms GitHub 儲存庫是一個資訊中心,專門為訓練規模最大化的歷史大型語言模型 (LLM) 所設計。此專案的核心目標是建立能夠反映特定歷史時期知識的 LLM,以利於人文學科、社會科學和電腦科學的研究。該專案已宣佈即將推出 Ranke-4B 系列模型,這是一組基於 Qwen3 架構、參數量為 40 億的模型,並從頭開始訓練,使用了涵蓋不同歷史知識截止點(1913、1929、1933、1939、1946 年)的 800 億個 token 的歷史數據,並以 6000 億個 token 的時間戳記文本進行微調。儲存庫中也提供了 1913 年模型的範例輸出,展示了模型在回答敏感或歷史爭議性問題時,會呈現訓練資料中的歷史觀點,而非現代的價值判斷,例如關於阿道夫·希特勒、奴隸制度、女性工作權益及同性戀等議題。專案強調其科學應用目標
#AI #大型語言模型 #歷史研究 #數據集

Worth reading

John Lanchester · For Every Winner a Loser: What is finance for?

lrb.co.uk · Dec 18

In our society the classic three ways of making a fortune still apply: inherit it, marry it, or steal it. But for an...

Shared by @mspro and 14 others.
emeritrix (@anarchademic) · Dec 18
🔁 @wall_e:

@pluralistic the source article linked by Cory is quite long but really good! Definitely give it a read if you have some time:

lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v46/n17/jo

BashStKid (@BashStKid) · Dec 18
🔁 @pluralistic:

The piece in question is John Lanchester's "For Every Winner A Loser," in the *London Review of Books*, in which Lanchester reviews two books about the finance sector: Gary Stevenson's *The Trading Game* and Rob Copeland's *The Fund*:

lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v46/n17/jo

2/

Michael Seemann (@mspro) · Dec 19
🔁 @pluralistic:

The piece in question is John Lanchester's "For Every Winner A Loser," in the *London Review of Books*, in which Lanchester reviews two books about the finance sector: Gary Stevenson's *The Trading Game* and Rob Copeland's *The Fund*:

lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v46/n17/jo

2/

BobDevney (@BobDevney) · Dec 19
🔁 @markmetz:

Helluva good read…

“But what was really happening was that the wealth of the middle class – or ordinary, hard-working families ... and almost all the world’s largest governments – was being sucked away from them and into the hands of the rich.

Ordinary families were losing their assets and going into debt. So were governments. As ordinary families and governments got poorer, and the rich got richer, that would increase flows of interest, rent and profit from the middle class to the rich, compounding the problem.

The problem would not solve itself. In fact, it would accelerate, it would get worse.”
lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v46/n17/jo

Nat (@nat) · Dec 19
🔁 @wall_e:

@pluralistic the source article linked by Cory is quite long but really good! Definitely give it a read if you have some time:

lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v46/n17/jo

J.L.1285 :cangoose: (@CAWguy) · Dec 19
🔁 @wall_e:

@pluralistic the source article linked by Cory is quite long but really good! Definitely give it a read if you have some time:

lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v46/n17/jo

CelloMom On Cars (@CelloMomOnCars) · Dec 18
🔁 @kfogel: It's another one of those "Ok, what bodily subsystem do I have to sell to be granted the ability to write that well?" moments, this time upon reading John Lanchester's multi-book review about finance in LRB:

https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v46/n17/john-lanchester/for-every-winner-a-loser

Astonishingly good. ^/ to @pluralistic for the link.
Zhi Zhu 🕸️ (@ZhiZhu) · Dec 18
🔁 @kfogel: It's another one of those "Ok, what bodily subsystem do I have to sell to be granted the ability to write that well?" moments, this time upon reading John Lanchester's multi-book review about finance in LRB:

https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v46/n17/john-lanchester/for-every-winner-a-loser

Astonishingly good. ^/ to @pluralistic for the link.
rhodriplewiskc (@rhodriplewiskc) · Dec 18
🔁 @kfogel: It's another one of those "Ok, what bodily subsystem do I have to sell to be granted the ability to write that well?" moments, this time upon reading John Lanchester's multi-book review about finance in LRB:

https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v46/n17/john-lanchester/for-every-winner-a-loser

Astonishingly good. ^/ to @pluralistic for the link.

How climate breakdown is putting the world’s food in peril - in maps and charts

theguardian.com · Dec 18

From floods to droughts, erratic weather patterns are affecting food security, with crop yields projected to fall if changes are not made

Shared by @ehrba and 16 others.
Bastian Ehrenholz (@ehrba) · Dec 19
🔁 @parents4future:

1960 📈 2020 📉 2100

"…multiple projections suggest that climate change will soon have key crops plateauing, then sliding down again. The chart shows how crop yields could fall over the rest of the century under a high-emissions scenario."

"More than 600 million people worldwide are projected to face food insecurity – or worse – by 2030."

theguardian.com/environment/ng

Parents For Future :verified: (@parents4future) · Dec 19
🔁 @parents4future:

1960 📈 2020 📉 2100

"…multiple projections suggest that climate change will soon have key crops plateauing, then sliding down again. The chart shows how crop yields could fall over the rest of the century under a high-emissions scenario."

"More than 600 million people worldwide are projected to face food insecurity – or worse – by 2030."

theguardian.com/environment/ng

kali (@kaliagainstallodds) · Dec 18
🔁 @CelloMomOnCars:

“Climate change and weather extremes will drive down global caloric yields by about 24% under high future emissions.

“This would result in higher food prices, which in rich countries would feel like inflation. In poor countries, this would exacerbate food security problems and could negatively affect political stability.”

theguardian.com/environment/ng

#ClimateInflation

Worth reading

Want to understand the sickness of Britain today? Look no further – a novel explained it all 20 years ago | Aditya Chakrabortty

theguardian.com · Dec 18

The racism, the predatory politics, the banality and cruelty: we struggle to make sense of it, but JG Ballard foretold everything we are living through now, says Guardian columnist Aditya Chakrabortty

Shared by @BashStKid and 12 others.
kcarruthers (@kcarruthers) · Dec 18
🔁 @CGM:

"Want to understand the sickness of Britain today? Look no further – a novel explained it all 20 years ago" - theguardian.com/commentisfree/
#jgballard #uk

Ian Turton (@ianturton) · Dec 18
🔁 @decembr14:

"The crusader crosses of St George, the hair clay and bloviating of GB News and the live-streaming, selfie-gurning, hate-spewing of Tommy Robinson – their spirit is better captured in this last fiction by the late Ballard than in many more recent and more breathless titles clogging up the annual best-of lists."

theguardian.com/commentisfree/

#England #Fiction #JGBallard #NigelFarage #TommyRobinson #Immigration #Asylum

Richard Michael Blaber (@rmblaber1956) · Dec 18

theguardian.com/commentisfree/. JG Ballard was a true prophet - & is insufficiently honoured in his own country. "Kingdom Come" sounds like a must read.

Simon Brooke (@simon_brooke) · Dec 18
🔁 @CGM:

"Want to understand the sickness of Britain today? Look no further – a novel explained it all 20 years ago" - theguardian.com/commentisfree/
#jgballard #uk

Bird flu warnings are being ignored. I’ve seen this pattern before

theconversation.com · Dec 19

H5N1 has a 50% fatality rate in humans. Yet we’re dismantling the systems designed to catch it early.

Shared by @cdarwin and 15 others.
GailWaldby@bsky.social❌👑 (@gwaldby) · Dec 19
🔁 @ai6yr:

The Conversation: Bird flu warnings are being ignored. I’ve seen this pattern before

Published: December 18, 2025 6:01am EST

theconversation.com/bird-flu-w

#flu #influenza #pandemic #health

Wendizen 🇺🇦 (@wendinoakland) · Dec 19
🔁 @cdarwin:

There’s an unwritten rule in publishing,
or so I’ve been told:
don’t write about COVID.

Our collective attention span has been saturated by those endless months holed up in attics and cramped corners of apartments, staring out at a world we could no longer take part in.
When the worst of it passed, we felt an urge to close that chapter, to padlock it behind a heavy latch.

But in doing so, we also tuck away the hard-won lessons of that time:
how quickly systems buckle,
how two decades of coronavirus warnings accumulated without adequate preparedness,
and how the very mechanisms we rely on for safety can become the scaffolding of a next disaster.

This matters now as another threat is taking shape:
highly pathogenic avian influenza, known as bird flu.

Bird flu still poses a low‑probability threat of sustained human transmission.
But that doesn’t make the virus harmless.
The H5 viruses are brutally lethal to birds
– 9 million have died outright, and hundreds of millions have been culled to contain the spread.
Alarming is the virus’s expanding reach into mammals.
So far, at least 74 mammal species, from elephant seals to polar bears, have suffered die‑offs.
The individual cases are situated within a broader shift.
Dense poultry farms create opportunities for the virus to hop species.
Over a thousand US dairy herds have tested positive in the past two years,
and viral fragments have even been detected in milk
– a worrying route of spillover.
Every jump is a probe for new footholds.
Europe is seeing a surge too.
From early September to
mid-November 2025,
1,444 infected wild birds were found across 26 countries:
a quadrupling compared with the year before.
theconversation.com/bird-flu-w

Compassionate Crab (@Compassionatecrab) · Dec 19
🔁 @ai6yr:

The Conversation: Bird flu warnings are being ignored. I’ve seen this pattern before

Published: December 18, 2025 6:01am EST

theconversation.com/bird-flu-w

#flu #influenza #pandemic #health

Chuck Darwin (@cdarwin) · Dec 19
🔁 @cdarwin:

There’s an unwritten rule in publishing,
or so I’ve been told:
don’t write about COVID.

Our collective attention span has been saturated by those endless months holed up in attics and cramped corners of apartments, staring out at a world we could no longer take part in.
When the worst of it passed, we felt an urge to close that chapter, to padlock it behind a heavy latch.

But in doing so, we also tuck away the hard-won lessons of that time:
how quickly systems buckle,
how two decades of coronavirus warnings accumulated without adequate preparedness,
and how the very mechanisms we rely on for safety can become the scaffolding of a next disaster.

This matters now as another threat is taking shape:
highly pathogenic avian influenza, known as bird flu.

Bird flu still poses a low‑probability threat of sustained human transmission.
But that doesn’t make the virus harmless.
The H5 viruses are brutally lethal to birds
– 9 million have died outright, and hundreds of millions have been culled to contain the spread.
Alarming is the virus’s expanding reach into mammals.
So far, at least 74 mammal species, from elephant seals to polar bears, have suffered die‑offs.
The individual cases are situated within a broader shift.
Dense poultry farms create opportunities for the virus to hop species.
Over a thousand US dairy herds have tested positive in the past two years,
and viral fragments have even been detected in milk
– a worrying route of spillover.
Every jump is a probe for new footholds.
Europe is seeing a surge too.
From early September to
mid-November 2025,
1,444 infected wild birds were found across 26 countries:
a quadrupling compared with the year before.
theconversation.com/bird-flu-w

Kevin Karhan :verified: (@kkarhan) · Dec 19
🔁 @cdarwin:

There’s an unwritten rule in publishing,
or so I’ve been told:
don’t write about COVID.

Our collective attention span has been saturated by those endless months holed up in attics and cramped corners of apartments, staring out at a world we could no longer take part in.
When the worst of it passed, we felt an urge to close that chapter, to padlock it behind a heavy latch.

But in doing so, we also tuck away the hard-won lessons of that time:
how quickly systems buckle,
how two decades of coronavirus warnings accumulated without adequate preparedness,
and how the very mechanisms we rely on for safety can become the scaffolding of a next disaster.

This matters now as another threat is taking shape:
highly pathogenic avian influenza, known as bird flu.

Bird flu still poses a low‑probability threat of sustained human transmission.
But that doesn’t make the virus harmless.
The H5 viruses are brutally lethal to birds
– 9 million have died outright, and hundreds of millions have been culled to contain the spread.
Alarming is the virus’s expanding reach into mammals.
So far, at least 74 mammal species, from elephant seals to polar bears, have suffered die‑offs.
The individual cases are situated within a broader shift.
Dense poultry farms create opportunities for the virus to hop species.
Over a thousand US dairy herds have tested positive in the past two years,
and viral fragments have even been detected in milk
– a worrying route of spillover.
Every jump is a probe for new footholds.
Europe is seeing a surge too.
From early September to
mid-November 2025,
1,444 infected wild birds were found across 26 countries:
a quadrupling compared with the year before.
theconversation.com/bird-flu-w

Femme Malheureuse (@femme_mal) · Dec 19
🔁 @ai6yr:

The Conversation: Bird flu warnings are being ignored. I’ve seen this pattern before

Published: December 18, 2025 6:01am EST

theconversation.com/bird-flu-w

#flu #influenza #pandemic #health

wsm (@weldon) · Dec 19
🔁 @cdarwin:

There’s an unwritten rule in publishing,
or so I’ve been told:
don’t write about COVID.

Our collective attention span has been saturated by those endless months holed up in attics and cramped corners of apartments, staring out at a world we could no longer take part in.
When the worst of it passed, we felt an urge to close that chapter, to padlock it behind a heavy latch.

But in doing so, we also tuck away the hard-won lessons of that time:
how quickly systems buckle,
how two decades of coronavirus warnings accumulated without adequate preparedness,
and how the very mechanisms we rely on for safety can become the scaffolding of a next disaster.

This matters now as another threat is taking shape:
highly pathogenic avian influenza, known as bird flu.

Bird flu still poses a low‑probability threat of sustained human transmission.
But that doesn’t make the virus harmless.
The H5 viruses are brutally lethal to birds
– 9 million have died outright, and hundreds of millions have been culled to contain the spread.
Alarming is the virus’s expanding reach into mammals.
So far, at least 74 mammal species, from elephant seals to polar bears, have suffered die‑offs.
The individual cases are situated within a broader shift.
Dense poultry farms create opportunities for the virus to hop species.
Over a thousand US dairy herds have tested positive in the past two years,
and viral fragments have even been detected in milk
– a worrying route of spillover.
Every jump is a probe for new footholds.
Europe is seeing a surge too.
From early September to
mid-November 2025,
1,444 infected wild birds were found across 26 countries:
a quadrupling compared with the year before.
theconversation.com/bird-flu-w

Nicole Parsons (@Npars01) · Dec 19
🔁 @cdarwin:

There’s an unwritten rule in publishing,
or so I’ve been told:
don’t write about COVID.

Our collective attention span has been saturated by those endless months holed up in attics and cramped corners of apartments, staring out at a world we could no longer take part in.
When the worst of it passed, we felt an urge to close that chapter, to padlock it behind a heavy latch.

But in doing so, we also tuck away the hard-won lessons of that time:
how quickly systems buckle,
how two decades of coronavirus warnings accumulated without adequate preparedness,
and how the very mechanisms we rely on for safety can become the scaffolding of a next disaster.

This matters now as another threat is taking shape:
highly pathogenic avian influenza, known as bird flu.

Bird flu still poses a low‑probability threat of sustained human transmission.
But that doesn’t make the virus harmless.
The H5 viruses are brutally lethal to birds
– 9 million have died outright, and hundreds of millions have been culled to contain the spread.
Alarming is the virus’s expanding reach into mammals.
So far, at least 74 mammal species, from elephant seals to polar bears, have suffered die‑offs.
The individual cases are situated within a broader shift.
Dense poultry farms create opportunities for the virus to hop species.
Over a thousand US dairy herds have tested positive in the past two years,
and viral fragments have even been detected in milk
– a worrying route of spillover.
Every jump is a probe for new footholds.
Europe is seeing a surge too.
From early September to
mid-November 2025,
1,444 infected wild birds were found across 26 countries:
a quadrupling compared with the year before.
theconversation.com/bird-flu-w

Steve's Place (@steter) · Dec 19
🔁 @cdarwin:

There’s an unwritten rule in publishing,
or so I’ve been told:
don’t write about COVID.

Our collective attention span has been saturated by those endless months holed up in attics and cramped corners of apartments, staring out at a world we could no longer take part in.
When the worst of it passed, we felt an urge to close that chapter, to padlock it behind a heavy latch.

But in doing so, we also tuck away the hard-won lessons of that time:
how quickly systems buckle,
how two decades of coronavirus warnings accumulated without adequate preparedness,
and how the very mechanisms we rely on for safety can become the scaffolding of a next disaster.

This matters now as another threat is taking shape:
highly pathogenic avian influenza, known as bird flu.

Bird flu still poses a low‑probability threat of sustained human transmission.
But that doesn’t make the virus harmless.
The H5 viruses are brutally lethal to birds
– 9 million have died outright, and hundreds of millions have been culled to contain the spread.
Alarming is the virus’s expanding reach into mammals.
So far, at least 74 mammal species, from elephant seals to polar bears, have suffered die‑offs.
The individual cases are situated within a broader shift.
Dense poultry farms create opportunities for the virus to hop species.
Over a thousand US dairy herds have tested positive in the past two years,
and viral fragments have even been detected in milk
– a worrying route of spillover.
Every jump is a probe for new footholds.
Europe is seeing a surge too.
From early September to
mid-November 2025,
1,444 infected wild birds were found across 26 countries:
a quadrupling compared with the year before.
theconversation.com/bird-flu-w

Trending Bot (@trending) · Dec 19
🔁 @ai6yr:

The Conversation: Bird flu warnings are being ignored. I’ve seen this pattern before

Published: December 18, 2025 6:01am EST

theconversation.com/bird-flu-w

#flu #influenza #pandemic #health

Worth reading

Gisèle Pelicot's power, and Dominique Pelicot's shame | Girl on the Net

girlonthenet.com · Dec 19

Gisèle Pelicot has shown us that shame can change sides. Her heroism can never be overstated. So let's talk about Dominique Pelicot's shame.

Shared by @Mactonex and 7 others.
Christopher Phin (@chrisphin) · Dec 19
🔁 @girlonthenet:

I am going to mark this day every year.

Gisèle Pelicot is an international hero. I hope that every single day she knows safety and love and peace.

girlonthenet.com/blog/dominiqu
girlonthenet.com/blog/dominiqu

Mactonex (@Mactonex) · Dec 19
🔁 @girlonthenet:

I am going to mark this day every year.

Gisèle Pelicot is an international hero. I hope that every single day she knows safety and love and peace.

girlonthenet.com/blog/dominiqu
girlonthenet.com/blog/dominiqu

Joe Brockmeier (@jzb) · Dec 19
🔁 @girlonthenet:

I am going to mark this day every year.

Gisèle Pelicot is an international hero. I hope that every single day she knows safety and love and peace.

girlonthenet.com/blog/dominiqu
girlonthenet.com/blog/dominiqu

Neil Brown (@neil) · Dec 19
🔁 @girlonthenet:

I am going to mark this day every year.

Gisèle Pelicot is an international hero. I hope that every single day she knows safety and love and peace.

girlonthenet.com/blog/dominiqu
girlonthenet.com/blog/dominiqu

pascoda (@pascoda) · Dec 19
🔁 @girlonthenet:

I am going to mark this day every year.

Gisèle Pelicot is an international hero. I hope that every single day she knows safety and love and peace.

girlonthenet.com/blog/dominiqu
girlonthenet.com/blog/dominiqu

Sandzwerg (@sandzwerg) · Dec 19
🔁 @girlonthenet:

I am going to mark this day every year.

Gisèle Pelicot is an international hero. I hope that every single day she knows safety and love and peace.

girlonthenet.com/blog/dominiqu
girlonthenet.com/blog/dominiqu

Mince Pie Butty (@otfrom) · Dec 19
🔁 @girlonthenet:

I am going to mark this day every year.

Gisèle Pelicot is an international hero. I hope that every single day she knows safety and love and peace.

girlonthenet.com/blog/dominiqu
girlonthenet.com/blog/dominiqu

The Americans Who Saw All This Coming—but Were Ignored and Maligned

newrepublic.com · Dec 18

Call them the Cassandras: the people—mostly not white and male—who smelled the fascism all over Trump from jump street. Why were they “alarmists,” and how did “anti-alarmism” become cool?

Shared by @msbw and 16 others.
Bruce Sigmon (@bsigmon) · Dec 18
🔁 @wdlindsy:

Toby Buckle on why the Cassandras who saw what was coming with Trump early on, smelled the fascism all over him, tended to be female, Black, LGBTQ — and why they were resoundingly ridiculed by "mainstream" and "centrist" commentators (largely male and "reasonable") for whom the word "fascism" was a bridge too far.

#Trump #MAGA #lies #ConspiracyTheories #Qanon #pizzagate #Jan6 #WhiteSupremacy #ApprovalRating #economy #affordability #fascism
/2

newrepublic.com/article/204254

Zhi Zhu 🕸️ (@ZhiZhu) · Dec 19
🔁 @wdlindsy:

Toby Buckle on why the Cassandras who saw what was coming with Trump early on, smelled the fascism all over him, tended to be female, Black, LGBTQ — and why they were resoundingly ridiculed by "mainstream" and "centrist" commentators (largely male and "reasonable") for whom the word "fascism" was a bridge too far.

#Trump #MAGA #lies #ConspiracyTheories #Qanon #pizzagate #Jan6 #WhiteSupremacy #ApprovalRating #economy #affordability #fascism
/2

newrepublic.com/article/204254

The Human Capybara (@aSweetGentleman) · Dec 18
🔁 @DemocracyMattersALot:

Call them the Cassandras: the people—mostly not white and male—who smelled the fascism all over Trump from jump street. Why were they “alarmists,” and how did “anti-alarmism” become cool?

The Americans Who Saw All This Coming—but Were Ignored and Maligned
newrepublic.com/article/204254

#TrumpDidThis #RepublicansDidThis #GOPKakistocracy #AmericanFascistParty #Project2025 #NoRepublicansEverAgain #USPol

The Flight Attendant (@CosmicTraveler) · Dec 18
🔁 @donmoyn.bsky.social:

Trying to forecast the future is prone to uncertainty, though I am probably closer to the alarmist end of the spectrum. This article is most useful in highlighting the dismissals of such warnings. Big question is why? Normalcy bias? Not being vulnerable? newrepublic.com/article/2042...

The Americans Who Saw All This...

RealGene ☣️ (@RealGene) · Dec 18
🔁 @wdlindsy:

Toby Buckle on why the Cassandras who saw what was coming with Trump early on, smelled the fascism all over him, tended to be female, Black, LGBTQ — and why they were resoundingly ridiculed by "mainstream" and "centrist" commentators (largely male and "reasonable") for whom the word "fascism" was a bridge too far.

#Trump #MAGA #lies #ConspiracyTheories #Qanon #pizzagate #Jan6 #WhiteSupremacy #ApprovalRating #economy #affordability #fascism
/2

newrepublic.com/article/204254

BobDevney (@BobDevney) · Dec 19
🔁 @wdlindsy:

Toby Buckle on why the Cassandras who saw what was coming with Trump early on, smelled the fascism all over him, tended to be female, Black, LGBTQ — and why they were resoundingly ridiculed by "mainstream" and "centrist" commentators (largely male and "reasonable") for whom the word "fascism" was a bridge too far.

#Trump #MAGA #lies #ConspiracyTheories #Qanon #pizzagate #Jan6 #WhiteSupremacy #ApprovalRating #economy #affordability #fascism
/2

newrepublic.com/article/204254

Worth reading

Earth’s frozen regions are sending a clear warning about climate change – but politicians are ignoring it

theconversation.com · Dec 18

The warning lights from the cryosphere have been flashing red for several years and governments and policymakers ignore this at their peril.

Shared by @chu and 6 others.
Chu 朱 (@chu) · Dec 19
🔁 @PeterRu:

Earth’s frozen regions are sending a clear warning about climate change – but politicians are ignoring it
December 18, 2025

theconversation.com/earths-fro

Schauinsland (@Soweitsogut) · Dec 19

Earth’s frozen regions are sending a clear #warning about #climatechange – but politicians are ignoring it

We cannot negotiate with the melting point of ice.” That’s the message from more than 50 leading scientists who study the Earth’s frozen regions, published in the latest annual State of the Cryosphere report.

theconversation.com/earths-fro?

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