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@mariyadelano@hachyderm.io
2025-11-14 21:05:53

So I grew up next to #Chernobyl and this is, well, TERRIFYING.
A story for y’all: I’m from a city called Zhytomyr, 2 hours west of Kyiv in the North of #Ukraine. We were downwind of the Chernobyl #nuclear power plant when the 1986 disaster happened.
I wasn’t born for another 12 years, but my childhood was filled with stories and the aftermath of it all. Things like:
- My grandmother worked as a head doctor in a hospital and rehabilitation facility exclusively for children of Chernobyl victims to treat the extremely high prevalence of Tuberculosis and other severe health complications. (To specify: these were SECOND GENERATION of exposure).
- A lot of the kids in that facility were orphans, because their parents died young from health problems.
- My uncle’s wife was born in Pripyat. She was 1 year old when the disaster happened. Her parents were told to evacuate while given no information about what happened. They had to pack up their things and rush out to an unfamiliar city with their baby, never to see the rest of their belongings, apartment, or hometown again.
- When I was a kid, it became so common to see weirdly mutated animals and insects that even 2-3 year olds would make jokes about “Chernobyl mosquitos” and I wouldn’t even flinch seeing occasional giant bugs, dark frogs, weird-looking dogs.
- We’d frequently hear of nearby farms having issues with their animals being born too mutated to survive or random outbreaks from contaminated water / food. Crops would randomly fail. People would get poisoned on a regular basis. This all got less common as I grew up.
- My mother still remembers being a little girl, 10 years old, and looking outside from their balcony at the clouds blowing over from Chernobyl that day. People were told to not go outside and to shut all the windows, but not given an explanation as to why. My mother swears that the rain looked different. They weren’t able to go and buy more food for the kitchen for multiple days.
Anyway - nuclear safety isn’t a joke. I don’t understand how this level of carelessness can happen after Chernobyl and Fukushima.

404media.co/power-companies-ar

@cowboys@darktundra.xyz
2025-09-15 02:12:41

Jadeveon Clowney, Dallas Cowboys contract details revealed si.com/nfl/cowboys/news/jadeve

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-13 06:16:23

Just finished "Beasts Made of Night" by Tochi Onyebuchi...
Indirect CW for fantasy police state violence.
So I very much enjoyed Onyebuchi's "Riot Baby," and when I grabbed this at the library, I was certain it would be excellent. But having finished it, I'm not sure I like it that much overall?
The first maybe third is excellent, including the world-building, which is fascinating. I feel like Onyebuchi must have played "Shadow of the Colossus" at some point. Onyebuchi certainly does know how to make me care for his characters.
Some spoilers from here on out...
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I felt like it stumbles towards the middle, with Bo's reactions neither making sense in the immediate context, nor in retrospect by the end when we've learned more. Things are a bit floaty in the middle with an unclear picture of what exactly is going on politics-wise and what the motivations are. Here I think there were some nuances that didn't make it to the page, or perhaps I'm just a bit thick and not getting stuff I should be? More is of course revealed by the end, but I still wasn't satisfied with the explanations of things. For example, (spoilers) I don't feel I understand clearly what kind of power the army of aki was supposed to represent within the city? Perhaps necessary to wield the threat of offensive inisisia use? In that case, a single scene somewhere of Izu's faction deploying that tactic would have been helpful I think.
Then towards the end, for me things really started to jumble, with unclear motivations, revelations that didn't feel well-paced or -structured, and a finale where both the action & collapsing concerns felt stilted and disjointed. Particularly the mechanics/ethics of the most important death that set the finale in motion bothered me, and the unexplained mechanism by which that led to what came next? I can read a couple of possible interesting morals into the whole denouement, but didn't feel that any of them were sufficiently explored. Especially if we're supposed to see some personal failing in the protagonist's actions, I don't think it's made clear enough what that is, since I feel his reasons to reject each faction are pretty solid, and if we're meant to either pity or abjure his indecision, I don't think the message lands clearly enough.
There *is* a sequel, which honestly I wasn't sure of after the last page, and which I now very interested in. Beasts is Onyebuchi's debut, which maybe makes sense of me feeling that Riot Baby didn't have the same plotting issues. It also maybe means that Onyebuchi couldn't be sure a sequel would make it to publication in terms of setting up the ending.
Overall I really enjoyed at least 80% of this, but was expecting even better (especially politically) given Onyebuchi's other work, and I didn't feel like I found it.
#AmReading

@cowboys@darktundra.xyz
2025-09-15 02:19:27

Cowboys sign potential replacement for Micah Parsons; details revealed sportingnews.com/us/ncaa-footb

@cosmos4u@scicomm.xyz
2025-09-10 22:40:30

Late fluid flow in a primitive asteroid revealed by Lu–Hf isotopes in #Ryugu: nature.com/articles/s41586-025 -> Scientists find evidence of flowing water on Ryugu’s ancient parent asteroid: space.com/astronomy/asteroids/

@servelan@newsie.social
2025-11-12 04:09:10

Kash Patel’s high-flying habits roil Trump’s circle as new posh hunting trip revealed - Raw Story
rawstory.com/kash-patel-267428

@Techmeme@techhub.social
2025-10-08 05:35:52

UK filings: Revolut CEO and largest shareholder Nik Storonsky has shifted his residency from the UK to the UAE; Revolut is awaiting a full UK banking license (Financial Times)
ft.com/content/54348782-abc4-4

@UP8@mastodon.social
2025-11-12 21:04:32

🍆 A Hermetic, Transparent Soft Growing Vine Robot System for Pipe Inspection
#robots #machine

Illustration of a base station attached to the flange of a pipe and extended a vine robot underground that has sensors in it's tip
@arXiv_condmatmeshall_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-10-10 10:03:19

Surface-Localized Magnetic Order in RuO2 Thin Films Revealed by Low-Energy Muon Probes
Akashdeep Akashdeep, Sachin Krishnia, Jae-Hyun Ha, Siyeon An, Maik Gaerner, Thomas Prokscha, Andreas Suter, Gianluca Janka, G\"unter Reiss, Timo Kuschel, Dong-Soo Han, Angelo Di Bernardo, Zaher Salman, Gerhard Jakob, Mathias Kl\"aui
arx…

@bobmueller@mastodon.world
2025-10-07 15:59:28

Gods, let this be the thing that finally ends his ordeal and sets him free.
innocenceproject.org/news/brea