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ISS Daily Summary Report – 7/26/2024

Boeing CST-100 Crewed Flight Test (CFT): The CFT crew continued assisting the ISS crew with various audits and housekeeping.  They also performed CloudNet Testing and STEMonstration Earth Science activities. Payloads: Sleep in Orbit: A crewmember transferre

Politics

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A win for Hunter Biden, and why is Trump appealing a courtroom victory?

Injustice for All is a weekly series about how the Trump administration is trying to weaponize the justice system—and the people who are fighting back. Hell yeah, Hunter Biden keeps winning Remember the Hunter Biden laptop guy? John Paul Mac Isaac i
Daily Kos

A win for Hunter Biden, and why is Trump appealing a courtroom victory?

Injustice for All is a weekly series about how the Trump administration is trying to weaponize the justice system—and the people who are fighting back. Hell yeah, Hunter Biden keeps winning Remember the Hunter Biden laptop guy? John Paul Mac Isaac is the computer repairman who handed a copy of Biden’s hard drive over to Rudy Giuliani, kicking off years of GOP accusations and investigations. Nearly three years ago, in a Trumpy little move, Mac Isaac sued Biden, Sen. Adam Schiff, CNN, and Politico for defaming him, whining that he was falsely smeared as a Russian agent.  But Mac Isaac’s feelings festival came to an end earlier this week when the Delaware Supreme Court upheld a lower court’s dismissal of Mac Isaac’s claims.  Mac Isaac was irate over the following comment Biden made as the laptop story exploded in 2020: There could be a laptop out there that was stolen from me. It could be that I was hacked. It could be that it was the – that it was Russian intelligence. It could be that it was stolen from me. Or that there was a laptop stolen from me. You’ll note that the statement doesn’t name Mac Isaac. It doesn’t mention his store. It doesn’t say a thing about him, but nonetheless, Mac Isaac was pretty sure he was the real victim here. Sure, he’s made a career out of his Hunter Biden notoriety, writing a book about it, going on Fox News podcasts, selling thumb drives of the laptop’s contents, but just imagine his heartbreak at hearing Biden say literally nothing about him at all? Mac Isaac will have to content himself with making money on the right-wing grift circuit instead. Next stop for Hunter? Continuing to laugh at Melania Trump’s threat of a billion-dollar lawsuit. Half a billion dollars in treats is still not enough for Trump Donald Trump ended last week with a $500 billion gift from a New York state appellate court ruling which wiped out his civil fraud penalty for his cute little habit of lying to banks—a thing which is fine and cool and good when Trump does it, but for anyone else is allegedly grounds for termination and prosecution. So Trump and his crime family are appealing his … win. He wants the sanctions in the judgment gone, because he should never ever suffer any consequences. Of course, Trump declared TOTAL VICTORY when the penalty was tossed, which makes slinking off to the court to ask if they’d pretty please also say he didn’t actually commit any fraud even more hilarious.  Jack Smith to Tom Cotton: lol nope Sen. Tom Cotton has always taken his cues from Trump, and makes a vicious little ferret of a sidekick. That’s why the Arkansas lawmaker filed an absolutely unhinged ethics complaint against former special counsel Jack Smith, alleging that Smith violated the Hatch Act by investigating and prosecuting Trump.  It’s so cute when Republicans pretend to care about the Hatch Act, which limits the sort of partisan political activities federal employees may engage in. Here’s a report about 13 senior Trump officials violating the Act during his first term. Here’s a whole congressional hearing about all the violations. Here’s the administration loosening the Hatch Act rules during Trump’s second term so all the goons he’s stuffed into government can wear MAGA hats. Really. Neither Trump nor Cotton can conceive that anyone’s actions are taken honestly, rather than in the cynical, weaselly, bullying way they act. So, Cotton’s ethics complaint framed the totally normal actions Smith took as a prosecutor, such as asking the court for permission to file a longer brief or requesting a trial date, as somehow instead an attempt to influence the 2024 election.  The letter Smith’s attorneys filed in response is blistering, and points out that Cotton’s view of the Hatch Act would mean any politician could avoid prosecution simply by announcing they were running for office—which, come to think of it, is pretty much exactly how it ended up working out for Trump after all. But the mere fact that anyone ever investigated Trump’s open and obvious crimes is, as far as crony Cotton is concerned, the real crime.  Third Circuit to Republicans: lol nope On Tuesday, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that it is unconstitutional for the state of Pennsylvania to toss mail-in ballots when voters don’t include the correct date on the return envelope. Republicans have been desperately trying to suppress voting in the swing state and are fully-aligned with Trump’s unhinged war on mail-in ballots.  Judge D. Brooks Smith, a George W. Bush appointee, writing for the unanimous three-judge panel, wrote that the date requirement “imposes a burden on Pennsylvanians’ constitutional right to vote” and “culminates in county election boards discarding thousands of ballots each time an election is held. The date requirement will not protect against the vast majority of attempts at voter fraud.” Tell that to the weirdo election denier from Pennsylvania who just landed an administration job thanks to her election conspiracy bona fides. She’s gotta be incandescent with rage.  Trump judge lets Trump do what Trump wants, as per usual U.S. District Judge Lance Walker, a Trump appointee, helped the administration kick in the teeth of a network of Maine clinics that provide health care to low-income residents in the state. The clinics are a casualty of the GOP’s war on Planned Parenthood, with the One Big Beautiful Bill blocking all Medicaid funding to any clinic that provides abortions—despite, of course, the fact that the Hyde Amendment has barred federal Medicaid funding for abortions for decades. So, too bad, low-income people in Maine who need other health care services like birth control. It’s not so much that Walker ruled against the clinics, but what he said when he did it. He declared that it would be a “special kind of judicial hubris” to defy the “big beautiful bill.” Man, show some dignity and at least pretend you understand your role in the ever-eroding system of checks and balances. Caping like this is just embarrassing. 

Clips of the week: Democrats shred Trump’s dictator dreams

As President Donald Trump continues to play fantasy dictator, ruining lives and threatening U.S. democracy, Democratic leaders have finally started hitting back—hard.  And it’s all on video! Watch Newsom troll the sh-t out of Trump with real crim
Daily Kos

Clips of the week: Democrats shred Trump’s dictator dreams

As President Donald Trump continues to play fantasy dictator, ruining lives and threatening U.S. democracy, Democratic leaders have finally started hitting back—hard.  And it’s all on video! Watch Newsom troll the sh-t out of Trump with real crime statistics x x YouTube Video California Gov. Gavin Newsom will not stop trolling Trump—with facts. During a press conference on public safety last week, Newsom offered the president some important crime statistics he seems to have overlooked. 'A bunch of sh-t': Walz spits fire against Trump's petty tyranny x x YouTube Video Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz didn’t mince words on Aug. 25 at the Democratic National Convention’s summer meeting in Minneapolis, taking aim at the deterioration of the country under Trump.  Trump gets a ridiculous badge for turning DC into a police state x x YouTube Video Trump received a made-for-TV honorific for turning Washington into a police state on Aug. 25, with U.S. Marshals Service Director Gadyaces Serralta presenting him with an honorary marshal’s badge.  Watch this Trump Cabinet meeting devolve into ass-kissing assembly x x YouTube Video Trump held one of his cult-of-personality Cabinet meetings on Aug. 26, which quickly devolved into a session of his minions lathering him up with obsequious praise. Trump says he can do 'anything' he wants x x YouTube Video Trump went full dictator on Aug. 26 when he was asked about Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker's rejection of federal troops that are set to be deployed to Chicago. Republican has infuriating response to Minneapolis shooting x x YouTube Video Fox News pundit and former GOP Rep. Trey Gowdy of South Carolina, whose time in Congress was spent shilling for the pro-gun National Rifle Association, continues making excuses for a gun-obsessed society following the Aug. 27 mass shooting in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Another week, another ceaseless attack on U.S. democracy from Republicans. At least democrats are finally starting to fight back. For more video content, check out Daily Kos on YouTube.

Why are conservatives such cowards?

The past few weeks of conservative politics have been jam-packed with demonstrations of fear and cowardice, poking holes in their facade as tough guys (and gals). For instance, senior White House aide Stephen Miller took a break from creating policies meant
Daily Kos

Why are conservatives such cowards?

The past few weeks of conservative politics have been jam-packed with demonstrations of fear and cowardice, poking holes in their facade as tough guys (and gals). For instance, senior White House aide Stephen Miller took a break from creating policies meant to hurt immigrants and appeared in the Oval Office, alongside President Donald Trump, to inform the world how afraid he is of parks in Washington, D.C. Praising Trump’s installation of federal law enforcement and National Guard members in the nation’s capital, Miller explained, “For the first time in their lives, they can use the parks, they can walk on the streets. You have people who can walk freely at night without having to worry about being robbed or mugged. They are wearing their watches again.” x x YouTube Video Every year, millions of people visit Washington and have no problem with the parks. Little babies are fine there. People wear watches. Trump’s deployment to the city has been a serious affront to locals, particularly the city’s large Black population, but it has also exposed a falsehood at the center of Republican fearmongering. The National Guard on the ground is largely focusing on trash pickup and responding to traffic accidents, despite the administration’s apocalyptic rhetoric. The most high-profile crime the deployment has handled so far is a sandwich thrower they couldn’t convince a grand jury to indict. The right has a lot invested in their image as the strongest people in American politics. From MAGA red hats to George W. Bush fanboys wearing cowboy hats, the conservative movement has embraced “macho” as its aesthetic for decades. But more often than not they have been utter cowards, displaying weakness on a host of issues facing Americans. Then-President Ronald Reagan, shown in 1987. For instance, when the AIDS/HIV crisis began to haunt the country in the 1980s, then-President Ronald Reagan did not confront the problem directly. Because the disease first surfaced in the LGBTQ+ community, and that was where a majority of the deaths initially occurred, Reagan ignored the problem. Behind closed doors, his team laughed at the tragedy. In public, he would barely say a word, refusing to have the courage to exhibit basic compassion and humanity for his fellow Americans because they were gay. The religious right also embraced homophobia, attacking LGBTQ+ people for the purported sin of their existence. One of the most prominent bigots in the movement was Rev. Jerry Falwell, a key ally of the Republican Party who whipped up a homophobic frenzy while pushing to deliver votes for the party. But Falwell was a coward. In 1991, after being confronted by counterprotesters, Falwell whined to the Los Angeles Times, “Everyone in the hotel was frightened. I think they intended to do me harm.” A decade later, Falwell (and fellow coward Pat Robertson) was busy blaming the 9/11 terrorist attacks on gay people, abortion, and feminists. Former President George W. Bush, on whose watch 9/11 happened, loved to embrace the tough-guy aesthetic. He posed in a cowboy hat on his ranch and described al-Qaida terrorists as “evildoers.” But same-sex marriage terrified him. Bush was so afraid of people entering into matrimony that, in 2004, he backed a constitutional amendment that would restrict marriage rights to opposite-sex couples. He described it as a “serious matter of national concern.” In right-wing media, Bill O’Reilly, then a host on Fox News, issued serious warnings to his viewers that legal same sex marriage would lead to weddings with dolphins, goats, turtles, and other animals. Then-candidate George W. Bush tries on a cowboy hat in St. Louis, in October 2000. Years later, when the Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage, the only “serious matter” has been the size and scope of wedding cakes. Bush was also at the forefront of sharing his fear with the public. His administration pushed a color-coded terrorism alert system. It was a manifestation of cowardice that permeated his administration, leaving the capture of 9/11 mastermind Osama bin Laden to his successor, President Barack Obama. Bush’s signature policy—the disastrous invasion of Iraq—was about fear of al-Qaida and their nonexistent alliance with the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein. The conservative National Rifle Association echoed Bush-style cowardice more than a decade later, telling their supporters in 2014 that they needed guns because militants from the Islamic State group, commonly known as ISIS, could be outside their homes. Trump’s cowardice has been on display for his entire career as a political figure. He launched his first presidential campaign by talking about his fear of Mexican immigrants, citing the absurd need for a border wall to protect against them. There seems to be nothing Trump is more afraid of than brown-skinned people, especially if that person is former President Barack Obama. Trump still invokes Obama as a boogeyman more than eight years after the Democrat left office. More recently, attempting to bolster Trump’s actions against D.C., Republican Rep. Tim Burchett of Tennessee claimed he sleeps in his office because he’s so afraid of Washington residents. Oklahoma Sen. Markwayne Mullin bragged that he breaks local laws and doesn’t drive with a seatbelt in D.C., because he’s supposedly living in constant terror of being carjacked. Armed members of the South Carolina National Guard talk with a man outside of Union Station in Washington on Aug. 24. Conservatism is about tearing things down, not building them up. The movement would rather spread wild fantasies about American cities as urban hellscapes instead of admitting that cities have been at the forefront of American innovation on several community-oriented issues. The right could look at these policies and leaders and come up with ways to implement them in rural and suburban areas, but they’re too afraid to admit that their ideas simply haven’t worked. This is a big reason why they embrace fear and cowardice. Demonizing the other has always been the easy way out. Denigrating human beings, using the power of the state to shut down outside ideas and voices—that’s what cowards do. And that’s what the conservative movement, from Trump at the top and all the way down, does every day of its existence.

“Stupid is as stupid does”: The Gumpification of America, 30 years later

Robert Zemeckis' «Forrest Gump» is aging poorly. What's worse is how we're creating more bliss through ignorance
Salon: in-depth news, politics, business, technology & culture Salon

“Stupid is as stupid does”: The Gumpification of America, 30 years later

Robert Zemeckis' «Forrest Gump» is aging poorly. What's worse is how we're creating more bliss through ignorance

Economics

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China boosts AI chip output amid US export curbs – FT

Beijing is reportedly trying to triple production to offset Washington’s restrictions on advanced semiconductors Read Full Article at RT.com
RT Business

China boosts AI chip output amid US export curbs – FT

Beijing is reportedly trying to triple production to offset Washington’s restrictions on advanced semiconductors Read Full Article at RT.com

Science

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We finally have an idea of how the lifetime supply of eggs develops in primates

Scientists have studied female monkey embryos to map how, when and where the egg supply develops. This can now be used to build realistic models of ovaries in the lab to search for the causes of reproductive health issues that lead to infertility.
Live Science

We finally have an idea of how the lifetime supply of eggs develops in primates

Scientists have studied female monkey embryos to map how, when and where the egg supply develops. This can now be used to build realistic models of ovaries in the lab to search for the causes of reproductive health issues that lead to infertility.

The geology that holds up the Himalayas is not what we thought, scientists discover

A 100-year-old theory explaining how Asia can carry the huge weight of the Himalayas and Tibetan Plateau needs to be rewritten, a new study suggests.
Live Science

The geology that holds up the Himalayas is not what we thought, scientists discover

A 100-year-old theory explaining how Asia can carry the huge weight of the Himalayas and Tibetan Plateau needs to be rewritten, a new study suggests.

There are 32 different ways AI can go rogue, scientists say — from hallucinating answers to a complete misalignment with humanity

New research has created the first comprehensive effort to categorize all the ways AI can go wrong, with many of those behaviors resembling human psychiatric disorders.
Live Science

There are 32 different ways AI can go rogue, scientists say — from hallucinating answers to a complete misalignment with humanity

New research has created the first comprehensive effort to categorize all the ways AI can go wrong, with many of those behaviors resembling human psychiatric disorders.

The world's first view of Earth from the moon, taken 59 years ago — Space photo of the week

On Aug. 23, 1966, NASA's Lunar Orbiter 1 sent back the first photo of Earth from the moon. It showed a grainy crescent Earth that predated Apollo 8's famous color «Earthrise» by over two years.
Live Science

The world's first view of Earth from the moon, taken 59 years ago — Space photo of the week

On Aug. 23, 1966, NASA's Lunar Orbiter 1 sent back the first photo of Earth from the moon. It showed a grainy crescent Earth that predated Apollo 8's famous color «Earthrise» by over two years.

NASA Invites Media to Learn About New Missions to Map Sun’s Influence

NASA will hold a media teleconference at 12 p.m. EDT on Thursday, Sept. 4, to discuss the agency’s upcoming Sun and space weather missions, IMAP (Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe) and Carruthers Geocorona Observatory. The two missions are targeti
NASA Breaking News

NASA Invites Media to Learn About New Missions to Map Sun’s Influence

NASA will hold a media teleconference at 12 p.m. EDT on Thursday, Sept. 4, to discuss the agency’s upcoming Sun and space weather missions, IMAP (Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe) and Carruthers Geocorona Observatory. The two missions are targeting launch on the same rocket no earlier than Tuesday, Sept. 23. The IMAP mission will map […]

Culture

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‘Crafting Sanctuaries’ Sheds Light on Black Experience in the South During the Great Depression

A partnership between Art Bridges Foundation and Museum of Art + Light illuminates Black spaces during the 1930s and early 1940s. Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as lit
Colossal

‘Crafting Sanctuaries’ Sheds Light on Black Experience in the South During the Great Depression

A partnership between Art Bridges Foundation and Museum of Art + Light illuminates Black spaces during the 1930s and early 1940s. Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article ‘Crafting Sanctuaries’ Sheds Light on Black Experience in the South During the Great Depression appeared first on Colossal.

Janet Echelman’s Suspended Nets Radiate Across 25 Years in ‘Radical Softness’

For the first time, the artist's 25-year practice is collected in 'Radical Softness: The Responsive Art of Janet Echelman.' Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little a
Colossal

Janet Echelman’s Suspended Nets Radiate Across 25 Years in ‘Radical Softness’

For the first time, the artist's 25-year practice is collected in 'Radical Softness: The Responsive Art of Janet Echelman.' Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Janet Echelman’s Suspended Nets Radiate Across 25 Years in ‘Radical Softness’ appeared first on Colossal.

‘Where’s Waldo?’ Meets Sarcastic, Dystopian Visions in Ben Tolman’s Elaborate Ink Drawings

«With a generous dose of cynicism and voyeurism, Tolman portrays the eccentric truths and social failures of Western society.» Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing f
Colossal

‘Where’s Waldo?’ Meets Sarcastic, Dystopian Visions in Ben Tolman’s Elaborate Ink Drawings

«With a generous dose of cynicism and voyeurism, Tolman portrays the eccentric truths and social failures of Western society.» Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article ‘Where’s Waldo?’ Meets Sarcastic, Dystopian Visions in Ben Tolman’s Elaborate Ink Drawings appeared first on Colossal.

September 2025 Opportunities: Open Calls, Residencies, and Grants for Artists

Get your CV and artist statement ready! Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article September 2025 Opportunities: Open Calls, Residencies, an
Colossal

September 2025 Opportunities: Open Calls, Residencies, and Grants for Artists

Get your CV and artist statement ready! Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article September 2025 Opportunities: Open Calls, Residencies, and Grants for Artists appeared first on Colossal.

Atmospheric Oil Paintings by Martin Wittfooth Illuminate Nature’s Timeless Cycles

Wittfooth venerates «ancient rhythms that prevail despite our human tumult.» Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Atmosphe
Colossal

Atmospheric Oil Paintings by Martin Wittfooth Illuminate Nature’s Timeless Cycles

Wittfooth venerates «ancient rhythms that prevail despite our human tumult.» Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Atmospheric Oil Paintings by Martin Wittfooth Illuminate Nature’s Timeless Cycles appeared first on Colossal.

Sport

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2025 Heisman Watch: Garrett Nussmeier Leads Pack, Jeremiah Smith Close Behind

Garrett Nussmeier out-dueled Cade Klubnik. John Mateer broke onto the scene. See how the top Heisman candidates fared in Week 1.
FOX Sports Digital

2025 Heisman Watch: Garrett Nussmeier Leads Pack, Jeremiah Smith Close Behind

Garrett Nussmeier out-dueled Cade Klubnik. John Mateer broke onto the scene. See how the top Heisman candidates fared in Week 1.

McLaren warns Max Verstappen has “powerful weapon” in F1 Dutch GP strategy

As expected, McLaren locked out the front row for Formula 1's Dutch Grand Prix. The outcome was, however, slightly surprising in two ways.Firstly, Oscar Piastri struck when it mattered most, despite Lando Norris having had the edge in all practice sessions. S
Motorsport.com - All - Stories

McLaren warns Max Verstappen has “powerful weapon” in F1 Dutch GP strategy

As expected, McLaren locked out the front row for Formula 1's Dutch Grand Prix. The outcome was, however, slightly surprising in two ways.Firstly, Oscar Piastri struck when it mattered most, despite Lando Norris having had the edge in all practice sessions. Secondly, the gap to Max Verstappen was significantly smaller than anticipated after FP3. During that final practice session, McLaren had ...Keep reading

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