Joanne Dixon

Video Thread 10/8/2020

 Posted by at 2:35 pm  Politics
Oct 082020
 

Randy Rainbow and Patti LuPone fundraising for the ACLU

Meidas Touch – Strange … but effective.

Really American (This one is today’s hanky alert)

RVAT new ad, not new info …

The Lincoln Project

Keith is late today, or else he is skipping a day. I’ll keep checking back, but as I said, if lateness occurs, there’s always the next day. Update – Yes, he was about 45 minutes late.

Supreme Court petition updates
In case you haven’t noticed, Daily Kos has multiple petitions (and is making more) on the Supreme Court, each with a different theme. By signing all, we can at least distract Republican Senators’ staffs.
Daily Kos (gun safety)

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Video Thread 10/7/2020

 Posted by at 2:22 pm  Politics
Oct 072020
 


Biden ad on Twitter

Meidas Touch has two –

Lincoln Project “Covita”

Dr. Fauci on “Onyx Family” playing “Two Truths and a Lie” (several rounds with background information added – about 13 min. total.)

James Corden “Maybe I’m Immune” Paul McCartney parody

Keith Olbermann Worst Person in the World – (~15 min) I’m crushed that there’s no CC. I can do a transcription but not as fast as I can put the video up … so it will be late.  Also, in my hurry to provide everyone a Keith fix, I posted before I finished listening.  So, yeah, it’s about 15 minutes, but the political opinion is about ten minutes, followed by about five minutes of headlines.  He says that will approximately be the format going forward.

Supreme Court petition updates
The Center for Popular Democracy
Daily Kos (LGBTQ)

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Video Thread 10/6/2020

 Posted by at 3:09 pm  Politics
Oct 062020
 


Yesterday in history – Oct. 5, 1988

From the Biden campaign – no CC, but about Joe saving lives by getting funding for mine resistant vehicles

Sound and Fury Messaging – very short but right to the point.

Two from The Lincoln Project

Get ready to snicker …

“Do you know what a secret de polichinelle is?” – Hercule Poirot.  It is a ‘secret” which is known to all. No one ever talks about it, so anyone who for some reason doesn’t know it, never learns it.

Supreme Court petition updates
Daily Kos (new wording)
Daily Kos (Voting Rights)

UPDATE:  Yes, I know Keith Olbermann returns to politics tomorrow (October 7), and yes, I will be featuring him – if I am too late on any given day, i will catch up the next.

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Video Thread 10/5/2020

 Posted by at 1:25 pm  Politics
Oct 052020
 


Sound and Fury Messaging “Focus”

The Lincoln Project

Legal Eagle, from what I have seen (IANAL), is about as accurate as one can be who is not looking at each state seperately. This video is long – 22+ minutes (somewhere around the 20 minute mark it turns into a commercial and can be stopped without loss of information) – but it’s a subject with a lot of “if this, if that”s

Beau has a lot to say on Trumpp* and CoViD-19. I picked this one.

Supreme Court Petitions update –
Daily Kos (shutdown related)
Daily Kos (if you have one or more Republican Senator)
This from Stop Republicans is directly addressed to the chief Justice

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Video Thread 10/4/2020

 Posted by at 2:31 pm  Politics
Oct 042020
 


From the Biden campaign (hanky alert)

I’ve been waiting for this – Jim Carrey as Joe.  And Maya Rudolph as Kamala.

Slow otherwise, so here …

Beau on bothsiderism. And common sense. And IMO all the stronger for being in some ways weak.

I’m pretty sure everyone here is well aware of this. But not everyone is. And let me be quick to say that we will not need just a victory lap but also a break of some kind. But only a break.

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Video Thread 10/3/2020

 Posted by at 2:17 pm  Politics
Oct 032020
 


From the Biden campaign

Eleven Films – I put CC on but so much of what’s not already on the screen is just noise…

Beau on why we should hope Trump* survives at least through November 3rd.

Texas today – elsewhere tomorrow. The ink reference is to Iraq.

There are other readings of this available. The backstory seems all too appropriate. You can argue whether to change it to orange or leave it as red. (It’s longish.  If you want to just read it, it’s here.)

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Everyday Erinyes #234

 Posted by at 9:00 am  Politics
Oct 032020
 

Experts in autocracies have pointed out that it is, unfortunately, easy to slip into normalizing the tyrant, hence it is important to hang on to outrage. These incidents which seem to call for the efforts of the Greek Furies (Erinyes) to come and deal with them will, I hope, help with that. As a reminder, though no one really knows how many there were supposed to be, the three names we have are Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. These roughly translate as “unceasing,” “grudging,” and “vengeful destruction.”

This sounds like something out of a fantastic hidden-object-puzzle-adventure (“HOPA”) computer game – such as “The Andersen Accounts.” But apparently, even though supernatural powers are not in the offing, there is some promise of getting tattoos to be more than just art.
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Dynamic tattoos promise to warn wearers of health threats

In the not-too-distant future, tattoos could become medical diagnostic devices as well as body art.
LightFieldStudios/iStock via Getty Images

Carson J. Bruns, University of Colorado Boulder

In the sci-fi novel “The Diamond Age” by Neal Stephenson, body art has evolved into “constantly shifting mediatronic tattoos” – in-skin displays powered by nanotech robopigments. In the 25 years since the novel was published, nanotechnology has had time to catch up, and the sci-fi vision of dynamic tattoos is starting to become a reality.

The first examples of color-changing nanotech tattoos have been developed over the past few years, and they’re not just for body art. They have a biomedical purpose. Imagine a tattoo that alerts you to a health problem signaled by a change in your biochemistry, or to radiation exposure that could be dangerous to your health.

You can’t walk into a doctor’s office and get a dynamic tattoo yet, but they are on the way. Early proof-of-concept studies provide convincing evidence that tattoos can be engineered, not only to change color, but to sense and convey biomedical information, including the onset of cancer.

Signaling biochemical changes

In 2017, researchers tattooed pigskin, which had been removed from the pig, with molecular biosensors that use color to indicate sodium, glucose or pH levels in the skin’s fluids.

In 2019, a team of researchers expanded on that study to include protein sensing and developed smartphone readouts for the tattoos. This year, they also showed that electrolyte levels could be detected with fluorescent tattoo sensors.

In 2018, a team of biologists developed a tattoo made of engineered skin cells that darken when they sense an imbalance of calcium caused by certain cancers. They demonstrated the cancer-detecting tattoo in living mice.

UV radiation sensors

My lab is looking at tech tattoos from a different angle. We are interested in sensing external harms, such as ultraviolet radiation. UV exposure in sunlight and tanning beds is the main risk factor for all types of skin cancer. Nonmelanoma skin cancers are the most common malignancies in the U.S., Australia and Europe.

A four-panel series shows a UV-activated tattoo appearing in a star pattern, erased and then appearing in a dot pattern
UV-activated tattoo ink is invisible until exposed to UV light.
Jesse Butterfield/The Laboratory for Emergent Nanomaterials, University of Colorado Boulder, CC BY-NC-ND

To help address this problem, we developed an invisible tattoo ink that turns blue only in UV light, alerting you when your skin needs protection. The tattoo ink contains a UV-activated dye inside of a plastic nanocapsule less than a micron in diameter – or thousandth of a millimeter – about the same size as an ordinary tattoo pigment.

The nanocapsule is needed to make the color-changing tattoo particles large enough. If tattoo pigments are too small, the immune system rapidly clears them from the skin and the tattoo disappears. They are implanted using tattoo machines in the same way as regular tattoos, but they last for only several months before they start to degrade from UV exposure and other natural processes and fade, requiring a “booster” tattoo.

I served as the first human test subject for these tattoos. I created “solar freckles” on my forearm – invisible spots that turned blue under UV exposure and reminded me when to wear sunscreen. My lab is also working on invisible UV-protective tattoos that would absorb UV light penetrating through the skin, like a long-lasting sunscreen just below the surface. We’re also working on “thermometer” tattoos using temperature-sensitive inks. Ultimately, we believe tattoo inks could be used to prevent and diagnose disease.

In this TEDx talk, the author demonstrates the UV-detecting tattoo.

Temporary high-tech tattoos

Temporary transfer tattoos are also undergoing a high-tech revolution. Wearable electronic tattoos that can sense electrophysiological signals like heart rate and brain activity or monitor hydration and glucose levels from sweat are under development. They can even be used for controlling mobile devices, for example shuffling a music playlist at the touch of a tattoo, or for luminescent body art that lights up the skin.

The advantage of these wearable tattoos is that they can use battery-powered electronics. The disadvantage is that they are much less permanent and comfortable than traditional tattoos. Likewise, electronic devices that go underneath the skin are being developed by scientists, designers and biohackers alike, but they require invasive surgical procedures for implantation.

Tattoos injected into the skin offer the best of both worlds: minimally invasive, yet permanent and comfortable. New needle-free tattooing methods that fire microscopic ink droplets into the skin are now in development. Once perfected they will make tattooing quicker and less painful.

Ready for everyday use?

The color-changing tattoos in development are also going to open the door to a new kind of dynamic body art. Now that tattoo colors can be changed by an electromagnetic signal, you’ll soon be able to “program” your tattoo’s design, or switch it on and off. You can proudly display your neck tattoo at the motorcycle rally and still have clear skin in the courtroom.

As researchers develop dynamic tattoos, they’ll need to study the safety of the high-tech inks. As it is, little is known about the safety of the more than 100 different pigments used in normal tattoo inks. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has not exercised regulatory authority over tattoo pigments, citing other competing public health priorities and a lack of evidence of safety problems with the pigments. So U.S. manufacturers can put whatever they want in tattoo inks and sell them without FDA approval.

So far, there is no evidence that tattoos cause cancer, and one study even found that black tattoos protect against UV-induced skin cancer. Still, many tattoo inks contain or degrade into substances that are known to be hazardous, and health complications including infection, allergy and granuloma have been found in about 2% of tattoos. More research is needed to understand the long-term effects of nano- and microimplants in the skin in general.

A wave of high-tech tattoos is slowly upwelling, and it will probably keep rising for the foreseeable future. When it arrives, you can decide to surf or watch from the beach. If you do climb on board, you’ll be able to check your body temperature or UV exposure by simply glancing at one of your tattoos.The Conversation

Carson J. Bruns, Assistant Professor, University of Colorado Boulder

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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AMT, in 75 years, it never once crossed my mind that a tattoo might be something I might one day consider. But here it is. If a tattoo could actually give me a health warning – and I can think of situations where that could go way past handy, all the way to life-saving – I’m on board.

The Furies and I will be back.

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Video Thread 10/2/2020

 Posted by at 3:06 pm  Politics
Oct 022020
 


From the Biden Campaign

Meidas Touch

Really American has two …

The Lincoln Project

This one is 13+ minutes, and it’s about Standing Rock

Beau makes a very good point here. It isn’t easy to think like a stupid person if you aren’t one, but we need to be able to.

RBG Petitions update –
Democratic Conservation Alliance
Fight for Reform (updated)

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