The U.S. Could Ban Chinese-Made Drones Used By Police Departments
Dec. 22nd, 2025 04:05 amRead more of this story at Slashdot.
FSF Says Nintendo's New DRM Allows Them to Remotely Render User Devices 'Permanently Unusable'
Dec. 21st, 2025 04:34 pmRead more of this story at Slashdot.
The Webb Telescope Captures Runaway Black Hole
Dec. 22nd, 2025 04:00 am
The Webb telescope does it again.
A supermassive black hole which is 10 million times bigger than the mass of the sun has been captured by the aforementioned telescope.
Gizmodo reports that it's leaving a trail of gas that spawning new stars.
Astronomers have long theorized about runaway black holes, but none have been observed until now.
The black hole is one of the fastest-moving objects observed in the cosmos, traveling at a speed of 2.2 million miles per hour (1,000 kilometers per second). At that speed, it could travel from Earth to the Moon in 14 minutes, according to NASA.
Open thread you science nerds!
Google Launches CO2 Battery Plants for Long-Duration Storage of Renewable Energy
Dec. 22nd, 2025 01:34 amRead more of this story at Slashdot.
Deputy AG Lies About Protecting Victims After Releasing Survivor's Name
Dec. 21st, 2025 11:56 pm
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche wants us to believe they're all about protecting victims' right after his DOJ disappeared files that included Trump, yet published a victim of Jeffery Epstein's name.
This is not true. I have confirmation from a Jane Doe Epstein survivor that her name was not redacted in publicly released files.
The DOJ redacted the names of wealthy and powerful people but failed to redact the name of a survivor: https://t.co/6qZlbUiuYk https://t.co/PNuFDLz8IU— Aaron Parnas (@AaronParnas) December 21, 2025
Here's Blanche's pathetic spin on this Sunday's Meet the Press when asked about the partial release of the files.
WELKER: The Epstein Files Transparency Act called for all files with limited exceptions to be released within 30 days. On Friday, the Justice Department released just a fraction of the overall Epstein files. Why didn't the Justice Department meet that Friday deadline?
Charlie Kirk Derangement Syndrome At TPUSA Event
Dec. 21st, 2025 11:55 pm
The grifting machine known as Turning Point USA is holding a big old fascist festival this weekend in Arizona. The event is the first since Charlie Kirk was unalived earlier this year. The main event, besides wringing every dime out of the attendees, was to enthrone the professional widow and Tammy Faye lookalike, Erica Kirk, as the Queen of the Grift.
But you do have to give the people credit for one thing - they sure do understand their cultish - and rather ghoulish - followers:
As she [Brandy Zadrozny] was speaking with host Chris Jansing, she strolled in front of a canopy that had “Prove me wrong” printed on it — an exact replica of the one from the murder scene.
"Hello from Turning Point USA in Phoenix, Arizona,” she began. “ We have had quite a time, it's been a pretty spicy conference to be honest. You can see here people are sort of winding their way back into the conference.”
“But there are three main things that are happening here,” she reported. “The first thing that's happening is grief. And you can see from behind me, this is a re-creation of the tent where Charlie Kirk lost his life at Utah University in September, and people are taking selfies with it. You can see all around people are saying, like ‘For Charlie,’ they're wearing replicas of the shirt that Charlie Kirk was wearing when he was killed. So there's that moment.”
Can we call this Charlie Kirk Derangement Syndrome, because these people are just plain sick?
Karmic Comeuppance: The Rise And Fall Of Elise Stefanik
Dec. 21st, 2025 11:55 pm
Annie Karni, with a quick and decent summation of Elise Stefanik's meteoric rise and just as sudden fall after her stunning announcement that she was leaving politics when her term ends, and abandoning her quixotic New York Gubernatorial run.
Source: New York Times
To detractors, Ms. Stefanik’s shoddy treatment by the president amounted to karmic comeuppance for a Republican lawmaker who came to Congress as a Harvard-educated moderate but tacked unapologetically to the MAGA right when it suited her political purposes. They said she personified the opportunistic shape-shifting that gripped her party.
“My greatest disappointment is Elise Stefanik, who should know better,” Representative Don Beyer, Democrat of Virginia, said in an interview last year, describing her as a one-time friend. “She went off the deep end.”
Her tumble from grace crystallized the limits of MAGA loyalty and the risks of building a political identity around Mr. Trump, who can turbocharge or torpedo a career — sometimes both. Once one of the president’s most stalwart defenders, Ms. Stefanik, who referred to herself as “ultra MAGA” and styled herself after Mr. Trump, ultimately found herself undermined by him and politically adrift.
Nowhere was that undermining more evident than when Trump invited the New York mayor-elect, Zohran Mamdani, to the White House.
MTG's Boyfriend Is Upset By MAGA In Disarray
Dec. 21st, 2025 10:00 pm
During the fascist festival hosted by Turning Point USA in Arizona this weekend, there's been a lot of sniping going on. Benjamin Shapiro went after a slew of people. Steven The Blob Bannon went after Shapiro. None of the children were behaving.
All of this infighting has gotten conservative reporter Brian Glenn all upset, gosh darn it all!
Conservative journalist Brian Glenn erupted Friday over the ongoing MAGA civil war that was on full display Thursday during a Turning Point USA event in Arizona, warning that the escalating intraparty fights may hurt Republicans in the upcoming midterm elections.
“When it comes down to it, is your life better right now than it was a year ago?” Glenn said, speaking on right-wing news network Real America’s Voice.
“Do you think it's gonna be better off two years from now than it was when [Trump] took office? Those are the things I wish we'd talk about! All this other bull----, I'm sorry, I'm just over it! If I seem a little angry, I apologize, I'm just over it!”
It appears that in all of his faux outrage, Glenn forgot about his girlfriend's - er, fiancée's - own history of tantrums and picking fights to the point of quitting Congress. I guess that not all disarray is created equal or something like that.

Residents of Lexington, Nebraska, are feeling devastated this Christmas. The town’s biggest employer revealed it will shut down early next year, triggering fear and economic uncertainty across the community. Via WTF Detective:
MS NOW reported Friday from Lexington — the county seat of Dawson County, Nebraska, a place Trump carried easily with more than 74 percent of the vote last year. Tyson, the meatpacking giant that employs about 3,200 workers in the town, will leave all of them without jobs when the facility closes on Jan. 20.
“Have you ever been in a place where you can just feel the pain and the anxiety? That’s what it feels like being here in Lexington, Nebraska,” MS NOW reporter Rosa Flores said. “… People have described to me what’s happening here by using the words ‘catastrophe,’ ‘crisis,’ the feeling of being ‘collateral damage,’ ‘hurt,’ ‘anxiety,’ ‘agony.’”
“There’s another business here to my left, down the street. That woman says that people have gone into her store sobbing,” Flores said. “Her sales immediately dropped 10 to 20 percent right after the announcement.”
Earlier this month, Reuters reported that Tyson decided to close the Lexington facility as cattle supplies are expected to fall to a 75-year low in 2025. Limited cattle availability drives up production costs for beef products like hamburgers and steaks, while prolonged drought has shrunk grazing land and reduced herd sizes for ranchers.
Hoo Boy, Here Comes Jeff Bezos's $40M Bribe 'Melania' Movie
Dec. 21st, 2025 08:46 pm
In case you missed it, the trailer for Melania Trump’s new self-titled documentary dropped Wednesday—and it looks as uninteresting as you might have imagined.
The one-minute glimpse of “Melania” portrays the first lady as a strutting fashionista, complete with dramatic scene cuts and music that aspire to make the Amazon MGM Studios-produced documentary a blockbuster-style flick.
But the only real scoop gleaned from the teaser is that Melania is still mostly removed from her husband’s affairs.
“Did you watch it?” Donald Trump can be heard asking from the other end of a phone line.
“I did not, yeah” she replied. “I will see it on the news.”
A year that Americans would rather forget
Dec. 22nd, 2025 12:00 amSurvey Says is a weekly series rounding up the most important polling trends or data points you need to know about, plus a vibe check on a trend that’s driving politics or culture.
With the winter holidays approaching—and with this marking the last formal edition of Survey Says for the year—it’s a natural moment to take stock. New polling offers a revealing snapshot of how Americans are closing out 2025 and what kind of mood they’re carrying into 2026.
The toplines are not encouraging.
A new survey from YouGov asked Americans to assess this past year both personally and nationally, and what emerges is a country that feels worn down, uneasy, and distinctly unconfident about what comes next.
Let’s start with the personal assessments. Just 9% of Americans said 2025 was “great” for them, and 29% called it “good.” The largest share—37%—landed in the middle, describing the year as being only “OK.” But the distribution’s darker edge was hard to ignore: 15% said the year was “bad,” and another 10% called it “terrible.”
In other words, roughly 1 in 4 Americans said their experience of 2025 was actively negative.
If Americans’ personal experience of the year is lukewarm at best, they’re even more downbeat about the country’s performance in 2025. Only 24% rated the year as “good” or “great” for the United States. Another 24% called it just “OK.” But nearly half—48%—said the year was “bad” or “terrible” for the country as a whole.
That dissatisfaction shows up clearly when Americans were asked to rate how things are going nationally on a 1-to-10 scale. Forty-seven percent placed their answer between one and four. But just 30% gave the year an seven or higher.
Other polling points in the same direction. The latest Economist/YouGov survey found that 56% of Americans said the country was “off on the wrong track,” compared with just 35% who said it was headed in the right direction.
Optimism, in other words, is in short supply.
“It’s not surprising that, overall, the results indicate the level of ambivalence and negativity that they do,” Grant Reeher, a professor of political science at Syracuse University, told Daily Kos. “The country has been in deep, polarized political and social conflict, and that usually doesn’t feel like a good thing to most people.”
Reeher cautioned against reading these kinds of questions too literally, though. Assessments of “how the year was” often act as proxies for a tangle of other forces: personal psychology, financial stress, perceptions of national decline, and what social scientists call expressive bias.
“There’s so much noise in these kinds of questions,” he said. “Respondents are often signaling something else that they want others to know about them,” adding that, in this case, that could be views about the president himself or about politics more generally.
“It’s simply impossible to unwind all these threads,” Reeher said.
Still, the broader gloom didn’t materialize out of thin air. Polling throughout the second half of 2025 has shown rising economic anxiety—particularly around the holidays—alongside sagging approval ratings for President Donald Trump. Those pressures appear to be shaping how people look back on the year, even if they don’t fully explain it.
At the same time, Reeher is quick to note that pessimism about the future long predates Trump.
“The polarization we are experiencing is not new or a product of Trump, and neither is the pessimism about the future,” he said. “That’s been a growing feature since the mid-2000s, with some temporary exceptions.”
Even so, the political undercurrent in the YouGov data is unmistakable. Forty-three percent of Americans describe 2025 as “one of the worst” years in American history. Some of that is almost certainly recency bias, or overemphasizing the effects of recent events. But the willingness to apply such language to the year is striking.
Notably, YouGov didn’t ask respondents why they felt this way. But the answers to questions about New Year’s resolutions offer some clues. The most common goals were modest and familiar: exercising more (25%), being happy (23%), eating healthier (22%), and saving money (21%).
More forward-looking ambitions were far less common. Just 9% said they planned to pursue a career goal in 2026, and only 12% hoped to pay down debt. Even saving money—named by 21% of Americans—comes across less as optimism than as self-protection, a reflection of how many households are still feeling financially boxed in.
Looking ahead provides little reassurance about the country’s trajectory.
While 48% of Americans believed 2026 would be good or great for them personally, only 31% said it would be great for the country. Worse, 27% predicted it would be one of the worst years in American history.
Those are dramatic numbers, but they likely reflect generalized pessimism rather than a literal comparison to historical calamities. The question asked about “one of the best years,” not whether the country would improve. Still, the pattern is clear: Far more Americans expect trouble for the country than for themselves.
It’s a familiar dynamic in polling. People often believe they’ll manage personally—even as they conclude that the broader system is failing.
So how seriously should we take these responses? Reeher urged some caution in reading too much into polls like YouGov’s.
“Those who are saying the past year has been great are probably trying to signal that they support the president,” he said. “Those who are saying that the past year has been one of the worst are probably trying to tell the surveyor that they really, really don’t like the president. The people more in the political middle are probably reacting to all the conflict and political chaos, and are either ambivalent or negative.”
That doesn’t make the data meaningless. But it does limit how much can be drawn from it.
At best, polls like this offer a reading of national mood—an emotional barometer rather than a precise diagnosis. Anyone trying to extract more than that does so at their own peril, politically or otherwise.
Any updates?
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Daily Kos has reported extensively on the cracks forming in Trump’s coalition—first among Latinos, then young voters. Now, new data from NBC News Decision Desk and SurveyMonkey confirms the trend. The largest declines in strong support since April are among Republicans overall, particularly those who identify with Trump’s MAGA movement. MAGA Republicans continue to widely approve of Trump, with 70% saying they strongly approve of him, but that represents an 8-percentage-point drop from earlier this year. Meanwhile, fewer Republicans report being part of the MAGA movement compared with earlier in 2025, highlighting early signs of fraying in Trump’s base.
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Americans remain deeply ambivalent about the rapid spread of artificial intelligence, even as they’re increasingly using it on the job. Gallup reports that the share of U.S. employees using AI at least a few times a year increased from 40% to 45% between the second and third quarters of 2025. Frequent use also increased from 19% to 23%. So, while Americans may not love AI, more of them are learning to live with it.
Vibe check
It’s easy enough to freeze up over holiday gifts, especially with people you don’t see often. Wanting to give something that signals your thought and care doesn’t always come with the clarity about what that something should be.
New polling from the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research offers some reassurance. Nearly 9 in 10 say it’s acceptable to give cash (88%) or gift cards (87%). Even regifting or giving secondhand items—long treated as a social faux pas—now clears the bar for a solid majority: 64% say it’s fine.
Age, unsurprisingly, shapes those views. Adults ages 18 to 45 are significantly more open to secondhand gifts than those 45 and older (73% vs. 58%), reflecting the growing normalization of thrift and resale culture. The flip side is that enthusiasm for cash and gift cards declines with age, suggesting older Americans still place more weight on presentation—or at least pretense.
The poll looks beyond presents as well, examining how people are spending the holidays. Nearly half of adults (44%) plan to be in bed before midnight on New Year’s Eve—an understated way to close out a year many seem ready to move on from.
Still, signs of seasonal enthusiasm remain. About a third of Americans say they’ve worn or plan to wear a holiday sweater or accessories this month. And 30% are getting into the spirit by buying gifts for their pets—present company included. This year, we got our shelter pooch a DNA test, and I’m really excited to learn more about him.
As for Christmas Day itself, traditions vary. Nearly a quarter of Americans (24%) say they’ll watch sports, while 5% plan to head to a movie theater.
Please sound off in the comments and tell us how you’re spending the holidays. Are you keeping things low-key? Sticking to old traditions? Spoiling your pets? However you’re marking the season, we want to hear it—and happy holidays!
When The Books Are Overdue And The Meal Is Overdone
Dec. 22nd, 2025 12:00 amRead When The Books Are Overdue And The Meal Is Overdone
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I work in an academic library. I am overhearing my manager's side of the conversation with one of our regular patrons.
Manager: "Yes, that is correct, we've rescinded your right to eat food in the library."
Larry showed up carrying all the signs of a hard life. No collar, no chip, underweight, and clearly used to being on his own. He was wary at first, more comfortable outside than anywhere else, but there was a sense that he wanted stability even if he didn't quite trust it yet.
Over the past few months, that trust has grown steadily. What began as brief check-ins slowly turned into a routine, then into a garage setup with food, a bed, and a safe place to rest. Eventually, Larry made the leap to becoming a full house cat, with occasional outdoor time on his own terms. Each transition happened gradually, guided by patience and consistency. Living alongside other cats has come with some growing pains, especially around mealtimes, but there are more playful moments now and fewer signs of stress.
As Larry settles in, his personality has become impossible to miss. His large paws, striking features, and confident presence fill the space he's in. Watching him relax into comfort feels like witnessing a quiet victory. After a long stretch of surviving, Larry finally has a place to belong.
Are 'Geek Gifts' Becoming Their Own Demographic?
Dec. 21st, 2025 10:34 pmRead more of this story at Slashdot.

In 2020, Tim Ferriss wrote a post cataloging what happens when your monthly audience grows larger than New York City. The list is grimmer than you'd expect.
Ferriss uses a helpful metaphor: think of your audience as a city where you're the mayor. — Read the rest
The post Tim Ferriss's audience is larger than NYC. He now carries a gun, uses fake names at hotels, and gets monthly death threats appeared first on Boing Boing.
