I highly recommend seeking out websites and social media accounts that highlight good news.
It can really make the difference when it comes to having hope for the future
For example, did you know there are already 2 facilities dedicated to sucking carbon out of the air! We have that technology! It's not quite at a scale to stop warming yet. But think what it could do when combined with other efforts!
I've also learned recently that emissions per capita (that's emissions per person) is going down. While total emissions are still going up its still a good sign. This could be a sign total emissions will start falling soon.
While it's important to remember the climate is still in crisis. These nuggets good news remind us that all hope is not lost. That we still have a chance if we continue to work hard.
These men just stole the personal information of everyone in America AND control the Treasury. Link to article.
Akash Bobba
Edward Coristine
Luke Farritor
Gautier Cole Killian
Gavin Kliger
Ethan Shaotran
Spread their names!
folks in the U.S it comes to no surprise that 17 states are filing to drop Section 504. What's Section 504?
Section 504 protects against DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION in schools, workplaces, and as of May '24, includes gender dysphoria as a potential disability.
The ADA protects this but there are 17 states that are tryna to scratch this from effect.
please, please.
Call your representatives. Flood their phone box. Specifically, call your State Attorney General.
This person does a better breakdown but please.
We cannot lose the Disability protections, especially when we have so few.
If you aren't in these states, spread the news like wildfire.
You have any headcannons about Gerry Keay?
BOY DO I!
ill say some tidbits but i hc that hes a proper london punk and everything he wears is homemade/thrifted. He dyes and cuts his own hair, and he smokes nonmenthol blacks. He likes when it rains, he loves intricate stories and often prefers escapism to cope, and he looks to science fiction as a way to reinvent his world a little.
He’s an unreliable narrator to himself. He had to care for and raise himself mostly, he had to unlearn that everything he knew was not normal nor acceptable to do unto someone else. He’s not allowed much time to explore himself, and thus he’s often thinking he doesn’t care about someone’s opinion or isnt hurt but very much is, he just can’t access everything he’s feeling. He didn’t have support so he tries to have control. He likes art in every form. He loves to see people create to create. He thinks about the person who will have to move his books and paintings when he dies, he thinks about what kind of person they’d piece him together to be and he thinks he likes that much better than anyone elses including his.
He’s deeply sentimental. He applies meaning and joy when there is a hard place to. His rebellion is his choice to be good, he saves others because he feels he failed his mother even knowing it wasn’t his fault. He hates his loyalty, because he knows with how starved he’s been that he was never going to land a relationship that was even sided, that he just needed to be loyal to someone, and he knew that someone would probably not feel the same way back. He never feels right calling anything a home. He has a shoebox full of memorabilia, few are gifts, most are keepsakes he took for himself.
He loses his hairties alot. He holds his brushes in his teeth because he uses 8 minimum at a time. He once made himself horribly sick because he forgot he was working with oil paint and accidentally swallowed some. He’s very good at building card houses. He hates the taste of mint tea.
So proud of my mother for doing her own research after I sent her that meme. A sign she hung in her car window.
My daily call reminder for everyone today includes some recent good news courtesy of this reddit post, which I've just copypasted wholesale for everyone over here to enjoy!
Resistance
crosswalks in Seattle were hacked to play AI audio of Jeff Bezos asking not to tax the rich, in reference to Washington’s regressive tax structure
crosswalks in Palo Alto were hacked to play AI audio of Elon talking about be being a friendless loser
A constituent at Marjorie Taylor Green’s town hall called her a “butch body bigot”
Constituents at Chuck Grassley’s town hall demanded they get Kilmar Abrego Garcia out of El Salvador (this was in IOWA, and was mostly older white people)
5 Calls posted that people are averaging 50 calls a minute to representatives via the app, specifically about Kilmar and CECOT
Posters went up around Philadelphia just before 4/15 about Elon and his companies not paying taxes
Protesters showed up outside a courthouse in Vermont in support of Rumeysa Ozturk during her detention hearing
People travelled from all over Missouri to speak out in opposition of a proposed abortion ban during a committee hearing
Home Alone 2 director wants to cut Trump’s cameo out of the movie
Attorneys in the solicitor general’s office of the DOJ are resigning
A group of current and former Big Law attorneys are organizing to fight back against the administration’s attacks on law firms
More associates have quit law firms that capitulated to Trump
Harvard refused to comply with Trump’s demands, despite losing billions in federal funding
Protesters marched to Fetterman’s Philadelphia office demanding he hold in person town halls
Universities are creating NATO-like alliances of “mutual defense compacts”, where they’d all support and defend each other if Trump attacks one
Farmers in Maine had a tractor “parade” to protest USDA cuts
Boise city hall is continuing to have their pride flag up despite a new Idaho state law banning pride flags on government property
Republicans breaking ranks
Mark Kelly said republicans will start to distance themselves from Trump and speak out against his policies, that they’re saying things in private they won’t say publicly
Lisa Murkowski heavily criticized Trump’s policies during a nonprofit leadership summit, also said there’s a “growing number of republicans” opposing Medicaid cuts
12 house republicans signed a letter to Mike Johnson saying they won’t vote for a final budget reconciliation bill that cuts Medicaid
17 republicans in the Montana state senate joined democrats to block an anti-trans bill that would have made it a felony for an adult to help trans kids under 16 access gender affirming medical care
The Libertarian Party of Travis County, TX passed a resolution calling for Trump to be impeached
Dems doing stuff
Chris Van Hollen went to El Salvador to put eyes on Kilmar Abrego Garcia and attempt to negotiate his release. After being denied access to CECOT or even a phone call on Wednesday, he was able to meet with Kilmar on Thursday
Robert Garcia and Maxwell Frost are trying to get a congressional delegation authorized to travel to El Salvador
Cory Booker, Maxine Dexter, Yassamin Ansari, and Mark Desaulnier have all said (separately) they plan to travel to El Salvador
Chuck Schumer is blocking Trump’s nominees for federal prosecutors in NY—this is different than when senators put holds on cabinet nominees and this would completely block the appointments instead of just slow them down
Becca Balint Led 67 House Colleagues in Demanding Answers from DHS and the State Department on Mohsen Mahdawi’s Arrest
Elizabeth Warren and Melanie Stansbury introduced a bill to create stronger ethics rules and crack down on conflicts of interest for special government employees
Sarah McBride forced the Trump admin to reverse course on slashing a manufacturing support program in Delaware
Sean Casten held a town hall in the deepest red district in Illinois
Democrats have identified 35 vulnerable republican house seats to target in the midterms
Texas state representative John Bucy introduced a bill to expand online voter registration
Kathy Hochul supported a law passed by NYC city council to shift payment of broker fees from renters to landlords, after the Real Estate Board of NY sued the city to block it
Tony Evers locked in an increase in public school funding in Wisconsin for 400 years, the state Supreme Court backed it up
Janet Mills refused to comply with Trump’s orders on banning transgender athletes, said “I’m happy to go to court”
Illinois house democrats advanced legislation to require public colleges and universities to provide reproductive health care services to students
Jared Polis signed the Protecting the Freedom to Marry Act, protecting every Coloradan’s right to marry who they love
Nevada democrats introduced legislation to help the state hire federal workers fired by Trump and Elon
Wes Moore signed legislation aimed at connecting laid-off federal health care workers with jobs
NC AG Jeff Jackson sued property management companies over using RealPage to set and inflate rents, the second largest one settled and agreed to stop using it
Legal stuff
A lawsuit was filed against the DoD on behalf of students at schools on military bases, stating that book removals and curriculum changes violate their first amendment rights
Gavin Newsom is suing Trump over tariffs
Newsom is planning to sue Trump over the dismantling of Americorp
Judge Boasberg finds “probable cause” to hold Trump admin in contempt over Alien Enemies Act deportations
Judge Xinis ordered two weeks of discovery in the Abrego Garcia case, including depositions of the four officials who signed affidavits, and doesn’t rule out holding them in contempt
An appeals court denied the Trump administration’s attempt to appeal the order from Judge Xinis to facilitate the return of Kilmar Abrego Garcia
A former Wisconsin Supreme Court justice had his law license suspended for 3 years for violating professional conduct rules during a probe of the 2020 presidential vote
A group of small businesses is suing Trump over the tariffs, arguing they’re illegal under the IEEPA
A judge blocked Trump’s EO targeting law firm Susman Godfrey
Appeals court blocked the ban on trans military service members
Supreme Court temporarily blocked deportations under the Alien Enemies Act
A court denied the administration’s attempt to appeal an order mandating officials’ depositions about Kilmar’s deportation
A judge blocked the administration from enacting a policy that bans the use of “X” gender markers on passports
Foreign students are suing DHS over their visas being terminated
A federal judge blocked the Department of Energy from cutting over $400M in research funds to universities
A judge blocked the EPA from withholding billions in funds from clean energy programs
An Idaho judge ruled to broaden medical exceptions to the state’s abortion bans
Misc
Trump’s approval rating among independents is -22, the lowest ever for this point in a presidency
Three pentagon officials have been suspended in a leak investigation
Spokane, WA city council is proposing an ordinance that would include Two-Spirit people in the city’s human rights code, double up on state shield protections and ensure city employees’ insurance covers gender-affirming and reproductive healthcare
David Hogg (DNC vice chair) is planning to spend $20M funding primary challengers against sitting House members in safe blue districts who aren’t fighting hard enough
Florida lawmakers unanimously approved making medical marijuana cards free for veterans
Run For Something reported that over 200,000 people have signed up with them to run for office since 2017, and they’re currently averaging 500 new signups a day
National Republican Senatorial Committee is warning republicans that democrats are out-fundraising them
Six men in Coeur d’Alene, ID have been charged after dragging Teresa Borrenpohl out of a town hall in February
Mike Lindell (MyPillow guy) cried to a judge that he was “in ruins” and had no money after refusing to pay sanctions to Smartmatic
Portland city council unanimously voted to grant an appeal to stop a Portland General Electric project that would cut down 397 trees in Forest Park to build power lines
Unions form pro bono legal network for federal workers targeted by Trump
Funding was extended for the Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures database (cybersecurity)
Democrats are more trusted on the economy than republicans for the first time in years
The FDA granted fast track status to a bird flu vaccine
Dems won against Maga candidates in the Newark school board election
Labor union reps in Utah got twice the required number of signatures to get a referendum on the ballot to repeal a recent bill that ended collective bargaining
Washington state senate passed a bill that would require insurance companies to cover a 12-month supply of hormone replacement therapy at a time
Betty Martinez Franco became the first Latina elected to Irvine city council. She came to the US as an undocumented immigrant and has since become a citizen, gotten a masters degree, started a PR agency, and is now elected to city council
Elon’s L’s
Elon dropped DOGE’s savings goal from $2T to $150B—less than 10% of the original goal
Elon was outed as dm’ing women he’d never met and offering to impregnate them, shortly after that he announced he was deactivating twitter’s dm feature
Elon’s meeting at the Pentagon on China was stopped by Trump (“what the fuck is Elon doing there? Make sure he doesn’t go”)
So I see you all are exhausted by streaming services effectively recreating cable. I see you’re all tired of ads. Pirating is a great alternative, but I have another fantastic option for you all!
I live in Seattle. And in Seattle we have America’s largest physical media store, Scarecrow Video. They are a non-profit that has pretty much any film or tv show you can imagine. Like, everything. So much so that one of our local cinemas does a program with them called “Unstreamable” where they show a film from Scarecrow’a archive that you can’t access anywhere online. It’s a bit overwhelming to go to their store, which is two levels of every program under the sun.
ANYWAY, I bring this up because they recently started a Rent-by-Mail program. It’s pretty similar to what Netflix used to do. You can rent up to six titles (barring their super rare stuff and pornos) and they will ship it to you, then you return it in the included pre-paid envelope.
Why does this rock? Sure, you still have to pay money, BUT you are supporting a non-profit that is dedicated to preserving media instead of some corporation looking for endless profit. They can also expand your palette with their vast selection. And if you have a favorite piece of media, you never have to worry about it disappearing! All their stuff is there in perpetuity.
So this is all to say, now that Scarecrow has expanded their reach beyond the Greater Seattle Area, I implore you to check them out. If you don’t want to rent right now, the could always use donations to keep them afloat.
You can check out their catalogue HERE!
When self-described “ocean custodian” Boyan Slat took the stage at TED 2025 in Vancouver this week, he showed viewers a reality many of us are already heartbreakingly familiar with: There is a lot of trash in the ocean.
“If we allow current trends to continue, the amount of plastic that’s entering the ocean is actually set to double by 2060,” Slat said in his TED Talk, which will be published online at a later date.
Plus, once plastic is in the ocean, it accumulates in “giant circular currents” called gyres, which Slat said operate a lot like the drain of the bathtub, meaning that plastic can enter these currents but cannot leave.
That’s how we get enormous build-ups like the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, a giant collection of plastic pollution in the ocean that is roughly twice the size of Texas.
As the founder and CEO of The Ocean Cleanup, Slat’s goal is to return our oceans to their original, clean state before 2040. To accomplish this, two things must be done.
First: Stop more plastic from entering the ocean. Second: Clean up the “legacy” pollution that is already out there and doesn’t go away by itself.
And Slat is well on his way.
Pictured: Kingston Harbour in Jamaica. Photo courtesy of The Ocean Cleanup Project
When Slat’s first TEDx Talk went viral in 2012, he was able to organize research teams to create the first-ever map of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. From there, they created a technology to collect plastic from the most garbage-heavy areas in the ocean.
“We imagined a very long, u-shaped barrier … that would be pushed by wind and waves,” Slat explained in his Talk.
This barrier would act as a funnel to collect garbage and be emptied out for recycling.
But there was a problem.
“We took it out in the ocean, and deployed it, and it didn’t collect plastic,” Slat said, “which is a pretty important requirement for an ocean cleanup system.”
Soon after, this first system broke into two. But a few days later, his team was already back to the drawing board.
From here, they added vessels that would tow the system forward, allowing it to sweep a larger area and move more methodically through the water. Mesh attached to the barrier would gather plastic and guide it to a retention area, where it would be extracted and loaded onto a ship for sorting, processing, and recycling.
It worked.
“For 60 years, humanity had been putting plastic into the ocean, but from that day onwards, we were also taking it back out again,” Slat said, with a video of the technology in action playing on screen behind him.
To applause, he said: “It’s the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen, honestly.”
Over the years, Ocean Cleanup has scaled up this cleanup barrier, now measuring almost 2.5 kilometers — or about 1.5 miles — in length. And it cleans up an area of the ocean the size of a football field every five seconds.
Pictured: The Ocean Cleanup's System 002 deployed in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. Photo courtesy of The Ocean Cleanup
The system is designed to be safe for marine life, and once plastic is brought to land, it is recycled into new products, like sunglasses, accessories for electric vehicles, and even Coldplay’s latest vinyl record, according to Slat.
These products fund the continuation of the cleanup. The next step of the project is to use drones to target areas of the ocean that have the highest plastic concentration.
In September 2024, Ocean Cleanup predicted the Patch would be cleaned up within 10 years.
However, on April 8, Slat estimated “that this fleet of systems can clean up the Great Pacific Garbage Patch in as little as five years’ time.”
With ongoing support from MCS, a Netherlands-based Nokia company, Ocean Cleanup can quickly scale its reliable, real-time data and video communication to best target the problem.
It’s the largest ocean cleanup in history.
But what about the plastic pollution coming into the ocean through rivers across the world? Ocean Cleanup is working on that, too.
To study plastic pollution in other waterways, Ocean Cleanup attached AI cameras to bridges, measuring the flow of trash in dozens of rivers around the world, creating the first global model to predict where plastic is entering oceans.
“We discovered: Just 1% of the world’s rivers are responsible for about 80% of the plastic entering our oceans,” Slat said.
His team found that coastal cities in middle-income countries were primarily responsible, as people living in these areas have enough wealth to buy things packaged in plastic, but governments can’t afford robust waste management infrastructure.
Ocean Cleanup now tackles those 1% of rivers to capture the plastic before it reaches oceans.
Pictured: Interceptor 007 in Los Angeles. Photo courtesy of The Ocean Cleanup
“It’s not a replacement for the slow but important work that’s being done to fix a broken system upstream,” Slat said. “But we believe that tackling this 1% of rivers provides us with the only way to rapidly close the gap.”
To clean up plastic waste in rivers, Ocean Cleanup has implemented technology called “interceptors,” which include solar-powered trash collectors and mobile systems in eight countries worldwide.
In Guatemala, an interceptor captured 1.4 million kilograms (or over 3 million pounds) of trash in under two hours. Now, this kind of collection happens up to three times a week.
“All of that would have ended up in the sea,” Slat said.
Now, interceptors are being brought to 30 cities around the world, targeting waterways that bring the most trash into our oceans. GPS trackers also mimic the flow of the plastic to help strategically deploy the systems for the most impact.
“We can already stop up to one-third of all the plastic entering our oceans once these are deployed,” Slat said.
And as soon as he finished his Talk on the TED stage, Slat was told that TED’s Audacious Project would be funding the deployment of Ocean Cleanup’s efforts in those 30 cities as part of the organization’s next cohort of grantees.
While it is unclear how much support Ocean Cleanup will receive from the Audacious Project, Head of TED Chris Anderson told Slat: “We’re inspired. We’re determined in this community to raise the money you need to make that 30-city project happen.”
And Slat himself is determined to clean the oceans for good.
“For humanity to thrive, we need to be optimistic about the future,” Slat said, closing out his Talk.
“Once the oceans are clean again, it can be this example of how, through hard work and ingenuity, we can solve the big problems of our time.”
-via GoodGoodGood, April 9, 2025
It’s not being widely reported on yet, but there’s a massive rally in support of trans youth and in opposition to trumps trans youth care ban happening in new your right now
We aren’t alone y’all. These last few weeks have been hard and it took some time for people to start organizing a response, but people are standing up and fighting for us.