Monday, May 31, 2021

In the news: America’s new normal: A degree hotter than two decades ago

 As a meteorologist and someone who has been working with  climate change research for 20 years, the latest report about a warming U.S. is no surprise to me. In fact, the temperatures have warmed so much that there are new, warmer climate normals.  Here's a story from the Associated Press;

WHAT IS A CLIMATE NORMAL? From the daily weather report to seasonal forecasts, the Normals are the basis for judging how temperature, rainfall, and other climate conditions compare to what's normal for a given location in today's climate. For the past decade, the Normals have been based on weather observations from 1981 to 2010.

HOW IS AN AVERAGE CALCULATED? - By averaging the daytime high temperature and the night-time low temperature - (add the high and low and divide by 2) you'll come up with an average daily temp. 

 America’s new normal: A degree hotter than two decades ago  

by Seth Bornstein/ Associated Press May 4,2021

America’s new normal temperature is a degree hotter than it was just two decades ago.

Scientists have long talked about climate change — hotter temperatures, changes in rain and snowfall and more extreme weather — being the “new normal.” Data released Tuesday by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration put hard figures on the cliche.

The new United States normal is not just hotter, but wetter in the eastern and central parts of the nation and considerably drier in the West than just a decade earlier.

Meteorologists calculate climate normals based on 30 years of data to limit the random swings of daily weather. It’s a standard set by the World Meteorological Organization. Every 10 years, NOAA updates normal for the country as a whole, states and cities — by year, month and season.



For the entire nation, the yearly normal temperature is now 53.3 degrees (11.8 degrees Celsius) based on weather station data from 1991 to 2020, nearly half a degree warmer than a decade ago. Twenty years ago, normal was 52.3 degrees (11.3 degrees Celsius) based on data from 1971 to 2000. The average U.S. temperature for the 20th century was 52 degrees (11.1 degrees Celsius).

The new normal annual U.S. temperature is 1.7 degrees (0.9 Celsius) hotter than the first normal calculated for 1901 to 1930.

“Almost every place in the U.S. has warmed from the 1981 to 2010 normal to the 1991 to 2020 normal,” said Michael Palecki, NOAA’s normals project manager.

Fargo, North Dakota, where the new normal is a tenth of a degree cooler than the old one, is an exception, but more than 90% of the U.S. has warmer normal temperatures now than 10 years ago, Palecki said.



In Chicago and Asheville, North Carolina, the new yearly normal temperature jumped 1.5 degrees in a decade. Seattle, Atlanta, Boston and Phoenix had their normal annual temperature rise by at least half a degree in the last decade.

Charlottesville, Virginia, saw the biggest jump in normal temperatures among 739 major weather stations. Other large changes were in California, Texas, Virginia, Indiana, Arizona, Oregon, Arkansas, Maryland, Florida, North Carolina and Alaska.

New normals are warmer because the burning of fossil fuels is making the last decade “a much hotter time period for much of the globe than the decades” before, said Cornell University climate scientist Natalie Mahowald.

For Phoenix, the biggest change in normal came in precipitation. The normal annual rainfall for Phoenix dropped 10% down to 7.2 inches (18.2 centimeters). Rainfall in Los Angeles dropped 4.6%.



At the same time, Asheville saw a nearly 9% increase in rainfall, while New York City’s rainfall rose 6%. Seattle’s normal is 5% wetter than it used to be.

Climate scientists are split about how useful or misleading newly calculated normals are.

Mahowald and University of Oklahoma meteorology professor Jason Furtado said updating normal calculations helps city and regional planners to prepare for flooding and drought, farmers to decide what and when to plant, energy companies to meet changing demands and doctors to tackle public health issues arising from climate change.

But Pennsylvania State University climate scientist Michael Mann said he prefers a constant baseline such as 1951 to 1980, which is what NASA uses. Adjusting normal every 10 years “perverts the meaning of ‘normal’ and ‘normalizes’ away climate change,” he said in an email.

North Carolina’s state climatologist Kathie Dello said, “It seems odd to still call them normals because 1991-2020 was anything but normal climate-wise.”

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Follow AP’s climate coverage at https://www.apnews.com/Climate

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Follow Seth Borenstein on Twitter: @borenbears

Sunday, May 30, 2021

Idiot of the Week: Steal a car and hoard gasoline and get burned (literally)

 I love Karma. whatever you do, truly does come back to you. Today's Idiot of the week is a 28 year old woman driving a STOLEN CAR, who told police she was hoarding gas during the short gas shortage a couple of weeks ago in the southeastern U.S. In today's blog, you'll read about the idiot in the actual posting from the Pickens County Sheriff's office in South Carolina (courtesy of their Facebook page). 

A couple of takeaways: 1) Steal a car, get burned (literally) - sorry, couldn't resist 2) A huge Thanks to the Sheriff's office for catching stupid criminals 3) Selfish acts lead to bad things on you. Here's the Sheriff's posting

(Photo:  car caught fire after a police chase in Pickens County, S.C., ending in a woman's arrest on Thursday May 14, 2021.Sarah Wilson / via Facebook)

 Woman Steals Car, Hoards Gas, Runs from Police, Car Explodes

Pickens County Sheriff’s Office Responds to Accident and Vehicle Fire
Earlier this evening, a deputy with the Pickens County Sheriff’s Office, in a marked patrol unit, observed a 2007 Pontiac G6 traveling on Jameson Road in Pickens. It was determined that the vehicle was displaying a South Carolina license plate that had been reported stolen. As the vehicle approached the intersection of Jameson Road and Wolf Creek Road, the deputy activated his vehicle’s emergency lights in an attempt to conduct a traffic stop.
The driver of the Pontiac turned left onto Wolf Creek Road and accelerated the vehicle in an attempt to elude law enforcement. The deputy then activated his vehicle’s siren. Before the deputy could complete radio traffic with the Communications center, the driver of the Pontiac lost control of the vehicle leaving the roadway and completely flipping the vehicle. The vehicle immediately caught fire and multiple explosions were heard inside the vehicle.
As the deputy approached the vehicle, the driver, later identified as Jessica Gale Patterson (28 YOA), exited the vehicle and was observed to be on fire. The deputy pushed Ms. Patterson to the ground in order to put out the flames. She was transported to the hospital by Pickens County EMS personnel.
Before leaving the scene, Ms. Patterson told deputies that she was transporting several containers of fuel that she was hoarding in the trunk of the vehicle. These containers of fuel were the catalyst of the explosions.
The South Carolina Highway Patrol responded to the scene to investigate the accident.
###

Saturday, May 29, 2021

Good Person/Hero of the Week: Wales Teenager Rescues Woman from Burning House

 This week's Good Person of the Week is a teenager in Wales, who saw a house on fire and fearlessly ran inside and rescued an elderly woman! 

(Photo: MARCUS EVANS
image captionMum Clare Evans was Marcus's inspiration for his heroic act

Neath Port Talbot's Marcus Evans saves woman from burning house 

BBC NEWS, Wales May 10, 2021

A teenager dashed into a burning house to rescue an elderly woman after hearing her cries for help. Marcus Evans acted after seeing a police support officer outside the house which had smoke pouring from it.

He twice ran inside the house in Baglan, Neath Port Talbot, before he was able to lift the unconscious woman to safety.

Marcus, whose own mother died from cancer, said he was motivated by not wanting anyone to suffer such a loss. The 19-year-old, who lives in Baglan, told BBC Wales: "I was coming back from the shops when I saw a PCSO on the phone outside a house. "There was smoke coming out of the chimney and the side of the house. I went over and I could hear the woman inside."

The officer managed to kick the door open and went in but was overcome by the thick smoke and had to retreat. However, Marcus did not hesitate to go in but on his first attempt he was also beaten back by the smoke.

Even though there were flames nearby and the heat was overwhelming, he went back in. "When I was in there I could see nothing, it was just pitch black," he said. "I could just see the glowing from the flames. The heat in there - I've never been in somewhere so hot. It was boiling." This time, Marcus was able to find the 79-year-old woman at the back of the house.

"She was unconscious by the time I got there," Marcus said. "I picked her up and carried her out the back door." "I just laid her down and tried to make sure she was alright."

The woman was later taken to Morriston Hospital, where she was placed in an induced coma because of her injuries following the fire on Thursday.

Marcus fortunately did not need any treatment as he was "completely fine". "[But] I was in shock for a while. I couldn't believe what had just happened," he admitted. "One minute I was in the shop, the next minute I was pulling someone out of a burning building."

Marcus has received lots of praise locally for his actions, his family said Memories of losing his own mother Clare two years ago, had made him determined to prevent another family going through the same thing, he explained.

Friday, May 28, 2021

Movie Night: Wonder Woman 1984

 We loved the first Wonder Woman movie and liked this follow up, Wonder Woman 1984.  Gal Gadot plays Diana Prince, AKA Wonder Woman and as the last film ends at the end of World War I with Steve Trevor's death (Wonder Woman's love interest), this film picks up over 50 years later. For those who don't know, Diana is an Amazon, and they don't age (that was explained). In today's review you'll read about our thoughts (all good) on character development, plot, pacing, villains, and the bottom line). Read on! >>>


CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT - Unlike last week's abysmal film (Nomadland), Wonder Woman 1984 does show you how the character grew up on the Grecian Paradise Island (Themscyria) in a race of Amazon women (no men). It explains how the fled barbaric men, and taught themselves how to be warriors- which is where Wonder Woman learned her skills. (I will say that the first 30 minutes could have been cut to 15 - covering Amazon olympic games with Diana as a girl). The director also made you really like Barbara - even after bad stuff. In addition, they put Diana Prince in a job as an archaeologist for the Smithsonian museum, complementing her background living around Greek gods and goddesses. 

THE VILLAINS - The writers used a "gift" from a twisted Greek God but there was a cost to those who used it. It was a clever way to bring the Steve Trevor character back. The villains were straight out of the comic books, Power-mad Maxwell Lord (who was a nobody until he stole the gift); and Wonder Woman's classic villain, the Cheetah. Yes, we even cared about the villains!

PACING - The Amazon opening scene went on too long, and some of Max Lord's ramblings were too much. But, it was great to see Steve Trevor trying to understand 1984 - coming from 1918. That was very, very well done. Of course, so were the Wonder Woman fighting scenes. We LOVED the shopping mall scene...

BONUS: They gave a great take on Wonder Woman's Invisible robot plane. Glad to see that worked in there!  

BOTTOM LINE: It was a good movie. We paid attention (I didn't read my book, or turn off the movie); We enjoyed the action, cared about the characters (and Max Lord was convincingly annoying - just as he was in the comics). Definitely a B to B+ movie. 

ABOUT THE MOVIE: Diana Prince lives quietly among mortals in the vibrant, sleek 1980s -- an era of excess driven by the pursuit of having it all. Though she's come into her full powers, she maintains a low profile by curating ancient artifacts, and only performing heroic acts incognito. But soon, Diana will have to muster all of her strength, wisdom and courage as she finds herself squaring off against Maxwell Lord and the Cheetah, a villainess who possesses superhuman strength and agility.

VIDEO TRAILER: https://youtu.be/sfM7_JLk-84


Thursday, May 27, 2021

Fantastic Cozy Mystery: The Ghost and the Haunted Portrait by Cleo Coyle

 The seventh book in  Cleo Coyle's "Haunted Bookshop Mystery" series is absolutely Awesome!  I have read every book in the series, and thoroughly enjoy them. This one, "The Ghost and the Haunted Portrait,"  has mysteries in mysteries and so many likeable characters. Pen and her aunt Sophie run a bookstore in Quindicott, Rhode Island, and Pen has connected with the ghost of a detective who was murdered in the 1940s in the location of what is now her bookstore. The ghost helps her solve mysteries.  I couldn't put this book down. I love the bickering between her mailman and professor friends, and all the supporting characters. It also had me wondering who the murderer was all the way until the end. Brilliant writing, fantastic characters, great story. Can't wait for the 8th in the series (hopefully they're working on it). - Rob



ABOUT THE BOOK: Bookshop owner Penelope Thornton-McClure and her gumshoe ghost team up to solve the stunning mystery at the heart of a madwoman's self-portrait in this all new installment from New York Times bestselling author Cleo Coyle.


While gathering a collection of vintage book cover paintings for a special event in her quaint Rhode Island bookshop, Penelope discovers a spooky portrait of a beautiful woman, one who supposedly went mad, according to town gossip. Seymour, the local mailman, falls in love with the haunting image and buys the picture, refusing to part with it, even as fatal accidents befall those around it. Is the canvas cursed? Or is something more sinister at work?

For answers, Pen turns to an otherworldly source: Jack Shepard, PI. Back in the 1940s, Jack cracked a case of a killer cover artist, and (to Pen's relief) his spirit is willing to help her solve this mystery, even if he and his license did expire decades ago.

Wednesday, May 26, 2021

Archaeological Find! Vesuvius ancient eruption rescuer identified at Herculaneum

 We had the good fortune to visit Pompeii, Italy and saw the ancient unearthed city that was buried by ash from the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 A.D. We didn't get to Herculaneum, however, and wish we had time to do that. Today's blog is an astounding find of what appears to be an ancient Roman Soldier who was caught by the volcano's eruption. Here's the story from BBC News> 

PARCO ARCHEOLOGICO DI ERCOLANO
image captionThe skeleton was discovered in Herculaneum back in the 1980s and its importance is now becoming clearer

 Vesuvius ancient eruption rescuer identified at Herculaneum

BBC News, May 11, 2021 

Archaeologists in Italy believe they have identified the body of a rescuer killed in the eruption of Mount Vesuvius almost 2,000 years ago.

The skeleton, originally thought to be an ordinary soldier, was among some 300 found at Herculaneum in the 1980s. It is now thought he may have been a senior officer in the rescue mission launched by historian and naval commander Pliny the Elder. Herculaneum and the nearby city of Pompeii were engulfed by the eruption. Buildings and bodies were encased in a flow of molten lava, mud and gas that fell on Herculaneum in AD79 at a speed of at least 80km/h (50 mph).


The man's remains were found face-down in the sand at the site to the north of Pompeii around 40 years ago. Skeleton no 26, as it is known, is believed to have belonged to man aged between 40 and 45 and in good health, who was thrown to the ground by the force of the eruption. A boat was found nearby and it is now thought that the 300 other skeletons found massed on the beach were close to being rescued.

(Photo: The excavations of Ercolano, Herculaneum. Credit: Wikipedia)

Francesco Sirano, the director of the archaeological site at Herculaneum, said the items discovered with the skeleton no. 26 suggest he may have played a more important role than originally thought. "He may be an officer of the fleet that took part in the rescue mission launched by Pliny the Elder to help the people in the towns and villas nestled on this part of the Bay of Naples," Mr Sirano told Ansa news agency.


Twelve silver and two gold denarii coins were found in the man's possession - the equivalent of a month's salary for members of the elite Praetorian Guard, according to Mr Sirano.


Credit:  PARCO ARCHEOLOGICO DI ERCOLANO
image captionA bag with tools was found with the skeleton when it was discovered

His highly decorated gold and silver belt and a sword with an ivory handle indicate he was no ordinary soldier, while his bag contained tools likely to have been used by a faber navalis - one of the Guard's naval engineers specialised in carpentry.

Pliny the Elder was a Roman naval commander stationed at the port of Misenum, further up the coast from Herculaneum. He was himself well known for writing about natural history. His death during the eruption of Vesuvius was recorded by his nephew, Pliny the Younger, in two letters written to the historian Tacitus.

"The ash already falling became hotter and thicker as the ships approached the coast. It was soon followed by bits of pumice and blackened, burnt stones charred by the fire... [my uncle] wondered for a moment whether to turn back, as the captain advised, but he decided instead to go on."

Excavations at the site are expected to resume in the coming weeks.

Tuesday, May 25, 2021

RESEARCH NEWS: Vaccine hesitancy is nothing new. Here’s the damage it’s done over centuries

Although I'm not a doctor, I am a scientist, so I trust science. Although there are a very few people who have legitimate health reasons why they can't take a vaccine against COVID (or any other vaccine); the "Anti-Vaxxer" movement originated from poor news reporting (as you'll read in this article from Science News), and exploded, creating mis-informed people who refused to educate themselves.  I call them ignorant and selfish, because not getting a vaccine to prevent a disease puts everyone THEY associate with at risk, too.  In today's blog, you'll read about how the Anti-vaccine (stupidity) began>> 

(Photo: A rally of the Anti-vaccination League of Canada filled the streets near City Hall in Toronto in 1919. CITY OF TORONTO ARCHIVES, FONDS 1244, ITEM 2517

RESEARCH NEWS:  Vaccine hesitancy is nothing new. Here’s the damage it’s done over centuries  

By Tara Haelle  SOURCE: Science News. ORG

As vaccines to protect people from COVID-19 started becoming available in late 2020, the rhetoric of anti-vaccine groups intensified. Efforts to keep vaccines out of arms reinforce misinformation about the safety and effectiveness of the vaccines and spread disinformation — deliberately misleading people for political, ideological or other reasons.

Vaccines have been met with suspicion and hostility for as long as they have existed. Current opposition to COVID-19 vaccines is just the latest chapter in this long story. The primary driver of vaccine hesitancy throughout history has not been money, selfishness or ignorance.

“Vaccine hesitancy has less to do with misunderstanding the science and more to do with general mistrust of scientific institutions and government,” says Maya Goldenberg, a philosophy expert at the University of Guelph, Ontario, who studies the phenomenon. Historically, people harmed or oppressed by such institutions are the ones most likely to resist vaccines, adds Agnes Arnold-Forster, a medical historian at the University of Bristol in England.

A range of recurring and intersecting themes have fueled hesitancy globally and historically. These include anxiety about unnatural substances in the body, vaccines as government surveillance or weapons, and personal liberty violations. Other concerns relate to parental autonomy, faith-based objections, and worries about infertility, disability or disease. For example, some people oppose vaccines that were grown in cell culture lines that began from aborted fetal cells, or they mistakenly believe vaccines contain fetal cells. **One of today’s false beliefs — that COVID-19 vaccines contain a microchip — represents anxiety about both vaccine ingredients and vaccines as a surveillance tool.

“The reasons people have hesitated reflect the cultural anxieties of their time and place,” Goldenberg says. People worried about toxins arising during environmentalism in the 1970s and people in countries steeped in civil war have perceived vaccines as government weapons.

Historical attempts to curb vaccine hesitancy often failed because they relied on authoritarian and coercive methods. “They were very blunt, very punitive and very ineffective,” Arnold-Forster says. “They had very little impact on actual vaccine intake.”

The most effective remedies center on building trust and open communication, with family doctors having the greatest influence on people’s decision to vaccinate. Increased use of “trusted messengers” to share accurate and reassuring vaccine information with their communities builds on this.

18th Century - Smallpox vaccine sets the stage around the globe 

In a way, anti-vaccination attitudes predate vaccination itself. Public vaccination began after English physician Edward Jenner learned that milkmaids were protected from smallpox after exposure to cowpox, a related virus in cows. In 1796, Jenner scientifically legitimized the procedure of injecting people with cowpox, which he termed variolae vaccinae, to prevent smallpox. However, variolation — which staved off serious smallpox infections by triggering mild infection through exposure to material from an infected person — dates back to at least the 1000s in Asia, Africa and other parts of the world. In some cases people inhaled the dried scabs of smallpox lesions or rubbed or injected pus from smallpox lesions into a healthy person’s scratched skin.

About 1 to 2 percent of people — including a son of Britain’s King George III in 1783 — died from the procedure, far fewer than the up to 30 percent who died from smallpox. Benjamin Franklin rejected variolation, but later regretted it when smallpox killed his youngest son. Onesimus, an enslaved man in Boston, taught the procedure to Puritan minister Cotton Mather, who in turn urged doctors to inoculate the public during a 1721 smallpox outbreak. Many refused, and Mather faced hostility: A small bomb was thrown through his window. Reasons given for avoiding variolation — particularly that it was unnatural to interfere with a person’s relationship with God — were the seeds of later anti-vaccination attitudes.

19th Century - The first vaccination laws kindle resistance 

In 1809, Massachusetts passed the world’s first known mandatory vaccination law, requiring the general population to receive the smallpox vaccine. Resistance began to grow as other states passed similar laws. Then the U.K. Vaccination Act of 1853 required parents to get infants vaccinated by 3 months old, or face fines or imprisonment. The law sparked violent riots and the formation of the Anti-Vaccination League of London. Vaccine resisters were often poor people suspicious of a forced medical intervention since, under normal circumstances, they rarely received any health care. Anti-vaccination groups argued that compulsory vaccination violated personal liberty, writing that the acts “trample upon the right of parents to protect their children from disease” and “invaded liberty by rendering good health a crime.”


(Image:  a political cartoon against vaccination This 1838 illustration seems to take a negative view of a vaccination method that used cowpox to immunize people against a similar, and deadly, human disease, smallpox. NATIONAL LIBRARY OF MEDICINE )

Anti-vaccination sentiment grew and spread across Europe 

Anti-vaccination sentiment grew and spread across Europe until an 1885 demonstration of about 100,000 people in Leicester, England, prompted the British monarchy to appoint a commission to study the issue. The resulting 1896 report led to an 1898 act that removed penalties for parents who didn’t believe vaccination was safe or effective. The act introduced the term “conscientious objectors,” which later became more commonly associated with those who refuse military service on religious or moral grounds. 

Across the Atlantic, most U.S. residents had embraced Jenner’s cowpox protective, leading to a precipitous drop in smallpox outbreaks. But with fewer outbreaks, complacency set in and vaccination rates dropped. As smallpox outbreaks resurfaced in the 1870s, states began enforcing existing vaccination laws or passing new ones. 

How Anti-Vaxxers Spread in the U.S.

British anti-vaccinationist William Tebb visited New York in 1879, which led to the founding of the Anti-Vaccination Society of America. The group’s tactics will sound familiar: pamphlets, court battles and arguments in state legislatures that led to the repeal of mandatory vaccination laws in seven states. The 1905 Supreme Court decision Jacobson v. Massachusetts upheld a state’s right to mandate vaccines; it remains precedent today.

Documentary hypes vaccine injuries 

The U.S. entered a golden age of vaccine development from the 1920s through the 1970s with the arrival of vaccines for diphtheria, pertussis, polio, measles, mumps and rubella. Opposition diminished as infection rates, particularly for polio, fell. Rosalynn Carter and Betty Bumpers, the wives of the governors of Georgia and Arkansas, respectively, began a vaccination campaign that grew into a national effort in the 1970s. The goal was to encourage every state to require children attending public school to receive most vaccines recommended by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Inaccurate News Report Triggered Anti-Vaxxers

A nationally aired 1982 news documentary called “DPT: Vaccine Roulette” changed everything. Lea Thompson, a reporter with WRC-TV in Washington, D.C., shared emotional stories of parents claiming their children had suffered seizures and brain damage from the diphtheria-pertussis-tetanus, or DPT, shot. Interviews with doctors lent the stories credence. Fever-caused seizures were a known side effect of DPT, and a 1974 study had reported neurological complications developing in 36 children within 24 hours of DPT vaccination. But the study did not follow the children long-term. Later research revealed neither the seizures nor the vaccine caused long-term brain damage.

But the damage to public trust was done. Coopting the DPT acronym, one parent, Barbara Loe Fisher, cofounded Dissatisfied Parents Together, which became the National Vaccine Information Center, the most influential anti-vaccine organization in the United States.

1998: Fraudulent study links vaccines to autism 

The National Vaccine Information Center maintained a steady hum of anti-vaccination sentiment and activity through the 1980s and ’90s. Then British gastroenterologist Andrew Wakefield published a report in the Lancet alleging that the measles-mumps-rubella, or MMR, vaccine caused autism spectrum disorder in 12 children. Wakefield falsified data, violated informed consent and secretly invested in development of a solo measles vaccine, but it took years to uncover his deceit (SN Online: 2/3/10). Fears about autism and vaccines had already exploded by the time the study was retracted 12 years after publication.

Almost immediately after publication of the study, U.K. vaccination rates began falling. But news of Wakefield’s work didn’t reach the United States until 2000, just as U.S. medical authorities were embroiled in a debate about the use of thimerosal, a mercury-containing preservative, in vaccines. In 1999, the U.S. Public Health Service recommended removing thimerosal from childhood vaccines as a precautionary measure to reduce infants’ mercury exposure. Later research showed no safety concerns about its use.

The MMR vaccine never contained thimerosal, but fears about mercury-related brain damage merged with those about MMR and autism, creating a storm of anger and fear surrounding claims of vaccine harm.

21st Century Social media and slick documentaries 

Despite the 2010 retraction of his study and the revocation of his license to practice medicine in the United Kingdom, Wakefield remains a leader in today’s anti-vaccination movement. Joining him is Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., who gained prominence promoting unfounded allegations about thimerosal. Both men rode the wave of anti-vaccination networking on social media and the promotion of disinformation through slick documentaries like 2016’s Vaxxed: From Cover-Up to Catastrophe (SN Online: 4/1/16).

In 2014, the United States saw its highest number of measles cases since the disease was eliminated from the country in 2000, culminating in a large outbreak that began at Disneyland that December. In response, California passed a law removing parents’ ability to opt out of vaccinating their children based on personal beliefs and required that all children receive CDC-recommended vaccines to attend school (SN Online: 7/2/19). Extreme opposition to that law and subsequent ones helped fuel a resurgence in anti-vaccine advocacy along with an alarming measles outbreak in 2019 (SN: 12/21/19 & 1/4/20, p. 24).

The vast majority of people accept recommended vaccines and their role in stemming the spread of infectious diseases. Recent surveys suggest that 69 percent of U.S. adults say they have or will get a COVID-19 vaccine, an improvement over the 60 percent willing to do so in November. But responses to surveys don’t necessarily predict behavior, Goldenberg says.

Questions or comments on this article? E-mail us at feedback@sciencenews.org

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**One of our neighbors conveyed this same stupid conspiracy theory to me. I told her to turn off Fox News. 

Monday, May 24, 2021

Why I won't Cross a Glass Bridge: China: Man left dangling from bridge after glass breaks

Today's blog highlights EXACTLY why I will never, ever, ever walk on one of those ridiculous glass bridges... Here's some news from BBC on May 10th the shows a man in China stranded in the middle of a glass bridge when parts of the glass floor were blown out by a powerful storm!!


XINHUA/WEIBO
image captionSeveral pieces of the glass floor were blown away by extreme weather

China: Man left dangling from bridge after glass breaks

The man was visiting the 100m-high bridge (330 ft) in the Piyan Mountain, in the north-east of the country, when the incident occurred on Friday.

Several pieces of the glass floor were blown away by winds that reached up to 150km/h (90mph).

It is thought that China has about 2,300 glass bridges and a number of glass walkways and slides.

They are designed to attract thrill-seeking tourists and capitalise on China's growing domestic tourism.

An image widely shared on social media shows the man dangling in the middle of the bridge, located in a scenic area near the city of Longjing.

Firefighters rushed to the scene to rescue the man. However he managed to get back to safety himself with the help of on-site staff, Xinhua news agency reports.

The tourist was taken to hospital for observation and counselling, and is now said to be in a "stable emotional and physical condition".

The area has been closed, according to Longjing City's Weibo page. An investigation into the incident has been launched. 

It is not the first accident of its kind in China. In 2018, Hebei province shut all of its 32 glass attractions - including bridges, walkways and viewing decks - while safety checks were carried out.

Elsewhere in the country, one person died and six others were injured in 2019 after they fell off a glass slide in Guangxi province.

In 2016, a tourist was injured by falling rocks while walking on a glass walkway in the city of Zhangjiajie.

Who I am

I'm a simple guy who enjoys the simple things in life, especially our dogs. I volunteer for dog rescues, enjoy exercising, blogging, politics, helping friends and neighbors, participating in ghost investigations, coffee, weather, superheroes, comic books, mystery novels, traveling, 70s and 80s music, classic country music,writing books on ghosts and spirits, cooking simply and keeping in shape. You'll find tidbits of all of these things on this blog and more. EMAIL me at Rgutro@gmail.com - Rob

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