Stephen Colbert Delivers Furious Takedown of Trump, GOP and Fox News After Capitol Riot


Matt Wilstein  12 hrs ago

Stephen Colbert Delivers Furious Takedown of Trump, GOP and Fox News After Capitol Riot (msn.com)


Inflammatory Trump tweets on day of Capitol breach were final straw for loyal…‘Disgraceful’: World leaders stunned by ‘insurrection’ at US CapitolStephen Colbert Delivers Furious Takedown of Trump, GOP and Fox News After Capitol Riot

Exactly two months ago, after President Donald Trump responded to his election loss by declaring victory, Stephen Colbert choked back tears during his monologue as he told viewers, “We all knew he would do this. What I did not know is that it would hurt so much.”Stephen Colbert standing in front of a building: CBS© Provided by The Daily Beast CBS

He hadn’t seen anything yet. But this time, Colbert wasn’t sad, he was furious.

The Late Show host once again threw out the jokes Wednesday night, going live on CBS to share his horrified response to the act of violent insurrection earlier in the day fueled by the president’s election lies.

“I really want to do the show we’re about to do,” Colbert began. “And I also really don’t want to do the show. Because lord have mercy, there are some dark topics that we talk about on the show occasionally, but I’ve rarely been as upset as I am tonight.”

Speaking directly to the Republican members of Congress who support Trump, the host asked, “Have you had enough? After five years of coddling this president’s fascist rhetoric, guess whose followers want to burn down the Reichstag?”

“Who could have seen this coming?” Colbert asked. “Everyone! Even dummies like me. This is the most shocking, most tragic, least surprising thing I’ve ever seen. For years now, people have been telling you cowards that if you let the president lie about our democracy over and over and then join him in that lie and say he’s right when you know for a fact that he is not, there will be a terrible price to pay. But you just never thought you’d have to pay it too.”

From there, he singled out Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO), who was caught on camera “raising your stupid fist to the mob outside the Capitol.” In the first line of the night that could be considered a joke, Colbert said, “It’s like Black Power but the opposite. There really should be a name for that. And obviously he has to keep his fist closed, because if he opened it you’d see all the blood on his hands.”

Then the host took on Fox News. “You think maybe years of peddling his conspiracy theories had anything to do with this?” Colbert asked, mocking the network for claiming its “news” and “opinion” sides are different. Like the “lubricated catheters” they sell during the ad breaks, he said, “You know where you can stick your excuses and you can skip the lubrication.”

Colbert’s even longer than usual monologue continued for another 10 minutes, as he tore into President Trump for claiming to support “law and order” while encouraging his minions to violently overtake the U.S. Capitol building. “For the record, if I said that, I’d be arrested for inciting a riot,” he said. “But of course, you can’t arrest the president… for 15 more days.”

“Now I’ve said before, violence is the last refuge of the incompetent,” Colbert said later. “And if the last four years have taught us anything, it’s that there are a lot of incompetent people in our leadership.”

Looking ahead to 2022, “when all of those Republicans, who, make no mistake, are responsible for what happened today and are running for reelection,” he said, “let’s remember them for who they showed themselves to be today: Cynical cowards who believe the voters should not get to choose who governs this country. Let’s hope the voters prove them all wrong.”

Read more at The Daily Beast.

California woman killed during Capitol riot was a military veteran and staunch Trump supporter

Dennis Wagner, Melissa Daniels and Grace Hauck, USA TODAY  27 mins ago


Rep. Adam Kinzinger Becomes First Republican to Call for Trump’s Removal…Dog That is Deaf Rescued After Getting Stuck in Rabbit Hole for 30 HoursCalifornia woman killed during Capitol riot was a military veteran and staunch Trump supporter

Ashli Babbitt survived eight U.S. military deployments, but the Air Force veteran died Wednesday on a mission in the homeland – an assault on the nation’s Capitol.PauseCurrent Time 0:10/Duration 1:15Loaded: 18.56%Unmute0FullscreenWhat To Know About The Electoral College Certification Amid Riots At Capitol HillClick to expand

U.S. Capitol Police identified Babbitt as the woman who was shot inside the Capitol. 

“As protesters were forcing their way toward the House Chamber where Members of Congress were sheltering in place, a sworn USCP employee discharged their service weapon, striking an adult female,” police said Thursday. “Medical assistance was rendered immediately, and the female was transported to the hospital where she later succumbed to her injuries. She has been identified as Ashli Babbitt.”

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The Capitol Police employee has been placed on administrative leave and their police powers have been suspended pending the outcome of a joint Metropolitan Police Department and USCP investigation, police said.

Three other people also died Wednesday from medical emergencies, including a man from Greentown, Pennsylvania, a man from Athens, Alabama, and a woman from Kennesaw, Georgia, D.C. police chief Robert Contee III said in a press conference Thursday. It was not immediately clear how they died.

“They were on the grounds of the Capitol when they experienced the medical emergency,” Contee said.

Numerous media outlets named Babbitt, a 35-year-old San Diego woman, late Wednesday, and KSUI-TV quoted her husband saying she had been a staunch Trump supporter and “a great patriot.”

Timeline: How a Trump mob stormed the US Capitol, forcing Washington into lockdown

Graphic videos of the shooting show Babbitt wore a Trump flag as a cape as she tried to crawl through a broken window, flanked by other protesters. A single shot rang out, and she fell to the floor bleeding from an apparent neck wound. 

Police officers screamed for the crowd to make room and a voice heard on video declared, “Ladies and gentlemen, a lady was just shot. She might be dying right now.”

Messages of grief and mourning poured out on social media after Babbitt’s identity was circulated.

The biographical section of a Twitter account with the user name, Ashli Babbitt, using the display name “CommonSenseAsh,” identifies her as a veteran, a Libertarian, and a Second Amendment supporter.

Online, she was vocal about her backing of Trump and appeared in photographs wearing a red ball cap with the president’s “Make America Great Again” slogan. In September, Babbitt tweeted a photo from a pro-Trump boat parade in San Diego.

On Tuesday, she posted a declaration: “Nothing will stop us….they can try and try and try but the storm is here and it is descending upon DC in less than 24 hours….dark to light!”

That message was in response to a post from another Twitter user who pictured a colonial flag overlaid with “1776 Again” above the words, “Trump is still our president.”

Babbitt’s account also shows many retweets. The last one, posted Wednesday, called for Vice President Mike Pence to resign and face charges of treason; for former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to be arrested and charged as an accessory to murder and treason; and for Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts to resign.

Members of Babbitt’s family could not be reached for comment Thursday.

Babbitt served in the Air Force under the married name of Ashli Elizabeth McEntee. She served as an enlisted airman in the Air Force, serving on active duty and in the Air Force Reserve and Air National Guard, according to records released Thursday.

She worked as an active duty security forces airman, troops with law enforcement training who protect air bases in the United States and abroad. She served on active duty from April 2004 to April 2008 and deployed to Iraq, according to the records. She received several commendations, including for service in the Global War on Terrorism.

She was in the reserve from 2008 to 2010, and the guard from 2010 to 2016.

An undated news release from Eielson Air Force Base in Alaska pictured Airman Ashli McEntee with her then husband, Sgt. 1st Class Timothy McEntee, after they had adopted her military working dog. Maryland records show the McEntees divorced in 2019.

A Washington, D.C., Air National Guard news release in 2014 listed Senior Airman Ashli McEntee among 30 personnel being sent to southwest Asia. The article noted it was her eighth deployment and identified her as a mentor to others in the 113th Security Forces Squadron.  

California business records list Ashli Elizabeth McEntee as owner of Fowler’s Pool Service & Supply, a San Diego County business. A LinkedIn account for Ashli McEntee indicates she took over the company in 2017. Customers praised Ashli and Aaron Babbitt online for their service. 

Contributing: Tom Vanden Brook

Dennis Wagner and Grace Hauck, USA TODAY; Melissa Daniels, Desert Sun

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: California woman killed during Capitol riot was a military veteran and staunch Trump supporter

California woman killed during Capitol riot was a military veteran and staunch Trump supporter (msn.com)

Sudden Stratospheric Warming underway: What this means for Michigan, Great Lakes region

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

https://www.mlive.com/weather/2021/01/sudden-stratospheric-warming-underway-what-this-means-for-michigan-great-lakes-region.html

Updated Jan 05, 9:48 PM; Posted Jan 05, 2:38 PMFacebook ShareTwitter Share701sharesBy Mark Torregrossa | mtorregr@mlive.com

The highest part of the weather atmosphere is undergoing some big changes right now. Researchers find that these changes occurring high up in the air eventually transfer to a weather pattern realignment here at the ground.

The second part of Earth’s atmosphere is called the stratosphere. It lies on top of the troposphere, which is where most of our weather occurs. Currently, a Sudden Stratospheric Warming (SSW) is underway.https://34ec3bea956cc15f888dc918e8d381f3.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-37/html/container.html

The stratosphere is around 100,000 feet above the ground. Usually in winter there is a swirling vortex centered over the north pole, with the vortex up in the stratosphere. This is the vortex that most researchers call the Polar Vortex. On Dec. 25, the temperature average in this vortex started to warm. Since then, the temperature around 100,000 feet has warmed 54 degrees Fahrenheit. While…

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Discovery boosts theory that life on Earth arose from RNA-DNA mix

Newly described chemical reaction could have assembled DNA building blocks before life forms and their enzymes existed

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/12/201228095428.htm

Date:December 28, 2020Source:Scripps Research InstituteSummary:Chemists have made a discovery that supports a surprising new view of how life originated on our planet. They demonstrated that a simple compound called diamidophosphate (DAP), which was plausibly present on Earth before life arose, could have chemically knitted together tiny DNA building blocks called deoxynucleosides into strands of primordial DNA.Share:    FULL STORY


DNA illustration (stock | Credit: © BillionPhotos.com / stock.adobe.com

DNA illustration (stock image).Credit: © BillionPhotos.com / stock.adobe.com

Chemists at Scripps Research have made a discovery that supports a surprising new view of how life originated on our planet.

In a study published in the chemistry journal Angewandte Chemie, they demonstrated that a simple compound called diamidophosphate (DAP), which was plausibly present on Earth before life arose, could have chemically knitted together tiny DNA building blocks called deoxynucleosides into strands of primordial DNA.

The finding is the latest in a series of discoveries, over the past several years, pointing to the possibility that DNA and its close chemical cousin RNA arose together as products of similar chemical reactions, and that the first self-replicating molecules — the first life forms on Earth — were mixes of the two.

The discovery may also lead to new practical applications in chemistry and biology, but its main significance is that it addresses the age-old question of how life on Earth first arose. In particular, it paves the way for more extensive studies of how self-replicating DNA-RNA mixes could have evolved and spread on the primordial Earth and ultimately seeded the more mature biology of modern organisms.

“This finding is an important step toward the development of a detailed chemical model of how the first life forms originated on Earth,” says study senior author Ramanarayanan Krishnamurthy, PhD, associate professor of chemistry at Scripps Research.

The finding also nudges the field of origin-of-life chemistry away from the hypothesis that has dominated it in recent decades: The “RNA World” hypothesis posits that the first replicators were RNA-based, and that DNA arose only later as a product of RNA life forms.

Is RNA too sticky?

Krishnamurthy and others have doubted the RNA World hypothesis in part because RNA molecules may simply have been too “sticky” to serve as the first self-replicators.

A strand of RNA can attract other individual RNA building blocks, which stick to it to form a sort of mirror-image strand — each building block in the new strand binding to its complementary building block on the original, “template” strand. If the new strand can detach from the template strand, and, by the same process, start templating other new strands, then it has achieved the feat of self-replication that underlies life.

But while RNA strands may be good at templating complementary strands, they are not so good at separating from these strands. Modern organisms make enzymes that can force twinned strands of RNA — or DNA — to go their separate ways, thus enabling replication, but it is unclear how this could have been done in a world where enzymes didn’t yet exist.

A chimeric workaround

Krishnamurthy and colleagues have shown in recent studies that “chimeric” molecular strands that are part DNA and part RNA may have been able to get around this problem, because they can template complementary strands in a less-sticky way that permits them to separate relatively easily.

The chemists also have shown in widely cited papers in the past few years that the simple ribonucleoside and deoxynucleoside building blocks, of RNA and DNA respectively, could have arisen under very similar chemical conditions on the early Earth.

Moreover, in 2017 they reported that the organic compound DAP could have played the crucial role of modifying ribonucleosides and stringing them together into the first RNA strands. The new study shows that DAP under similar conditions could have done the same for DNA.

“We found, to our surprise, that using DAP to react with deoxynucleosides works better when the deoxynucleosides are not all the same but are instead mixes of different DNA ‘letters’ such as A and T, or G and C, like real DNA,” says first author Eddy Jiménez, PhD, a postdoctoral research associate in the Krishnamurthy lab.

“Now that we understand better how a primordial chemistry could have made the first RNAs and DNAs, we can start using it on mixes of ribonucleoside and deoxynucleoside building blocks to see what chimeric molecules are formed — and whether they can self-replicate and evolve,” Krishnamurthy says.

He notes that the work may also have broad practical applications. The artificial synthesis of DNA and RNA — for example in the “PCR” technique that underlies COVID-19 tests — amounts to a vast global business, but depends on enzymes that are relatively fragile and thus have many limitations. Robust, enzyme-free chemical methods for making DNA and RNA may end up being more attractive in many contexts, Krishnamurthy says.make a difference: sponsored opportunityhttps://action.publicgood.com/embed.html?partner_id=sciencedaily&utm_source=sciencedaily&title=Discovery%20boosts%20theory%20that%20life%20on%20Earth%20arose%20from%20RNA-DNA%20mix%3A%20Newly%20described%20chemical%20reaction%20could%20have%20assembled%20DNA%20building%20blocks%20before%20life%20forms%20and%20their%20enzymes%20existed&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.sciencedaily.com%2Freleases%2F2020%2F12%2F201228095428.htm&utm_content=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.sciencedaily.com%2Freleases%2F2020%2F12%2F201228095428.htm&widget_type=card&action=Default&is_flex=true&match_type=terms&content_id=13885177&cid_match_type=regex&tag=coronavirus%20~%20unsponsored%20first%20responders%20variant%20terms%20match&target_id=a5b62d04-991b-4b01-a285-9a499e519227&target_type=campaign&is_filter=true&url_id=25771184&parent_org=sciencedaily&target_name=Support%20%20First%20Responders%20and%20Health%20Care%20Workers%20During%20Coronavirus&is_sponsored=false&sponsor_name=


Story Source:

Materials provided by Scripps Research InstituteNote: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Ramanarayanan Krishnamurthy, Eddy I. Jiménez, Clémentine Gibard. Prebiotic Phosphorylation and Concomitant Oligomerization of Deoxynucleosides to form DNAAngewandte Chemie International Edition, 2020; DOI: 10.1002/anie.202015910

Aug. 30, 2018 — How did life arise on Earth? Researchers have found among the first and perhaps only hard evidence that simple protein catalysts — essential for cells, the building blocks of life, to function — …

‘Origami’ Is Reshaping DNA’s Future

July 6, 2016 — Ten years after Paul Rothemund knitted tiny smiley faces from strands of DNA, the field of DNA origami is coming of …

Missing Links Brewed in Primordial Puddles?

Apr. 25, 2016 — The crucibles that bore out building blocks of life may have been, in many cases, not fiery cataclysms, but modest puddles. Researchers working with that hypothesis have achieved a significant …

DNA Supply Chain Explained

Jan. 12, 2016 — Cell survival depends on having a plentiful and balanced pool of the four chemical building blocks that make up DNA. However, if too many of these components pile up, or if their usual ratio is ..

B.C. mink farmer decides to destroy 1,000 animals after positive COVID-19 tests

The Canadian PressStaff

ContactPublished Tuesday, January 5, 2021 12:56PM PSTMinks

Denmark has ordered the slaughter of all of the country’s minks, estimated at up to 17 million. (AFP)

VICTORIA — British Columbia’s chief veterinarian says a mink farmer decided to euthanize the remaining 1,000 animals on his Fraser Valley operation after some of the mink tested positive for COVID-19.

Dr. Rayna Gunvaldsen says the operator was not ordered by the provincial government to euthanize the animals as more tests are underway to determine the extent of the presence of COVID-19.

The first farm where the virus spread to mink also had eight workers who tested positive and Gunvaldsen says both farms remain under quarantine.

She says there are no other reports of COVID-19 at B.C.’s eight other mink farms.

Alan Herscovici, a spokesman for the Canada Mink Breeders Association, says imposing strict quarantine and biosecurity measures at mink farms for about two weeks appears to limit the spread of COVID-19 to other animals.

After COVID-19 was diagnosed on the first farm, the B.C. Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals called for a moratorium on mink farming in the province.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 5, 2021.

https://bc.ctvnews.ca/b-c-mink-farmer-decides-to-destroy-1-000-animals-after-positive-covid-19-tests-1.5254551

Greyhound racing comes to an end in Florida

Chris Perkins, South Florida Sun Sentinel  5 days ago

https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/more-sports/dog-gone-greyhound-racing-comes-to-an-end-in-florida/ar-BB1codmo?ocid=sf&fbclid=IwAR0eis-aHrppDhmEiB5-uqlxGaiiIEP820a6ZO18POW2_NWqMtAxHBmZebw


A top scientist explains why a more infectious coronavirus variant is a…Here’s who won’t be getting a $600 stimulus checkSun Sentinel logoDog gone: Greyhound racing comes to an end in Florida

Ewart Johnson, an 80-year-old West Palm Beach resident, was a bit melancholy Thursday afternoon as he scrutinized his racing form at the Palm Beach Kennel Club.a sign on the side of a fence: Greyhounds race at Palm Beach Kennel Club in West Palm Beach on Dec. 31, 2020.© John McCall/South Florida Sun Sentinel/South Florida Sun Sentinel/TNS Greyhounds race at Palm Beach Kennel Club in West Palm Beach on Dec. 31, 2020.

It was the last day greyhound racing was legal in Florida, something that should represent a financial upturn for Johnson.

“I lose my money every day,” he said with a smile.

Still, Johnson, who has been going to the Palm Beach Kennel Club since 1987, couldn’t shake his sense of loss.

Although the mood was generally festive at the Kennel Club with live music, giveaways and plenty of racing, Johnson considered Thursday a sad day.

And so did the 3,000 or so people who went to the venue on New Year’s Eve. Regulars said it was the largest crowd in years. It figures it came on the final day the greyhounds were running.a dog that is covered in snow: Greyhounds round a corner during a race at Palm Beach Kennel Club in West Palm Beach on Dec. 31, 2020, the last day of legal dog racing in Florida.

Should Wildlife Be Granted the Right to Own Their Homes?

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

Marc Bekoff Ph.D.

https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/animal-emotions/202011/should-wildlife-be-granted-the-right-own-their-homes?fbclid=IwAR1tgNXP5kHQHYAvDQa3sUkSmwdaetohhJ1GbBdeby2Brbdto9qRV77Eq-8

Animal Emotions

Karen Bradshaw says “yes” and they should not be viewed as transient renters.

Posted Nov 29, 2020

“Affording a property right to animals has both dignity and practical benefits.” — Karen Bradshaw,Wildlife as Property Owners(p. 132)

Pixabay, Pexels free download

Source: Pixabay, Pexels free download

I recently read a fascinating book by Arizona StateUniversity distinguished legalscholarKaren BradshawcalledWildlife as Property Ownersthat is an extremely timely addition to books and essays that focus on the lives and rights of nonhuman animals (animals) and the complicated and often vexing relationships they have with us.1,2My learning curve was vertical as she wove in information from numerous disciplines including different aspects oflegal scholarship,ethology and cognitive ethology (the study of animal minds), and the social sciences in an easy-to-read fashion.

I’ve long beeninterested in all the topics aboutwhichKarenwrites,perhapsmoreso now as numerous animals…

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Sixth graders learn hunter safety, ethics in PE class

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

Greybull Game Warden Rob Hipp works with a sixth grade student at an outdoor range during a field trip for hunter education students from Burlington Middle School.

Greybull Game Warden Rob Hipp works with a sixth grade student at an outdoor range during a field trip for hunter education students from Burlington Middle School.PHOTO COURTESY WYOMING GAME AND FISH DEPARTMENTPosted Tuesday, January 5, 2021 8:10 am

https://www.powelltribune.com/stories/sixth-graders-learn-hunter-safety-ethics-in-pe-class,28713

Sixth grade students attending Burlington Middle School recently earned hunter education certificates as part of their regularly scheduled physical education class.

Over several months this fall, students completed 16 hours of coursework relating to ethics and responsibility, wildlife identification, Wyoming laws and regulations, wildlife conservation and management, firearms safety and more. In November, the class culminated in a field trip to Gunwerks in Cody to shoot .22 long rifles and practice marksmanship.

“The field trip gave students an opportunity to practice safe firearms handling practices they learned as part of class and was a fun way to finish the course,” said Game and Fish Information and Education Specialist Tara Hodges.

Hodges conducted the…

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Climate change: Threshold for dangerous warming will likely be crossed between 2027-2042

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

Scientists introduce a new way to predict global warming, reducing uncertainties considerably

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/12/201221160425.htm

Date:December 21, 2020Source:McGill UniversitySummary:The threshold for dangerous global warming will likely be crossed between 2027 and 2042 — a much narrower window than the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s estimate of between now and 2052. Researchers introduce a new and more precise way to project the Earth’s temperature. Based on historical data, it considerably reduces uncertainties compared to previous approaches.Share:    FULL STORY


Photo concept, hourglass | Credit: © denyasapozhnik / stock.adobe.com

Photo concept, hourglass on beach (stock image).Credit: © denyasapozhnik / stock.adobe.com

The threshold for dangerous global warming will likely be crossed between 2027 and 2042 — a much narrower window than the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s estimate of between now and 2052. In a study published inClimate Dynamics, researchers from McGill University introduce a new and more precise way to project the Earth’s temperature. Based on historical data, it considerably reduces uncertainties…

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