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Trump’s DOJ is targeting Daily Kos

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President Donald Trump’s Department of Justice is coming after us.

That’s not a metaphor. It’s real. 

I wish I could tell you more, but I’m not allowed to say anything further. Convenient, isn’t it? A perfect gift for an authoritarian regime—using the power of the state to silence dissent and debate, all while shielding Trump from criticism.

We’ve watched them go after ActBlue. After Media Matters. I guess it was inevitable that we’d get our turn.

But you all know me: I don’t back down from a fight. This is what I’m built for. Mounting a vigorous legal defense doesn’t come cheap, though. And as you all know, independent media isn’t flushed with cash these days. We certainly aren’t. 

You—our supporters—got us through our legal fight with Robert F. Kennedy Jr., and I’m counting on you to help us now. I’m not exaggerating when I say that this one is existential. 

So please contribute to Daily Kos’ legal defense.

Honestly, we were planning to fundraise for something entirely different—the next great version of Daily Kos. A new platform built for this community, with the features you’ve been begging for over the last two decades.

I can’t wait to tell you all about it. I’m downright bursting at the seams!

But first? We’ve gotta deal with this bullshit. 

Here are other ways to support us in this fight.

As always, thank you for being here. We couldn’t do this without you.

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Ferret
3 days ago
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Well this is some BS
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This Machine Extracts Gasoline From Thin Air… And It Could Literally Topple Economies

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It looks like gasoline might finally be cool again. That’s a wild thing to say in 2025, but if you saw the Aircela device in action on a random Manhattan rooftop last week, you’d be tempted to say the same. Nestled among grimy air vents and skyline silhouettes was a machine that looked more like a triple-stacked oak barrel set than the future of clean energy. A future where you’d never have to complain about gas prices again, because you could just harvest gas from thin air.

Think of it as a molecular bartender. CO₂ in, gasoline out. The unit, roughly the size of a refrigerator, uses direct air capture tech to isolate carbon dioxide, then pushes it through a fuel synthesis process that doesn’t require the Earth to be mined, fractured, or torched in the process. What you get is a drop-in ready, sulphur-free, ethanol-free, heavy-metal-free gasoline that can go straight into your existing engine. No retrofits, no infrastructure overhaul, no endless legislative debates. You just plug it in and pour.

Designer: Aircela

That’s a very big deal when you consider over 90 percent of the global vehicle fleet runs on gasoline. Transitioning to electric is great in theory, but bumpy in reality. EV infrastructure is still playing catch-up, and not every driver is ready to trade tailpipe growls for whisper-quiet motors. What Aircela offers is not a workaround or a compromise. It’s a plug-and-play leap forward. Cleaner gasoline, made where you need it, from the air you’re already breathing.

The company behind this is hardly your average garage startup. Aircela was founded in 2019 by Mia and Eric Dahlgren, and it’s already pulled in heavyweight backing. We’re talking Chris Larsen (of Ripple fame), Jeff Ubben (known for activist investing), and even Maersk Growth, the venture arm of the global shipping behemoth. They even managed to convert a skeptical former Porsche exec, Karl Dums, by showing that the Aircela wasn’t ‘Theranosian’ vaporware, or a distant pipe dream.

And here’s what really grabs you: the system works entirely on renewable electricity. No dirty grid hookups or carbon offsets. That’s critical, because making synthetic fuel often has a catch: energy use. If you’re burning coal to make clean gas, the math doesn’t favor you. But Aircela sidesteps that pitfall. Their rooftop unit in NYC pulled CO₂ out of the ambient air and turned it into gasoline right before everyone’s eyes. CEO Eric Dahlgren even filled a plastic bottle straight from the tap.

The scientific roots trace back to physicist Klaus Lackner, one of the earliest pioneers in direct air capture. Aircela didn’t invent the idea. They engineered it into a viable, shippable product. One machine, three barrels in size, capable of creating gallons of clean fuel daily. And it’s modular, so stack a few, power them with a solar array, and suddenly you’re a decentralized, renewable fuel producer. Imagine putting these on construction sites, off-grid cabins, or remote industrial bases.

They’re planning initial deployments by fall this year, targeting commercial and off-grid applications first. That’s smart – go where fuel logistics are a pain point, where clean gasoline isn’t a PR stunt but a practical advantage. The long play is broader adoption, of course. Homes, neighborhoods, maybe even gas stations. A network of clean-fuel microfactories humming away in the background, turning our biggest pollutant into something useful, again.

Gasoline has been vilified for good reason. It’s tangled up in climate change, war economies, and decades of corporate greenwashing. But Aircela has carved out a strange little pocket of optimism. And in doing so, it’s somehow scrubbed some of that dirt off gasoline’s reputation. Combined with all the great work Elon’s been doing to absolutely sour the EV market. *bombastic side eye*

The post This Machine Extracts Gasoline From Thin Air… And It Could Literally Topple Economies first appeared on Yanko Design.

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Ferret
32 days ago
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Wild
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Humans give off visible light that vanishes when we die, new study shows

BGR
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new drug could help humans grow new teeth

It turns out the idea that humans glow might not just be poetic. A new study from the University of Calgary and the National Research Council of Canada has captured physical evidence showing that living organisms, including mice and plants, emit a faint visible light that vanishes upon death.

This barely-there glow, known as ultraweak photon emission (UPE), is produced by chemical reactions inside cells. While these biophotons are far too dim for our eyes to see, they’re very real, and scientists have now observed the glow flicker out in real time.

Biophotons aren’t a new concept, though they’ve often been treated as fringe science. They differ from more familiar forms of bioluminescence (like glowing jellyfish or even barrelfish) and are emitted as cells deal with stress or damage. However, this is one of the first times science has posited that humans themselves glow.

The source of the glow is believed to be byproducts of metabolism that sometimes create high-energy reactions capable of releasing light.

A new study focused on whether this phenomenon could be seen across an entire living subject, not just in isolated cells or tissues. To test this, researchers placed live mice into completely dark imaging chambers and used high-sensitivity cameras to record their biophoton emissions.

After about an hour, the mice were euthanized, but kept warm to rule out temperature effects. Imaging continued for another hour. According to a study published with their findings, the researchers observed a dramatic decrease in photon emissions after death.

The same was observed in plant leaves from thale cress and umbrella trees. Injured parts glowed more brightly than healthy ones, which the researchers say is clear evidence that living stress responses drive the emission.

The idea that humans glow may seem silly, but this research suggests it’s a measurable biological fact. If these emissions reflect cellular stress and health, they could one day become tools for medical diagnostics, offering a non-invasive way to monitor health, detect injury, or even study the aging process.

The post Humans give off visible light that vanishes when we die, new study shows appeared first on BGR.

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Humans give off visible light that vanishes when we die, new study shows originally appeared on BGR.com on Wed, 14 May 2025 at 16:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.



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Ferret
46 days ago
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Whoa
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First 60-Hz E Ink monitor gives mobile productivity an eye-friendly boost

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An eye-friendly secondary monitor with a fast refresh rate and anti-ghosting tech

Once the domain of paperback replacements, E Ink has branched out to try and compete with tablets and monitors. But low refresh rates can be frustrating. Improving this has been a focus for Dasung, and now its quick-refresh monitor has launched.

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Category: Mobile Technology, Consumer Tech, Technology

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Ferret
68 days ago
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First folding color e-reader breaks cover

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Storing hundreds of books on a digital device is a great way to satisfy your thirst for adventure or knowledge without needing lots of shelving in the home. But e-readers don't really feel book-like. Until now. E Ink has partnered with Readmoo to launch the first foldable color e-book reader.

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Category: Mobile Technology, Consumer Tech, Technology

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Ferret
73 days ago
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Neat!
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Wedge-shaped exposed metal supercar puts Tesla Cybertruck to shame

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The Peralta S debuted at the Pastejé Automotive Invitational vehicle show in Mexico by Fabrizio Giugiaro

What you're looking at is a one-off, mid-engine, hand-built wedge car with an exterior fashioned almost entirely of mirror-polished aluminum. Its exposed-metal design puts a certain Tesla Cybertruck to shame.

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Category: Automotive, Transport

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Ferret
86 days ago
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This thing looks freaking awesome
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