If only the American public showed the same amount of concern over other missing women as they did for Gabby Petito.
- Living orbs of light: how firefly flashes illuminate the physics of complex systems.
- Some dinosaurs may have wagged their tails to help them run. This and the T-Rex moving like a chicken is the reason why a real-life Jurassic Park would fail.
- Cats say “I love you” in their own douchey way.
- Mysterious shaking rattles north Phoenix neighborhood homes.
- The Out and Back podcast has an interview with our good friend Mike Clelland, a.k.a. ‘the Owlman’.
- Demi Lovato’s Unidentified seems like UFO Hunters meet MTV’s The Real World –BARF!
- Space Force’s new uniforms will ensure their officers to be the best-dressed bellboys in the Solar System.
- Mysterious stealthy shape that resembles future fighter concepts spotted at radar test range (Updated).
- Is Biden planning to detain Haitian immigrants in Guantanamo?
- Member of CIA chief’s team reported Havana syndrome symptoms on recent trip to India.
- Researchers use innovative head-mounted magnetic device to shrink brain tumor.
- China pledges not to build new coal-fired power projects abroad. We might get to see the end of fossil fuels within our lifetimes.
- New volcano erupts on the Spanish island of La Palma, attracting tourists and destroying crops.
- The lucha libre silent serial killer you’ve never heard of.
- Peter Thiel’s ideology still dominates Silicon Valley. That is NOT a good thing.
- Red Pill of the Day: Homeowner discovers creepy doll and chilling note behind a wall of their new home.
Quote of the Day:
There have been four sorts of ages in the world’s history. There have been ages when everybody thought they knew everything, ages when nobody thought they knew anything, ages when clever people thought they knew much and stupid people thought they knew little, and ages when stupid people thought they knew much and clever people thought they knew little. The first sort of age is one of stability, the second of slow decay, the third of progress, and the fourth of disaster.
Bertrand Russell