Image of the DayThe green alga Caulerpa taxifolia is the largest known single-celled organism; it |
I love great art, no matter the medium.
Image of the DayThe green alga Caulerpa taxifolia is the largest known single-celled organism; it |
By Jef Akst
As the number of Ebola cases declines, Chimerix is unable to recruit enough patients for its trial in Liberia testing the antiviral drug brincidofovir.
Hi Herbert, According to multiple news reports today, FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler will use Title II to protect real Net Neutrality.1 This. Is. The. Biggest. Deal. Ever. We’re not being hyperbolic here. Title II would be a watershed victory for people like you who have pushed the FCC — some of you for an entire decade — to protect the open Internet. So here’s what we do now: 1) Get excited. We're closer than ever to the biggest public policy victory in decades. 2) Get ready to fight. Over the next three weeks the cable and phone industries are going to try and destroy everything we’ve worked for. The big Internet service providers will pressure the FCC to weaken its proposal. They'll round up their buddies in Congress. They'll flood the Web and the airwaves with lies and misinformation. Creating policy change is hard. Winning Title II will be a huge victory that protects the rights of Internet users at a time when companies like Comcast, AT&T and Verizon are trying to control the market and strengthen their monopoly status. Title II gives the FCC the authority it needs to preserve the foundational principles of universal access, competition, interconnection and consumer protections that are core parts of the Communications Act. As long as the FCC continues down this path — and also keeps the final order free of loopholes and industry meddling — the chairman should be cheered by the millions who have mobilized to save the Internet. As the details of the FCC’s rules emerge over the next three weeks, the push from the cable and phone industries will become even more aggressive. There will be enormous pressure on the FCC to weaken its proposal before the final vote on Feb. 26. We'll need to be vigilant to ensure the rules remain as strong as possible. We've proved that organized people can trump organized dollars and that industry is no match for activists like you. Thanks for all you’ve done to save the Internet. If we keep pushing in the weeks ahead, this is a fight we can win once and for all. Onward, Craig, Candace and the rest of the Free Press Action Fund team P.S. It takes more than energy and commitment to go up against the phone and cable companies. Help fuel our campaign to save the open Internet with a donation of $10 (or more!) today. Thank you! 1. "FCC Chairman Reportedly Moving Forward with Real Net Neutrality Protections," Free Press, Feb. 2, 2015: http://act.freepress.net/go/16251?t=4&akid=5081.10046904.UqozTw |
Free Press and the Free Press Action Fund are nonpartisan organizations fighting for your rights to connect and communicate. Learn more at www.freepress.net. Join us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.
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Once upon a time, music was the antidote. The response to the status quo.
Now it is the status quo.
How very sad.
I love great art, no matter the medium.
Loretta Lynch, President Obama's nominee for attorney general, disagrees with him on marijuana. That weed is not safer than alcohol might have been the most controversial thing she said during her confirmation hearing Wednesday. As Danny Vinik notes, polls show that large majorities of Americans believe that alcohol is more dangerous. They're right, as a matter of medical science. Wonkblog has noted repeatedly that alcohol is a very dangerous drug, both to users and to the people around them, and government statistics reflect the fact that marijuana is much safer. That's not to say it's safe, particularly for adolescents, but Lynch appears to be overstating weed's dangers. This is important, as the attorney general has the authority to remove marijuana from Schedule 1, the most dangerous classification of drugs. Doing so would give researchers a chance to study weed carefully, and figure out whether it's possible to safely and effectively prescribe it for medical purposes. |
UV Light Doesn’t Fully PurifyBy Jef Akst Using ultraviolet light to disinfect drinking water may simply drive bacteria to dormancy, rather than kill them. |
I love great art, no matter the medium.
I love great art, no matter the medium.
I love great art, no matter the medium.