Speculating, it might be people rather than the grass. I.e. If the SDSU game ends late, then many stadium ops workers (security, concessions, cleanup) have to stay well after midnight. Wouldn't be surprised if Calif. law or union contracts say they can't be called back soon enough to open for SDFC.
10.11.2025 17:13 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
Newsom is a bad person and Iβll leave that bubble empty before I vote for him, but if he spends all day on tv tomorrow calling Schumer a coward and it normalizes the call to primary him among lowish information democrats, godspeed.
10.11.2025 05:32 β π 2335 π 251 π¬ 9 π 1
"i asked grok" "i asked chatgpt" yeah well i asked carl sagan and he said the greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance but the illusion of knowledge π§ͺ
18.07.2025 04:12 β π 22665 π 6742 π¬ 132 π 123
It was so little money that was doing amazing work. The party of blood and carnage rejoices.
07.11.2025 02:58 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
Elected Democrats spending more time today praising Dick Cheney than Zohran Mamdani is a great case study in abject fucking moral failure.
04.11.2025 22:52 β π 9110 π 2251 π¬ 170 π 108
A brown cloud arising from an underground nuclear test in Nevada. Dry Nevadan hills are in the background. The scientific encampment to control the test and take data is in the lower right.
This is the Baneberry nuclear test, and it is not how underground nuclear tests should look.
Screenshot of a Facebook post:
Terry Wallace
On December 18, 1970, a nuclear weapons test was conducted in an underground shaft at the Nevada Test Site. The test, code-named Baneberry, was detonated at a depth of about 900 feet. Baneberry was a relatively small weapons test and was conducted at Yucca Flats (a large playa) in alluvial soil derived from surrounding deposits of volcanic tuff. Within the alluvium, there were intermittent seams of montmorillonite clay that were saturated with water. The drill hole was filled with a concrete plug and sorted materials; the procedure for plugging the hole was consistent with previous tests at Yucca Flats, which aimed to fully contain the radioactive products within a cavity produced by the nuclear explosion.
In the case of Baneberry, the detonation seemed normal until about 3 Β½ minutes after the βboom,β when a large fissure opened up a few hundred feet from the test shaft, and a boiling cloud of radioactive debris rose above the Nevada desert (Figure 1 is an image of the Baneberry release). The cloud rose about 10,000 feet above the test and was visible in Las Vegas, 100 miles away. The cloud spread radioactive dust across a broad area, contaminating 86 workers at the test site. The total radioactive release was 6.7 megacuries (for comparison, Chernobyl released 200 megacuries), including 80,000 curies of iodine-131. Two of the workers who were contaminated died in 1974 from myeloid leukemia. The accident resulted in a six-month suspension of nuclear weapons testing, and a root cause analysis revealed three geological issues that combined to create the release: an unrecognized fault in the alluvium, a buried escarpment between the alluvium and limestone, and the structural weakness of the water-saturated clay.
Post continues (2)
the structural weakness of the water-saturated clay.
The summary conclusion of the root cause analysis indicated that a thorough geological analysis was needed for all future nuclear tests, and it recommended the establishment of a containment evaluation panel (CEP) for the approval of any tests. This panel required that βsuccessful containment means no radioactivity detectable offsite, and no unanticipated release of activity onsite.β Of the 200+ tests that occurred after the creation of the CEP, only four tests had releasesβthe worst of which was a test called Diagonal Line, detonated about a year after Baneberry, and resulting in a release of 6,000 curies.
I started my career at Los Alamos National Laboratory as an undergraduate student in 1975 employed by the J Division, which was responsible for providing the containment package for LANL nuclear tests. My first project involved modeling the small earthquakes that occurred after an explosion. Once an explosion is detonated, it creates a cavity by vaporizing and compressing the surrounding materials. This cavity is expected to collapse over the following days or weeks to create a porous chimney that traps the gases produced in the explosion. This containment strategy is unique to the geology of the Nevada Test Site and is not applicable to other testing environments, especially crystalline rock (like the North Korean Test Site). Over the three years I worked as a student at LANL, I analyzed data from more than 70 tests, which initiated my career in forensic geophysics and eventually led to my becoming the 11th Director of LANL.
On September 23, 1992, the U.S. conducted its final explosive nuclear
Post continues (3):
On September 23, 1992, the U.S. conducted its final explosive nuclear test, code-named Divider (a LANL test). Shortly after the test, President Bush announced a test moratorium that was extended indefinitely by President Clinton. This ushered in a new era in which nuclear weapons were evaluated not through explosions but by scientific tools that verified material properties through dynamic testing and advanced computer simulations that encapsulated the complex physics of nuclear reactions and explosions along with the material properties derived from non-explosive experiments.
The Directors of Los Alamos, Livermore, and Sandia are required to write an annual stockpile assessment letter that assures the nuclear stockpile's reliability; this letter is finalized after a yearlong assessment of the safety, reliability, and performance of both the nuclear and non-nuclear components of all weapon types in the U.S. arsenal. The letters are highly classified and closely held, but no letter has indicated that the U.S. needs to return to nuclear testing. This is hugely significant not only for the U.S. but also for the worldβthe moratorium on testing represents a small step toward a world that recognizes that nuclear weapons are not weapons of war, but rather instruments of deterrence.
On October 28, President Trump announced that the U.S. would restart nuclear weapons tests: βBecause of other countriesβ testing programs, I
This needs to be shared more widely. It's on Facebook, which AFAIK doesn't allow direct links to its posts. Terry clearly wants it to be shared, so I don't feel bad about posting it in multiple screenshots.
Terry Wallace was the director of the Los Alamos National Laboratory.
04.11.2025 19:15 β π 171 π 110 π¬ 7 π 10
Legally, this is no different from Iran sinking a Disney cruise in international waters and then saying "it's all good, they were terrorists carrying drugs."
Which is to say, it's wholly illegal and has been for centuries. You couldn't even do this with a Letter of Marque and Reprisal.
30.10.2025 00:25 β π 3221 π 1016 π¬ 68 π 22
Hang it in the Louvre.
πΈ FC Cincinnati
28.10.2025 13:33 β π 22 π 3 π¬ 2 π 1
And all of these people hold two ideas in their head simultaneously:
β
Nuclear weapons are completely insane.
β
There are rational reasons they must do the mission they're doing.
These ideas are diametrically opposed in many ways. And its that opposition that makes nukes SO interesting to me.
24.10.2025 14:35 β π 43 π 5 π¬ 1 π 1
The White House was three buildings connected by two walkways and Trump decided unilaterally to obliterate one of those buildings and one of those walkways to build a ballroom paid for by donations given by companies and people looking to curry favor.
23.10.2025 17:08 β π 768 π 212 π¬ 32 π 8
all of these people would do well to learn something about βcheapβ and βcostlyβ grace. no one is saying that platner is irredeemable, but that some things are a bridge too far for someone seeking a public trust. if he feels truly contrite, he can work on himself and his community and try again.
21.10.2025 13:30 β π 3829 π 391 π¬ 2 π 55
Stop committing so many fouls
21.10.2025 14:13 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
I'm not a West Wing obsessed lib or anything but the more I see pictures of this the more fucked up I think it is. It's like he cut off one of the hands of the Lincoln memorial with an angle grinder so he could add a big gun to it.
21.10.2025 02:51 β π 14513 π 3339 π¬ 682 π 137
twitter is making mainstream reporters dumber, and because they're all getting dumber together, none of them can recognize it and they actually think they're getting smarter
21.10.2025 02:24 β π 7197 π 1006 π¬ 81 π 49
The most simple explanation is most likely the correct one:
The NYTimes' leadership supported the Tea Party and its goals and wanted to elevate its stature. OTOH, the NYTimes leadership doesn't support #NoKings and its goals and wants to diminish its stature.
20.10.2025 15:56 β π 59 π 16 π¬ 1 π 0
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
NATIONAL TRANSPORTATION SAFETY BOARD
*****************
Investigation of:
LOSS OF THE SUBMARINE TITAN
IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN
ON JUNE 18, 2023
*
*
*
*
*
*
Accident No.:
*********** * * * * * *
Interview of:
Co-designer/Pilot
Deepsea Challenger
DCA23FM036
via Microsoft Teams
Friday,
July 26, 2024
INTERVIEW OF
10
BY LCDR
11 Q. So how did you get yourself started into submersible
12 operations?
13
A.
Well, I'm sure you're familiar with my film Titanic.
When I
14
set down the path to make that film, the first thing that I did
15
was arrange to be introduced to the head of the submersible
16
program at the P.P. Shirshov Institute in Moscow, a guy named
17|
Professor
I. I did that through a mutual friend
18
of ours, a guy named
, who is one of the preeminent
underwater cinematographers in the world. And had been on a
20
submersible expedition out to Titanic the previous year with the
21
Russians. And that was organized by a Canadian company that was
22 doing an IMAX film which was released under the title Titanica.
Learned that an anonymous outside expert on submersibles did an interview with the OceanGate Titan investigation, and they released a transcript, with all the names redacted. The first line of his first answer? "I'm sure you're familiar with my film Titanic."
16.10.2025 21:28 β π 14148 π 3601 π¬ 266 π 491
Scrap the entire INA.
14.10.2025 03:12 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
A classic case of irresponsible both-sidesism from the NYT. The story is that Trump and MAGA propagandists are lying about Portland to incite a conflict, not that there are different views of the matter.
11.10.2025 13:26 β π 5704 π 1512 π¬ 267 π 214
The most fundamental political debate of our time: You are integrated into and have responsibility for our complex, imperfect society vs. Nuh-uh.
08.10.2025 14:56 β π 2438 π 470 π¬ 30 π 20
I feel like this photo of masked, armed men pepper spraying a pastor protecting his community is going to be a defining picture of this moment in America for a long, long time.
07.10.2025 23:29 β π 56587 π 21248 π¬ 1748 π 1259
I am not a constitutional scholar but I am pretty sure βthe president my personally levy taxes and choose what they fundβ is not in fact what the founders intended
07.10.2025 20:23 β π 1884 π 299 π¬ 15 π 14
The law is clear so this "floating the possibility" is just a distraction. Red meat for the media to focus on rather than... (Hmm, what might he want to avoid coverage of?)
07.10.2025 22:10 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
Health Experts Recommend Standing Up At Desk, Leaving Office, Never Coming Back
Health Experts Recommend Standing Up At Desk, Leaving Office, Never Coming Back https://theonion.com/health-experts-recommend-standing-up-at-desk-leaving-o-1819577456/
07.10.2025 20:15 β π 11100 π 2876 π¬ 85 π 126
Look. Invading our own country is about as straightforward a case as you can have for impeachment. The GOP abandoning the Constitution is kind of the only story there is and it gets no coverage.
06.10.2025 03:18 β π 7550 π 1958 π¬ 74 π 54
Why is the president of the United States manufacturing violence in the biggest cities in America?
would be the most crucial question to ask any Republican right now if the answer weren't obvious.
04.10.2025 21:32 β π 188 π 36 π¬ 4 π 1
01.10.2025 01:50 β π 1572 π 357 π¬ 30 π 7
A publication that covers the nuts and bolts of political change: Boltsmag.org
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