Good News Friday

  • This injectable gel reversed paralysis in mice. Humans could be next. Daily Beast.
  • Water chlorination has cut mortality rates for children under five in certain Kenyan villages by 63%. Vox.
  • Cancer deaths in U.S. fall overall by 27% over last 50 years. UPI.
  • Presumed extinct, the tentacled butterfly ray comes back from the dead. Hakai.
  • Airless puncture-proof tires may be on your car by 2024. Big Think.
  • Beavers return to Nottinghamshire for first time in 400 years. BBC.

For more good news, check out The Progress Network, Future Crunch, and Reasons to be Cheerful.

Good News Friday

  • In 2021, 147 countries have improved their overall score on the Social Progress Index since previous indices. Social Progress Imperative.
  • HPV vaccine saves thousands of women from cervical cancer, UK study shows. The Guardian.
  • Tucson OK’s measure to gradually raise minimum wage to $15 AP.
  • Hiring grows in U.S. as employers add 531,000 jobs, beating expectations. NBC News.
  • Firefighting robots go autonomous. Scientific American.
  • A father and son in remote Siberia are trying to engineer an ice age ecosystem. Peer-reviewed scientific papers show they are slowing global warming. Reuters.
  • Japan start-up designs wind turbine that can harness typhoon energy. Reuters.
  • 20 recent justice reform measures to celebrate. The Innocence Project.

For more good news, check out The Progress Network, Future Crunch, and Reasons to be Cheerful.

The Man in the High Castle by Philip K Dick

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In this alternate version of 1962, Roosevelt is assassinated during his first year in office which leads to the Japanese and Germans winning World War II. Germany and Japan divide the United States between them with the western US belonging to Japan and the eastern US belonging to Germany. While the Rocky Mountain states belong to Japan, they’re considered inconsequential and generally left to themselves. (Italy has a small empire in the Middle East, but generally didn’t benefit much from their alliance with Germany.)

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Good News Friday

  • Insecticide-spraying drones have reduced malaria incidence in Rwanda by 90.6%. Freethink.
  • Solar pumps are helping Kenya’s farmers access water. Good Good Good.
  • Egypt has ended their 2017 state of emergency which curtailed constitutional rights. Aljazeera.
  • Stacey Abrams group donates $1.34M to wipe out medical debts. AP.
  • Thanks to science, cancer deaths are rapidly decreasing. Good Good Good.
  • This new concrete soaks up a greenhouse gas. Freethink.
  • US wages jump by the most in records dating back 20 years. AP.
  • COVID-19 pandemic drove flu to historic lows, and may have eliminated one virus type completely. ABC Science.
  • In Senegal, rate of access to sanitation in urban areas has risen from 61.7% in 2013 to 74% in 2020, and in rural areas from 38.7% to 50.7% during the same period. Afrik21.
  • Strokes are the second-leading cause of death worldwide, but between 1990 and 2019, the age-standardized incidence of strokes has decreased by 17%, and deaths by 36%. The Lancet.
  • In Pakistan between 1990 and 2019, life expectancy at birth increased by 7.2 years, average schooling increased by 2.9 years, average income rose by 64%, and poverty declined from over 50% to just over 20%. UNDP.
  • The Saharan gazelle saved from extinction in southern Spain. El Pais.
  • For the first time in 60 years, cheetahs have returned to Mozambique. Daily Maverick.
  • Sea turtle populations are thriving in Cape Verde, with the number of nests increasing from 10,000 to almost 200,000 in the past six years. The Guardian.

For more good news, check out The Progress Network, Future Crunch, and Reasons to be Cheerful.

Good News Friday

  • In the 17 advanced economies recently surveyed, wide majorities now describe where they live “as benefiting from people of different ethnic groups, religions, and races.” Pew Research Center.
  • A half-mile installation just took 20,000 pounds of plastic out of the Pacific — proof that ocean garbage can be cleaned. Business Insider.
  • Vast area of Atlantic to be protected in effort to protect 5 million seabirds. The Irish Times.
  • Wooden knives that are three times sharper than steel ones could help cut energy use and plastic cutlery waste. New Scientist.
  • California Writes Off $534M in Justice Debt for Low-Income Residents. The Crime Report.
  • We could see planes fueled by captured CO2 in 2022. Free Think.
  • A group in the Philippines is turning plastic waste into building materials. Reuters.
  • Researchers are teaching cows to pee in designated places where the urine can be collected and neutralized, sharply reducing methane emissions. Reasons to be Cheerful.

For more good news, check out The Progress Network, Future Crunch, and Reasons to be Cheerful.

Good News Friday

  • Four years after the start of the #MeToo movement, about half of all Americans are more likely to speak up about sexual harrassment. AP.
  • Pig heart valves are routinely transplanted into humans. Now, surgeons have successfully attached a pig kidney to a human. In the future, genetically-engineered pigs could be used to save the lives of those who need organ donations. The New York Times.
  • Benton Harbor, Michigan is finally getting lead-free water lines. The Guardian.
  • Vaccines may have prevented a quarter-million Covid-19 cases and 39,000 deaths among seniors. CNN.
  • A group of “holistic engineers” want to regreen the arid Sinai peninsula in the same way the Loess Plateau was regreened. Reasons to be Cheerful.
  • Kristine Tompkins has conserved more land than any other single individual. Reasons to be Cheerful.
  • Alabama’s free pre-K stands out as a model for long-term, bipartisan success. The Hechinger Report.

For more good news, check out The Progress Network, Future Crunch, and Reasons to be Cheerful.

Titans

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Back in 2003, Teen Titans debuted. It was a fun animated show featuring Batman’s sidekick Robin, as well as other teen superheroes Starfire, Raven, Beast Boy, and Cyborg. I recently rewatched it and it’s still a lot of fun, although season five dragged for me. They spent so much time introducing new characters you didn’t really get a chance to know any of them. It was also disappointing that they never revealed who Slade really was or what his big plan was.

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Good News Friday

  • The first malaria vaccine has been approved and it’s expected to save tens of thousands of young children’s lives each year. Washington Post.
  • Natural bacteria could wipe out dengue-carrying mosquitoes, Australian research suggests. The Guardian.
  • 43 fish stocks have been rebuilt since the year 2000. Now, 84 percent of stocks are no longer overfished. Reasons to be Cheerful.
  • Wild Amur tigers rebound in China. Mongabay.
  • Scientists have created a hydrogel tablet that can purify a liter of river water in an hour. UT News.
  • A professor has developed smart microscope slides that help to detect cancer. Medical Xpress.
  • The nonprofit Sungai Watch, based in Bali, Indonesia, has created a new system for collecting plastic waste out of rivers which also employs people who lost their tourism jobs due to Covid. Hakai.
  • Haiti, which experienced the largest cholera epidemic ever recorded in a single country, hasn’t had a single case of cholera since January 2019. World Bank.
  • 84% of countries experienced better air quality in 2020 compared to 2019, due to COVID lockdowns. CNN.
  • More than 110,000 landmines were destroyed globally last year, a new annual record. ReliefWeb.
  • Three years ago, Pakistan launched the Ten Billion Tree Tsunami, a plan to reforest vast swathes of one of the most deforested countries in the world. They’re on track to plant 1.5 billion trees by the end of 2021. Dunya.
  • The population of the critically endangered Grauer’s gorilla has doubled, with current numbers of 6,800 up from 3,800 in 2016. Mongabay.
  • The 2020 US Census shows a 13% drop in the total number of incarcerated people, or nearly 300,000 fewer people, compared with the 2010 Census. The Marshall Project.

For more good news, check out The Progress Network and Future Crunch.

Good News Friday

  • The New Ireland province in Papau New Guinea has severely reduced transmission of lymphatic filariasis which causes elephantiasis. WHO.
  • In just ten days, Zimbabwe has managed to vaccinate four million kids and teenagers against typhoid and cholera. WHO.
  • Global cases of cholera plummeted by almost two thirds last year, thanks to a 68% decrease in cases in Yemen, and a 23% decrease from all other countries. WHO.
  • A court in Jakarta has ruled that the Indonesian government is required to tighten national air quality standards to protect human health and the environment. The Independent.
  • More than 99.5% of people in Bangladesh now have access to electricity, up from 47% before 2009. New Age.
  • 85,000 adults with disabilities were able to vote for the first time in the recent German election. DW.
  • 362,000 marijuana cases in New Jersey have been dismissed and 1,200 people released from probation as new drug laws take effect. NJ.
  • The Philippine Senate has approved a bill to raise the minimum age of sexual consent from 12 to 16 years old. Benar News.
  • Elderly black women now have equal access to matrimonial property in South Africa. Berea Mail.
  • Ford is spending $11.4 billion to build two new factories in Tennessee and Kentucky for batteries and electric pickup trucks. Together, they’ll create over 11,000 jobs. The Atlantic.

For more good news, check out The Progress Network and Future Crunch.

The Principles of Nature by Andrew Jackson Davis

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In the introduction, we’re given a description of Andrew Jackson Davis which would appeal to a phrenologist, as well as testimonials from his acquaintances. We’re told he was poor and barely educated, only attending a few months of school, so he only knows the basics of reading, writing, and arithmetic. Although we’re also told he knows all the technical medical terms, so maybe he’s not as ignorant as they want us to believe. He’s only 20 years old.

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