Good News Friday

  • Armenia and Azerbaijan agree to end almost 40 years of conflict. Reuters.
  • In the US, Medicaid expansion saved 27,400 lives by 2022. The Economist.
  • Global average yields of cereal crops have tripled over the past 60 years. This has been crucial to feeding a growing population while sparing natural habitat from expanding agricultural land. Our World in Data.
  • How China re-greened the most eroded place on earth. The Guardian.
  • Texas broke its solar, wind, and battery records in one week. Canary Media.
  • Covid ‘benevolence bump’ endures as acts of kindness 10% higher than before 2020. The Guardian.
  • Tech millionaire builds village of 99 tiny houses for homeless neighbors in Canada. Good Good Good.
  • Mediterranean monk seals make remarkable return from brink of extinction. ABC.
  • In the past 25 years, 68 million child marriages have been averted. UNICEF.

For more good news, check out Fix the News and The Progress Network.

Good News Friday

  • $20k foldable tiny home can be installed in just 60 minutes: ‘Meeting the growing demand for housing’. Good Good Good.
  • Man lives for 100 days with artificial titanium heart in successful new trial. CNN.
  • U.S. battery capacity increased 66% in 2024. EIA.
  • Almost 100 million people in Africa have gained access to electricity in recent years. Global Energy.

For more good news, check out Fix the News and The Progress Network.

The Lost 116 Pages by Don Bradley

When Joseph Smith was writing the Book of Mormon, approximately 116 pages were lost. Don Bradley attempts to reconstruct what was in the lost pages by examining the scriptures and the accounts of those familiar with what was in the lost pages.

Interestingly, Joseph Smith’s father said there were Masonic symbols on the cover of the golden plates. (I didn’t realize until reading this book that the beehive was a Masonic symbol.)

Smith’s mother described the Urim and Thummim as three-cornered diamonds framed in silver, connected like a pair of spectacles. (They may have been triangular in shape to match the Masonic compass and square.) They could be attached to a breastplate by a rod which held them in front of the face. Joseph apparently used the Urim and Thummim to translate the lost portion, but used the stone in the hat to translate the Book of Mormon we have today.

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Good News Friday

  • James Harrison, a man with an unusually high concentration of rare antibodies in his blood that can help prevent hemolytic disease in newborns, died recently. He helped save 2.4 million babies by donating blood. The Washington Post.
  • Vaccines now save six lives per minute in Zimbabwe. The country has slashed under-five mortality from 93 to 48 deaths per 1,000 live births. Gavi.
  • HPV vaccines help reduce US cervical cancer deaths by 62%. Gavi.
  • Cambodia, once the world’s most mined country, is now almost landmine-free with the number of casualties plummeting from 4,320 in 1996 to just 49 in 2024. Construction Property.
  • Texas sees steady decline in child abuse deaths after legislative changes. KSAT.
  • India’s tiger population doubles in a decade. BBC.
  • In 1987 there were only 22 remaining California condors, North America’s largest bird. There are 561 today, with 344 flying free. Knowable Magazine.
  • Wind and solar power overtake coal in US for first time. The Times.
  • UK emissions fall 3.6% in 2024 as coal use drops to lowest level since 1666. Carbon Brief.
  • How Bangladesh rolled out the world’s largest off-grid solar program. The Progress Playbook.
  • Scientists have developed a new rice strain that emits 70% less methane. Sci Tech Daily.
  • Chilean scientists develop rice that uses half as much water. El Pais.
  • Almost 100 million people in Africa have gained access to electricity in the past five years. Global Energy.
  • In 2024, women in the US 16 and older earned an average of 85% of what men earned, up from 81% in 2003. Women between 25 to 34 years old earned 95% of what men earned, up from 88% in 2003. Pew Research Center.

For more good news, check out Fix the News and The Progress Network.

The Simpsons Season 4

As a kid, one of the cartoons I watched was Tiny Toon Adventures, which featured younger versions of Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and other Looney Tunes characters. Around the same time season 4 of The Simpsons premiered, Tiny Toons featured an obvious Bart Simpson analog named Blard Simpleton. Blard came from a realistic cartoon and was unprepared for wacky things like anvils falling from the sky. Ironically, The Simpsons largely decided to abandon realism in season 4, opting for a lot more Looney Tunes style gags.

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Good News Friday

  • Nearly 24% decline in U.S. drug overdose deaths. CDC.
  • By 2023, Denmark had reduced its greenhouse gas emissions by 46% compared 1990, and will likely cut its emissions by 50% this year. Reuters.
  • Fetus receives life-saving medication before birth in medical first. Science Alert.
  • New sickle cell treatment cures disease at lower cost than gene therapies. Axios.

For more good news, check out Fix the News and The Progress Network.

Good News Friday

  • 10 ways investing in children’s well-being changed the world. UNICEF.
  • Between 1990 and 2021, the global death rate for suicide declined by almost 40%, indicating that intervention and prevention are working. IHME.
  • The rate of deaths from drowning dropped by 38% between the year 2000 and 2021. WHO.
  • Tanzania has reduced maternal mortality by 80% between 2016 to 2022. AfricaCDC.
  • There has been a 37% drop in child marriages in Malaysia from 2019 to 2023. Free Malaysia Today.
  • Since 2019, Mackenzie Scott has given $19 billion to more than 2,000 nonprofits. One charity expanded its refugee efforts from 29 to 71 countries. Another went from serving meals to approximately 2.5 million people a day, to 10 million. CBS.
  • Homicides in the US dropped 16% in 2024 from the previous year. Axios.
  • Americans are paying less for college, on average, than they were a decade ago. The Atlantic.
  • In the 1920s, there were just 54 European bison, all in captive areas, but thanks to rewilding efforts there are now around 10,000. Reasons to be Cheerful.
  • Wind and solar are expected to meet nearly 50% of power demand in Texas this spring. Reuters.
  • Last undiscovered tomb of Tutankhamun dynasty found. BBC.
  • America’s first car-free neighborhood is popular with its residents two years in. Dwell.

For more good news, check out Fix the News and The Progress Network.

Good News Friday

  • Malaria deaths in Kenya drop by 93 per cent over eight years. The Eastleigh Voice.
  • Iraq’s poverty rate dropped from 21.5% in 2022 to 17.6% in 2024. Shafaq.
  • In these nine Asian countries, child mortality has more than halved since the year 2000. Our World in Data.
  • Cold-related deaths have fallen 65% since the 1990s. Think Global Health.
  • Tanzania reduced maternal mortality by 80% over seven years. Africa CDC.
  • China has created or restored more than 10,000 square km of wetland since 2012. Xinhua.
  • Artificial intelligence is now used to locate abandoned fishing nets in the ocean. Oceanographic.
  • Global sales of combustion engine cars have peaked. Our World in Data.

For more good news, check out Fix the News and The Progress Network.

Grover Cleveland: A Study in Character by Alyn Brodsky

Happy President’s Day! Last year for president’s day, I did a post about Abraham Lincoln. Two years ago, I did a post about Thomas Jefferson. This year, it’s a less famous president, Grover Cleveland.

Grover Cleveland was the only Democrat to be elected president between the Civil War and World War I. His great great grandfather Aaron was friends with Benjamin Franklin. His great grandfather (also named Aaron) was an abolitionist way back in the 1790s. His father Robert was a Presbyterian minister and his mother owned a slave before her husband made her send her slave away.

Stephen Grover Cleveland was born in Caldwell, New Jersey in 1837. He was the fifth of nine children. He was named in honor of his father’s predecessor who had founded the Caldwell church. He ended up dropping the Stephen from his name, although he was known as Big Steve to his friends.

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Good News Friday

  • Child mortality in Malawi has plummeted from 234 deaths per 1,000 live births to just 49 since 1992. Nyasa Times.
  • World Health Organization (WHO) report reveals a 38% drop in the global drowning death rate since 2000. WHO.
  • A year into new initiative, Denver no longer has any homeless veterans living on the street. Good Good Good.
  • In Bradford, England, a clean air zone has reduced visits to the doctor for respiratory illnesses and heart problems by around 25%. The Guardian.
  • Wind and solar accounted for nearly two-thirds (65%) of Lithuania’s power generation in 2024. The Progress Playbook.
  • In 2004, it took the world a year to add a gigawatt of solar power — now it takes a day. Our World in Data.
  • 95% of all new power capacity in the United State added to the grid in 2024 was carbon-free. Distilled.
  • Family of beavers save Czech government $1.2 million by finishing a 7-year dam project in just a few weeks. Fortune.

For more good news, check out Fix the News and The Progress Network.