[-] chicory@hexbear.net 4 points 21 hours ago

weird they are just now getting around to banning it if that's the reason

[-] chicory@hexbear.net 48 points 1 day ago

Target to stop accepting personal checks as of July 15

I'm amazed they've accepted them as long as they have

[-] chicory@hexbear.net 7 points 2 days ago

I just learned it’s the birthday of Caesar salad thanks to NPR

[-] chicory@hexbear.net 10 points 2 days ago

Exactly, this take is the perfect result of the horserace perspective. All that matters is blue team winning. The policy is meaningless.

[-] chicory@hexbear.net 74 points 1 month ago

H5N1 virus in latest human case has mutated, officials say

The slight evolution in the virus is associated with ‘adaptation to mammalian hosts’, according to the Centre for Disease Control

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submitted 1 month ago by chicory@hexbear.net to c/news@hexbear.net

Archive

The USDA-approved lab authorized to test the milk for the H5N1 bird flu virus called the farms to seek their permission to examine the milk, then also declined to test the milk for bird flu when the farmers did not grant it.

“[The farms] are aware of what a nonnegative test would do to their business,” said Brandon Dominguez, the Veterinary Services Section Head at the Texas A&M Veterinary Medical Diagnostic laboratory in College Station, Texas. “They asked that we do not run the test.”

After NPR reported that the USDA had confirmed the agency does not require labs to have permission from farms to test milk samples for bird flu, Amy Swinford, the director of the Texas A&M lab, added that another reason the lab could not perform the test is that reporters did not provide the premise identification numbers for each of the farms. Those numbers are not publicly available; reporters did include the license numbers of each of the farms when they submitted samples for testing.

The lab and the farms’ refusal to test samples of raw milk comes as scientists have criticized the federal government for being slow to collect and report information about the virus. There has been no widespread testing of dairy workers to understand how many may be infected, no mandate that dairy farms test their herds if they aren’t moving cattle between states, and no clear testing data to support federal authorities’ warnings of a potential threat of bird flu in raw milk that people drink.

Head in the sand: what could go wrong?

[-] chicory@hexbear.net 69 points 1 month ago

Hope this fucker is travelling by helicopter

[-] chicory@hexbear.net 85 points 2 months ago

Fucking cops. Reminds me of this from 2020:

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submitted 3 months ago by chicory@hexbear.net to c/news@hexbear.net

Nice to see US leadership continue to work on things that matter.

[-] chicory@hexbear.net 62 points 3 months ago

Hot on the heels of Air Canada's AI chat bot making up policies, NYC is following suit, giving illegal advice in response to questions:

The problem, however, is that the city’s chatbot is telling businesses to break the law.

Five months after launch, it’s clear that while the bot appears authoritative, the information it provides on housing policy, worker rights, and rules for entrepreneurs is often incomplete and in worst-case scenarios “dangerously inaccurate,” as one local housing policy expert told The Markup.

https://archive.is/n9XF3

[-] chicory@hexbear.net 57 points 3 months ago

Critical support to... the White House Press Corp for apparently nonstop theft from Air Force One:

Everyone, it appears, is pilfering from Air Force One. And it’s gotten so bad that last month, NBC correspondent KELLY O’DONNELL, the president of the White House Correspondents’ Association, included a terse reminder to colleagues that taking items off the plane was not allowed and reflected poorly on the press corps as a whole, several individuals who saw the off-the-record email confirmed.

https://archive.is/dboCM

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chicory

joined 8 months ago