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RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE CAMPAIGN ASSESSMENT, JULY 6, 2023

What DPICM Cluster Munitions Are And Why Ukraine Wants Them So Bad

France’s Macron Refuses to Address Migrant Violence, Seeks Powers to ‘Cut Off’ Social Media and Add More Electronic Surveillance

“Gig reviewers” are endorsing fake products for quick cash in Brazil

We can topple the PM and form a government, say leaders of Dutch farmers party

In Syracuse, the I-81 viaduct has two groups at war. One wants to tear it down, one wants to leave it up — all in the name of environmental justice.

Office Mortgage Delinquency Rate Has Biggest Six-Month Spike Ever. It’s just the Beginning

99% of humans about to experience sunlight at same time

Links For Today

RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE CAMPAIGN ASSESSMENT, JULY 5, 2023

Ukraine Situation Report: A Peak Into Prigozhin’s Bizarre Pad

Peru declares emergency as Ubinas volcano spews ash

San Francisco: Kids With Bats Attacking Moms, Nannies Picking Up Children After School

Xylazine, a powerful animal sedative that’s moving through the illicit drug supply in the U.S., is causing gruesome skin wounds and scrambling longstanding methods for treating addiction and reversing overdoses.

White House Won’t Call for Prosecution of Whoever Left Cocaine in West Wing

Links For Today

RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE CAMPAIGN ASSESSMENT, JULY 4, 2023

Russian Jamming Reducing Accuracy of US Guided Weapons in Ukraine

Ukraine ‘Preparing For Nuclear Explosion’ As Russia Reduces Zaporizhzhia Plant Presence

In Remarkable Statement, French Police Unions Condemn ‘Savage Hordes;’ Say France is in a Civil War

Iran’s ballistic missile capabilities are a growing threat to Europe

‘Hot Money’ Is Piling Up at Banks and It’s Starting to Take a Toll

Ten blue states are planning to sue the EPA for failing to crack down on wood-burning stoves

The multibillion-dollar lawsuits that could radically reshape how we buy and sell homes forever

The Sun Just Unleashed a Huge Solar Flare, Triggers Radio Blackout in US

Links For Today

RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE CAMPAIGN ASSESSMENT, JULY 3, 2023

Ukraine Situation Report: Patriot Kill Marks Hint That It Downed Aircraft Inside Russia

UK Looking to Buy Cheaper Israeli Alternative to Storm Shadow

The current round of rioting caused more destruction than the 2005 riots, which lasted for weeks. “According to several sources, five nights and as many days of violence have exceeded the severity of the riots in the fall of 2005, which lasted three weeks.

Large-scale Israeli army raid kills 8 in West Bank

The upcoming “Barbie” movie will not appear in Vietnamese cinemas because it depicts a map showing China’s claims to the South China Sea, state media reported.

China Stockpiling Cobalt Reserves Amid Price Crash

US Manufacturing “Took Sharp Turn For The Worse” In June

Housing Inventory and Demographics: The Next Big Shift

Whole Brain Emulation: No Progress on C. elegans After 10 Years

Straight From The U.S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE

This is the link.

Most shelf-stable foods are safe indefinitely. In fact, canned goods will last for years, as long as the can itself is in good condition (no rust, dents, or swelling). Packaged foods (cereal, pasta, cookies) will be safe past the ‘best by’ date, although they may eventually become stale or develop an off flavor. You’ll know when you open the package if the food has lost quality. Many dates on foods refer to quality, not safety. See FSIS’ Shelf-Stable Food Safety fact sheet for more information.

This thing about “if it is past it sell date throw it out” probably applies to open stuff or easily spoiled stuff like milk, but otherwise the sell by date is more a product of lawyers and not science. Often times it is a reflection of how far they have data for as opposed to when they know it will be bad. For example, Mountain House was only allowed to advertise that there food was good for 20 years after they had stored the food for 20 years and then tested it in a lab to see if nutrition data still met the claims on the packaging. Other sellers of similar products don’t say there food is good for 20 years and I am going to guess that is because of lack of data and not because there is some magical difference between different types of freeze dried foods.

In any case, you would not eat food that tasted/smelled bad just because the packaging said it was still good and you should not throw out food that tastes/smells good just because the date says it is bad.

Links For Today

RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE CAMPAIGN ASSESSMENT, JULY 2, 2023

“Intifada in Heart of France” – Mobs Torch Cities, Desecrate Holocaust and WWII Memorial

EU hails discovery of massive phosphate rock deposit in Norway

Big families wanted, but they can’t be homeschoolers.

Lumber Prices Down About 35% YoY

Researchers discover new weapon against antibiotic resistance—it also fights malaria

Links For Today

RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE CAMPAIGN ASSESSMENT, JULY 1, 2023

Ukraine Situation Report: Russian SAMs Can’t Stop This Storm Shadow

Chaos Engulfs France: Highlight Reel

An “Adolescent” (Surely a Gentle Giant) Is Killed by Police During His 13th Brush with the Law in France, And BLM-Style Rioting, Arson, and Looting Engulfs the Nation

Workers at Canada’s busiest port in Vancouver and at harbors up and down the nation’s west coast stopped work Saturday in a labor dispute that is likely to disrupt global freight transport.

Europe Set To Reach Natural Gas Storage Target Ahead Of Schedule

Links For Today

RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE CAMPAIGN ASSESSMENT, JUNE 30, 2023

Ukraine Situation Report: Counteroffensive Criticism “Pisses Me Off” Says Top General

Alarming antibiotic resistance discovered in war-torn Ukraine

IN PICTURES: FRANCE BURNS

The Ultimate Bubble

New UPS Trucks Will Get Air Conditioning After Years of Driver Demands

SCOTUS “gave universities a narrow opening, and Harvard just announced it’s going to drive an affirmative action truck right through it”

5 Megawatt solar plant destroyed by hail

A long and very informative read on the problems facing the Grid. The predictability of power generation is slowly going out the window. Predictable, firm sources of electricity (such as coal plants) are being removed from the grid, and being replaced by sources of electricity generation such as wind and solar, which fluctuate in their output based on whether the wind is blowing or the sun is shining. Between 2011 and 2020, roughly 1/3rd of US coal plants were shut down. By 2030, that’s expected to fall by another 25%. By contrast, of the 150 gigawatts of new electrical generation projects being tracked by the EIA, 2/3rds of them are wind or solar projects.

Texas Endures Another Heat Wave

For the first time, six fast-growing states in the South — Florida, Texas, Georgia, the Carolinas and Tennessee — are contributing more to the national GDP than the Northeast, with its Washington-New York-Boston corridor