🦅 Long Branch, NJ: A 100-year-old tree was removed along the Lake Takanassee / Cedar Ave corridor. I contacted the foreman, police, and city to request a pause for permit & wildlife review, then escalated to state and federal agencies.
In the spirit of Gam zu l’tovah (גם זו לטובה — “this too is for the good”), I’m asking for a transparent review of habitat impacts and compliance.
@USFWS@EPA@NOAA @NJDEP @NJFishWildlife @News12NJ
#ProtectWildlife #JerseyShore #LongBranchNJ #HabitatProtection #MigratoryBirds
Mild sleep deprivation drives significant increases in hunger, but differentially in men versus women. It makes men release more pro-hunger signals. In women it inhibits satiety via reductions in GLP. This has key implications for how to counter it.
Your brain erases what it stops using.
Shoes do this to your feet in months.
Childhood does this to your real self in years.
This was never just about shoes.
7 shocking parallels most people never see: 👇
1. Your toes stop spreading.
My health Tips,
You Won't Believe These Habits are Medicine
1. Sleep Early: Sleeping before 10 p.m. is medicine.
2. Nature Walk: A walk in nature is medicine.
3. Hydration: Drinking 600ml of water on an empty stomach is medicine.
4. Spiritual Practice: Having a moment with God daily is medicine.
5. Healthy Diet: Avoiding sugar, alcohol, dairy, and gluten is medicine.
6. Kiwi Before Bed: Eating 1 kiwi after dinner is medicine.
7. Strength Training: Doing strength training is medicine.
8. Positive Environment: Staying away from negative people is medicine.
9. Deep Breathing: Practicing 5 minutes daily is medicine.
10. Morning Sunlight: Getting at least 20 minutes of sunlight is medicine.
11. Quality Sleep: Prioritizing 7–9 hours of sleep is medicine.
12. Various Snacks: Eating a handful of nuts and seeds is medicine.
13. Cold Showers: Taking cold showers boosts circulation and immunity.
14. Reading: Reading daily strengthens the brain and reduces stress.
15. Digital Detox: Taking breaks from screens is medicine for your mind.
A new United Nations report warns that by 2030, AI could consume 3% of the world’s electricity and deplete more water annually than the global population drinks.
A groundbreaking United Nations report reveals that the breakneck expansion of artificial intelligence is on track to extract a devastating environmental toll by 2030.
According to scientists, AI-driven data centers could require a staggering 9.3 trillion liters of water annually for cooling, while producing carbon emissions comparable to the entire United Kingdom. This rapid infrastructure growth also risks running into the 'Jevons Paradox'—an economic principle warning that as technology becomes cheaper and more efficient, overall resource consumption actually spikes rather than declines.
The physical footprint of today's digital age is already immense; last year, global data centers consumed as much electricity as Saudi Arabia. With over 90% of specialized AI computing power concentrated in just the United States and China, the report highlights a widening environmental divide where less-wealthy nations bear the burden of e-waste and raw mineral extraction while strategic benefits flow elsewhere. To avoid ecological exhaustion, researchers are calling for urgent international cooperation, operational transparency, and sustainable design standards.
source: United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health. (2026). AI's environmental costs threaten water, land and climate. UNU-INWEH.
Young worker bees secrete tiny white flakes of beeswax directly from glands on their abdomen, this is used to make the hexagonal structure of the honeycomb
a rare sight most beekeepers never witness
In a stunning medical breakthrough, scientists in China have successfully reversed Type 1 diabetes in a female patient by using her own stem cells. For the first time since her diagnosis, her body began producing insulin naturally, eliminating the need for daily injections. This achievement could change the future of diabetes treatment forever.
The innovative procedure began by collecting the woman’s own cells and reprogramming them into stem cells. Researchers then guided these stem cells to become insulin-producing beta cells. Once developed, the lab-grown cells were implanted into her abdomen. These newly introduced cells began secreting insulin, effectively regulating her blood sugar levels from within.
The clinical study included three patients with Type 1 diabetes, but the woman was the first to show full insulin independence. This marks a significant step forward in regenerative medicine and offers a potential pathway toward long-term relief from this chronic autoimmune condition.
Type 1 diabetes affects millions worldwide, and current treatment relies heavily on lifelong insulin therapy. This stem cell method not only reduces that dependency but also opens the door to a personalised, cell-based cure.
While the research is still in early stages and requires further validation, the success of this procedure shines a hopeful light on what the future of diabetes care may look like.
If you woke up today without:
– cancer
– diabetes
– dementia
– Alzheimer’s
– schizophrenia
– severe depression
Be grateful.
You’re living a reality that millions would give anything to experience.
A Pennsylvania farmer chose preservation over profit after turning down an offer worth about $15.7 million for his land.
Mervin Raudabaugh, who owns 261 acres of farmland in Silver Spring Township, was offered around $60,000 per acre by developers interested in building a data center. Rather than accept the multimillion dollar deal, he sold the development rights to the Lancaster Farmland Trust for just under $2 million. This decision permanently protects the land for agricultural use.
Raudabaugh said protecting his farms was more important than the money. He also expressed concern about the loss of wildlife habitat and the increasing amount of farmland being converted for development.
As artificial intelligence continues to expand across the United States, demand for data centers is rising rapidly. These facilities require significant amounts of land, electricity, water, and cooling infrastructure. Because of this, developers are increasingly choosing farmland located near power supplies and population centers.
Many farmers face financial pressures from rising costs and uncertain markets, making lucrative offers difficult to refuse. However, once farmland is developed, it is rarely restored to agricultural use.
Raudabaugh believes preserving farmland is essential for the future and worries that protected land may eventually be all that remains.
Credit: Fortune, “Farmer turns down $15.7 million offer from data center developers.”
Humans have been on this earth for at least 310,000 years. Yet mainstream history INSISTS our civilisation only started 6,000 years ago?
That’s the exact timeline contradiction Graham Hancock has spent more than 30 years trying to unpick.
Graham has sold millions of books and has a Netflix series. All built around one idea...
That we are missing a huge chapter of our own history.
When we sat down, Graham told me that he is about to undergo serious heart surgery.
And, there is a 15% chance he may not survive the operation.
With his future feeling uncertain, he wanted to come on the show for the opportunity to put his life's work, his philosophy and the biggest unanswered questions of human history on the record.
Graham has been very vocal about how he thinks that mainstream science is dismissing and ignoring evidence rather than actively hiding it.
We discussed things like:
- A 12,800-year-old comet that forced humanity to restart.
- Satellite imagery revealing a lost civilisation beneath the Amazon!
- Ancient maps of the world that shouldn't exist…
- The psychedelics that may have unlocked human consciousness.
- Why everything we know about our origins could be wrong…?
What was clear from our conversation, was that Graham isn’t afraid to go against the grain and challenge the official narrative.
Whether you agree with his conclusions or not, I think there's something valuable about opening your mind in a way that’s just driven curiosity.
As he told me, the most important lesson from his life's work is simple:
Question everything.
So, what if the story of who we are is much older, stranger and more fragile than we think?
"Crown Shyness" is a natural phenomenon where the uppermost branches of certain tree species completely refuse to touch one another, creating a perfectly defined, puzzle-like canopy.
🚨Slight correction🚨
However, my stance stays the same that the fertilizer, pesticides and herbicide from golf courses are slowly wrecking our oceans. We don’t need more! 👇🏼