So. If you are in ANY emergency situation — let’s say you park in your driveway, & only as you begin taking your groceries from the car, you see movement in your home that is supposed to be empty. And a broken window. You cannot drive away to somewhere safer to get help. Your car refuses.
You are at a traffic light. Suddenly someone is trying to get into your car (this has happened to me). You have a split second to accelerate & leave him in the dust. Your car shuts down power.
The school calls. Your daughter has fainted. You cannot drive to the school to pick her up because your car notices your eyes are wide & you’re breathing fast.
Your car now controls whether you live or die in an emergency situation. And those controls cannot be overridden.
Foreigners should not be able to serve in Congress. That’s why I’ve introduced the Disqualifying Dual Loyalty Act.
If you’re a citizen of another country, you shouldn’t serve this one.
Get out.
Every time you get a cancer biopsy, the lab makes a tissue slide that costs about $5. It shows the shape of your cells under a microscope, and every cancer patient already has one on file.
There’s a much fancier version of that test called multiplex immunofluorescence (basically a protein-level map showing which immune cells are near your tumor and what they’re doing). It costs thousands of dollars per sample, takes specialized equipment most hospitals don’t have, and barely scales. But it’s the kind of data oncologists need to figure out whether immunotherapy will actually work for you. Right now, only about 20 to 40% of cancer patients respond to immunotherapy, and one of the biggest reasons is that doctors can’t easily tell whether a tumor is “hot” (immune cells actively fighting it) or “cold” (immune system ignoring it).
Microsoft, Providence Health, and the University of Washington trained an AI to analyze the $5 slide and predict what the expensive test would show across 21 different protein markers. They called it GigaTIME, trained it on 40 million cells in which both the cheap slide and the expensive test coexisted, and then turned it loose on 14,256 real cancer patients across 51 hospitals in 7 US states.
The results landed in Cell, one of the most selective journals in biology. The model generated about 300,000 virtual protein maps covering 24 cancer types and 306 subtypes. It found 1,234 real, verified connections between immune cell behavior, genetic mutations, tumor staging, and patient survival that were previously invisible at this scale. When they tested it against a completely separate database of 10,200 cancer patients, the results matched up almost perfectly (0.88 out of 1.0 agreement).
Nature Methods named spatial proteomics (mapping where specific proteins sit inside your tissue) its Method of the Year in 2024, and specifically cited GigaTIME in a March 2026 update as a model that “democratizes” this kind of analysis. The full model is open-source on Hugging Face. Any cancer research lab with archived biopsy slides, and most of them have thousands, can now run virtual immune profiling without buying a single piece of new equipment.
If we talking about drugs let’s talk about Epstein and friends drugging underage girls to rape them. Why yall don’t wanna talk about the Epstein files?
6 years of speeding ticket data for every county in Indiana. I have it all because I was working on a story and put it all into a spreadsheet. It took several hours.
The state data showed that speeding tickets jumped by more than 270 thousand tickets between years 2023 and 2024. The years prior were all very similar too. I requested 2025 to compare, but have not been given that yet. This did not include seatbelt violations, or being on your phone, or drunk driving, or anything else. Just speeding tickets. I wanted to know if technology was behind the huge increase or how in the world did 270-thousand more people get tickets.
And I specifically asked if the data was correct!
FYI now they are asking me to do a different records request. The last time I put in a bulk data request it took 6 months to get the data.
I have also reached out to several others departments and agencies. I am also awaiting data on how prosecutor's spent their deferral program money. It might all be great causes. But the stories I am hearing from the public and other LE are very interesting and making me want to know more.
This came out of my husband getting his first speeding ticket in at least 25 years. The state trooper gave him a ticket for 16 mph over the speed limit instead of 6 and spent about 1 minute with us.
I started looking into it because that's not right. The higher the speed the higher the ticket. I wondered how many times does that happen. Can you do anything about it? Realistically. Go to court yes but will you just lose? And if you just pay the 220 dollar fine how much money would Indiana be taking in a year. Well... in the last state data that was available in 2024 here are the numbers:
494, 322 people got a ticket that's $108 million dollars. The cheapest fine I could find is still more than 140 bucks. So that's 69 million.
The year before the numbers were 228,426 so money taken in would have ranged from 32 million to 50 million if my calculator is correct.
I was shocked to hear a few people say... let it go Angela. WHY? Don't people want to know if our state data is correct and if so how did we take in an extra 30 to 50 million dollars!! And what was that money spent on? I do.
Every fucking one of these documents is like
From: <███████>
To: jeevacation@ gmail. com
Subject: Crimes
I loved killing all those people with you last week. Do it again soon?
Sent From My iPad
Elong Muᛋᛋk tried his hardest to silence all posts about the general strike. Hundreds of these posts been throttled. They’re scared to death of this. Tweet your own posts please about this. Share tweets about this. Don’t let them silence this huge event. Something is happening.