Have yourself a Big Think: Physicist Brian Cox explains quantum physics in 22 minutes
09 Friday May 2025
Posted in Science
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09 Friday May 2025
Posted in Science
≈ Comments Off on Have yourself a Big Think: Physicist Brian Cox explains quantum physics in 22 minutes
07 Wednesday May 2025
Posted in Wellness
≈ Comments Off on Oxidative Stress: What You Need To Know
“The risk for many chronic diseases is directly linked to metabolic changes in the body. In this program, Dr. Natalie Marshall focuses on the role of antioxidants and how they work against oxidative stress in the body.”
06 Tuesday May 2025
Posted in Economy
≈ Comments Off on Tariffs and U.S. Agriculture
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In 2018, the U.S. imposed tariffs on over $250 billion worth of Chinese products, leading to Chinese retaliation with tariffs on over $110 billion worth of U.S. products, including agricultural products like soybeans, pork, and ethanol.
By December 2019, the average U.S. tariff rates on Chinese products had increased to 24.3%, while Chinese tariffs on U.S. exports were set to reach 25.9%.
These retaliatory tariffs significantly impacted U.S. agricultural exports, leading to a decline of $27 billion between mid-2018 and the end of 2019. Soybeans were most affected, accounting for 71% of the decline.
China purchased only 58% of the US exports it had committed to purchase under the agreement, not even enough to reach its import levels from before the trade war.
The trade war led to a significant drop in U.S. soybean exports to China, declining by 75% in 2018.
To mitigate the impact on farmers, the Trump administration provided $28 billion in aid, a sum exceeding the annual budget of various government agencies, including the Navy’s shipbuilding program and the cost of maintaining the U.S. nuclear arsenal.


Despite the trade war, a survey of Midwestern farmers conducted in early 2019 revealed that over 56% remained supportive of President Trump’s tariffs. This sentiment persisted even though over 80% reported experiencing income losses due to the trade disruptions.
A key takeaway from this that the trade war primarily hurt U.S. farmers and consumers, and the tariffs did not achieve the intended outcome of benefiting U.S. industries. The “Phase One” agreement signed in January 2020, while halting further tariff escalation, did not fully resolve the issues, and China fell short of its purchase commitments.
Experts argue that a more effective approach would involve lowering or eliminating tariffs and focusing on constructive trade policies that promote economic growth and competition.
05 Monday May 2025
Posted in Music
≈ Comments Off on MusicMonday: Lyyra – The Hymn of Acxiom (Official Video)
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02 Friday May 2025
Posted in Economy
≈ Comments Off on Watch: Economists on How Trump’s 2017 Tax Cuts Actually Unfolded | WSJ
30 Wednesday Apr 2025
Posted in Dance Movement Therapy, photo, quote
≈ Comments Off on we might as well dance
28 Monday Apr 2025
Posted in Music
≈ Comments Off on MusicMonday: Mary Lambert – We Belong
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25 Friday Apr 2025
Posted in AI
≈ Comments Off on Artificial intelligence, intellectual property and the creative industri…
23 Wednesday Apr 2025
Posted in Travel
≈ Comments Off on Travel: Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge
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The Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge is a 15,978 acres (64.66 km2) National Wildlife Refuge located along the eastern coast of Kent County, Delaware, United States, on Delaware Bay. It was established on March 16, 1937, as a refuge and breeding ground for migratory and wintering waterfowl along the Atlantic Flyway. The Refuge was purchased from local land owners with federal duck stamp funds.
Today, the refuge protects wildlife of all kinds, with emphasis on all migratory birds. The refuge also contains the Allee House, a pre-revolutionary war farmhouse on the National Register of Historic Places. It is a stop on Delaware’s Coastal Heritage Greenway. From Wikipedia.







21 Monday Apr 2025
Posted in Music
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19 Saturday Apr 2025
“Wounding and healing are not opposites. They’re part of the same thing. It is our wounds that enable us to be compassionate with the wounds of others. It is our limitations that make us kind to the limitations of other people. It is our loneliness that helps us to find other people or to even know they’re alone with an illness. I think I have served people perfectly with parts of myself I used to be ashamed of. ” Rachel Naomi Remen

18 Friday Apr 2025
Posted in About
≈ Comments Off on I asked a friend to write about death
I asked a friend to write about death … But I did instead:
Strong wind blows the past
into the future we sail
Boundless and joyfull
So heartfelt and some pride as the words just quickly poured out.
I sure as shit hope I didn’t read this on some Hallmark card and it buried itself in my subcon.

18 Friday Apr 2025
Posted in poverty
≈ Comments Off on Why More Americans Are Being Pushed Into Poverty | CNBC
16 Wednesday Apr 2025
Posted in art
≈ Comments Off on Rutu Modan – Queen of the Scottish Fairies
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Rutu Modan, an illustrator and comic book creator, is a chosen artist of the Israel Cultural Excellence Foundation. She has done comic strips for the Israeli newpapers Yedioth Acharonot and Ma’ariv and illustrations for The New Yorker, Le Monde, The New York Times and many other publications. Her first graphic novel, Exit Wounds, will be published in June. Ms. Modan, usually based in Tel Aviv, is currently in Sheffield, England.
14 Monday Apr 2025
Posted in Music
≈ Comments Off on MusicMonday:Jungle – Let’s Go Back (Official Video)
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11 Friday Apr 2025
Posted in water
≈ Comments Off on The fight for water | DW Documentary
09 Wednesday Apr 2025
Posted in creative arts therapy, Dance Movement Therapy, Developmental, Movement, parenting, Research, unison
≈ Comments Off on Moving together builds bonds from the time we learn to walk
Whether they march in unison, row in the same boat or dance to the same song, people who move in time with one another are more likely to bond and work together afterward.
It’s a principle established by previous studies, but now researchers at McMaster University have shown that moving in time with others even affects the social behavior of babies who have barely learned to walk.
“Moving in sync with others is an important part of musical activities,” says Laura Cirelli, lead author of a paper now posted online and scheduled to appear in an upcoming issue of the journal Developmental Science. “These effects show that movement is a fundamental part of music that affects social behavior from a very young age.”
Cirelli and her colleagues in the Department of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behavior showed that 14-month-old babies were much more likely to help another person after the experience of bouncing up and down in time to music with that person.
Cirelli and fellow doctoral student Kate Einarson worked under the supervision of Professor Laurel Trainor, a specialist in child development research.

They tested 68 babies in all, to see if bouncing to music with another person makes a baby more likely to assist that person by handing back “accidentally” dropped objects.
Working in pairs, one researcher held a baby in a forward-facing carrier and stood facing the second researcher. When the music started to play, both researchers would gently bounce up and down, one bouncing the baby with them. Some babies were bounced in sync with the researcher across from them, and others were bounced at a different tempo.
When the song was over, the researcher who had been facing the baby then performed several simple tasks, including drawing a picture with a marker. While drawing the picture, she would pretend to drop the marker to see whether the infant would pick it up and hand it back to her — a classic test of altruism in babies.
The babies who had been bounced in time with the researcher were much more likely to toddle over, pick up the object and pass it back to the researcher, compared to infants who had been bounced at a different tempo than the experimenter.

While babies who had been bounced out of sync with the researcher only picked up and handed back 30 per cent of the dropped objects, in-sync babies came to the researcher’s aid 50 per cent of the time. The in-sync babies also responded more quickly.
The findings suggest that when we sing, clap, bounce or dance in time to music with our babies, these shared experiences of synchronous movement help form social bonds between us and our babies.
It’s a significant finding, Cirelli believes, because it shows that moving together to music with others encourages the development of altruistic helping behavior among those in a social group. It suggests that music is an important part of day care and kindergarten curriculums because it helps to build a co-operative social climate.
Cirelli is now researching whether the experience of synchronous movement with one person leads babies to extend their increased helpfulness to other people or whether infants reserve their altruistic behavior for their dancing partners
McMaster University. Helpful bouncing babies show that moving together builds bonds from the time we learn to walk.
07 Monday Apr 2025
Posted in Music
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04 Friday Apr 2025
Posted in water
≈ Comments Off on DW: The fight for water in Bangalore: Is India’s Silicon Valley drying up?
02 Wednesday Apr 2025
Posted in whole
≈ Comments Off on the whole of life