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Oh, I love this. A new species of sea anemone was discovered recently that parks itself on top of a hermit crab shell like a hat. It seems to feed partly off the crab's faeces, but it also excretes a hard shell that extends the crab's home. In return, it's carried around the seafloor like a king.
November 10, 2025 at 9:57 PM
Her criticism of another’s lack of “human expression” online exposes the counterfeit nature of her own.
When display becomes the measure of depth,
those who don’t display become the only ones left with any.
Found the tweet that Joyce Carol Oates bodied Elon Musk with and it's so beautiful in its eloquent, simple take down. So much so he's crashing out trying to prove he reads books now. Put this in the Louvre.
November 11, 2025 at 5:26 AM
Legacy intellectuals operate inside institutions that depend on legible morality: shorthand cues that mark them as safe nodes within the network of approved discourse.
To omit moral signalling would risk contagion: association with the “tainted” figure (Watson) could propagate reputational noise.
1/
I met Watson several times, and every time it was replete with sexism and racism, often comically idiotic. We learn nothing new from showcasing his awful bigotry. But there is much still to be understood in the story of biology in the 20th century. This is where my interests lie.
November 11, 2025 at 5:09 AM
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Started / going

Here's a view of Jupiter from NASA's Juno spacecraft, now in orbit there. science.nasa.gov/mission/juno

Image processed from raw data by @kevinmgill.bsky.social
November 10, 2025 at 9:51 PM
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The first surviving successful image of Jupiter was taken in 1879 by Andrew Ainslie Common in Ealing, London, using his 36-inch Newtonian reflector and the wet collodion process invented in 1851 by portrait photographer Frederick Scott Archer
November 10, 2025 at 8:24 AM
The News Agents are trapped between epochs. They are voices from the analogue afterlife, still trying to curate a centre that no longer exists with the panic of a lighthouse realising the ships have GPS.

The museum of yesterday’s authority: nicely lit, narratively embalmed, epistemically dead.
“If the papers keep saying the BBC is lying to you, that it’s biased, people start believing it.”

Has the BBC’s Trump edit error been blown out of proportion because of deeper motivations, asks @maitlis.bsky.social.
November 11, 2025 at 1:30 AM
The BBC once served as a shared clock signal for British informational synchrony. Over time, feedback loops collapsed: delayed error-correction, insulation from user-level feedback, and over-optimised signaling toward elite peer-approval rather than the general cognitive field.
Everything on our news agenda is being driven by a corrupted disinformation machine, run by a billionaire who sponsors Tommy Robinson and who keeps trying to foment civil war in the UK.

And incredibly our MPs & news providers stay there.

THAT is the problem. Not some bad editing choice on the BBC.
November 10, 2025 at 9:59 PM
Anybody who had a vision to bring American levels of political, cultural and social polarisation to Britain - whether their motive was clicks or cash, ideology, boredom or anything else - would make it their top strategic priority to abolish the BBC, or to damage and diminish it at the very least
Quick thread on the BBC and the political and societal significance of recent developments:

One of the main reasons the UK has historically been so much less polarised than the US, is that Britain has a shared source of information, consumed and trusted by most people regardless of their politics.
November 10, 2025 at 9:51 PM
The 'discover' tab on Bsky is just Sunder and Otto endlessly posting communist propaganda. Very dull.
November 10, 2025 at 5:54 PM
How would a rational scientist steel man the opposition to industrial abortion/tissue farming?
November 10, 2025 at 3:08 AM
Another strange post from Katwala: rejoicing the establishment maintaining it's grip.
But on Bsky, this is preaching to a very pliant choir.
After a fourth successive heavy annual defeat for Restore Trust, we should (but won't) have Telegraph reporters descending on the scone-eaters at historic properties to ask why they weren't in touch

This is an assymetry between the liberal left and the culture warriors of the metropolitan right
November 10, 2025 at 2:45 AM
A strange post from leftist commentator Katwala, seemingly endorsing Musk's fact checking on X.
A strange post from the Ukip leader, pictured at the Aldershot memorial, but seeming to want people to believe/imagine it was the Cenotaph
November 10, 2025 at 2:40 AM
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Fascinating example of Moral Retrofitting. The critics draw moral credit from the very structure of tolerance that thinkers like Dawkins helped normalise, then use that credit to denounce him.
It’s another round of virtue inflation: repaying intellectual debt with devalued empathy tokens. 1/
November 9, 2025 at 3:09 PM
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Oklahoma is beautiful, actually. All scenes were captured in the last 2 years. #photography
November 9, 2025 at 10:10 PM
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Institutions lost epistemic liquidity, so people anchor trust in the logo. “Lancet” is a proxy node for epistemic certainty, not the content itself.
Blind sharing a high-status citation broadcasts allegiance rather than understanding. It’s tribe-detection/signalling.
November 6, 2025 at 2:25 AM
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This isn’t really about Cummings... it’s a small act of moral liquidity.
Each insult a fresh note from the outrage mint, circulated for in-group affirmation.
Feels good to spend, but every round devalues the currency a little more.
Dominic Cummings was always an absolute arsehole.

The Conservative right loves to talk up imagined genius among their ranks when in truth there's nothing there but attitude, flex, and pose. Mogg, Johnson, Gove, Cummings. All tiresome little nobodies trotting out rehashed nonsense. Often nasty.
November 7, 2025 at 12:24 AM
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Sunder’s essay performs exactly what it tries to warn against: it “reinvents” tradition ideologically. By making Remembrance about representation, he dissolves the *reverence* it required.
His “inclusive spirit” is actually a displacement of spirit: a form of moral laundering that renders
On the way to the Festival of Remembrance, with Indi, 13. My thoughts in my column this week on how these traditions were invented to fill the identity gaps of the 1920s and how renewing them in the 2020s can be one way to bridge divides in polarised times
www.britishfuture.org/in-divided-t...
November 9, 2025 at 12:04 AM
Notice that the entire content from the Left on bsky, is about their opponents elsewhere.
Otto is incapable of producing independent, creative, optimistic content, with telos. It's always adversarial, negative, tribal, doomerism.
This is in such incredibly bad taste.
Yes, Nigel Farage made an actual promo video of his poppy performance in Walton-on-the-Naze today.
November 10, 2025 at 2:20 AM
When a social wave amplifies a label, demand rises; when the infrastructure (institutions, discourse) recalibrates, demand may recede.
Only invest what you can bare to lose... not your physical body!

www.skeptic.com/article/tran...
Transgenderism Is in Rapid Decline Among Young Americans
Transgenderism is in rapid decline among young Americans, indicating it was a social contagion. A few weeks ago, I published results from six waves of the massive Foundation for Individual Right...
www.skeptic.com
November 9, 2025 at 3:20 PM
Fascinating example of Moral Retrofitting. The critics draw moral credit from the very structure of tolerance that thinkers like Dawkins helped normalise, then use that credit to denounce him.
It’s another round of virtue inflation: repaying intellectual debt with devalued empathy tokens. 1/
November 9, 2025 at 3:09 PM
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Classic “complexity compression.” The real system, immune adaptation across variant waves, prior infection, behavioral shifts, gets collapsed into a binary variable: vaccinated/not & even the cohorts overlap.
Multiple probs with this study, big one of course is the missing 70%
November 6, 2025 at 2:14 AM
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engagement with sovereignty tensions.
The result is a polished sermon for the already converted: rhetorically clean, empirically hollow, and blind to its own quasi-religious absolutism.
November 6, 2025 at 5:49 PM
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Perhaps the 'prior residents' feel they're on the wrong end of your moral economy?
When you cast one groups as debtors & the other as creditors you build resentment, status anxiety, identity fatigue.

Every time moral discourse becomes one-directional, the counter-current forms in taboo.
November 8, 2025 at 1:52 PM
Sunder’s essay performs exactly what it tries to warn against: it “reinvents” tradition ideologically. By making Remembrance about representation, he dissolves the *reverence* it required.
His “inclusive spirit” is actually a displacement of spirit: a form of moral laundering that renders
On the way to the Festival of Remembrance, with Indi, 13. My thoughts in my column this week on how these traditions were invented to fill the identity gaps of the 1920s and how renewing them in the 2020s can be one way to bridge divides in polarised times
www.britishfuture.org/in-divided-t...
November 9, 2025 at 12:04 AM