Wednesday, May 27, 2026

All evacuation orders lifted after explosion at California chemical tank is averted

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All evacuation orders lifted after explosion at California chemical tank is averted

 

U.S. military strike on alleged drug boat in Pacific kills 1, leaving 2 survivors

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U.S. military strike on alleged drug boat in Pacific kills 1, leaving 2 survivors

 

Teachers union president calls for limits on AI and screen time in schools

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Teachers union president calls for limits on AI and screen time in schools

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, wants to ban “social companion” chatbots for children under 16.

 

Dissident flees China by inflatable boat, hoping it’s 4th time lucky on escape attempts

Dissident flees China by inflatable boat, hoping it’s 4th time lucky on escape attempts

Rights groups urged South Korea not to repatriate Dong Guangping, 68, who has previously tried to escape three times only to be returned to China.
 
Dong Guangping.via Human Rights in China

SEOUL, South Korea — A Chinese dissident who fled the country aboard an inflatable boat has been detained in South Korea, with rights groups calling for him to be granted asylum after three previous escape attempts saw him returned to China.

Dong Guangping, 68, a former police officer who has been imprisoned multiple times over his criticism of China’s ruling Communist Party, was detained late Monday by the South Korean coast guard, a spokesperson told NBC News on Wednesday.

Authorities detained Dong off the coast of Taean in South Chungcheong province after he was spotted by a fishing vessel, which alerted officials. Dong’s rubber boat was about 11 feet long and had a 9.9-horsepower engine, the spokesperson said.

 

Key takeaways from Trump's trip to China

03:08

An arrest warrant is being sought for violating immigration laws and an investigation is underway “while leaving open various possibilities,” the spokesperson said.

Dong’s arrival in South Korea was first reported by The New York Times. His lawyer, Kim Joo-kwang, could not be immediately reached for comment.

In a post on X, Chinese Canadian rights activist Sheng Xue called Dong “incredibly tenacious and brave.”

“He had previously discussed with me the idea of escaping by boat, and I thought it was far too dangerous. But he actually went through with it,” she wrote.

Sheng added that she had been in touch with Dong and that he said he had lost consciousness by the time he reached South Korean waters, having spent more than 30 hours at sea since leaving Weihai, a coastal city in China’s eastern province of Shandong.

Asked about Dong at a press conference on Wednesday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said that she was “not familiar” with the details.

According to the New York-based rights group Human Rights in China (HRIC), Dong, who is from the central Chinese city of Zhengzhou, was dismissed from the police force in 1999 after he signed a petition supporting victims of the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in Beijing.

He was imprisoned from 2001 to 2004 after being convicted of “inciting subversion of state power,” and was detained again in 2014 and held in solitary confinement for more than eight months for participating in Tiananmen Square commemorations.

In 2015, Dong and his family fled to Thailand, where the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees recognized them as refugees and they were approved for resettlement in Canada. Before Dong could leave, however, Thai authorities deported him to China, where he served another prison sentence from 2016 to 2019.

The rest of his family continued on to Canada.

Facing continued surveillance, harassment and persecution in China, HRIC said, Dong tried to swim to Taiwan’s Kinmen Islands in December 2019 but was intercepted and returned. A month later, he escaped to Vietnam, but in 2022 Vietnamese authorities deported him to China, where he was sentenced to 11 months in prison for “illegally crossing the border.” He was released in October 2023.

HRIC urged South Korea, which rarely accepts refugees aside from North Korean defectors, not to return Dong to China, saying he “faces a grave risk of persecution and torture.”

“For more than a decade, he has never ceased striving for liberty and reunion with his family,” the group said. “That a man nearing seventy years old was driven to cross open seas in a small inflatable boat is itself a devastating indictment of China’s human rights situation.”

The Chinese and Canadian embassies in Seoul did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Dong’s detention comes at a tricky time for South Korea as it tries to improve ties with China, its biggest trading partner. Earlier this year, South Korean President Lee Jae Myung said he hoped to open a “new phase” in relations with Beijing after meeting with Chinese leader Xi Jinping.

This is not the first time a critic of the Chinese government has fled to South Korea.

In August 2023, Kwon Pyong, an ethnic Korean Chinese dissident who said he feared for his safety, fled China on a jet ski and traveled hundreds of miles by sea, trailing barrels of fuel behind him before washing up on South Korea’s coast, where he was detained and charged with entering the country illegally.

After initially being prohibited from leaving South Korea, Kwon told The Times in June 2024 that he was flying to Newark, New Jersey, and that he planned to apply for asylum in the United States or Canada.

Stella Kim reported from Seoul, and Jay Ganglani from Hong Kong.

A blood test has been added to colorectal cancer screening options. Here’s what to know.

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A blood test has been added to colorectal cancer screening options. Here’s what to know.

The American Cancer Society’s updated guidelines are meant to increase the number of people screened — not replace colonoscopies.
A box of Guardant Health's Shield, a blood collection kit for cancer screening.

 

At least one dead, 9 unaccounted for after chemical implosion at Washington plant

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At least one dead, 9 unaccounted for after chemical implosion at Washington plant

At least nine other people, including a firefighter, were injured after a tank with chemicals ruptured early Tuesday in Longview, officials said.

What important to think about the lunar outpost on the Moon?

I think only by moving underground to use the moon dirt or soil as a cover over your head is it practical because of meteors and meteorites. 

It is less of a problem for Astronauts in the Space station simply because they are orbiting around Earth and the earth's gravitation pulls meteorites and meteors into the atmosphere which usually (unless they are really huge like the one that killed the Dinosaurs) are burned up when they hit the atmosphere.

However, the moon has no atmosphere at all, so if anything the gravity of the moon just speeds up impending doom for anything on the surface of the Moon. So, only by moving underground in case a meteor or meteorite hits where the station is can they be more protected there without holes in their station with the air all leaking out when some meteor or meteorite hits at full speed and made even faster than it was before by the gravitation of the moon and hitting them with no atmosphere at all to protect them there. 

To Drink from Enligthenment's Nectar

I was thinking about what this is actually tonight.

And what I came up with is that: "It is communion with all life in the universe in the past, present and future."

That is what drinking from Enlightenment's Nectar is for me.

It's realizing that the trillions or more beings in the universe are all in this together in the past, present and future and that there really isn't any separation at all between any of us.

Where I live there are things like Raccoons and skunks and Deer a lot and once in a while there are Mountain lions who come into this area to prey on the deer. 

Recently, my wife told me of a skunk running down the road within block or two of where we live on the northern Coast of California. Then I must have seen the same one or a family member of this same skunk running down the road with his tail up a few more blocks away. At the time I was worried he would make the outside of my car stink but luckily only his tail was up so this didn't happen.

Often we see Deer and bucks of various ages where we live. I recently saw a young buck with skin still on his antlers because I think rutting season is in the fall I believe but the antlers are growing in already.

The point of all this is: "All the wild things around us help us to experience Enlightenment's nectar because they are just being themselves in their natural state."

So, the point is Drinking of Enlightenment's Nectar I believe is each one of us being in our natural state where we are sort of At Peace with the world.

I can remember visiting Nepal and India and out in the country then in 1985 and 1986 most people don't ever go to school even 1st grade at that time. So, what I experienced around people like this was "Ignorance is Bliss".

At the time I thought about people without radios or TVs or the Internet or reading and writing or listening to the news or reading a newspaper and realized: "Yes. Ignorance is bliss until something bad happens you didn't know about and then you are maybe dead."

So, on one level I envied people like this who never went to school a day in their lives, and yet, it's not likely I would have lived to be 78 there where "Ignorance is Bliss" or was then.

When you travel all over the world like I have and my wife has too, the world and it's people are completely different in every way than you presently think unless you have gone and experienced this too in many different countries.

When you see movies it is usually people speaking English which most of the world might not speak (even though supposedly there are more English Speakers in China than presently speak it in the rest of the world. And even in India many people speak English because it is the least offensive to them of the 300 languages spoken in India.

To Drink of Enlightenment's Nectar is a real Joy I believe. However, I believe it is mostly about having communion with all life in the past, present and future throughout the universe and experiencing that communion right now.

By God's Grace 

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Remaining military targets in Iran are more challenging and complicated to hit, sources say

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Remaining military targets in Iran are more challenging and complicated to hit, sources say

Even people loyal to Trump get the Shaft eventually!

John Cornyn undone by past Trump misgivings after decades as a loyal party man

Cornyn touted his long record of supporting Trump’s agenda during the campaign. But it wasn’t enough, as the president never forgot his past criticisms.
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Ahead of his Republican primary runoff Tuesday, Sen. John Cornyn highlighted a photo of himself standing next to President Donald Trump as his pinned post on X. He boosted one post disputing that he’s “disloyal” to Trump and another about voting “yes on every major Trump law.”

The posts captured an important side of Cornyn: a loyal Republican soldier, standing with his party’s leader. There’s no disputing that Cornyn’s voting record was almost perfectly aligned with Trump.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s lopsided victory in the election results captured an important reality of the GOP in 2026, too: That’s not enough.

Trump jumped in last week to issue a late endorsement for Paxton, who defeated Cornyn on Tuesday night. In January, Cornyn’s 24-year Senate career will come to an end.

Ultimately, Trump noted last week, he had “worked well” with Cornyn. But he compared Cornyn unfavorably with Paxton on another key metric, saying Cornyn “was not supportive of me when times were tough.”

Plenty of Trump allies shared the view throughout the race, citing factors outside his vote card as why they didn’t view him as sufficiently loyal. Behind Cornyn’s record were an institutionalist instinct and a long paper trail of misgivings about controversial Trump actions.

Unlike Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., another recent Trump target who lost his primary, Cornyn voted to acquit Trump on impeachment charges in 2021. But he remained deeply critical of the Capitol riot and argued in subsequent years that Trump shouldn’t run again in 2024, calling him unelectable and backing a new direction for the GOP.

Months later, as Trump was dominating early primaries and cruising to the nomination, Cornyn backtracked and endorsed him. As a former chair of the National Republican Senatorial Committee and a Senate GOP whip for six years, including Trump’s first two years, Cornyn always saw himself as a team player after the arguments had settled.

“To beat Biden, Republicans need to unite around a single candidate, and it’s clear that President Trump is Republican voters’ choice,” Cornyn said in early 2024.

In Trump’s first term, Cornyn was part of a group of Republicans who sought to nudge him toward traditional conservatism. In 2017, Cornyn criticized Trump’s controversial firing of FBI Director James Comey and defended various prominent figures against criticism, including special counsel Robert Mueller and former Defense Secretary Mark Esper.

Paxton allies put together a list of the alleged heresies to convince Trump that he couldn’t trust Cornyn.

“Cornyn has gone out of his way to stab President Trump and MAGA in the back at every turn, while defending every terrible deep state actor,” said Republican consultant Caroline Wren, an outspoken Cornyn critic.

It also appeared to hurt Cornyn that he was among many Republicans reluctant to endorse nuking the chamber’s 60-vote filibuster threshold to pass the Trump-backed Save America Act, which would impose nationwide voter ID laws. Paxton had no such qualms, quickly siding with Trump in that goal.

Whether out of deference to his party leader, a change in principle or political opportunism, Cornyn later followed suit, after Paxton pushed him to a runoff in March.

Trump’s endorsement of Paxton disappointed many Senate Republicans. Majority Leader John Thune of South Dakota and NRSC Chair Tim Scott of South Carolina had pleaded with him to back Cornyn, seeing him as a safer general election bet than Paxton, whose history of controversies includes getting impeached (but then acquitted) by the Republican-led Texas Legislature in 2023.

“Sen. Cornyn is a principled conservative. He is a very effective senator for the state of Texas,” Thune told reporters. “But I don’t — none of us control what the president does. He made his decision about that. That doesn’t change the way I feel, and I am certainly supportive of and will continue to be supportive of Sen. Cornyn in his re-election.”

In a sign of the growing rift between Trump and the Senate GOP, Thune said Trump didn’t give him a heads-up before he threw his support to Paxton.

Apart from his voting record, Cornyn’s years as a campaign chair, leadership member and prolific donor to fellow Republican candidates endeared him to colleagues. As NRSC chair, he navigated the “tea party” era with some bumps in the road, as GOP voters bucked his preferred picks in a number of contested primaries. Some of those candidates, like Marco Rubio, went on to serve amiably with Cornyn for years. Others lost to Democrats, costing the party winnable seats in 2010 and 2012.

But Cornyn’s rise up the ranks continued, and he became majority whip in 2013, under former Republican leader Mitch McConnell. But unlike McConnell, Cornyn was term-limited out of the job in 2019 and replaced in the No. 2 position by Thune, who narrowly defeated him to replace McConnell in late 2024.

Another sign of Cornyn’s survival instincts came on the issue of immigration, a perennially divisive issue for which he had a front-row seat as a Judiciary Committee member and border-state senator.

Bipartisan deals struck under George W. Bush, Barack Obama and Trump in his first term imposed tougher border security in exchange for legal status for at least some people in the country illegally. Trump’s White House turned against the 2018 deal to fund a border wall in exchange for legalizing young immigrants in the country illegally, known as “Dreamers.”

Each deal was blasted on the right as “amnesty” for lawbreakers — the type of vote that could come back to haunt a Republican in a primary. Cornyn voted against each of them.

Still, it will be Paxton who faces James Talarico this fall, as Democrats continue to chase their elusive goal of winning statewide in Texas.

“Texas is a huge mess for the Republicans,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., who has simultaneously worked with Cornyn on bills and fought unsuccessfully to defeat him.

Speaking a few hours after Trump endorsed Paxton, Schumer added: “And I believe that we’re in much better shape taking back Texas than we were a few days ago.”

 

Actually at this point I believe Trump's position on Iran is confusing on purpose by him. Why?

 Because he and his buddy Putin are making so many billions of dollars on Oil that he doesn't really want these windfall Oil profits to go away. So, it really doesn't matter how much Americans or Europeans or anyone else is suffering, because he is about money and really doesn't care what happens to any people including Americans. And strangely enough, his supporters don't seem to care about the people either worldwide who are suffering incredibly from all his decisions right now either.

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Deal or no deal? Trump’s social media posts add confusion to Iran conflict

The president posted that a peace deal would be announced “shortly.” Later he posted it was not “even fully negotiated yet.”

 

IN 1969 my life turned upside down

Then in 1970 and 1971 I had to learn to live with my life turned upside down.

I'm not sure how many people have experienced this in one way or another. 

However, for me, my plans for my future were gone in 1969 by Christmas.

Merry Christmas Fred!

However, looking back now from here I see it all makes complete sense to me.

I couldn't have survived the life I planned for in the first place.

However, like so many people "The only life you know is the one you presently have".

However, just thinking that all you have is the life you have isn't the way life really is at all.

However, my 20s were mostly spent in creating a whole new life for myself that I never dreamed possible before.

So, even though 21 to 25 especially was very difficult for me to survive when my live in girlfriend got pregnant in 1973 and then we married before my son was born in 1974 this was an amazing experience in itself. Why?

Because at that time people were really happy I did the right thing and got married when we did and had our son. It was like at that time getting married and having a baby was even more to be rewarded than getting a college degree.

So, I was really surprised and sort of mystified but also happy at the new found respect everyone gave us for marrying and buckling down and supporting my son.

So, my life turning upside down actually helped create the future I have lived with ever since.

I have had an AMAZING life that I never could have imagined possible before.

The Tibetan Lamas say "Your cup has to be empty for it to be filled with something new" (and BETTER) I might say.

So, when my cup emptied completely in 1969 and I considered suicide for several years there my life then filled with something new and better than I could have imagined as a 21 year old then.

So, sometimes when things seem the worst they are actually the beginning of something much better than you could ever imagine!

By God's Grace 

NASA is building a Moon Base near the lunar South Pole