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Could Psilocybin Be The Magical Ingredient For A Longer Life?
ATLANTA — Magic mushrooms could be the unexpected fountain of youth. A groundbreaking study reveals that psilocybin, the mind-altering compound found in these fungi, might do more than produce psychedelic experiences. The research suggests it could actually help people live longer lives. Researchers have discovered this controversial substance extends cellular lifespan and improves survival rates in aging mice, opening an entirely new frontier in anti-aging research.
Most research has focused on psilocybin’s ability to treat depression, anxiety, and other mental health conditions. But this study reveals the compound might be working at a much more fundamental level, literally slowing down the aging process itself.
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WorkWorkWorkBrazils Lula Squares Up to Trump Donald Trump has often likened efforts to hold him accountable by the media, Democrats, investigators, courts, and others, to a witch hunt. But recently hes begun also using the phrase to defend his foreign buddies. Work
WorkJapan raises concern over Chinese fighter jet flights Japan has demanded China stop flying its fighter jets abnormally close to Japanese intelligence-gathering aircraft, which it said was happening repeatedly and could cause a collision. Japan's Defense Ministry said a Chinese JH-7 fighter-bomber flew as close to 98 feet to a YS-11EB electronic-intelligence aircraft of the Japan Air Self-Defense Force on Wednesday and Thursday. The ministry said it occurred outside Japanese airspace over the East China Sea. China had no immediate comment on the latest incident. Previously, Beijing has alleged Japan flew close to its aircraft and was spying on China's ordinary military activity and demanded Japan stop its actions. WorkWorkWorkWould this food label change how you eat? Imagine, for a moment, that youre seated and ready to dine at one of Switzerlands many celebrated high-end eateries, where a prix fixe meal can run around $400. On the menu, the slow-cooked Schweinsfilet, or pork tenderloin, comes with a bizarre and disturbing disclosure: The pigs raised to make that meal were castrated without pain relief.
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WorkWorkWorkThe quest to reinvent anesthesia Before 1846, surgery was a crude and brutal undertaking, typically performed on conscious patients lashed to their beds. Then a Boston dentist publicly demonstrated that the highly flammable chemical diethyl ether - commonly called ether - could render a patient unconscious and insensitive to pain. Overnight, surgery became a major player in modern medicine. Work
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WorkWorkWorkWhat's Trump's next move on Iran? - WSJ (No paywall) The aftermath of the 12-day war with Iran looks mixed more than two weeks later. Irans nuclear program was badly damaged and likely set back for years. But the Ayatollahs government isnt admitting defeat and shows no signs of dropping its revolutionary or nuclear designs. That puts into focus the next policy question for the U.S.: Will Mr. Trump's cease-fire give way to diplomacy that deepens the achievements of the war, or will it put those achievements at risk? Work WorkWorkChina's energy dominance in three charts - MIT Technology Review (No paywall) China is the dominant force in next-generation energy technologies today. Its pouring hundreds of billions of dollars into putting renewable sources like wind and solar on its grid, manufacturing millions of electric vehicles, and building out capacity for energy storage, nuclear power, and more. This investment has been transformational for the countrys economy and has contributed to establishing China as a major player in global politics. WorkWork
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WorkWhy a Devoted Justice Department Lawyer Became a Whistle-Blower - The New Yorker (No paywall) In the early days of the first Trump Administration, Erez Reuveni, a lawyer for the Department of Justice, went to court to defend the new Presidents travel ban on foreign nationals from seven predominantly Muslim countries. He told the federal judge hearing the case to ignore the unpleasant fact that, as a candidate, Donald Trump had argued for a travel ban on Muslims; those statements, he said, didnt justify interfering with Trump's authority to take actions that he deemed necessary to protect national security. Second-guessing a President in that way, Reuveni argued, would place the court and the President in an untenable position. As the Administrations efforts to restrict immigration and deport noncitizens continued in the months that followed, Reuveni defended the authority of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to turn up at court hearings to arrest undocumented immigrants. He argued in support of the Administrations decision to eliminate asylum protections for victims of domestic violence, and he defended its rule denying asylum to migrants at the southern border unless they first sought asylum in Mexico or a third country. WorkWorkWork
WorkWorkWorkWorkWorkUN Gaza investigator Francesca Albanese says US sanctions against her a sign of guilt The US sanctions are the culmination of an extraordinary and sprawling campaign of nearly six months by the Trump administration to quell criticism of Israel's handling of the deadly war in Gaza. Earlier this year, the Trump administration began arresting and deporting faculty and students of American universities who participated in pro-Palestinian demonstrations and other political activities. WorkTwo men exonerated after serving decades for 1994 Harlem murder Two New York men imprisoned as teenagers have been exonerated in a 1994 killing. A judge scrapped Brian Boles and Charles Collins' convictions and the underlying charges on Thursday. It happened after Manhattan prosecutors said new DNA testing and a fresh look at other evidence made it impossible to stand by the men's convictions in the death of James Reid. He was 85 when he was attacked in his Harlem apartment. Boles and Collins served decades behind bars before being paroled in recent years. The two gave confessions that their lawyers say were false, and prosecutors now say witness statements contradicted the purported confessions. |
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