Science & Technology
Today we're joined again by Scott Ogrin of Scottie's Tech.Info to give us the techie take on the nefarious agenda of Big Tech to control the information flow and steer public perception towards official consensus reality. We cover the latest whistleblower releases of Zach Vorhies, Dr. Robert Epstein and more.
It's a scary world, and one that is becoming increasingly difficult to navigate! Join us on this edition of Objective:Health where we cover the latest machinations of the technocracy!
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Running Time: 01:17:30
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The campaign dubbed Support Hera and initiated by the co-founders of Asteroid Day hopes to influence more research into safeguarding Earth from future impacts.
Hera is the European Space Agency's (ESA's) planetary defence and asteroid deflection mission ran in partnership with the US space agency NASA.

A 4.8 magnitude earthquake struck southeast France on November 11, damaging buildings and injuring four people. The small town of Le Teil suffered some of the worse damage, with hundreds of structures cracked and crumbling, such as the one pictured here in the town's Rouviere quarter.
Fears of explosions at the nearby nuclear energy plant flooded into his mind. Bastie, a high school biology and geology teacher, rushed outside expecting to see the bloom of a mushroom cloud. But as he soon discovered, the shaking came from something less devastating but still surprising for the region: an earthquake that cracked through the ground.
Clocking in at 4.8 magnitude, the temblor damaged numerous buildings and injured four people. It also left scientists buzzing over a number of curious features. For one, while France is no stranger to temblors, they are often quite small, explains seismologist Jean-Paul Ampuero of the Université Côte d'Azur in France. Monday's event was only of moderate intensity by global measures, but it was a "very large one for French standards," he says.
Comment: Just today another quake was recorded, although not in the same region, at M3.7 4 km W of Le Puy-Notre-Dame at 09:04 local time:
Everything is changing: the composition of the atmosphere; the electric charge differential between atmosphere, ground and sub-surface layers; the core itself is heating up if one theory for 'El Nino' is correct; even the Sun is behaving differently... there's gonna be a whole lotta strange in the next few years!
See also:
- Gulf Stream is 15% weaker, region south of Greenland coldest in 1,000 years
- They just keep coming: Skyscraper-sized asteroid due to pass Earth this week
- Several injured as rare 5.4M earthquake strikes southeast France - UPDATE: Earthquake revised down to 4.9M
- Southern California hit by 7.1 magnitude earthquake just one day after M6.4 tremor - the largest for 20 years
- Huge earth crack several hundred miles long opens up in Pakistan
- Behind the Headlines: Earth changes in an electric universe: Is climate change really man-made?
- Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: Interview with Laura Knight-Jadczyk and Pierre Lescaudron

Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales says the business model of social media companies is problematic: 'It turns out the huge winner is low-quality content'
WT:Social, his new social-networking site, allows users to share links to articles and discuss them in a Facebook-style news feed. Topics range from politics and technology to heavy metal and beekeeping.
While the company is completely separate to Wikipedia, Mr Wales is borrowing the online encyclopedia's business model. WT:Social will rely on donations from a small subset of users to allow the network to operate without the advertising that he blames for encouraging the wrong kind of engagement on social media.
Comment: Sounds like a recipe for the worst social media platform ever. Considering he's launching this platform at our peak 'cancel culture' moment in history, giving people the ability to edit or delete each other's posts will likely lead to the removal of all content (except for, perhaps, the banal content Wales rails against). Everything offends someone, especially if it's something worth saying. This sounds like the opposite of the free-speech platforms people have been asking for.
See also:
- Zuckerberg lays out grand vision of Facebook-fueled utopia - too bad it bears no resemblance to the platform he's actually built
- Not a free speech platform: Facebook proclaims it's a 'publisher' and can censor whomever it wants, walking into legal trap
- Clueless Guardian columnist unwittingly gives Jordan Peterson's new platform free advertising
- Platform access is a civil right
- Fake news 'fact-checkers' abandoning Facebook after 'losing trust' in the platform
- An experiment led by Dr. Akiko Takaoka from the Department of Psychology at Japan's Kyoto University concluded that dogs refuse to trust a person who lied to it. Dogs did not follow a pointing hand that led them to an empty container.
- In an experiment, dogs wouldn't take a treat from the people who'd been mean or disrespectful toward their owners. In fact, besides distrusting them, they flat-out ignored these meanies.
- With enough training and treats for a job well-done, dogs are able to tell the happy faces from the sad ones, even with human faces they didn't come across during their training.

NASA provided Boeing with $287.2 million in additional commercial crew funding in order to create more schedule flexibility to address potential gaps in ISS crew access, but NASA's inspector general says most of that additional funding was unnecessary.
The Nov. 14 report on the commercial crew program by NASA's Office of Inspector General (OIG) highlighted several issues with the commercial crew program that, it warns, could hinder NASA's ability to access and utilize the International Space Station in the near future.
While some of those issues, like ongoing delays with development of commercial crew vehicles and potential loss of access to the station when Soyuz seats run out, are not new, the report highlighted a change to Boeing's contract that the OIG concluded was largely unnecessary.
According to the report, Boeing proposed in September 2016 prices for four "post-certification missions," or PCMs, of its CST-100 Starliner vehicle that NASA originally rejected as too high, based on a table in the original contract that set prices based on the number of missions ordered and the date ordered.
The long-term study seems to have borne out the prophecy of Rachel Carson's seminal 1962 book Silent Spring, in which the author describes the nefarious trickle down effects of chemical pesticides that could "still the leaping of fish." While it is impossible to say that the use of pesticides caused the collapse of the fishery, the correlation is extremely strong.
Comment: Silent Hives: Colony Collapse Disorder and Pesticides:
- A Last (Chemical) Gasp for Bees?
- Scientists Untangle Multiple Causes of Bee Colony Disorder
- Honeybee Colony Collapse Disorder Finally Explained: Too Many Chemicals
- Harvard Study Links Pesticides to Colony Collapse Disorder in Bees
- Colony Collapse: Do Massive Bee Die-Offs Mean an End to Our Food System as We Know it?
- Bayer and Syngenta knew: Ag giants discovered in secret tests that pesticides severely harmed bees
- Woops! Bayer and Syngenta accidentally fund a study showing their pesticides harm bees

The Alpha-Monocerotid meteor outburst in 1995. Meteors are actually pieces of rock that have broken off a comet and continue to orbit the Sun.
Peter Jenniskens, a senior research scientist with the SETI Institute and NASA's Ames Research Center, along with Esko Lyytinen of the Finnish Fireball Network, have been keeping tabs on the shower for years. During outbursts, such as those that occurred in 1925 and 1935, activity reached meteor-storm levels with a zenithal hourly rate (ZHR) of more than 1,000. Activity rose to near-storm levels again in 1985 and 1995 with ZHRs around 700 and 400. ZHR is an idealized number based on how many meteors a single observer would see if the radiant were overhead in a dark sky during shower maximum.
The source of the Alpha Monocerotids is unknown, but the stream's orbital characteristics point to a long-period comet with a period of about 500 years. This nameless visitor deposited a dense, narrow ribbon of debris in the distant past with a half-width of only around 55,000 kilometers, equal to the distance from the center of Earth to the geostationary satellite belt.
Comment: Also, the Earth is passing through the Leonids this month, a huge meteor cloud left behind by the Comet Tempel-Tuttle. Each year sees impressive displays, with certain nights offering particularly spectacular meteor showers. See: 'They thought it was judgment day': The night in 1833 when 'stars fell' on the southern US
Treatment of the virus is difficult, because it hides out in nerve cells and emerges months or years later to reactivate the infection. New research from Dr. Luis M. Schang and his group at the Baker Institute for Animal Health has identified a new mechanism that plays a role in controlling how the virus alternates between dormant and active stages of infection.
In Schang's group, Mi Yao Hu and Esteban Flores Cortes discovered that the virus switches between the "latent" stage and the "lytic" stage, in which it is actively replicating, depending on how tightly its DNA is packaged into bundles called chromatin.
Their findings are in a paper, "Chromatin Dynamics and the Transcriptional Competence of HSV-1 Genomes During Lytic Infections," which published Nov. 14 in PLOS Pathogens. Schang's group collaborated with scientists from the University of Alberta, Canada, and University College London (UCL).
"Any problem that herpes causes is because of reactivation from latency," Schang said. "That's the reason why antivirals cannot cure the infection and why so far it's been impossible to develop a vaccine. Latency and reactivation are a major focus for herpes virus research."

Findings link healthy sleep to brain-wave bursts that mathematically mimic earthquakes
Sleep is traditionally considered to be a homeostatic process that resists deviation from equilibrium. In that regard, brief episodes of waking are viewed as perturbations that lead to sleep fragmentation and related sleep disorders. While addressing aspects of sleep regulation related to consolidated sleep and wake and the sleep-wake cycle, the homeostatic paradigm does not account for the dozens of abrupt sleep-stage transitions and micro-states within sleep stages throughout the night. Ivanov and colleagues hypothesized that, while sleep is indeed homeostatic at time scales of hours and days, non-equilibrium dynamics and criticality underlie sleep micro-architecture at shorter time scales.
To test this hypothesis, the researchers collected electroencephalogram (EEG) recordings of brain activity over multiple days in normal rats and in rats with injuries to the parafacial zone, a brain region that helps regulate sleep. They analyzed the bursting dynamics of brain activity patterns known as theta waves and delta waves, which are seen in both sleeping rats and humans.











Comment: See also:
- Something Wicked This Way Comes
- Hunting asteroids: NASA's Planetary Defense budget grew 4000% in 10 years
- They just keep coming: Skyscraper-sized asteroid due to pass Earth this week
- NASA: Previously unknown asteroid has a near miss with Earth
- Bus-sized asteroid shaves Earth with one day's notice
- Astronomers discover 12 new moons orbiting Jupiter
Video from the event's YouTube page: