Nostr-only. Positive News For Positive Views
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Last Notes npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Source] https://www.goodgoodgood.co/articles/new-species-pit-viper-cambodia npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill 11 New Species Discovered In Cambodia https://cdn.prod.website-files.com/5f6cc9cd16d59d990c8fca33/69c4324a0808c37314795fca_new-species-pit-viper.jpg Three years ago, a team of researchers from Flora & Fauna, a global conservation charity, set out to explore the Battambang Province of western Cambodia and get a head count on the animals that lived there. Before they set out, the researchers were hoping to spot threatened species like the Sunda pangolin, the Indochinese silvered langur, and the green peafowl, all of which are known to live among the region’s 60 karst caves (rock formations made from limestone, dolomite, and rain). But nothing could have prepared them for what they were about to discover: A “treasure trove” of 11 new species, including three new gecko species, two species of millipedes, two micro-snails, and a stunning turquoise pit viper. The researchers conducted their animal survey from November 2023 through July 2025, using cameras throughout the cave systems to collect images and information on an array of bird, mammal, and reptile species. Seven species have already been formally described. As for the striking blue and green pit viper? It’s still undergoing the process of being officially recognized as a new species. While its scientific name awaits consideration, the term “pit” refers to the heat-sensitive organ on its head that it uses to detect prey. “Cambodia’s karst areas are a treasure trove of scientific secrets waiting to be uncovered,” Sothearen Thi, the Karst Biodiversity Coordinator, told IFLScience. “From undiscovered reptiles and snails, to hidden caves, there is still so much we do not know about these unique ecosystems and the diversity of creatures living within them.” According to evolutionary biologist Lee Grismer, who supported the survey team, they are still unpacking what they’ve learned. After Flora & Fauna researchers identified a striped Kamping Poi bent-toed gecko species (Cyrtodactylus kampingpoiensis) in 2024, they soon realized that the region’s four distinct populations appeared to be evolving along different paths. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2846712 https://news.ki.se/high-meat-consumption-linked-to-lower-dementia-risk-in-genetic-risk-group npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill New Study Shows That High Quantities Of Meat Can Prevent Alzheimer’s https://images2.imgbox.com/6a/9f/TzJ41yvl_o.png A new study from Karolinska Institutet published in JAMA Network Open found that people with a genetic risk of Alzheimer's disease did not experience the expected increase in cognitive decline and dementia risk if they consumed relatively large amounts of meat. APOE is a gene that affects the risk of Alzheimer's disease. Among people with Alzheimer's disease, those with these genotypes account for nearly 70 per cent. When the Swedish Food Agency presented an overview of research on the link between diet and dementia last year, more research was requested to assess a possible link between meat consumption and the development of dementia. "This study tested the hypothesis that people with APOE 3/4 and 4/4 would have a reduced risk of cognitive decline and dementia with higher meat intake, based on the fact that APOE4 is the evolutionarily oldest variant of the APOE gene and may have arisen during a period when our evolutionary ancestors ate a more animal-based diet," says first author Jakob Norgren, researcher at the Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society, Karolinska Institutet. The study followed more than 2,100 participants in the Swedish National Study on Aging and Care, Kungsholmen (SNAC-K) for up to 15 years. All were aged 60 or older and had no diagnosis of dementia at the start of the study. The association between self-reported diet and cognitive health measures was analyzed, adjusting for age, sex, education and lifestyle factors. At lower meat intake, the group with APOE 3/4 and 4/4 had more than twice the risk of dementia than people without these gene variants. However, the increased risk of cognitive decline and dementia in the risk groups was not seen in the fifth of participants who consumed the most meat. Their median consumption is estimated at approximately 870 grams of meat per week, standardized to a daily energy intake of 2,000 calories. "Those who ate more meat overall had significantly slower cognitive decline and a lower risk of dementia, but only if they had the APOE 3/4 or 4/4 gene variants," says Jakob Norgren. He continues, "There is a lack of dietary research into brain health, and our findings suggest that conventional dietary advice may be unfavourable to a genetically defined subgroup of the population. For those who are aware that they belong to this genetic risk group, the findings offer hope; the risk may be modifiable through lifestyle changes." The study also shows that the type of meat is important. "A lower proportion of processed meat in total meat consumption was associated with a lower risk of dementia regardless of APOE genotype," says Sara Garcia-Ptacek, assistant professor at the same department, who together with senior lecturer Erika J Laukka is the study's last author. The findings also extend beyond brain health. In a follow-up analysis, the researchers observed a significant reduction in all-cause-mortality in carriers of APOE 3/4 and 4/4 with higher consumption of unprocessed meat. "Clinical trials are now needed to develop dietary recommendations tailored to APOE genotype," says Jakob Norgren. He continues, "Since the prevalence of APOE4 is about twice as high in the Nordic countries as in the Mediterranean countries, we are particularly well suited to conduct research on tailored dietary recommendations for this risk group." npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Source] https://www.sunnyskyz.com/good-news/6129/-039-A-Miracle-039-Canadian-Flight-Attendant-Ejected-100-Meters-From-Plane-Survives-Crash npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Flight Attendant Ejected 100 Meters From Plane And Survives https://www.sunnyskyz.com/uploads/2026/03/9hz89-flight-attendant-survives-plane-crash-ejected-good-news.webp On Sunday, an Air Canada Jazz CRJ-900 aircraft collided with a fire truck during landing, resulting in a tragic crash that claimed the lives of both the pilot and co-pilot. Nine other people were injured and taken to hospital. Among the survivors was flight attendant Solange Tremblay. Her survival is now being described as a “complete miracle” by her family. Her daughter, Sarah Lépine, shared the shocking details of what happened. “At the moment of impact, her seat was ejected more than 100 metres from the plane,” she said. “They found her and she was still strapped into her seat.” “It’s a complete miracle. She had a guardian angel watching over her. It could have been much worse.” Tremblay suffered multiple fractures and required surgery for a broken leg, but doctors say she is expected to recover. Tremblay has been working as a flight attendant with Jazz for 26 years. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Source] https://www.sunnyskyz.com/good-news/6126/Volunteer-Delivery-Driver-Arrives-Just-In-Time-To-Save-Woman-s-Life npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Volunteer Meal Delivery Teen Saves Woman's Life https://www.sunnyskyz.com/uploads/2026/03/ncrpe-delivery-driver-saves-woman-2-good-news.webp In Fort Worth, 19 year old Meals on Wheels driver Alekzander Dzivak was making his usual rounds when something unexpected happened behind one of the doors on his route. Inside the home, an elderly woman known as Ms. Lana was in serious trouble. Suffering from a diabetic episode, she had collapsed in her kitchen and couldn’t move. Luckily, her phone was right beside her. When her doorbell camera app alerted her that Dzivak had arrived, it gave her a critical chance to call out for help. She later said her mind was foggy in the moment, and she hadn’t even thought to call 911. Through the doorbell, she urgently told him what was happening. “She was giving me the code and saying she was gonna die, and please call 911,” Dzivak recalled. Without hesitation, he sprang into action—calling emergency services and staying with her virtually, doing everything he could to keep her calm while help rushed to the scene. “I was nodding and shaking my head. I was trying to keep her talking to me, keep her calm,” he said. “It was a very scary situation.” Less than five minutes later, first responders arrived and were able to stabilize her. For Ms. Lana, the timing couldn’t have been more critical. “If he hadn’t come, I would’ve died. It was that far along,” she said. “He came to the door at the right moment. It’s just unbelievable.” Still shaken, she described the fear of realizing she was completely alone. “I was petrified because I’ve never been that bad before. I knew I was by myself. There just wasn’t any way I could get hold of anybody.” Just weeks after turning 19, Dzivak is one of the youngest volunteers serving Meals on Wheels in Tarrant County, and handles two delivery routes each week. On this day, his role became something much bigger than delivering food. “I was very happy I arrived when I did, because I don’t know what would’ve happened had I shown up later,” he said. “So I’m just glad I was here, and the paramedics were as close as they were.” In the days since, the experience has left a lasting impact on both of them, creating a bond that goes far beyond a simple delivery. For Dzivak, it’s also strengthened his belief in giving back. “Any impact you’re able to make is amazing,” he said. “I find it so rewarding to volunteer.” npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Source] https://www.sunnyskyz.com/good-news/6124/Manager-Spends-3-Nights-At-Zoo-To-Keep-Animals-Safe-During-Massive-Blizzard npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Manager Stays Three Nights At Zoo During Blizzard https://www.sunnyskyz.com/uploads/2026/03/xtnlx-zoo-keeper-stays-with-animals-blizzard-good-news.webp When a powerful blizzard buried parts of Wildwood Zoo under more than two feet of snow, one dedicated manager refused to leave his post. Kyle Kirk, the zoo’s manager in Marshfield, Wisconsin, spent three straight nights at the facility to make sure every animal, across all 27 species, was safe and cared for during the extreme weather. “This is the most snow I think I’ve ever seen in my whole life,” Kirk said, describing the intensity of the storm. At one point, conditions were so severe that he was completely trapped inside the staff building. “There was a solid hour that I really couldn’t help really anybody because I was completely snowed in.” But as soon as he was able to get outside, Kirk got to work. He began digging out smaller animals that had been buried under the snow, including quail, prairie dogs, and skunks. “I was able to dig them out. Our skunks were completely snowed in,” he said. Despite the serious situation, there was even a moment of humor. “It was kind of comical because I think our skunks thought that I brought the snow. They were stomping at me and saying, ‘Oh, you can take away the snow now.’” Kirk carved pathways through enclosures so animals like porcupines and skunks could move around again, and he made sure foxes, who had already shed their winter coats, were warm enough to handle the sudden freeze. Meanwhile, some of the zoo’s larger residents took the storm in stride. The Kodiak bears lounged comfortably, and the lynx seemed right at home in the deep snow. “It was really fun to see him walking on top of the snow with his great big paws,” Kirk said. “He could have went for another two feet for sure.” Not all animals fared as easily, though. Kirk even had to lift sandhill cranes out of the snow after they became stuck. For Kirk, staying through the storm wasn’t a question, it was part of the job. “A lot of other people can call in sick or get snowed in, but simply, I can’t,” he said. “There’s really no reason to have these animals if we’re not going to care for them in the best possible way at our disposal.” npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Source] https://www.sunnyskyz.com/good-news/6120/Woman-Stops-Porch-Pirate-With-Kindness-039-I-Love-You-God-Loves-You-039- npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Porch Thief Thwarted With Compassion https://www.sunnyskyz.com/uploads/2026/03/y184v-woman-stops-porch-pirate-with-kindness-good-news.webp A simple act of compassion turned what could have been a tense confrontation into a powerful moment of grace in Philadelphia. When Bernadette Williams noticed someone attempting to steal a package from her neighbor’s porch, she didn’t respond with anger. Instead, she chose empathy. Doorbell camera footage captured the moment she calmly called out, “Put that down.” But what happened next surprised everyone. Rather than escalate the situation, Williams reached into her pocket and offered the woman $7—the only cash she had on her. For Williams, the decision came from a place of compassion. “I said, ‘She’s in trouble. How can I make a bad situation better?’ You have to be a part of the solution,” she explained. Her kindness didn’t stop there. She also offered words of encouragement, telling the woman, “Get some help. You’re better than that. I love you. God loves you.” The woman, clearly moved, apologized and thanked her. Williams later shared that she could see genuine remorse in the woman’s eyes. “Her eyes of ‘I’m sorry.’ That was in her heart, and that’s what I read. I hope that she will be fine, and I have faith that she will be fine,” she said. Having lived in the neighborhood for decades, Williams said her actions were rooted in a deep sense of community. “We are a part of this community, and we can make our community better,” she said. Now, she hopes this moment of compassion inspires others—not just the woman involved, but anyone who hears the story—to choose kindness when it matters most. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Source] https://www.sunnyskyz.com/good-news/6122/Kentucky-Family-Turns-Down-26-Million-AI-Data-Center-To-Protect-Farmland npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Family Turns Down $26 Million To Keep Farmland https://www.sunnyskyz.com/uploads/2026/03/6vw4t-no-data-center-farm-owners-say-good-news.webp In Maysville, Kentucky, Ida Huddleston and her daughter Delsia Bare were offered a staggering $26 million for part of their family’s 1,200-acre farm. The proposal would have transformed their pastureland into a data center, but for them, the choice was clear. Standing among the fields and cattle that have sustained their family for generations, Bare reflected on what truly matters. “Stay and hold, and feed a nation,” she said. “$26 million doesn't mean anything.” For this family, the land is more than property—it’s a living legacy. Generations before them worked the same soil, providing food even during some of the country’s hardest times. “My grandfather and great-grandfather and a whole bunch of family have all lived here for years… Fed a nation off of it. Even raised wheat through the depression and kept bread lines up in the United States of America when people didn't have anything else,” Bare shared. At 82 years old, Huddleston remains deeply connected to the place she has always called home. It’s where she was born—and where she intends to stay. For her, the decision wasn’t about turning down money, but about holding onto something priceless. Their story is one of conviction, choosing stewardship over profit, and honoring the role their land has played in feeding others. Bare described that connection in heartfelt terms, comparing it to a bond that can’t be broken: “As long as I'm on this land—as long as it's feeding me—as long as it's taking care of me—there's nothing that can destroy me if I've got this land.” While development may continue nearby, this family’s fields will remain just as they’ve always been—full of life, history, and purpose. In a world often driven by profit and technology, their choice stands as an inspiring testament to staying true to what matters most. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.sunnyskyz.com/good-news/6121/Engineering-Students-Build-Life-Changing-Wheelchair-That-Helps-Paralyzed-Student-Return-To-The-Outdoors npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Engineering Students Create "Off Road" Wheelchair For Student https://www.sunnyskyz.com/uploads/2026/03/x2qie-college-students-help-paralyzed-man-good-news.webp After a devastating accident left college student Vhan McGuire paralyzed, a team of engineering students stepped in with an incredible solution: building a custom all-terrain wheelchair that’s giving him the freedom to explore the outdoors again. McGuire, an architecture student, had always loved hiking, camping, and spending time in nature. But a motorcycle accident in October 2024 changed everything, limiting where he could go and what he could do. “A regular wheelchair struggles on any surface that isn’t hard and flat,” McGuire said. A friend connected him with a group of engineering students at Tennessee Tech University who were searching for a meaningful, real-world challenge. That’s when Braden Hopper, John Avery, and Luke White decided to take on something special. Together, they built a custom all-terrain wheelchair they call “The Chariot.” The Chariot is a rugged, powerful, chair designed to handle outdoor terrain and bring back the freedom McGuire thought he had lost. Now, instead of watching life from the sidelines, he’s back outside doing what he loves. “Now, having a piece of equipment that can go anywhere, and that I feel comfortable with, is a blessing,” McGuire said. “This gets me back to what I loved doing and how I loved living before my accident.” Perhaps he summed it up best with just a few powerful words: “It gives me back my legs.” npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.sunnyskyz.com/good-news/6118/A-Message-In-A-Bottle-Sparked-A-25-Year-Friendship-And-They-Finally-Met npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Friendship Of 25 Years Started By A Message In A Bottle https://www.sunnyskyz.com/uploads/2026/03/a148y-friendship-message-in-bottle-2.webp More than two decades ago, a simple message in a bottle drifted across the ocean and brought two strangers together in the most unexpected way. Back in 2001, Diane Charles was taking one of her usual morning walks along a beach in Stanley, Tasmania when something unusual caught her eye in the surf. “I'd walked out along the beach … and as I came back, rolling in on the waves was a bottle … covered in barnacles,” she recalled. “To my surprise, it seemed to have a note inside.” The message wasn’t easy to understand at first. It was written in Spanish, and Charles was determined to figure out what it said. With help from locals, and her brother, who had recently returned from Chile with a Spanish dictionary, they tried piecing together the translation word by word. “We just tried to pick words from the dictionary,” she said. Eventually, a scholar helped decode the note, which roughly read: “Life has taught me all is possible, receive love and success second to this.” But the most important clues were easy to spot: a name, a Colombian address, and a fax number. Those details led Charles to Erika Boyero, a woman from Colombia who had tossed the bottle into the sea four years earlier while working aboard a cruise ship near Norway. In 1997, Boyero had been bartending on a cruise traveling through the Nordic countries. One evening, bored and looking for something fun to do, she wrote several notes, sealed them in empty bottles, and threw them overboard. Then she forgot all about them. “I completely forgot about that day,” she said. Years later, her father surprised her with unexpected news. “Hey, you received a fax from Australia,” he told her. Boyero was stunned. “I said, ‘What? I don’t know anyone in Australia.’” Eventually, it clicked. “You don’t really think that can happen,” she said. “There are so many millions of people in the world … and when destiny, in this way, shows a person you have to meet in this life … it is beautiful.” What started as a mysterious ocean message soon turned into a long-distance friendship. For the next 25 years, Charles and Boyero stayed in touch, sharing life updates and milestones; from the birth of children to Boyero’s move to Germany. And recently, their story gained a new chapter. While traveling in Kuala Lumpur, Boyero called Charles with an idea. She wanted to fly to Tasmania so the two could finally meet in person. When Boyero arrived, Charles said their reunion felt natural. Once she walked into the terminal, the two embraced like “long lost friends.” “It was amazing and we've just talked ever since,” Charles said. The following morning, they walked together along the same beach where the bottle had washed ashore all those years ago. They also visited the Stanley Discovery Museum to see the very message that had brought them together. Looking back, Boyero says the early translation of her message wasn’t far from what she originally wrote. “Life has taught me all is possible,” she said. “I wish you good fortune wherever you are.” And thanks to a barnacle covered bottle drifting across the ocean, those words ended up connecting two people half a world apart. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.yakult.co.jp/english/inbound/yakultlady/ https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20260302-the-yoghurt-delivery-women-combatting-loneliness-in-japan npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Yogurt Delivery Creates Community Connection For Elderly https://www.yakult.co.jp/inbound/img/yakultlady/pic_mv_pc.jpg A network of women delivering probiotic milk drinks, referred to as "Yakult Ladies", has become a vital source of routine, connection, and care. Nearly 30% of Japan's population is now over 65, and the number of elderly people living alone continues to rise. As families shrink, and traditional multi-generational households decline, isolation has become one of the country's most pressing social challenges. In Japan, the number of people over 65 living alone is expected to rise to almost 11 million by 2050, according to the National Institute of Population and Social Security Research. The country even has the term "kodokushi" or "lonely death", which refers to the tragic cases of people dying alone at home with no one noticing. In 2021, Japan's first "Minister of Loneliness" was appointed to government, with a task force focused on social isolation. In the private sector, there is something else at play, "Yakult Ladies". A Yakult Lady is one of tens of thousands of workers across Japan who deliver probiotic drinks directly to people's homes. On paper they're delivery workers, but in practice they're part of the country's informal social safety net. The first Yakult Ladies made their deliveries in Japan in 1963, and play a major role in disseminating the valuable health benefits of Yakult around the world. The initiative began unintentionally. When Yakult launched in 1935, the idea of drinking "bacteria" sounded bad; like something that would make you sick rather than healthy. To explain what the product was, the company needed salespeople to go door to door. Yakult Ladies are easy to spot in the community in their blue uniforms with signature red plaid trim. They're often seen whizzing about their neighborhoods on bikes, motorbikes, on foot or by car. Satoko Furuhata, who has been a Yakult Lady for 25 years, begins her day at 08:30, when she loads her car and sets off on her route. "I have different routes each day but I visit about 40 to 45 households per day," she says. Every Monday for the past quarter-century, Furuhata has visited the same customer (who wants to remain anonymous) who is now 83 and lives alone in Maebashi, 100 miles northwest of Tokyo. Since her children have long left home, the elderly woman has come to treasure the visits. "Knowing that someone will definitely come to see my face each week is a tremendous comfort," she says. "Even on days when I feel unwell, hearing her say, 'How are you today?' at my doorstep gives me strength." It has become such a long standing routine that she avoids scheduling anything else that time. "Monday is my 'energy charging day'," she says. "I genuinely look forward to her visits. When the doorbell rings and I hear her cheerful voice, it lifts my spirits instantly." They chat about many things: their families, gardening and growing flowers, local news and health topics they've read about in newspapers or seen on TV. "These may seem like small conversations, but they make me feel and realize that I'm not alone." Stress and chronic loneliness may negatively affect gut health, explains Dr Emily Leeming, a microbiome scientist. "We live in a microbial world, constantly exchanging microbes back and forth between each other. That's one reason why loneliness is linked to lower gut microbiome diversity. It's also likely due to stress too, with loneliness causing a low-grade stress response that can also negatively impact your gut microbiome." Yakult did not design its delivery network as a public health intervention. But over time, the social dimension of the visits has taken on growing significance. "I've stayed healthy without major illnesses and people often tell me how energetic I am," says Furuhata's 83-year-old customer. "I believe that's because I've been drinking Yakult for many years. But it's not just the drink… receiving Mrs Furuhata's visits [is also] important to my health routine." Asuka Mochida is a Yakult Lady from Gunma Prefecture. Nearly all her customers are elderly, and she feels a deep sense of pride in being able to offer them both companionship and a watchful eye. "Yakult Ladies are not just people who sell products," says the 47-year-old. "We are watchers in a sense, people who look out for others. We notice small changes in health or lifestyle." They also notice subtle changes in a customer's routine. If someone fails to answer the door, they may alert family members or seek assistance. "For elderly customers or those living alone, the reassurance of seeing a familiar face is incredibly important," says Mochida. "Japan has a culture of watching over others and one's community. I think Yakult Ladies put that culture into practice in a natural, sustainable way. It's a job where responsibility and kindness overlap." It's also a job that can come with high levels of satisfaction. "Even on busy days when I can sometimes only talk for a moment, a customer once told me, 'Just seeing your face gives me energy.' That made me realize that even if I'm not perfect, simply being there can make a meaningful difference." "The ability to listen and to notice things," adds Mochida. "Being attentive to small changes is essential." There's currently more than 31,000 Yakult ladies in Japan. The model has also been replicated overseas in countries such as China, Indonesia, Malaysia, Brazil, and Mexico. Yakult is a fermented milk drink that contains a specific strain of lactic acid bacteria cultured by Dr Minoru Shirota, Yakult's founder, in 1930. When the scientist began studying medicine at Kyoto University in 1921, Japan was still developing economically, and many children were dying from infectious diseases. Appalled by the situation, he committed himself to the study of disease prevention, which led him to focus on microbiology – specifically helpful bacteria that could suppress harmful bacteria in the gut. From their beginnings in Japan, today nearly 80,000 Yakult Ladies are working to serve their local communities in 14 countries and regions across the globe. You might run into a Yakult Lady while on your travels. If you do, feel free to stop her, and she will be happy to sell you a Yakult or two (payment by cash only). npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.cbsnews.com/pittsburgh/news/on-a-positive-note-postal-worker-returns-lost-wallet/ https://news.usps.com/2026/02/27/philadelphias-postmaster-passes/ npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Postal Worker Drives Nearly 50 Miles After Work To Return Wallet https://images2.imgbox.com/73/50/Opb5yFlt_o.png A new postal worker, 25 year old Bruce Armah, found a wallet buried in the snow in Coraopolis, Pennsylvania, on a frigid winter morning. He tucked it away until he could look for an ID card or anything with an identifying address. After he finished his workday in -11 F (-24 C) temps, Armah, got into his car and began driving in the winter weather to the address he found on an ID in the wallet. After driving the ten miles (16 km) to Clinton, PA, he learned that the owner of the wallet had moved to a different town. They now lived in McDonald, about 13 miles (21 km) from Clinton. That's when Matt Bryan came to the door, knowing his wife was sick over losing her wallet somewhere earlier that day. "There was $100 cash in there, credit cards, ID, healthcare cards," Matt recalled. "He wanted nothing in return; he just said it was the right thing to do." “It’s just the right thing. If you find someone’s wallet, you just return it,” Armah said. “I remember when I was a teenager, my father lost his wallet, but someone returned it to him. A couple of months later, my dad found a wallet, and he returned it to that person. He taught me how important it is to return someone’s wallet.” Afterward, Armah doubled back the way he came to drive home to Ambridge, 24 miles (39 km) away from McDonald. In all, Armah drove 52 miles in total, on his own time, in his own car, making his father proud as well as his fellow postal workers. Matt Bryan, however, told a postal worker friend, who told another, and another, until it ended up becoming a legend. "I was complimenting him to some of his coworkers who mentioned it up the chain, which gets us to this point," Bryan said. "I can't thank him enough; it's great to see that young people are doing the right thing." npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.sunnyskyz.com/good-news/6114/Missing-Dog-Found-1-300-Miles-From-Home-Police-Care-For-Her-Until-Family-Arrives npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Missing Dog Found 1,300 Miles Away From Home https://www.sunnyskyz.com/uploads/2026/03/g2qn8-lost-dog-missing-1300-miles-away.jpg On March 4, someone spotted a small dog named Koko wandering around a shopping center in Clark, New Jersey, and called the Clark Township Police Department. Officer Nick Kurus responded to the call and brought Koko back to police headquarters. From there, staff members began working to track down her family. They were able to locate a pet-finder service connected to the dog, and eventually obtained contact information for the last recorded owner. Kurus made the call to Glenn Heights, Texas, 1360 miles away, and the reaction on the other end of the line was pure shock. Koko’s owners had been searching for answers ever since she vanished two years earlier. Over time, they had come to believe they might never see their beloved dog again. The family immediately made plans to fly to New Jersey, and a reunion was scheduled just a few days later on March 7, 2026. In the meantime, Koko became an honorary member of the police department. “Rather than being sent to a shelter, members of the Clark Police Department cared for the dog the next 3 days,” the department explained. Officers bathed her, fed her treats, took her for regular walks, and made sure she was comfortable with blankets and toys. Some of the supplies were even purchased by staff members with their own money. Police Director Patrick Grady said the decision was easy. “As a dog lover amongst many other dog lovers, we were not going to make that puppy wait in a shelter or pound,” he said. “Koko was living her best life inside the dispatch room the last 3 days,” Grady added. “Hopefully it will get even better being reunited with her family again.” When the long-awaited reunion finally happened, it was everything everyone had hoped for. Police said Koko ran straight to her mom the moment she arrived. The grateful owners thanked the department for the kindness and compassion they showed their dog while she waited to go home. For the officers who had grown attached to their temporary station mascot, the goodbye was a little bittersweet. “We will miss you, Koko,” the department wrote on Facebook. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.newsflare.com/video/845651/brit-throws-message-in-bottle-from-bahamas-and-ends-up-in-portugal-one-year-later npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Message In A Bottle Found One Year Later After Crossing the Atlantic https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Lorenzo-left-and-Maria-Enes-right-credit-SWNS.jpg On February 10, 2025, Amy Bisterzo, 43 and her son Lorenzo Bisterzo, 10, tossed a glass bottle into the Atlantic Ocean near Nassau, Bahamas. Amy explained, "Inside was a note that Lorenzo, our son, had written. He wrote a note saying the date, where it was from, and he also put my WhatsApp number on it and his. As time passed we forgot about it." 4,000 miles away, on February 12, 2026, Maria Enes, 49, was walking her dog on Vila Chã Beach, near Porto, in Portugal. She came across several dead and injured Puffins near a pile of sticks. While checking on them, and being able to rescue three, she found the bottle. Maria, a teacher, described the moment of finding a message in a bottle as being a "childhood fantasy". Maria added, "As it said 2025 and it was so new I thought it was from the area and I took it home with me. The bottle was intact, it only had a dent in the bottle cap and had very few marine traces. I took the paper with tweezers and I was astonished that it came from the Bahamas. Exactly one year had passed. I thought it was awesome and I called the number in the note." Amy, originally from the UK, but now living in Old Fort Bay, Nassau, said, "I was in the kitchen, just locking up to go to bed, and a random number from Portugal called me. Then a strange photo popped up with someone saying 'I got your bottle.' All I could see was what looked like material, and a bottle, and scissors; and it actually freaked me out so I immediately blocked the number." "Then I decide to look at the photo again, and I zoomed in, and I saw Lorenzo's writing." When Amy realized it was Lorenzo's writing on the message, she immediately unblocked the number. Amy said, "I shouted upstairs to Lorenzo 'someone found our bottle'. Because it was so long ago, he didn't know what I was talking about, and then I showed him. The whole family was just completely mind blown, it actually felt like magic." Amy added, "Then I started to communicate with Maria and she sent voice notes and videos, and very quickly I realized this woman was so kind and lovely." Amy thought the bottle would never be found when they first threw it. But they are glad they did it as they have created a friendship with Maria since then. "I never thought it would be found, let alone almost to the year exactly, let alone go so far, and also to be found by the perfect person.", said Amy. "It was sort of an activity to do with my son and give him some excitement, but in my adult mind I knew it was highly unlikely to be found. Of course when we first threw it we were so excited to imagine what might become of the bottle and where it would go. But honestly as time went by we completely forgot about it." Maria said she is hoping they can meet her in Vila Chã one day so they can throw a bottle together. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://phys.org/news/2026-03-lost-page-archimedes-palimpsest-blois.html https://archimedespalimpsest.org/about/history/index.php https://news.artnet.com/art-world/lost-page-of-archimedes-palimpsest-found-2753005 https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/long-lost-page-of-archimedes-writings-rediscovered-in-france/ npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Lost Page Of Archimedes Palimpsest Manuscript Found! https://static.scientificamerican.com/dam/m/23400d11b8725628/original/Archimedes-Palimpsest-2.jpg https://static.scientificamerican.com/dam/m/76b216a89cff76ac/original/palimpseste_light_small_1.jpg A page long believed to have been lost from the Archimedes Palimpsest, one of the most important surviving manuscripts of antiquity, has been identified at the Musée des Beaux-Arts in Blois, central France, by a CNRS researcher. Initial analysis confirms that the page corresponds to page 123 of the Palimpsest and contains a passage from Archimedes' treatise "On the Sphere and the Cylinder," Book I, Propositions 39 to 41. The compilation of Archimedes’s writings was created in Constantinople during the mid 9th century. Later, it was smuggled to a monastery in the Judean desert following the sacking of Constantinople by crusaders in 1204. The writing was scrubbed out by monks in the Middle Ages, in order to reuse the goat-skin parchment for liturgical texts. This practice of reusing parchment was common at the time, due to the animal-skin writing materials being extremely costly. In 1906, Johan Ludvig Heiberg documented the manuscript through photographs, which are now preserved at the Royal Danish Library. Since then, the manuscript changed hands several times, and as a result, three leaves documented in these photographs disappeared, and have since been considered lost. By the 1930s, the manuscript was in the possession of an art dealer in Paris, Salomon Guerson. After failing to sell it in 1932, he sought to increase its value by having forged Medieval illustrations added. In 1998, the Palimpsest was put up for sale at Christie’s by Guerson’s daughter-in-law where it sold for $2 million to the current owner; an anonymous buyer. The buyer lent the manuscript to the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore, Maryland, USA where it currently resides. The anonymous owner funded its research and restoration, as centuries of poor storage led to mold covering portions of the text, and its edges are charred. In the early 2000s, multispectral imaging made it possible to reveal major texts by Archimedes as well as previously unknown fragments of ancient literary and philosophical works. The leaf identified by Victor Gysembergh at CNRS was compared with Heiberg's photographs, making it possible to confirm that it was missing leaf number 123. On one of its two sides, a text of prayers partially covers geometric diagrams and a passage from the treatise "On the Sphere and the Cylinder". On the other side, the ancient text remains inaccessible using conventional methods of examination, because it is covered by the forged illumination of haloed Prophet Daniel with his palms to the sky and a tamed a pair of lions. Subject to the necessary authorizations, Gysembergh plans to conduct new imaging campaigns within a year. The new techniques to be used involve a multispectral approach combined with a series of synchrotron-based X-ray fluorescence analyses. This analytical technique can determine the elemental composition of materials in an attempt to reveal the text concealed beneath the illumination. After this discovery, only two further leaves from the manuscript remain missing. Archimedes, a Greek mathematician and scientist who laid the foundations of modern calculus, geometry and fundamental physics and lived around 250 B.C.E. in Syracuse, was not available for comment. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://afreakaccident.com/the-dog-bark-that-saved-his-owners-life/ https://www.sunnyskyz.com/good-news/6110/Dog-s-Bark-Sets-Off-039-Miracle-039-Chain-Of-Events-That-Saves-Man-s-Life npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Dog's Bark And Community Saves Owner's Life https://images2.imgbox.com/01/47/phgIV3rk_o.png A frightening ordeal began shortly after Chris’s partner, Linda, had left the house. Their dog, Sally, had gotten outside, so Chris stepped out to bring her back. But after taking just a few steps outside, Chris collapsed. He had gone into cardiac arrest. Sally’s barking quickly turned out to be life saving. Her loud, persistent bark caught the attention of women working at a nearby general store. Curious and concerned, they stepped outside to see what was happening—and spotted Chris lying on the ground, not moving. One of the workers, Renee, immediately called Australia’s emergency number, starting a rapid response that would soon grow into an extraordinary team effort. Around that same time, a driver happened to pass by. He had recently completed a CPR course and stopped right away to help. Then came another remarkable twist of fate. It turned out an off duty paramedic, named Brendan, lived right next door. Renee woke him up, and he rushed over to assist. Brendan helped administer CPR and was even able to provide clot busting medication, something paramedics are trained to give. Soon after, first responders arrived and airlifted Chris to the hospital by helicopter. Doctors later performed surgery to insert stents and open the blocked arteries that had caused the cardiac arrest. Looking back, Chris credits everyone involved, his dog included, for giving him another chance at life. From Sally’s urgent barking, to quick thinking store workers, a passerby trained in CPR, and a paramedic living next door, every piece of the puzzle came together at exactly the right moment. Thanks to that incredible chain of people stepping in to help, Chris survived, and he says he’s doing better than ever. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.kait8.com/2026/03/12/you-just-execute-19-year-old-pilot-safely-makes-emergency-landing-busy-roadway/ https://cbs12.com/news/local/19-year-old-pilot-forced-to-land-small-plane-lost-power-indiantown-road-town-of-jupiter-palm-beach-county-fire-rescue-florida-news https://www.wpbf.com/article/florida-19-year-old-pilot-emergency-landing-jupiter-nico-bray-engine-failure/70645802 https://www.sunnyskyz.com/good-news/6111/-039-I-039-m-Going-Down-For-Sure-039-Quick-Thinking-Truck-Driver-Helps-Teen-Pilot-Land-Safely-On-Busy-Road npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Truck Driver And Teen Make For A Good Landing On Roadway https://www.sunnyskyz.com/uploads/2026/03/ufce9-teen-lands-plane-roadway-good-news.webp An in-air emergency turned into an story of teamwork when a truck driver stepped in to help a teenage pilot safely land a powerless plane on a busy Florida roadway. Nico Bray, the 19-year-old pilot, said he was flying with a friend after taking off from Martin County, and was showing him different parts of north Palm Beach County when he realized the engine started to fail. While flying over Jupiter, his plane lost power, forcing him to make a decision he hoped he would never have to make. Bray, an experienced pilot at just 19 years old, said he trained for moments like this. He tried different troubleshooting methods and then realized he had to land the plane somewhere safe. “It can happen so fast,” he said. “It hit me, like, no, this is real. Like, I actually don’t have any power to climb right now. I need to … I started looking at the ground immediately, to find a spot to land. And once you’re in that position, you just execute,” he said. “I knew I was only about 500 feet off the ground, so I knew I was going down for sure.” Bray said. Bray said he realized nearby coastal road, A1A, would be too tight for a safe landing, so he turned west and set his sights on Indiantown Road, right in the middle of afternoon traffic. “I’ve traveled down this road hundreds of times, and turning it into an airport for the day, it was not what I was expecting to do,” Bray said. As he lowered the plane, he saw a truck driver pull over to flag down traffic, telling other drivers to slow down as the plane was about to land. The driver slowed traffic and helped hold vehicles back, effectively clearing a path for the descending plane. Thanks to that quick thinking, Bray was able to guide the aircraft down safely without anyone being injured. The dramatic landing happened around 2:30 p.m., prompting multiple 911 calls from stunned drivers who watched the unexpected scene unfold. Fire crews were at the scene in less than three minutes. PBCFR provided more information saying that the small, single-engine plane had landed on the westbound lanes of Indiantown Road between Maplewood Road and Pennock Lane. Luckily, the plane did not hit any cars during the landing process. The plane was eventually pushed from the middle of the road into a nearby plaza parking lot, where crews were prepared to load it onto a flatbed truck to be taken away. Based on information from the FlightAware track log, the plane was in the air for less than 17 minutes. The 19-year-old says he earned his commercial pilot license about a year ago and has flown the plane many times before without any problems. After landing safely, Bray says the reality of the moment didn’t hit him until he saw his mom again. “Very grateful for her. She’s funded my dreams of becoming a pilot,” Bray said. “I’m glad to be able to hug her again, for sure.” Bray says the experience won’t stop him from flying. He says becoming a pilot has been his dream since he was five years old. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.sunnyskyz.com/good-news/6112/Father-99-And-Son-80-Finally-Redeem-Decades-Old-Promise-Of-Free-Oysters npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill 50 Year Old Offer Finally Redeemed For The First Time https://www.sunnyskyz.com/uploads/2026/03/maw55-free-oysters-80-and-dad.webp For years, a quirky sign hanging inside a historic oyster house in Mobile, Alabama, promised something unusual: free oysters to any man who turned 80 and walked in with his father. It sounded almost impossible. And for decades, no one had ever claimed it. Until now. Jimmy Rush, who recently celebrated his 80th birthday, walked into Wintzell’s Oyster House with his 99-year-old father, Jim—making them the first known pair to finally cash in on the long standing promise. The moment was especially meaningful for the Rush family, who have deep roots in the area but now live in Florida. Visiting the oyster house has been a family tradition stretching back more than 50 years. “My dad and I started riding in a parade at Mardi Gras on Friday nights,” Jimmy said. “So we would come down here on Friday afternoon and eat oysters. And that started in 1972.” Over the years, the famous sign on the wall became something of a family goal. Jimmy’s brother, Carl, said the idea of someday qualifying for the offer had been talked about for decades. “I can quote by heart, ‘Free oysters, to any man 80 years old, accompanied by his father,’” Carl said. “So in seeing that sign, we felt like our dad was going to make it to 100 because he’s in great health. We’ve been talking about it as a family for 25, 30 years.” When Jimmy finally reached the milestone birthday, the family checked with the restaurant to see if anyone had ever beaten them to it. The answer was no. “We’d asked the bartender had anyone else did it? No one had,” Jimmy said. “So we said, ‘We’ll be the first.’” His father, Jim, proudly added, “We’re the number ones.” The special occasion turned into a big celebration. About 60 family members and friends gathered to mark Jimmy’s 80th birthday, and to watch the restaurant make good on its promise with a dozen free oysters. For Jimmy, it was a milestone he’d been looking forward to for a very specific reason. “Never thought about any birthdays except my 80th,” he said. “That’s the one I was looking forward to, because of the sign.” Jim, now 99, says he’s been fortunate in life. A veteran of both World War II and the Korean War, he shared that he takes no medication and credits his faith for his long and healthy life. “I’ve been very lucky and very well taken care of through my God and it worked out,” Jim said through tears. And the Rush family may not be done making history just yet. Jimmy’s brother Carl turns 80 in two years—and the family already has plans to return. “We will be back to do this all over again October of 2028 when I turn 80,” Carl said. “My dad says he’s going to make it, so that’s good enough for me.” npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://advanced.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/aenm.202505453 https://theconversation.com/how-we-turned-plastic-waste-into-vinegar-a-sunlight-powered-breakthrough-276735 https://www.aol.com/articles/chemical-process-uses-sunlight-turn-200700066.html npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Scientists Use Sunlight To Turn Plastics Into Vinegar https://scitechdaily.com/images/Yimin-Wu-University-of-Waterloo-777x617.jpg Researchers at the University of Waterloo have found a way to use sunlight, and a specially designed catalyst, to turn plastics in water into acetic acid. Dr. Yimin Wu, a professor of mechanical and mechatronics engineering and the Tang Family Chair in New Energy Materials and Sustainability, is the lead author in a study published in the journal Advanced Energy Materials. The study was led by Waterloo PhD student Wei Wei under the guidance of Wu, and co-authored by Roy Brouwer, executive director of the Water Institute. Traditional recycling methods involve melting plastics back into raw forms. This method is inefficient and produces harmful gasses. Instead, the research team developed a method where plastic particles, suspended in water and exposed to sunlight, are broken down into acetic acid with the use of a catalyst. Scientists believe that this approach to plastic waste management is more efficient. More importantly, this new method breaks down microplastics at the chemical level, unlike the incineration process. “Both from a business and societal perspective, the financial and economic benefits associated with this innovation seem promising,” said Brouwer. “This method allows abundant and free solar energy to break down plastic pollution without adding extra carbon dioxide to the atmosphere,” added Wu. “Our goal was to solve the plastic pollution challenge by converting microplastic waste into high-value products using sunlight.” "The inspiration for our research came from nature. The white rot fungus (Phanerochaete chrysosporium) is famous for its ability to break down lignin, one of the toughest polymers found in wood. It does this using enzymes that generate highly reactive chemicals that are capable of dismantling complex carbon structures." "The catalyst we designed is iron-doped carbon nitride, a semiconductor that absorbs visible light. We then anchored individual iron atoms, creating what scientists call a single-atom catalyst." Rather than forming nanoparticles, each iron atom is isolated and embedded within the carbon nitride structure, referred to as Fe@C₃N₄ SAC. This atomic precision is crucial. Each iron atom behaves like an active site in a natural enzyme, maximizing efficiency while maintaining stability. The system works through a cascade of light-driven reactions. Under sunlight and in the presence of hydrogen peroxide, the iron sites activate the peroxide to generate highly reactive hydroxyl radicals. A radical is an atom, molecule or ion that has at least one unpaired electron. This makes them highly chemically reactive. These radicals attack the long carbon chains that make up plastics. The polymers are progressively oxidized and broken down into smaller molecules, eventually forming carbon dioxide (CO₂). Rather than allowing this CO₂ to escape, the same catalyst then performs a second job: it uses sunlight to reduce the CO₂ into acetic acid. In other words, the carbon in plastic waste is first oxidized and then re-assembled into a new, valuable molecule. Acetic acid is best known as the sour component of vinegar, but it is also a major industrial compound. It is used to produce adhesives, coatings, solvents, synthetic fibers and pharmaceuticals. Global demand runs into the millions of tons each year, representing a multi billion dollar market. Currently, most acetic acid is produced through an energy intensive process called methanol carbonylation, whereby methanol is reacted with carbon monoxide at high temperatures. The dispersed atomic structure of the catalyst maximizes active sites for reactions, maintains stability under repeated use, and controls how the chemical transformation proceeds. In lab tests, the catalyst efficiently converted plastic waste into acetic acid over multiple cycles without losing activity, which is a key factor for potential large scale applications. By turning a pollutant into a commodity chemical, the process creates both environmental and economic incentives. Additionally, the use of iron makes the system more scalable and sustainable than methods relying on rare or precious metals. Producing acetic acid directly from waste provides an economic incentive, where plastics are transformed rather than discarded. Unlike conventional chemical recycling, this approach doesn’t rely on high temperatures, harsh solvents, or added energy from fossil fuels. The reactions occur in water under ambient conditions. Researchers found that it not only works on various forms of polymers, such as: polyvinyl chloride (PVC), polypropylene (PP), polyethylene (PE), and polyethylene terephthalate (PET), but that it also works with with mixed compositions of those polymers. Wu and colleagues envision a future where solar powered plastic conversion contributes to a circular economy, reducing environmental harm while generating commercially useful chemicals. The study was supported in part by the Waterloo Institute for Nanotechnology and the Water Institute. Research findings are available online in the journal Wiley Advanced. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.sunnyskyz.com/good-news/6107/Welder-Hailed-As-Highway-Hero-After-Quick-Thinking-Helps-Save-Driver-In-Medical-Crisis npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Welder "Hero" Helps Save Driver In Medical Crisis https://www.sunnyskyz.com/uploads/2026/03/iv02k-hero-saves-car-driver-good-news-1.webp A man in San Antonio is being praised online as a “highway hero” after his quick thinking helped stop a dangerous situation on a busy highway—and may have helped save a life. Rene Villarreal-Albe was driving with his wife when they noticed something alarming: an SUV weaving across lanes and bouncing off a concrete barrier during the busy noon hour. It quickly became clear the driver was in serious trouble. “I just saw somebody that looked like they were in some type of medical condition and it made me feel like I needed to help,” Villarreal-Albe said. “I have good critical thinking and I just thought about it and I decided to just get in front of him and slow him down.” Villarreal-Albe carefully maneuvered his heavy duty truck in front of the out-of-control vehicle and gradually slowed down until both vehicles came to a safe stop—while traffic sped past around them. His wife, Andrea Walker, recorded the intense moment from the passenger seat. “We were in the very far left lane and he was in the lane right next to us and he almost actually ran into us and we slowed down,” Walker said. “When we finally came up to him, he was unconscious and that's when we realized, OK, he's not gonna stop and he could hurt more people, so yeah, we took action.” Once the vehicles stopped, Villarreal-Albe rushed to help the driver. As he began pulling the man from the SUV, another good Samaritan stepped in at exactly the right moment. “A nurse recognized the emergency and stopped to help,” Villarreal-Albe said. “This lady started CPR right away, and he lost color, but he came back and that made it worth it. I've never seen someone being brought back, but it made everything worth it.” Villarreal-Albe believes his truck also played a role in the successful outcome. A welder by trade, he had recently fabricated and installed a heavy duty rear bumper on the vehicle—something he says gave him confidence that he could safely intervene. “I installed that bumper two months ago and it held up very well,” he said. “There's no body damage and I'm happy. I'm satisfied. Even if there was damage it wouldn't matter. He needed help.” Officials later confirmed emergency responders were dispatched for a cardiac arrest. Notes from the call indicate the man was breathing when he left the scene and was transported to the hospital as a Priority One case, meaning the situation could be life threatening. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.sunnyskyz.com/good-news/6108/9-Year-Old-s-Empty-Birthday-Party-Turns-Into-A-Packed-Celebration-Thanks-To-Kind-Strangers npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill 9-Year-Old’s Empty Birthday Party Turns Into A Packed Celebration Thanks To Kind Strangers https://www.sunnyskyz.com/uploads/2026/03/y0l5n-birthday-communtiy-helps-mom-good-news.webp Eisley Marquez had been looking forward to celebrating her 9th birthday. Her mother, Samantha Chamberlain, had put extra care into planning the party this year after missing the celebration last year because of work. Chamberlain said her daughter could hardly wait for the big day. “She was really excited. She was just kind of anticipating, ‘Are you guys going to be done decorating by the time that people get here?’” Chamberlain recalled. But after half an hour passed, the party space remained empty. No guests had arrived. “And I just thought to myself, no, right? Because here I am finally able to make the birthday party and nobody’s here,” Chamberlain said. The moment was especially painful for the mom, who had been so determined to make the day special for her daughter. “I kind of felt like I failed a little bit, and I know that’s not right, but I kind of felt like I failed her,” she said. Instead of letting the day end in disappointment, Chamberlain decided to try something bold. She turned to social media and asked if anyone in the community might want to stop by and help celebrate Eisley’s birthday. What happened next was more than she ever expected. Within a short time, neighbors began showing up—filling the restaurant with people who wanted to make sure the young girl had a birthday to remember. “This place that we’re in right now was full. It was filled with people,” Chamberlain said. “I started thinking, my goodness, if everybody comes, there’s no way that I’m going to be able to afford all of this.” The guests didn’t just bring smiles—they brought presents too. Eisley was thrilled as gifts started piling up. “I got Pokémon cards. I got slime. I got toys,” she said excitedly. Even neighbors who couldn’t attend in person found ways to send birthday surprises. “It was really nice to be able to do that for her, and again, we have a daughter, so I just think about her and I hope that it brought a smile to her face knowing that we’re here,” neighbor Karina Roberts said. By the end of the day, what could have been a sad memory became something far more meaningful—a reminder of how powerful kindness and community can be. And if you ask the birthday girl, the party ended up being better than anyone expected. “I think it went great,” Eisley said with a smile, “maybe a little bit better than great.” npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/he-earns-more-in-an-hour-as-spider-man-than-a-full-day-at-supermarket/ https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cq5y01w02dzo npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Being Spider-man Saves Teen From A Boring Job https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Spider-Man-freelancer-Nate-Frindall-SWNS.jpg (Nate Frindall as Spider-man) Nate Frindall used to have a job in a supermarket, until he gave it up for a side hustle as Spider-man. He started his superhero gig three years ago after he dressed as Spider-man to see the latest film. "When I walked in, someone shouted 'do a flip,'" the 19-year-old said. "I did one, and everyone started clapping." And so he decided, with his parents' encouragement, to turn this impromptu performance into a side hustle as a superhero impersonator. The teenager from Dorking in Surrey invested in an "expensive, custom-made" costume and started working evenings and weekends as Spider-Man. He soon quit his job as he got more pay for one hour as Spider-Man than an eight-hour shift at the supermarket. Of the supermarket job Nate says, "When I got paid at the end of the month, it felt like it wasn't worth what I put in." He continued, "I was not happy there. Time went so slowly." Working at the supermarket checkout he was paid £12.40 an hour, but now, he charges £75 for a 30-minute meet-and-greet and £150 for an hour. Some folks pay £250 for an hour ‘party package’ with games and photos or £300 for a two-hour party. However, he said he can end up working far more hours than before since he now needs to do unpaid promotional work and advertising. "It really does take up a lot of time," Frindall said. “I absolutely love doing it." he continued. "To see these kids really happy that I have made their party, and turned up to surprise them, is great. It has paid off, too, I am booked up for children’s parties every weekend in March. It’s lovely to see kids smile. Because of the realism of the suit, they genuinely think I am Spider-man. So, they get a big shock.” In a commitment to his performances, which involve walking on his hands and back flips, he’s now purchased two more suits. To promote his business, Nate attends lots of local events in costume and gives out his business cards, and he also posts on local Facebook groups. For his long term dreams, Nate works with music on the side, with hopes of becoming a producer, has taken up acting as an extra, and dabbling in comedy with his cousins on TikTok, where they’ve tallied 10,000 followers. He encourages other young people who have business ideas to take a super-hero leap and start their own businesses. “I would 100 percent recommend doing a side hustle or a freelancing gig. Not many people that I know are doing what I’m doing, so if you can find a niche gap in the market then you’re going to get better money for it.” npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/02/260228093508.htm https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/scientists-make-a-super-honey-using-cocoa-bean-waste-for-chocolatey-heart-healthy-jolt/ npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Researchers Create Chocolate-Flavored Honey With Cocoa Bean Shells https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Chocolate-and-honey-Deeliver-vIyCXvSbG8M-unsplash.jpg Researchers at the State University of Campinas (UNICAMP) in São Paulo, Brazil, have created a new product that blends native bee honey with cocoa bean shells. The result can be eaten on its own or added to foods and cosmetic formulations. Researchers who sampled the mixture report a pronounced chocolate flavor that varies depending on the proportion of honey to cocoa shells. Additional testing is planned to further evaluate taste and other sensory characteristics. "Of course, the biggest appeal to the public is the flavor, but our analyses have shown that it has a number of bioactive compounds that make it quite interesting from a nutritional and cosmetic point of view," says Felipe Sanchez Bragagnolo, the study's first author. He carried out the research during his postdoctoral work at the Faculty of Applied Sciences (FCA) at UNICAMP in Limeira with support from FAPESP. To make the product, the team used honey from native bees as a solvent to draw out beneficial compounds from cocoa shells, a byproduct typically discarded during chocolate production. These compounds include theobromine and caffeine, which are linked to heart health. The ultrasound-assisted process also boosted the honey's levels of phenolic compounds, known for their antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects. Native Bee Honey Beyond reducing food waste, the project highlights the sustainable use of local biodiversity. Honey from native Brazilian bees was selected because it generally contains more water and is less viscous than honey from European bees (Apis mellifera), making it more effective for extracting compounds. Mandaguari honey was initially used to refine the extraction process because its water content and viscosity were moderate compared to the others. Once optimized, the same procedure was applied to the remaining honey varieties. Bragagnolo notes that honey is sensitive to environmental factors such as climate, storage, and temperature. "Therefore, it's possible to adapt the process to locally available honey, not necessarily mandaguari honey," he says. Ultrasound Extraction The extraction method relies on ultrasound technology. A probe that resembles a metal pen is inserted into a container holding the honey and cocoa shells. Sound waves generated by the probe help release compounds from the plant material so they dissolve into the honey. This approach works by forming microscopic bubbles that collapse and briefly raise the temperature, helping break down the shells. In the food industry, ultrasound-assisted extraction is viewed as an environmentally friendly technique because it is faster and more efficient than many conventional methods. Sustainability was formally evaluated in the study using Path2Green software, developed by a team led by Professor Mauricio Ariel Rostagno of FCA-UNICAMP, who also supervised Bragagnolo's postdoctoral research and coordinated the project. The analysis measured how well the process aligned with 12 principles of green chemistry, including transportation, post-treatment, purification, and application. The use of a local, edible, ready-to-use solvent was a major advantage. "We believe that with a device like this, in a cooperative or small business that already works with both cocoa and native bee honey, it'd be possible to increase the portfolio with a value-added product, including for haute cuisine," Rostagno suggests. Shelf Life and Future Applications The team is also planning studies to examine how ultrasound affects honey microbiology. Just as it breaks down plant cells, ultrasound can disrupt the cell walls of microorganisms such as bacteria that may spoil the product. "Honey from native bees usually needs to be refrigerated, matured, dehumidified, or pasteurized, unlike honey from European bees, which can be stored at room temperature. We suspect that, simply by being exposed to ultrasound, the microorganisms contained in the honey are eliminated, increasing the stability and shelf life of the product," he explains. Looking ahead, the researchers intend to explore other uses for native bee honey as a solvent in ultrasound-assisted extraction, including processing additional plant residues. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://news.wildlifesos.org/all-you-need-to-know-about-indias-only-elephant-ambulance/ https://news.wildlifesos.org/indias-first-elephant-ambulance-is-on-the-road-to-freedom/ https://news.wildlifesos.org/welcoming-veer-a-tuskers-second-chance/ https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/new-elephant-ambulance-marks-inaugural-rescue-bringing-27-year-old-to-hospital-with-leg-injury/ https://www.eleaid.com/elephant-conservation/street-elephants/ npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Specialized Elephant Ambulance Enables Wildlife SOS to Rescue Injured Elephants https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Elephant-ambulance-on-highway-Credit-Wildlife-SOS-submitted-.jpg (Veer taking a curious peek as he travels to his new home) Veer, a 27 year-old begging elephant from Uttar Pradesh, India, was the most recent beneficiary of Wildlife SOS's specialized elephant ambulance. Begging elephants, also known as street elephants, live and work in an urban environment. The owner or handler makes money by training the elephants to perform tricks, mostly for tourists. They also sell over-priced fruit to passers-by so they may feed the animals. Begging elephants often suffer from burned feet (from hot asphalt), severe dehydration, and untreated wounds and other medical conditions. In Veer's case Wildlife SOS recieved a flood of emails and other messages sent by locals concerned by Veer's owner forcing him to continue working with an obvious and worsening limp. Plans were made to rescue Veer using the elephant ambulance. The transportation of ailing elephants is one of the biggest challenges rescuers face. Wildlife SOS’ elephant rescue project started with the rescue of Champa, a begging elephant, in 2009. Between then and August, 2025, Wildlife SOS have rescued 18 more elephants from conditions of abuse and neglect and given them a better, safer life at their rescue centres in Mathura and Haryana. The road to freedom has been a bumpy one for the rescued pachyderms, the trucks hired for the purpose of transporting these animals from the area of their rescue to safe haven haven’t always been ideal for the journey. The journeys are long and tiresome, the terrain sometimes undulating and hard to navigate. Unpredictable weather conditions only add to the woes of the rescue team trying their best to get these amazing animals safely to their new home. A kind-hearted family from the USA lent a helping hand, offering to sponsor the construction of an ambulance ideal for the transport of elephants across the varied Indian topography and weather. The ambulance includes seating for six people in the driver's cabin, a veterinary cabin, sleeping area for staff, a 50-liter water storage tank, shower heads in the elephant holding area in case there is need to cool the elephant, storage area for fodder, and a hydraulic ramp for safe loading and unloading. The veterinary cabin connects to the holding area of the elephant with a protected contact wall which allows safe administration of medicine without putting the veterinarian, caregiver, or elephant at risk. Rescuing Veer When the rescue team arrived to collect Veer there was a large and growing crowd of interested on-lookers. Realizing that it would be impossible to conduct a proper medical examination on Veer amidst the noisy crowd the team quickly decided to guide Veer directly into the ambulance and enticed him with fruit. A veterinarian, Dr. Rahul, padded Veer's injured leg with sacking, and Veer was secured inside the ambulance. The team quickly made friends with Veer, offering him sugarcane, which he accepted with soft huffs of approval. During multiple days of travel Veer remained relaxed and friendly. The team made multiple stops along the way, to rest in the shade or to purchase fresh food for the elephant. At one point the ambulance became stuck in the mud and while the team figured out how to get the vehicle in motion again Veer enjoyed a long nap on the soft ground, seeming deeply relaxed. When the team veterinarians were finally able to conduct a preliminary assessment of Veer his condition was worse than they had imagined it to be. As per the UPFD’s report, the visible problem in his right front limb was the major issue. There was also a prominent scar on the same elbow joint from an injury that was never properly treated. His gait and posture are abnormal, also because the left forelimb was forced to bear extra weight because of his damaged right leg that was struggling to support him, causing serious inflammation. Additionally, a thermographic evaluation revealed marked inflammation along Veer’s dorsal spinal region. Veer’s forelimbs had remained bound with spiked chains all his life. Since the journey back to the hospital had elongated, the vets felt it best to start treating the septic wounds that had festered due to this. These injuries were extremely painful, and Veer made it known through low grumbles as the antiseptic medication was carefully applied. Veer entered Wildlife SOS’s Elephant Hospital at the Elephant Conservation and Care Center in Mathura, Uttar Pradesh, trunk-first, eager to take in all the new scents. While the expert team of veterinarians developed a medical plan to heal Veer, dedicated caregivers prepared healthy meals to rejuvenate him. The pachyderm will be provided a field with enrichments to explore, encouraging him to revive his natural behaviours such as foraging. Soon after Veer comfortably settles in, target training sessions will gradually follow to allow the staff to interact with the tusker gently and of his own free will. “This rescue represents both urgency and hope,” said Nikki Sharp, executive director of Wildlife SOS USA. “With our new elephant ambulance and expert veterinary team, we are able to respond faster and more safely than ever before.” The organization currently cares for more than 30 rescued elephants at its conservation center, where they receive round-the-clock medical attention, nutritious diets, enrichment, and the opportunity to heal in a protected environment. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/philly-mobile-laundromat-unhoused-people/4359813/ npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Man Uses Mobile Laundromat to Wash Clothes for Homeless https://images2.imgbox.com/b7/2e/b7PT4a45_o.png For Joe Richardson, washing and drying clothes for homeless people in Philadelphia is an experience that helps him deal with his own personal tragedy. Richardson, who began working for his family's laundromat in 2021 after serving 14 years in prison, had his priorities change in 2023 when his 28 year old brother was shot and killed while working as a tow truck driver. The tragic loss made Richardson want to do something more fulfilling, he said. That's when he launched a mobile laundromat, which he said was an idea he first came up with in 2010 while he was incarcerated. "For me, cleaning homeless people's clothes is like second nature," Richardson said. A few hours a week, Richardson drives to neighborhoods and offers to clean the clothes of people living on the street. "I was told by the population of the unfortunate that a lot of people steal their clothes," Richardson said. He parked at Arch and Broad and helped Beatrice. "This man is a superhero," she said of Richardson. The Executive Director of Philadelphia's Office of Homeless Services, Cheryl Hill, said the extra helping hands are always welcome. "Anyone who is trying to provide services is amazing," she said. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://news.stanford.edu/stories/2025/11/type-1-diabetes-cure-research-immune-system-transplant https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/other/a-medical-experiment-cures-type-1-diabetes/ar-AA1XDhPd npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Type-1 Diabetes Cured Without Insulin or Immune Suppression https://news.stanford.edu/__data/assets/image/0031/179383/seung-kim-diabetes.jpg [Stephan Ramos, PhD, Seung K. Kim, MD, PhD, and Preksha Bhagchandani] Seung K. Kim, MD, and professor at Stanford University, is the lead author of a study published in The Journal of Clinical Investigation where Type 1 Diabetes was cured and prevented in mice by his team. Type 1 diabetes arises when the immune system mistakenly destroys insulin producing islet cells in the pancreas. Their approach combines two transplants to restore insulin production without using medications. The discovery could also open a new path for treating autoimmune diseases and improving organ transplants. A combination blood stem cell and pancreatic islet cell transplant, from an immunologically mismatched donor, completely prevented or cured Type 1 diabetes in mice. Consequently, the animals regained normal blood sugar regulation for the entire duration of the study. None of the animals developed "graft versus host" disease, and the destruction of islet cells by the native host immune system was halted. After the transplants, the animals did not require the use of the immune suppressive drugs or insulin for the duration of the six month experiment. “The possibility of translating these findings into humans is very exciting,” said Kim. “The key steps in our study, which result in animals with a hybrid immune system containing cells from both the donor and the recipient, are already being used in the clinic for other conditions. We believe this approach will be transformative for people with Type 1 diabetes, or other autoimmune diseases, as well as for those who need solid organ transplants.” “Just like in human Type 1 diabetes, the diabetes that occurs in these mice results from an immune system that spontaneously attacks the insulin producing beta cells in pancreatic islets,” Kim said. “We need to not only replace the islets that have been lost but also reset the recipient’s immune system to prevent ongoing islet cell destruction. Creating a hybrid immune system accomplishes both goals.” Graduate and medical student Preksha Bhagchandani, and Stephan Ramos, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow and study co-author, added a drug used to treat autoimmune diseases to the pre-transplant regimen the researchers had discovered in 2022. Doing so, then transplanting blood stem cells, resulted in an immune system made up of cells from both the donor and the recipient and prevented development of Type 1 diabetes in 19 out of 19 animals. Additionally, nine out of nine mice that had developed long standing Type 1 diabetes were cured of their disease by the combined blood stem cell and islet transplantation. Because the antibodies, drugs and low-dose radiation the researchers administered to the mice are already used in the clinic for blood stem cell transplantation, the researchers believe that translating the approach to people with Type 1 diabetes is a logical next step. In addition to diabetes, Kim, Judith Shizuru, MD, PhD, and their colleagues expect that the gentler pre-conditioning approach they developed could make stem cell transplants a viable treatment for autoimmune disease such as rheumatoid arthritis and lupus, and non-cancerous blood conditions like sickle cell anemia (for which current blood stem cell transplant methods remain harsh), or for transplants of mismatched solid organs. “The ability to reset the immune system safely to permit durable organ replacement could rapidly lead to great medical advances,” Kim said. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ckgngvr2ye1o https://www.b4-business.com/news/newrotex-takes-new-rd-lab-space-at-the-wood-centre-for-innovation/ npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Silk Could Repair Human Nerves https://images.fineartamerica.com/images-medium-large/golden-orb-weaver-spider-tony-grider.jpg Newrotex, a clinical stage biotech start up, has developed revolutionary implantable silk based medical devices designed to address large gap peripheral nerve injuries. Founded by trauma and orthopedic surgeon, Dr Alex Woods of Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Newrotex is entering a critical phase of clinical and operational scale up. "It acts like a scaffold for nerves to grow along like a rose on a trellis." Woods explains. When a nerve is cut it sprouts a basic scaffold that it tries to regenerate along, but only last about 10 days. "So if that gap is more than 1 cm with nerves regenerating at about 1 mm a day it can't bridge big gaps and breaks down," Woods said. Newrotex’s proprietary nerve repair devices use natural silk fibers produced by Golden Orb Weaver spiders under controlled GMP conditions in the laboratory. The silk has demonstrated biocompatibility, biodegradability, and strong nerve cell affinity. They can be manufactured in varying lengths and diameters, and with room temperature stability. "Except it lasts for 150 days," Woods said. "So now we can allow the nerves to get across the gap." The silk fibers are implanted into a vein or hollow conduit to repair a nerve and eventually degrade into the body. The device enables repair of nerve gaps up to 10cm, which is not currently achievable by anything on the market today. Dr. Woods hopes his silk-based devices could also help treat the nerve injuries caused by surgeons, following mastectomies or prostate cancer surgery. Each year, approximately 1.5 million patients worldwide undergo peripheral nerve injury surgery. Current standard treatments rely on “autografts”, requiring surgeons to remove healthy nerve from elsewhere in the patient’s body, increasing surgical time, morbidity, and cost. "These are huge problems, which are nerve injuries which, right now, struggle to be treated," said Woods. "So there's a really exciting opportunity to take this simple device and open it up to people in all those different specialties." The device is currently undergoing its first study for use in humans. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill I love starting the day with something positive! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ue7RKR3C00 npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://edition.cnn.com/2026/02/09/health/coffee-tea-caffeine-dementia-wellness https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2026/02/drinking-2-3-cups-of-coffee-a-day-tied-to-lower-dementia-risk/ npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Caffeinated Coffee And Tea Could Protect Against Dementia https://image.freepik.com/free-photo/caffeine-structural-chemical-formula-white-background_559531-9429.jpg New research shows that daily caffeinated coffee or tea is associated with better cognitive health in the long term. People having two to three cups of coffee, or one to two cups of tea, a day saw the biggest impact, according to the study published in The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA). Making use of the data of 131,821 people enrolled in the "Nurses’ Health Study and Health Professionals Follow-up Study", senior author Dr. Daniel Wang, assistant professor in the department of nutrition at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston, found that "Coffee drinkers in midlife had about an 18% lower chance of developing dementia later on, while tea drinkers had a 14% lower risk." Wang and the team did not observe the same benefit in decaffeinated options. “When searching for possible dementia prevention tools, we thought something as prevalent as coffee may be a promising dietary intervention, and our unique access to high quality data through studies that have been going on for more than 40 years allowed us to follow through on that idea.” said Wang. Other research has supported the idea that caffeinated coffee can be linked to healthier aging and that caffeinated coffee and tea can lower risk for conditions like heart disease. “While our results are encouraging, it’s important to remember that the effect size is small and there are lots of important ways to protect cognitive function as we age. Our study suggests that caffeinated coffee or tea consumption can be one piece of that puzzle.” Wang added. Coffee and tea contain bioactive ingredients like polyphenols and caffeine, which have emerged as possible neuroprotective factors that reduce inflammation and cellular damage while protecting against cognitive decline. Contrary to several previous studies, higher caffeine intake did not yield negative effects. Instead, it provided similar neuroprotective benefits to the optimal dosage. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Source] https://www.goodgoodgood.co/articles/bolivia-indigenous-communities-protect-amazon-rainforest npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Bolivia's Indigenous Communities Protected Nearly 1 Million Hectares of the Amazon Rainforest https://cdn.prod.website-files.com/5f6cc9cd16d59d990c8fca33/699879c19aa0b5ea78f33997_bolivia-indigenous-communities-local-govts-01.jpg Bolivia has added nearly a million hectares to its protected areas over the last several months, an effort by local governments to link Indigenous territories with nearby national parks and strengthen ecological connectivity. The four new protected areas cover 907,244 hectares (2.2 million acres) of Amazon lowlands and Andean highlands, creating corridors intended to improve wildlife migration and maintain forest-based economies for local families. The effort was led by local officials and Indigenous communities, who planned and approved the protections. “In many cases, the municipalities have now protected more than half their territories, a remarkable commitment that shows how local leadership can deliver durable conservation that strengthens communities and outlasts political cycles,” Eduardo Forno, vice president of Conservation International-Bolivia, which supported the projects, said in a statement. The initiative was also backed by the Andes Amazon Fund, Rainforest Trust, Conservación Amazónica, the Swedish Embassy, and EU. In recent years, Bolivia has had some of the highest deforestation rates in the world, driven by agribusiness, cattle ranching, and fires, among other factors. In 2025, it lost 1.8 million hectares (4.4 million acres), according to Global Forest Watch, a satellite monitoring initiative. The year before that, it lost around 490,000 hectares (1.2 million acres). In the early 2000s, Bolivia made a push to expand nationally protected areas. But since then, efforts have tapered off. In the last five years, only two nationally protected areas have been created or upgraded: El Choré National Park in Santa Cruz department and El Cardón Natural Park, an Integrated Management Area in Tarija. As a result, many conservation groups started looking to local and departmental governments to expand protected areas and meet Bolivia’s goals toward the global 30×30 initiative, in which 30% of the land and water are protected by 2030. Local and Indigenous communities were on board with the idea. Residents in the municipality of Santos Mercado, in the Pando department on the northern border with Brazil, were concerned about deforestation from mining and logging. It was starting to create water scarcity and impact Brazil nut (Bertholletia excelsa) harvests, a staple of the local economy. They created the Guardián Amazónico Pacahuara Integrated Natural Management Area in October 2025, protecting 544,103 hectares (1.3 million acres) of the Amazon. With the designation, the municipality has now protected around 82% of its territory, Conservation International reported. The new management area will help protect the endangered Bolivian river dolphin (Inia boliviensis) and vulnerable harpy eagle (Harpia harpyja), among other species. “That’s where the initiative was born,” Ericka Cortez, president of the Santos Mercado Municipal Council, told Mongabay. “The concern to conserve the environment, to conserve our Amazon, our forest and more than anything: the beauty of our Brazil nut.” There were similar needs in the Mosetén Indigenous Territory, where communities grow cacao, coffee, plantains, and other agricultural products but were also feeling pressure from unplanned settlements and the encroaching agricultural frontier. The 73 communities, located in La Paz department, helped create the Serranías y Cuencas de Palos Blancos Municipal Park and Integrated Natural Management Area, spanning 88,006 hectares (217,467 acres). The management area, officially established in January, sits next to the Indigenous territory and is designed to help protect freshwater sources like rivers and streams needed for agriculture, which can only survive if the forest remains standing. In October, local officials also established the 191,310-hectare (472,737-acre) Los Palmares de Villa Nueva Integrated Natural Management Area in Pando department, home to the endangered giant otter (Pteronura brasiliensis). The area was similarly under threat from settlements and agribusiness. And that same month, local communities established the 83,825-hectare (207,136-acre) Gran Paitití Municipal Park and Integrated Natural Management Area in the municipality of Mapiri in La Paz department. The area is known for illegal gold mining that has occasionally led to violent clashes with authorities. Deforestation and pollution from mercury are common in the municipality, Mongabay has previously reported. With the creation of the management area, around 56% of the municipality is now protected, Conservation International said. The area is also designed to act as a migration corridor between Madidi National Park and Cotapata National Park. It’s home to critically endangered endemic frogs like the Telmatobius verrucosus and Allobates mcdiarmidi and endangered glass frogs like the Nymphargus bejaranoi and N. pluvialis. Forno explained to Mongabay that the goal is to create a conservation “mosaic,” connecting multiple protected areas where human population density is low and biodiversity rates are high. “There are large areas that aren’t very populated,” Forno said. “Those areas have normally been linked to high biodiversity, especially in the northwest Bolivian Amazon, on the border with Peru and Brazil.” Moving forward, Forno said local jurisdictions have very limited resources and will need to look for long-term financing to ensure the integrity of the new protected areas, possibly through debt-for-nature swaps and protected area permanence programs. The protected areas will also rely on the revenue generated from sustainable development projects for Brazil nuts, açaí, fishing, and other commodities. For the Guardián Amazónico Pacahuara Integrated Natural Management Area, Cruz told Mongabay that a management committee made up of government officials, the private sector, and civil society groups is being developed. The committee is also developing a reforestation plan. “[The goal] is to have sustainable management within these places, and thus conserve our Amazon,” she said. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/ecology-and-evolution/articles/10.3389/fevo.2026.1724595/full https://www.frontiersin.org/news/2026/02/27/fossil-amber-secret-lives-cretaceous-ants-frontiers-ecology-evolution https://scienceblog.com/cretaceous-amber-preserves-99-million-year-old-ant-interactions-with-mites-and-spiders/ npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Cretaceous Amber Reveals Insect Relationships https://scienceblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/amber-with-cretaceous-ants-561x421.jpg Scientists in Spain analyzed six key samples of amber, containing extinct insects, to try to learn more about the ants that lived in the Cretaceous period. “Amber inclusions are representative of possible interactions between different organisms shaping the environment,” explained Dr Jose de la Fuente of the Institute for Game and Wildlife Research, Spain, lead author of the article in Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. The six pieces he and colleague, Agustín Estrada-Peña, studied span several key periods of time. Four pieces from Myamar's Hukawng Valley are from the Cretaceous Period, (99 million years ago). One piece of Baltic amber from Poland is from the Eocene Period, (40–55 million years ago). Another piece from the Dominican Republic is from the Oligocene Period (23–34 million years ago). Each contains ants alongside other organisms. This phenomenon is very rare, and referred to as "syninclusion" by palaeontologists. Ants were the focus precisely because they are, and probably always have been, so ecologically central by aerating soil, dispersing seeds, predating or being predated upon, and locked into relationships with hundreds of other species. The trouble with amber taphonomy (the study of how organisms end up preserved) is that proximity doesn’t guarantee interaction. A spider and an ant might share a piece of resin because one was hunting the other, or because both landed in the same patch of tree sap within minutes of each other through sheer bad luck. De la Fuente and Estrada-Peña tried to distinguish these scenarios by measuring the distances between organisms and cross referencing with published evidence of known ecological relationships. The earliest ants are known as Stem ants. Although they didn’t leave modern descendants, Hell ants are suspected to have evolved from them. These two, along with Crown ants, which all ants alive today evolved from, were found in the amber samples. Three of their six cases involved ants near mites, and these are perhaps the most compelling. Hitching a ride on a larger animal (phoresy) is well documented in living mites. Some modern mites that are associated with ants are mutualists (cleaning their hosts in exchange for transport), while others are parasites. In Case 1 (Baltic amber), a Crown ant was found with two mites of the family Glycyphagidae at 1.9 and 3.7 millimetres distance, alongside a wasp, an oak flower and some moss. The Glycyphagidae found in Case 1 appear consistent with the phoretic interpretation, possibly riding the ant to reach new food sources. Whether the relationship was beneficial or damaging to the ant is another matter; without micro-CT imaging to look for attachment structures on the mites, the paper stops short of a firm conclusion. In Case 4 (Burmese amber), a Stem ant lay about 4.4 mm from a mite showing a sclerotised body, consistent with a mobile, phoretic life stage. “The proposed ant-mite interactions in Case 4 may reflect two possible scenarios.” de la Fuente says. “First, a commensal specialized temporal relationship where mites attach to ants for free ride dispersal to new habitats. Second, a parasitism when mites feed on the ant host during transport.” Case 6 contains a Stem ant with its body curved backward, mandibles pressed against what looks like a worm or perhaps a neuropteran larva. The ant appears to be of the genus Gerontoformica (or close to it), which is part of the early eusocial lineages that preceded a diversification of ants in the later Cretaceous. Its body posture, with mandibles apparently in contact with substrate, suggests active foraging or scavenging behavior. A nearby spider, about 4 mm in compact body length, likely belonged to the Gnaphosidae family. This family of ground dwelling hunting spiders whose members today sometimes mimic ants to avoid being eaten by other predators, or to infiltrate ant colonies. It is unclear whether this long dead spider was doing something similar; using proximity to the ant as camouflage rather than fleeing from it. The Hell ant in Case 3 adds another layer entirely. Hell ants (Haidomyrmecinae) are among the strangest extinct insects we know of: their forward-projecting scythe-like mandibles bear no resemblance to any living ant, and they were probably specialized predators. This one was preserved alongside a land snail, a millipede, and two poorly preserved insects. A Hell ant eating a snail seems possible. Ants today prey on mollusks in some circumstances. But the distances between the organisms in Case 3 are larger, and de la Fuente’s team treats these as likely coincidences rather than evidence of interaction. That caution is probably right. “The closest ant syninclusions are more likely to reflect behavior and interactions between these organisms,” de la Fuente says, but the researchers are explicit that distance alone cannot determine what was happening. Amber distorts as it fossilizes, compressing three dimensional relationships into something harder to read. What looks like intimate proximity might reflect different moments in time, and what looks like coincidental clustering might have been deliberate. “The identification and morphological characterization of fossil ants in amber with other inclusions of insects provides a snapshot of life on Earth millions of years ago,” de la Fuente says. “To improve the analysis of interactions between different organisms in fossil amber inclusions, future research should use advanced imaging techniques,” said de la Fuente. “Nevertheless, these results provide evidence of insect behavior and ecological habits.” Micro-CT scanning can render the spatial relationships between organisms in three dimensions, potentially revealing whether mites have the sclerotised attachment structures they’d need to cling to a moving ant. Z-stack imaging can build up layered composite pictures of partially obscured inclusions. These techniques are already transforming what’s possible with amber paleontology. A 2024 study on termites used CT scanning to confirm that ancient termite colonies preserved in amber reflected genuine social group behavior, rather than accidental clustering. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.newsnationnow.com/good-news/good-samaritan-rescues-baby-belmont-harbor/ https://www.uppermichiganssource.com/2026/02/23/man-jumps-into-lake-save-baby-after-gust-wind-blows-stroller-into-water/ npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Baby Saved After Winds Blow Stroller Into Lake Michigan https://faithpot.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/man-saves-baby-from-lake-michigan.jpg Lio Cundiff was nearby and on the phone with his aunt, when he noticed the wind picked up, and then everything unfolded. He realized what had happened and jumped into the water to help rescue the baby. “I see a stroller getting blown into the lake and a lady screaming,” said Cundiff, speaking from his hospital bed following the harrowing rescue. “I wasn’t going to let that baby die.” “I’m just glad the stroller was up and not face down. The baby dipped under a couple times, but I was able to keep her up,” Cundiff said. According to Chicago police, the stroller fell into the water at around 3 p.m. “I was the only one in the water. Another guy came down the ladder to get the stroller out, and the mom kind of helped as well on the ladder, and then once we got the baby out I was able to get myself out. She was breathing and crying when we got her out,” Cundiff said. Emergency crews responded to the scene and Cundiff and the baby were already out of the water by the time they arrived. Police said the baby was taken to the hospital for observation, and she was initially listed in good condition. Cundiff had been enjoying the nice weather before going to work. Needless to say, he called his boss while in the ambulance. “Yeah, I called work, called my girlfriend. My aunt was on the phone. She heard the whole thing. I just threw my phone down and I guess she called my mom. I was just trying to make sure they all knew I was fine and the baby was good.” Cundiff said. “I hope she has a really cool future, and I’m happy I was there,” Cundiff said. He said he was in the hospital for heart monitoring and hoped to be released after staying the night. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-026-69384-2 https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/The-Tofu-Brine-Battery-That-Could-End-the-Lithium-Era.html https://interestingengineering.com/energy/chinas-water-battery-outlast-lithium https://techxplore.com/news/2026-02-eco-friendly-battery-theoretically-centuries.html npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Tofu Brine For Batteries https://thoseveganchefs.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/soft-tofu-in-brine-1024x639.jpg Researchers from the City University of Hong Kong and Southern University of Science and Technology in Shenzhen, Guangdong have developed a new form of battery that is more eco-friendly and longer lasting than lithium ion batteries, and it can run on tofu brine. This water-based (also called aqueous) battery is neither acidic, alkaline, nor flammable. Lithium-ion batteries are notoriously highly flammable if damaged and can experience thermal runaway. They are also very hazardous to the environment in terms of waste handling. "The full cells are environmentally benign and nontoxic and can be directly discarded to environments according to various standards." the research abstract states. “Compared with current aqueous battery systems our system delivers exceptional long-term cycling stability and environmental friendliness under neutral conditions,” the research team said in a paper published February 2026 in Nature Communications. Standard batteries often fail after a few hundred or a few thousand charges, but this new version remained stable for 120,000 charge cycles. To put that in perspective, if you charged your phone once a day with this type of battery, it would theoretically last for over 300 years. “At over a hundred thousand cycles, this could mean a single water-based battery could last at least a decade or so. For applications like grid storage (solar farms, wind balancing), that’s extremely valuable.” the report went on to say. The scientists replaced traditional acids and alkalis with neutral salts of magnesium and calcium to create the electrolyte. These are the same minerals used as brine in tofu production. Keeping this liquid at a neutral pH of 7.0 prevents the type of corrosive reactions that can destroy a battery from the inside out. To complete the battery design, they replaced the negative electrode, which is often made of metal based materials, with a special material they engineered from covalent organic polymers (COPs). They made three of these structures and selected one named Hex TADD COP. It is built with electron-donating chemical links that make it more conductive. The researchers paired this with a positive electrode made of Prussian blue analog, a material commonly used as a blue pigment in paints. The battery held a significant amount of power for its weight. It reached an energy capacity of 112.8 mAh/g, which is a high score for an aqueous organic battery. Aqueous batteries can be potentially cheap to produce as they rely on ingredients that are less rare in addition to being less hazardous. Currently, China alone controls half of the global lithium market, and is rapidly increasing its stake. In 2024, more than eight in ten battery cells on the planet were made in China. North American demand will reach 250,000 tons of Lithium Carbonate Equivalent by next year. If this new technology can perform reliably outside of lab conditions, is energy-dense enough to complete, and can prove cheap at an industrial scale, the world of energy storage may go through a large shift for renewable grid buffering and rural electrification projects. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.today.com/food/people/refugee-learning-english-brings-food-for-class-rcna245635 npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Syrian English Student Feeds Classmates Every Week https://images2.imgbox.com/9c/8f/562j9zLk_o.jpg 69-year-old Syrian, Hazaa Alabdullah hands out sandwiches, chips, vegetables, and more, to other students in his class each week. “... every week this student brings in food for the whole class,” said Shrea Kumar, a volunteer teacher at Community Refugee and Immigration Services (CRIS) in Ohio. “He really helps all the students start talking more and interacts with them,” Zin Min, Alabdullah’s teacher, said. “He makes the class lively and fun, and the class wouldn’t be the same without him.” Kumar says, “It shows how good humanity can be.”, adding that Alabdullah lifts the spirits of other students in his class. Alabdullah, who emigrated to Ohio four years ago with his wife and four of his six children, says serving others like his classmates is just part of who he is. “This is my home,” Alabdullah says. “We are one family. When I bring something, in my heart, I’m very happy.” As Alabdullah speaks, there’s an American flag hanging behind him. Min says he bought it for July Fourth, along with fresh fruit and vegetable for the class. Sharing a story about being a 13-year-old boy in Syria, Alabdullah says he’s come full circle now that he’s in the U.S. “Neil Armstrong stood on the moon, you remember?” he asks, adding that he listened to the 1969 broadcast over a radio in his village. Wanting to see a picture of the history making moment, he searched around town for weeks. Six months later, he got to view a black and white image of Armstrong landing on the moon. “Now, I’m here in Ohio, I go visit his museum,” Alabdullah says of his trip to the Armstrong Air & Space Museum in Wapakoneta, Ohio. “I took a picture together with Armstrong. This is my dream.” npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.today.com/food/people/crock-sells-for-32k-auction-rcna257559 npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Woman Hoped To Sell Crock Pot for $300, And Found Out It Is Worth Much More https://images2.imgbox.com/ba/98/Yfg67b35_o.jpeg 91 year old Lois Jurgens, of Holdredge, Nebraska, was downsizing and trying to figure out the best way to get rid of a 30 gallon crock pot. The Red Wing Stoneware crock had been used as a table next to her grill. Vicki Stepanich, Jurgens' daughter, explained, “They kind of used it as a little table because it was right next to the grill.”. Stepanich adds, “They would have the extra tank of propane in the crock as well. Now the crock was there, but it was just too heavy to move, but we talked about it on two different occasions of putting it on a yard sale.” Everyone involved says the crock sat heavy and stagnant, while various family members discussed selling it for as little as $20 or $100. When Jurgens saw the ad for a local auction, she called Ken Bramer, owner of Bramer Auction and Realty. “I told her, we’re pretty full,” Bramer remembers, adding that the catalog and advertising had already gone out, but he eventually relented. “She’s a sweet lady, and she was telling me about a little bit more, so I said, ‘One more crocks not going to hurt.’” Even at auction, the family thought they would get much less for it than it sold for. “We were hoping for maybe $300,” Jurgens says. “Usually you could buy a lot of crocks for a couple hundred,” Bramer says, adding that when he told Jurgens that it sold for $32,000 to an anonymous collector in Kansas, “She kind of went weak in the knees.” Luckily, his wife was standing next to her at the time and helped her to a seat. Bramer says crocks usually sell for much less, but due to a variety of factors, Jurgen’s crock sold for exponentially more. What made this one so special is that it has two maker stamps (while some crocks have none), the “elephant ears” on the handles, its telltale salt glaze, and fine condition. “You just can’t imagine that something that’s been sitting on the back porch for almost 30 years brought that kind of money,” Vicki Stepanich said. “So it is just kind of shocking.” “I can’t remember seeing it growing up,” Stepanich says, theorizing that it must have come a farm the family moved from many years ago. “I’m sure it was my grandfather’s or even his parents’. It’s been in the family for two, three generations.” A crock is a type of stoneware container used for food storage that comes in a bevy of sizes. Smaller ones are typically the size of Mason jars, while larger ones can be 20 to 30 gallons. “Back in the 1800s, a lot of people bought crocks, and they put them in their cellars and it’d be like a refrigerator.” said Bramer. He added that the containers were used for various perishable items, like vegetables or meat, which were then covered with a layer of lard to keep air from spoiling its contents. “When they needed a piece of meat, they’d go dig the lard off and grab a piece of salt pork and bring it up and cook,” he adds. “A lot of times they would put sand in there with their carrots and their potatoes to keep them in the cellar.” Jurgens commented, “A lot of these, that people inherited through the years, they use them for planting flowers. That really isn’t the best thing to do.” When discussing what the money might be spent on, Stepanich said “Well, it’s gonna go to the church partly, and then I don’t know from then on.”, then adds with a laugh, “It won’t take long to get rid of it all.” Jurgens' grocery trips have been taking much longer due to her newfound fame. “My name has been changed to Crock Lady,” she wrote. “It’s been a fun and interesting three weeks.” npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Thank you everyone that followed today! This is a project that I have attempted in years past a couple of times. The concept behind it is something I feel very strongly about. I put a good amount of work into re-writing and editing the stories I post, to make sure they don't include speculation, have accurate details, and are readable. One thing I didn't have to deal with in the past was editing text written by LLMs. They're good at misusing punctuation, making sentences with several breaks in thought, and putting hyphens and em dashes all over the place. I do my best to include actual photos of the subject instead of stock photos, and provide links to the source articles I used to distill material into the final post. Originally, I planned on starting out small, just a note or three per day. However, today seemed like a day that was in great need of positive news, so I went "all out", and spent most of the day editing and posting. It was a blast! I'm hoping to provide stories each day, and hopefully several times a day. Who knows, maybe on weekends I can make one post per hour, like I did today. I thought this project would take days or weeks before anyone decided to share with others, and was happily surprised to see all of your reactions, zaps, comments, and re-posts. THANK YOU SO MUCH!!! The reward of your responses was not something I thought about, and it really encourages me to continue. Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.sciepublish.com/article/pii/877 https://techxplore.com/news/2026-02-trash-takeoff-kg-sustainable-aviation.html https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1369527426000196 npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Waste Gases To Be Used As Aviation Fuel https://scx1.b-cdn.net/csz/news/800a/2026/krict-demonstrates-100-1.jpg [Facility for Converting Landfill Gas into Syngas (CO and H₂) Suitable for SAF Production] The international community is expanding mandatory use of Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF), which is produced from organic waste or biomass. However, high production costs remain a major challenge. A research team led by Dr. Yun-Jo Lee at the Korea Research Institute of Chemical Technology (KRICT), in collaboration with EN2CORE Technology Co., Ltd., has successfully demonstrated an integrated process that converts landfill gas generated from organic waste, such as food waste, into aviation fuel. Currently, the refining industry mainly produces SAF from used cooking oil. However, used cooking oil is limited in supply and is also used for other applications such as biodiesel, making it relatively expensive and difficult to secure in large quantities. In contrast, landfill or sewage gases, generated from food waste and livestock manure, is abundant and inexpensive. The two challenges in this process are purifying the gas, to obtain suitable intermediates, and converting those intermediates into liquid. The research team addressed these challenges by developing an integrated process encompassing landfill gas pretreatment, Syngas production, and catalytic conversion of Syngas into liquid fuels. EN2CORE Technology was responsible for the upstream processes. Landfill gas collected from waste disposal sites is desulfurized and treated using membrane-based separation. The purified gas is then converted into "Synthesis Gas", which contains carbon monoxide and hydrogen, using a proprietary plasma reforming reactor. KRICT applies the Fischer–Tropsch process to convert Syngas into liquid fuels. In this process, hydrogen and carbon react on a catalyst surface to form hydrocarbon chains. Hydrocarbons of appropriate chain length become liquid fuels, while longer chains form solid byproducts such as wax. By employing zeolite, and cobalt based catalysts, KRICT significantly improved selectivity toward liquid fuels rather than solid byproducts. A key innovation of this work is the application of a microchannel reactor. Excessive heat generation during aviation fuel synthesis can damage catalysts and reduce process stability. The microchannel reactor developed by the team features alternating layers of catalyst and coolant channels, enabling rapid heat removal and suppression of thermal runaway. Through integrated and modular design, the reactor volume was reduced by up to one-tenth compared to conventional systems. Production capacity can be expanded simply by adding modules. For demonstration purposes, the team constructed an integrated pilot facility on a landfill site in Dalseong-gun, Daegu. The facility, approximately 100 square meters in size and comparable to a two-story house, successfully produced 100 kg of sustainable aviation fuel per day. This achieves a liquid fuel selectivity exceeding 75%. The team is currently optimizing long term operation conditions, and further enhancing catalyst and reactor performance. This achievement shows that aviation fuel production, previously limited to large scale centralized plants, can be realized at local landfills or small waste treatment facilities. The technology is therefore expected to contribute to the establishment of decentralized SAF production systems and strengthen the competitiveness of Korea's SAF industry. KRICT President, Young-Kuk Lee, stated that the technology has strong potential to become a representative solution capable of achieving a circular economy. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://news.mongabay.com/2026/02/seagrass-restoration-in-malaysia-finds-multi-species-approach-boosts-recovery/ npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Seagrass Restoration in Malaysia Boosts Species Recovery https://apicms.thestar.com.my/uploads/images/2024/03/21/2603104.jpg Just over a decade ago, the wafting seagrass meadow in the shallow waters off Johor Bahru’s rapidly urbanizing shoreline, had been laid waste by development. In 2014, dredgers working on a massive land reclamation project to build a “Forest City” at the tip of the peninsula had dispersed plumes of sediment across the Merambong Shoal, one of Malaysia’s most extensive seagrass beds. Seagrasses, distinct from seaweeds, are flowering plants that form vibrant underwater meadows. Filtering pollutants, cycling nutrients, sequestering carbon and providing habitat for a rich diversity of marine life, they help maintain the health of coastal seas. To rectify the situation, the developer, Country Garden Pacificview Sdn. Bhd., ramped up mitigation measures and enlisted the help of marine scientists at the University of Putra Malaysia (UPM) to attempt recovering the seagrass. In a new study, the UPM researchers document the results of their decade-long seagrass restoration and monitoring program at the Merambong Shoal. Their approach, which focused on transplanting seedlings of a combination of fast-growing seagrass species, achieved relatively high survival rates of 66% in some recovery plots. What’s more, as the meadow stabilized, they recorded the natural return of many other types of seagrasses and a boost in animal communities. “We found four new species records in that particular area, and our colleagues recorded more than 100 species of invertebrates,” Muta Harah Zakaria, a researcher at UPM and lead author of the study, reported. At the Merambong Shoal, Zakaria and her colleagues had studied the local seagrasses since 1999. Therefore, they had deep knowledge of the biology of the species and had also trialed a range of planting techniques prior to embarking on their program in earnest. “Studying the biology is very important,” Zakaria said. “If you understand the biology of the species, how they grow, how they adapt to the environment, then you can transplant them well. We cultured seagrass in our laboratory until we were very confident.” The team also observed how different species grew naturally in the Merambong Shoal. They noticed a tall and wide-leaved species called Enhalus acoroides flourished around the edges of seagrass patches, while smaller and rapidly spreading species belonging to the genus Halophila tended to thrive in the middle of swards. “When the Enhalus is established, the smaller [Halophila] species come in to grow together under its canopy,” Zakaria said. “So we realized we’d better plant the bigger seagrasses first, then we could mix in the smaller Halophila species.” Primed with this information, Zakaria and her colleagues decided to transplant seedlings of four species in total: Enhalus acoroides, and three types of Halophila; collecting their seeds from healthy parts of the Merambong Shoal and germinating them in a laboratory tank. In total, they planted 8,591 seedlings across 324 square-meter (3,487 square-foot) recovery plots. First, the larger Enhalus acoroides, whose dense and deep-root systems helped to quickly stabilize barren sandy areas. This was followed by Halophila ovalis, H. major and H. spinulosa. While the damaged area is yet to return to its former richness, monitoring of the seedlings’ growth and survival between 2015 and 2024 revealed nine seagrass species had naturally colonized the recovery plots, creating a diverse sward of 13 of Malaysia’s 17 seagrass species. The high survival rates and returning diversity indicate that transplanting seedlings from a mix of species can offer an “affordable and ecologically sustainable” strategy, the study says, particularly at relatively sheltered sites where projects have access to ex situ tanks in which to cultivate seedlings. As a result, Peninsular Malaysia is seeing a sign of recovery with a busy assemblage of crabs, marine worms, and mollusks. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41730106/ https://www.popsci.com/science/earliest-human-writing-germany/ https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cvgknj7yyv2o https://archaeology.org/news/2026/02/27/computer-study-tracks-paleolithic-marks-and-symbols/ https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1117179 https://www.erc-evine.de/ npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Human Writing Is Potentially 40,000 Years Older Than Previously Thought https://static.wixstatic.com/media/a06f21_982fd4df7c7549478439b0cf8d756a76~mv2.jpg New evidence published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences indicates humans experimented with symbolic writing as much as 40,000 years ago. If true, the discoveries dramatically recontextualize the history of communication, given the previously earliest known written languages are Mesopotamian proto-cuneiforms dating back to around 3000 BCE. Linguist Christian Bentz, from Germany’s Saarland University, and archaeologist Ewa Dutkiewicz, from Berlin’s Museum of Prehistory and Early History, have analyzed a corpus of 260 mobile objects from a 43,000 to 34,000 year old Aurignacian culture-associated with the first modern humans to settle in Central Europe. These relics were recovered from cave sites in the Swabian Jura, a remote mountain range located in southwestern Germany. They include a small mammoth figurine carved from the extinct animal’s tusk along with the Adorant, a famous ivory carving that appears to depict a human-lion figure with outstretched arms. These, and many other similar artifacts, also feature frequently repeating sequences of lines, crosses, dots, and notches. The objects are adorned with over 3,000 geometric signs, in total. These symbols were entered into a Stone Age sign database, and examined them using various computational analysis tools. They didn’t expect to translate any of the messages, but instead used the analysis to compare and contrast their attributes with writing systems that developed later. Classification algorithms and statistical models were applied to capture their quantitative properties. As a result, it has been determined that they are comparable to sign sequences on the earliest protocuneiform tablets. Also, Paleolithic signs were systematically applied to yield higher information density on certain types of objects, e.g. ivory figurines compared to tools. This proves that the early hunter-gatherers in Europe already applied sign sequences of comparable complexity to protocuneiform in a deliberate, systematic, and conventional manner roughly ten thousand years before the advent of known genuine writing. “There are plenty of theories, but until now there has been very little empirical work carried out on the basic, measurable characteristics of the signs,” said Bentz. The work suggests that Stone Age people were as clever as modern-day humans, according to Dutkiewicz. The results surprised researchers. Although they initially theorized the proto-cuneiform would share more similarities to present-day writing systems, it seems that the Mesopotamian communication method looks more like its Stone Age ancestors. This means that writing may have changed very little for tens of thousands of years. The precise meaning of the symbols remains a mystery. The research is a part of the project 'The Evolution of Visual Information Encoding' (EVINE, link in "Sources" note, below), which is being funded by an ERC Starting Grant from the European Research Council. Professor Christian Bentz joined Saarland University in 2025 and leads the EVINE research project. The project first began at the University of Tübingen and was then continued at the University of Passau at the Chair of Multilingual Computational Linguistics. Professor Bentz and Dr. Dutkiewicz examine how visual information encoding developed from the earliest signs to the writing of today. The duo documents their hunt on their YouTube channel. https://www.youtube.com/@StoneAgeSigns npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.onlygoodnewsdaily.com/post/japanese-man-donates-gold-to-help-fix-osaka-s-water-pipes https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/feb/20/osaka-stunned-by-anonymous-gift-of-36m-in-gold-to-fix-ageing-water-pipes npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Gold Bars Donated Anonymously To Help Fix Osaka's Water Pipes https://static.wixstatic.com/media/a06f21_bc6942fd384c4821a3471281fcf3a600~mv2.jpg The gold bars, weighing a total of 21 kg (46 lbs), were given to the Osaka City Waterworks Bureau in November by a anonymous donor who wants to help improve aging water pipes, mayor Hideyuki Yokoyama told reporters. Sealed in protective polythene, 21 kilograms of gold bars arrived at the city office, prompting the mayor to announce, “It’s a staggering amount and I was speechless,” adding that "tackling aging water pipes requires a huge investment, and I cannot thank enough for the donation.” Osaka is Japan’s third largest city, with 2.8 million people. Although most of Japan's public infrastructure was built during the rapid postwar economic growth, Osaka's urban development started earlier. Its 160 miles (260 km) of water pipes are in need of replacement, according to the city’s waterworks official, Eiji Kotani. Renewing a 1.2 mile segment would cost about 500 m yen, Kotani said, adding that Osaka had 92 cases of water pipe leaks under city roads in the fiscal year ending March 2025. Concern over the safety of Japan’s waterworks systems grew after a truck fell into a sinkhole last year, killing the driver. It was linked to a damaged sewer in Saitama, north of Tokyo. Gold has experienced a historic surge over the past 12 months, with prices increasing by approximately 75 percent as of February 2026. That makes the 21 kilograms of donated gold worth around 560 million yen, or $3.6 million. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.sunnyskyz.com/good-news/6096/-039-As-Far-As-The-Eye-Can-See-039-Mother-Daughter-Duo-Discovers-Massive-Coral-Colony-On-Great-Barrier-Reef https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-02-26/citizen-scientists-discover-great-barrier-reef-coral-colony/106386786 https://citizensgbr.org/blogs/largest-coral Citizens Of The Reef https://citizensgbr.org/ npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Mother-Daughter Duo Discovers Massive Coral Colony On Great Barrier Reef https://reeflifesurvey.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/IMG_0015.jpg A routine dive turned into a record breaking moment for a mother and daughter exploring Australia’s Great Barrier Reef. Sophie Kalkowski-Pope and her mum, Jan Pope, were diving offshore from Cairns while participating in "Citizens of the Reef’s Great Reef Census" when they stumbled upon something extraordinary. A coral reef that scientists believe may be the largest coral colony ever recorded on the reef, and "possibly the largest in the world." Stretching 111 meters long, the massive Pavona clavus coral colony covers an estimated 3,971 square meters; roughly the size of a football field. It is currently the largest documented and mapped coral colony in the world today. “It’s just these meadows of rippling coral as far as the eye can see,” Kalkowski-Pope said. To put the size into perspective, she noted that other contenders for the world’s largest recorded corals include one off the Solomon Islands measuring 34 meters along its longest edge, and another in Nusa Penida that spans 71 meters across. “I knew right from the minute we dropped in that it was something special,” said Sophie Kalkowski-Pope. “When I got in the water, I’d never seen coral growing like this before,” said Jan Pope. “It looked like a meadow of coral. It just went on and on.” The site is characterized by strong tidal currents and comparatively low cyclonic wave exposure. Scientists are now examining these environmental conditions to better understand how such a large coral structure has persisted. The discovery has been passed along to the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, which will oversee its monitoring and management. The Australian Institute of Marine Science praised the find, with research scientist Mike Emslie estimating the coral colony to be “at least” a couple of hundred years old. That means this underwater giant has probably existed for centuries. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.sunnyskyz.com/good-news/6093/Chicago-Mailman-Sings-To-Grandma-Who-Lost-Her-Husband-Receives-An-Unexpected-Blessing npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Making Others Happy Brings Rewards https://img.youtube.com/vi/NvwpNxnQLtU/0.jpg Lavonte Harvey, a mail carrier known on his route for singing as he works, had no idea that one heartfelt gesture would change his life. In doorbell camera footage that’s now been viewed around the world, Harvey walks up to a home and says warmly, “This is for you, Grandma,” before launching into a song. The performance was meant to brighten the day of a grandmother who had recently lost her husband of 50 years. The song lifted her spirits so much that she shared the video with her granddaughter, Whitney Cumbo, who decided to post it online. She added a touching caption over the video, “My grandmother lost her husband of 50 years, and the mail man is her daily dose of life. You are appreciated.” Within two weeks of being posted, the clip racked up millions of views and over 10,000 comments. What started as a simple act of kindness quickly became a viral sensation. “I didn’t expect for it to go viral,” Harvey said, explaining that singing is something he regularly does along his route. “For me, singing isn’t just music,” he said. “It’s about ministry, it’s about spreading hope and joy.” Harvey thanked Cumbo and her family for sharing the video and supporting him after the attention poured in. The family even helped launch an online fundraiser that allowed him to purchase a new car. “I love you guys so much. It’s because of you so many doors have been open for me that I’ve only dreamed of,” Harvey said during an interview. “There are not enough thank-you’s in this world that I can honestly say, or give you guys. Just know that you have my heart, and I will always be here.” Since the video went viral, Harvey says he’s stayed in regular contact with the family, and that his life has been transformed by a moment that began with a simple goal: to lift someone’s spirits. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.positive.news/society/regenerative-agriculture-sows-success-in-kenya/ https://www.brightwire.news/article/kenya-farmers-triple-yields-with-regenerative-agriculture npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Regenerative Agriculture Success in Kenya https://www.positive.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/RS25698_Godfrey-Kirimi-displays-tomoatoes-from-his-farm-in-Tharaka-Nithi.-Photo-credit-Farm-Africa-Bertha-Lutome-740x492-c-center.jpg Kenyan farmers are celebrating dramatic harvest increases after switching to regenerative farming methods. A grassroots program has boosted crop yields by up to 81% while having other benefits to the ecosystem and community. Strengthening Regenerative Agriculture in Kenya (STRAK) aims to boost rural livelihoods, and has supported 60,000 farmers since 2017. The initiative upskills local farmers in regenerative techniques. They are then tasked with sharing their newfound knowledge within their communities. More than 70% of participating farmers in Kenya’s Embu and Tharaka Nithi counties have adopted methods such as intercropping, agro-forestry, crop rotation and use of farmyard manure instead of chemicals. Aside from the 81% higher yields, there has been a 92% improvement in water retention. Meanwhile, the problems that plagued these farmers for years are disappearing. Crop failures have dropped sharply. Soil erosion is declining. And farmers are cutting back dramatically on expensive chemical fertilizers and pesticides. The program works through a community model. Farm Africa trains local farmers in regenerative techniques, then those farmers share their knowledge with neighbors. This grassroots approach has allowed the project to reach tens of thousands of people without massive overhead costs. The transformation goes beyond just bigger harvests. Healthier soils mean these farms will stay productive for generations. Less chemical runoff means cleaner water for entire communities. And higher yields mean more income for families who desperately need it. The Center for International Forestry Research and World Agroforestry analyzed samples from 2,000 project sites and reported massive improvements in soil health and microbial diversity. “These results clearly demonstrate that regenerative agriculture is not just an environmental intervention, it is an economic one,” said Farm Africa’s country director, Mary Nyale. “By equipping smallholder farmers with the tools, knowledge, and market linkages to farm regeneratively, we are seeing sustainable improvements in yields, soil fertility and incomes. This evidence shows that regenerative agriculture can work at scale and deliver measurable impact for both people and the planet.” npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/feb/26/cornwall-new-geothermal-project-launches https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cewzg77k721o https://www.enlit.world/library/uks-first-geothermal-plant-starts-powering-the-grid npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill United Kingdom's First Geothermal Power Plant Goes Live! https://thumbs.dreamstime.com/z/geothermal-energy-as-electricity-power-underground-layer-outline-diagram-267559534.jpg OVERVIEW On February 26th, 2026, Geothermal Engineering Ltd (GEL) has started running a plant in Cornwall that will feed electricity, created by tapping into hot granite rocks, to the National Grid while also extracting lithium carbonate from the mineral-rich water used in the process. Ryan Law, chief executive of GEL, said he was overjoyed at the launch of the United Downs project, which has been almost 20 years in the making. “To finally reach this point is exciting, and a bit of a relief,” he said. The United Downs project was developed in partnership with Italian technology provider Exergy International. A favorable aspect of the location is the availability of rich, historical mining data, which Law suggests gave the GEL team a head start. The data was collected when United Downs was known as United Mines. A place once described as the richest square mile on Earth, due to its tin and copper deposits. OUTPUT GEL drilled the deepest on-shore well in the UK, over 5 km (3 miles) deep, to tap into naturally heated water exceeding 190° C found in faults of granite. GEL says the plant will generate enough renewable electricity to power 10,000 homes, with the plan to open more, bigger sites in Cornwall. The United Downs site is surprisingly small at roughly 0.6 hectares (1.5 acres). Octopus Energy signed a 3 Megawatt power purchase agreement, who will deliver the electricity via the national grid. HOW IT WORKS Beneath the region lies a granite body approximately 11 km thick and extending hundreds of kilometers. Granite is particularly ideal for this technology as it is very effective at holding and conducting the Earth's heat. The hot water is pumped from what is known as the Porthtowan Fault Zone to the surface via a “production well”, with a depth of 5275 meters. The steam drives a turbine to produce the electricity. At this point the water temperature drops to 50 C. This is the ideal temperature to work with when extracting the lithium carbonate within the water. Once the lithium is taken out, the water is pumped back into the fault line through a second, slightly shallower "injection well" to 2,393 m, which means that the hot reservoir is recharged. Both wells have intersected the Porthtowan Fault Zone located approximately 800 m to the west of the site. “The magic is happening beneath the surface,” said Law. “But it’s like someone has built this enormous nuclear power station underground. We are just tapping into the heat that’s generated.” Law compares the landscape to an inverse nuclear power plant, as the rock is full of uranium, potassium, and thorium. Those elements are decaying over time and they produce heat as they decay, just like in a nuclear power station. LITHIUM United Downs is now the first commercial source of lithium carbonate in the UK, and is the largest geothermal lithium carbonate plant in Europe. The site will produce 100 tonnes of lithium per year, but GEL said it plans to scale this to 18,000 tonnes annually. GEL is able to harness the over 340 parts per million (ppm) of lithium from the geothermal fluid brought to the surface at the plant. Law explains that the hot water comes to the surface, which is used to generate electricity. The temperature of the fluid is then dropped from around 175° C to about 55° C before it goes back underground. “That temperature is perfect for the lithium extraction process.”, Law says. The high heat of the fluids helps dissolve the lithium to a higher concentration. Law talks about the discovery of high levels of lithium as “luck rather than design”. “When we were testing the deep fluids for power generation capacity, we discovered these deep fluids have an enormous amount of lithium, which comes from the granite.” “It just so happens there is tremendous synergy between what the power plant does and how the lithium extraction works,” he says. “We can produce this on site with a low footprint, no mining and no evaporation ponds needed,” a fact that allowed GEL to significantly improve project economics. LOCAL IMPACT About 100 jobs have been created so far, including engineers, geologists, and chemists. GEL has sourced employees, contractors, and raw materials locally where possible. “People here are proud of their mining heritage.”, says Greg Foxwell, who sits on the Gwennap parish council. “The company has gone out of its way to recruit some local people, and do very good work with the local colleges and schools.” EXISTING GEOTHERMAL IN THE UK Most of the growth in the industry is currently focused on expanding shallow geothermal because the costs are lower. Currently, there are 30,000 ground source heat pumps in UK homes. At shallow depths, the heat is enough to warm homes and businesses. For example, ground-source heat pumps are a form of geothermal technology, and in places like Southampton, heating is provided to hundreds of homes via a local network. Gateshead council uses heat from water in flooded mines to heat hundreds of homes. It is estimated that a quarter of homes sit above abandoned coal mines which could be used in the same way. THE FUTURE The International Energy Agency has said that global investment in deep geothermal for electricity is growing up 80% year-on-year since 2018, partially due to growing demands for electricity from tech giants. Dr Ryan Law, chief executive of GEL, explains what this milestone truly means to him and the team. “It’s taken many more years than initially planned to get to the power generation phase, not necessarily for technical reasons, more because of financial obstacles. “Now it gets exciting,” concludes Law, as this switch-on unlocks the fund-raising process for their larger sites. GEL has two additional sites under development in Cornwall, which together are expected to deliver a further 10 Megawatts of baseload geothermal power in the UK by 2030. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill [Sources] https://alma2030.org/news/alma-congratulates-the-state-of-libya-on-eliminating-trachoma-as-a-public-health-problem/ https://www.cidrap.umn.edu/misc-emerging-topics/libya-eliminates-highly-contagious-bacterial-eye-infectio npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Trachoma Eliminated in Libya https://s3.amazonaws.com/static.wd7.us/a/aa/ChlamydiaTrachomatisEinschlussk%c3%b6rperchen.jpg Libya becomes the 28th country to eliminate trachoma! Trachoma, caused by the bacterium Chlamydia trachomatis, spreads through contact with infected eye discharges via hands, clothing, hard surfaces, and flies. Repeated infections can lead to scarring of the inner eyelid, causing the eyelashes to turn inward and scratch the cornea, a painful condition known as trachomatous trichiasis that can result in blindness. Trachoma remains the leading infectious cause of blindness globally and remains a public health problem in 30 countries. Africa bears 90% of the global trachoma burden, with 93 million people living in at-risk areas. However, significant progress has been achieved: between 2014 and 2024, the number of people in the African region requiring antibiotic treatment dropped by 96 million from 189 million to 93 million, representing a 51% reduction. Trachoma has been documented as a public health problem in Libya for over a century. In the 20th century, surveys revealed high levels of active trachoma, particularly in communities in the south of the country. Building on early efforts from the 1970's and 1980's, Libya's Ministry of Health in 2017 prioritized trachoma elimination under the "National Prevention of Blindness Programme". “Even through difficult years, we maintained our focus on improving eye health services and ensuring no one was left behind.”, said Mohamed Al-Ghoj, Libya’s Acting Minister of Health. Libya’s success is particularly commendable given the challenging circumstances the country has faced. Years of political instability and humanitarian crises have placed significant strain on health services, displaced populations, and limited access to essential services such as water, sanitation, and hygiene. Despite these pressures, the national trachoma program successfully integrated surveillance systems, expanded access to surgical care, and strengthened capacity among eye health workers in collaboration with national and international partners. With support from these partners, Libya implemented a trichiasis surgery campaign across six southern districts identified as having the highest endemicity. Continued surveillance and impact surveys conducted in 2025 confirmed that prevalence had fallen below WHO’s elimination threshold. “This validation is a source of pride for Libya and a testament to the commitment of our health workers and communities,” said Dr Mohamed Al-Ghoj. “This success would not have been possible without the professionalism and dedication of our doctors, nurses, and health workers in the field who reached all and every district to ensure a future free of preventable blindness.” Libya’s success demonstrates what determination and coordinated action can achieve. npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill Dogs Rescued During New York Blizzard https://images2.imgbox.com/7e/e4/SmzQzZyu_o.jpeg Department of Public Works employee Kenny McGowan had been plowing the roads in Babylon, New York, during the blizzard on Monday, Feb. 23, when he had spotted two dogs in need of assistance along Sunrise Highway. "I looked over and I seen something in the corner of my eye right there, and then I looked in my mirror and I saw a dog. I'm like that's a dog running," he said. "I immediately put my sirens on, and stayed right behind them," McGowan said. He followed them for about a mile. "Being an animal lover, being a father, I went right into protection mode ... I was gonna do whatever I had to do to stop these dogs from getting hurt." He said once he was in a safe position, he parked sideways across the highway near Town Hall, using his truck as a shield. "They ended up going into the median, right in the middle, where it was like three feet of the snow, and they, like, buried themselves in the snow," McGowan recalled. "One dog went laid on here, and the other dog went on top of him, so I was like, I knew right away ... that they were close, they were family members, they were sisters," he added. With the help of another Department of Public Works employee, Jason Koza, (who came with a leash), and other Good Samaritans, they were able to get the dogs into Koza's truck to be transported to a nearby animal shelter. The other good Samaritans include a truck driver who had a rope to secure the dogs, and a mother and daughter who wrapped a blanket around the dogs. Once the dogs were brought to the shelter, they were scanned for microchips. The animal shelter contacted the family listed on the dogs' microchip, and the two dogs were picked up on Tuesday, Feb. 24, by their family, who were grateful to have them home. "Everybody should think that way ... It's somebody else's pet," McGowan said. [Sources] https://people.com/2-dogs-rescued-by-snow-plow-driver-during-new-york-blizzard-11914154 https://www.cbsnews.com/newyork/news/sunrise-highway-dogs-rescued-during-blizzard/ https://abc7ny.com/post/snow-plow-driver-rescues-lost-dogs-during-height-blizzard-sunrise-highway-babylon-long-island/18641573/ npub1mn3ayg0ztq9rk9pz4t3n2zytp9j3mtf96zj8tsuepzwwmlagfrxsw0ze93 The White Pill The first positive news to share, is that The White Pill is here! Nostr-only positive news.