Blog

  • Trump threatens 50% tariffs on Brazil if it doesn’t stop the Bolsonaro ‘witch hunt’ trial

    Trump threatens 50% tariffs on Brazil if it doesn’t stop the Bolsonaro ‘witch hunt’ trial



    CNN
     — 

    President Donald Trump on Wednesday threatened Brazil with a crippling tariff of 50% starting August 1, according to a letter he sent to the country’s president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

    In the letter posted on Truth Social, Trump alleged Lula is undertaking a “Witch Hunt that should end IMMEDIATELY!” over charges against its right-wing former president, Jair Bolsonaro.

    Bolsonaro, who has bragged about his closeness with Trump, is facing trial for allegedly attempting to stage a coup against Lula.

    CNN has reached out to Brazil’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

    Unlike the 21 other countries that have received letters from Trump this week, Brazil was not set to face “reciprocal” tariffs in April. Goods from there have instead been tariffed at a minimum of 10%, which is the rate Trump has been taxing most goods from countries that were set to face “reciprocal” tariffs.

    And unlike the other 21 countries, the US ran a $6.8 billion trade surplus with Brazil last year, meaning the US exported more goods to there than it imported from there.

    This is not the first time Trump has used the threat of tariffs to try to change other countries’ domestic policy decisions.

    Earlier this year, he threatened 25% tariffs on Colombian exports that would grow to 50% if the country didn’t accept deportees from the US. (Colombia ultimately accepted the deportees and avoided those tariffs.) Trump also imposed tariffs on goods from Mexico, Canada and China over the role he alleges they play in facilitating illegal migration to the US and enabling fentanyl to reach the country.

    But despite Trump’s discontent with the Bolsonaro trial, he wrote that “there will be no Tariff if Brazil, or companies within your Country, decide to build or manufacture product within the United States.” Trump’s made nearly identical offers in a slew of other letters he sent to heads of state this week.

    Other recipients of tariff letters on Wednesday included the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Moldova, Brunei, Algeria, Libya and Iraq, with rates going as high as 30% on goods they ship to the United States. The new tariffs go into effect August 1, pending negotiations.

    The rates Trump said would be imposed on goods from Sri Lanka, Moldova, Iraq and Libya were lower than those he announced in early April. The rates on goods from the Philippines and Brunei were higher, compared to April levels. Meanwhile, the rate on goods from Algeria was the same (30%) as April levels.

    The US and various trading partners have been negotiating new trade agreements since Trump announced so-called “reciprocal” tariffs back in April. Yet few deals have come to fruition.

    During a cabinet meeting on Tuesday, Trump said “a letter means a deal.” But that doesn’t appear to be how some countries are perceiving the missives.

    In all the letters except the one sent to Brazil’s Lula, Trump wrote that he takes particular issue with the trade deficits the United States runs with other nations, meaning America buys more goods from there compared to how much American businesses export to those countries. Trump also said the tariffs would be set in response to other policies that he deems are impeding American goods from being sold abroad.

    Trump has encouraged world leaders to manufacture goods in the United States to avoid tariffs. If they chose to retaliate by slapping higher tariffs on American goods, Trump threatened to tack that onto the rate charged on their country’s goods shipped to the United States.

    Trump has now sent 22 letters on tariff rates to heads of state this week, and more could still come.

    JPMorgan economists said in a note to clients on Wednesday titled “Another day, another step closer to Liberation Day” that the 50% tariff threat on Brazilian goods was “most surprising.” (“Liberation Day” refers to April 2, the day Trump held a Rose Garden event to announce “reciprocal” tariff rates.)

    “It is possible these tariffs will never be implemented, as some in the market are hoping for,” the economists said, referring to Trump’s latest threats.

    Wednesday at 12:01 a.m. ET was the initial deadline Trump set three months ago for countries to ink trade deals with the US or instantly face higher tariff rates. However, on Monday he extended that deadline to August 1.

    Bolsonaro, often dubbed the “Trump of the Tropics,” is on trial in Brazil for charges related to an alleged plot to overturn the 2022 election results. He and dozens of associates have been charged with attempting a coup d’état, which prosecutors allege involved a plan to potentially assassinate elected President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Bolsonaro has denied wrongdoing.

    This story has been updated with additional context and developments.

    Continue Reading

  • Shakira raves about her haircare brand on the internet

    Shakira raves about her haircare brand on the internet

    Shakira gushes about her brand on social media

    Isima is Shakira’s new hair care line, and in her latest post, the pop icon expresses her gratitude to Ulta Beauty stores for featuring her brand’s stands.

    The Waka Waka singer, in an Instagram post, wrote, “A big hug to everyone at the @ultabeauty stores for setting up such beautiful @isima stands. Now you can all get isima products not only from our web page but also at every Ulta in America.”

    Shakira raves about her haircare brand on the internet

    She continued, “Don’t these bottles look super cute? Wait until you smell them! Thanks so much for the support!”

    In other news, reports indicate that Shakira has moved on from the hurt her split sparked, following her decision to end her relationship with partner Gerard Piqué.

    According to Us Weekly, the Grammy winner is having a good time with her sons, which comes on top of her hit Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran World Tour, which took place last month in Brazil.

    It is relevant to mention that the 48-year-old had previously opened up about what she went through when her relationship with the Spanish footballer ended.

    “For many months after my separation I had been silent, trying to begin my mourning, but I couldn’t really begin to grieve until I started writing music,” she told GQ.

    “It was my way of healing. And it continues to be. Grief is a process that is not linear. It is full of peaks and valleys,” she admitted at the time and declared that her perspective about love “is not the same” after the breakup.

    “The love of a partner disappointed me. It affected my idiosyncrasy. It’s inevitable, at least for the moment, that I have lost trust in the other.”

    “The healing process is long. It will take me several albums!,” Shakira concluded.


    Continue Reading

  • Third ‘Big Bang Theory’ spinoff in the works at HBO Max – NBC Connecticut

    Third ‘Big Bang Theory’ spinoff in the works at HBO Max – NBC Connecticut

    Originally appeared on E! Online

    “The Big Bang Theory” universe is expanding once more.

    A new spinoff of the long-running sitcom, which followed physicists Sheldon Cooper (Jim Parsons) and Leonard Hofstadter (Johnny Galecki) as well as their circle of friends, has been ordered to series at HBO Max, the network confirmed in a July 9 press release.

    The project — titled “Stuart Fails to Save the Universe” — marks the fourth series in the TV franchise, which also includes “Young Sheldon” and “Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage.” This time, the plot would focus on the hijinks of Stuart Bloom (Kevin Sussman), an acquaintance who became increasingly prominent in “The Big Bang Theory’s” later seasons.

    “Comic book store owner Stuart Bloom is tasked with restoring reality after he breaks a device built by Sheldon and Leonard,” the release read, “accidentally bringing about a multiverse Armageddon.”

    Notably, the release also teased appearances by “alternate-universe versions of characters” from the original series — which aired on CBS from 2007 to 2019 — but warned that “as the title implies, things don’t go well.”

    READ Felicity Huffman Reacts to Desperate Housewives Spinoff

    In addition to Sussman, Lauren Lapkus, Brian Posehn and John Ross Bowie, all of whom recurred on the flagship series, are reprising their roles for the new show. Of course, it wouldn’t be the first time a fan favorite from “The Big Bang Theory” returned to the small screen.

    In May 2024, Parsons appeared in character alongside Mayim Bialik, who played his wife Amy Farrah Fowler in the original series, during the series finale of Young Sheldon after serving as narrator throughout the show’s seven-season run.

    “It was very, very special to do that,” he told E! News at the time. “You shoot that final episode and it’s wrapped for you. Then a couple of months later, it wraps for the rest of the world and it’s a very weird feeling to flood over you again like that.”

    But the Emmy winner cautioned fans not to get their hopes up for more Sheldon going forward.

    “Never say never to anything,” he said. “Life is long, God willing. But I don’t think so.”

    PHOTOSThe Big Bang Theory

    Kate Micucci is giving fans a positive health update.

    Continue Reading

  • Joy Anna Duggar recalls emotional turmoil she faced after stillbirth

    Joy Anna Duggar recalls emotional turmoil she faced after stillbirth

    Joy-Anna Duggar opens up about painful miscarriage experience

    Joy Anna Duggar is opening up about the painful period she went through after losing her unborn baby girls.

    In a recent chat on the Jinger & Jeremy podcast, the TV personality poured her heart out in front of her sisters, Jinger and Jessa Duggar, about the difficult time.

    “I guess looking back, I did have kind of a gut feeling of something may not be right,” Joy-Anna said as she got emotional while sharing. “But also I’m like, ‘I don’t want to over exaggerate.’ …I just remember feeling so numb leaving the ultrasound.”

    The 19 Kids alum had to deliver her daughter, Annabell, at 20 weeks in 2019, whom she shares with husband Austin Forsyth.

    “That was extremely hard, having to go through the whole delivery process,” Joy-Anna noted.

    While expressing her grief and pain, the Jill & Jessa: Counting On star said she felt like she “was in a fog” for six months after the loss.

    “I’m so thankful that I had [my mom] there that had been through it before… even with all of that, it was extremely difficult,” she added.


    Continue Reading

  • Sea Spider Shock: Missing Gene, Vanishing Body, Evolution’s Strangest Plot Twist – SciTechDaily

    1. Sea Spider Shock: Missing Gene, Vanishing Body, Evolution’s Strangest Plot Twist  SciTechDaily
    2. The genome of a sea spider corroborates a shared Hox cluster motif in arthropods with a reduced posterior tagma  BMC Biology
    3. How a lost gene gave the sea spider its bizarre, leggy body  ScienceDaily
    4. Meet the ‘weird’ sea spider that’s mapping the evolution of eight-legged creatures  University of Wisconsin–Madison
    5. All legs, no guts: Sea spider genome stuns scientists  Earth.com

    Continue Reading

  • Giant Liquid Mirrors Could Revolutionise the Hunt for Habitable Worlds

    Giant Liquid Mirrors Could Revolutionise the Hunt for Habitable Worlds

    Imagine a space telescope with a mirror stretching 50 meters across! That’s larger than the width of a UK soccer field and nearly eight times wider than the James Webb Space Telescope. Now imagine that this enormous mirror is made not of precisely manufactured glass segments, but of liquid floating in space. This might sound like science fiction but it’s the cutting edge concept behind the Fluidic Telescope (FLUTE), a joint NASA-Technion project that could revolutionise how we explore the universe.

    The challenge of building ever larger space telescopes has reached a technological bottleneck. Even the James Webb Space Telescope, with its 6.5-meter segmented mirror, pushed the limits of what could be folded into a rocket and deployed in space. Scaling this approach to the tens of meters needed to directly image Earth like exoplanets seems impossible with current methods.

    The mirror of the James Webb Space Telescope will be dwarfed by a next generation of liquid mirror space telescopes. (Credit : NASA)

    Enter the liquid mirror solution. In the microgravity environment of space, a thin film of liquid naturally forms a perfect spherical surface due to surface tension, the shape needed for a telescope mirror. The FLUTE concept proposes using this phenomenon to create mirrors that would be impractical or impossible to manufacture using traditional solid materials.

    But there’s a catch: even if such a mirror could be created, what happens when the telescope needs to slew from one astronomical target to another? New research led by Israel Gabay and colleagues at Technion has tackled this fundamental question through sophisticated mathematical modelling and experimentation. Their work reveals both the promise and the challenges of liquid space telescopes.

    Size comparison of the James Webb Space Telescope and concept of the next generation fluidic telescope. (Credit : NASA) Size comparison of the James Webb Space Telescope and concept of the next generation fluidic telescope. (Credit : NASA)

    The team developed the first comprehensive theoretical model describing how a liquid mirror behaves when subjected to the angular accelerations of telescope slewing manoeuvres. Using advanced mathematical techniques they created analytical solutions that predict exactly how the liquid surface will deform during and after telescope movements.

    Their findings are both encouraging and sobering. When a 50 meter liquid telescope with a 1 millimetre thick mirror performs typical slewing manoeuvres, the surface does indeed deform, with disturbances reaching several micrometers at the edges. However, these deformations propagate inward extremely slowly, taking years to reach the telescope’s center.

    The key insight is that not all of the mirror needs to remain perfect. Even after 10 years of operation involving daily slewing manoeuvres, the inner 80% of the aperture remains adequately formed. This is well within the tolerance for high quality space optics.

    The research reveals that telescope operators would need to manage a “manoeuvring budget”, or the total amount of slewing the telescope can perform before deformations compromise its optical performance. Interestingly, the study found that multiple small manoeuvres in different directions can sometimes produce better results than single large movements, as they create more symmetric deformation patterns that are easier to correct optically.

    To validate their theoretical predictions, the researchers conducted ingenious laboratory experiments using microscopic liquid films and contactless electromagnetic forces to create controlled deformations. Despite the vast difference in scale the mathematical framework successfully predicted the observed liquid dynamics.

    A liquid-mirror telescope. In this design, the optical sensors are mounted above the mirror, in a module at its focus, and the motor and bearings that turn the mirror are in the same module as the sensors. The mirror is suspended below. (Credit : NASA Orbital Debris Program Office) A liquid-mirror telescope. In this design, the optical sensors are mounted above the mirror, in a module at its focus, and the motor and bearings that turn the mirror are in the same module as the sensors. The mirror is suspended below. (Credit : NASA Orbital Debris Program Office)

    The implications extend beyond just building bigger telescopes. Liquid mirrors could enable space telescopes that reshape themselves for different observational tasks, correct their own optical aberrations, or even self repair from micrometeorite damage. The research suggests that such telescopes could maintain functionality for decades, with the possibility of “reset” procedures to restore the original mirror shape when needed.

    As space agencies plan the next generation of telescopes for the 2030s and beyond, the FLUTE concept represents a shift from the precision manufacturing process to precision fluid dynamics. While challenges remain, particularly in the engineering systems needed to contain and control the liquid in space, this research demonstrates that the fundamental physics is sound.

    Source : Fluid dynamics of a liquid mirror space telescope

    Continue Reading

  • Big Screen, Bigger Deals: Amazon Prime Day's Outstanding Projector Sale – PCMag

    1. Big Screen, Bigger Deals: Amazon Prime Day’s Outstanding Projector Sale  PCMag
    2. This XGIMI 4K Projector Is Nearly 60% Off, But Only for Prime Members on Amazon  Gizmodo
    3. Bring the Movie Theater Home. Save up to $600 off Valerion Projectors on Amazon  CNET
    4. These are the 5 best Amazon Prime Day projector deals, with one so good I almost can’t believe it  TechRadar
    5. I replaced my TV with this long-throw projector, and it’s absolutely worth it – especially for $600 off  ZDNET

    Continue Reading

  • Mel B weds Rory McPhee at St Paul’s Cathedral after royal exception

    Mel B weds Rory McPhee at St Paul’s Cathedral after royal exception



     Mel B surprises fans with recent update after third marriage

    Mel B was granted the privilege to tie the knot with Rory McPhee at St. Paul’s Cathedral due to her previous charitable services.

    The former Spice Girl, who rose to fame with the 1990s pop group, said “I do” for the third time at the same venue where King Charles and Princess Diana were married.

    Mel, 50, was permitted to use this exclusive cathedral after being named on the 2022 MBE honours list for her charitable services.

    This recognition has also allowed the Scary Spice to baptise her three chidren – Phoenix, 26, Angel, 18, and Madison, 13, at the same church.

    The Wannabe hitmaker wore a pearl-adorned sheer white gown paired with a bridal veil for the special ceremony.

    Meanwhile, Rory, 37, donned traditional Scottish attire, including a red and green tartan kilt.

    Former Spice Girl Emma Bunton, along with Danielle Brown, Daisy Lowe, Katherine Ryan, and Gaby Roslin, were in attendance.

    It is pertinent to mention that the Spice World actress shares daughter Phoenix with ex-husband Jimmy Gulzar, from whom she separated in 2000.

    Mel B later married Stephen Belafonte, and the couple were together for a decade before divorcing in 2017.

    For the unversed, the Stop singer tied the knot with McPhee on Saturday, July 5, at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London.

    Continue Reading

  • UC Berkeley scientists uncover neural mechanisms behind long-term memory

    UC Berkeley scientists uncover neural mechanisms behind long-term memory

    Every day, our brain takes countless fleeting experiences — from walks on the beach to  presentations at work — and transforms them into long-term memories. How exactly this works remains a mystery, but neuroscientists believe that it involves a phenomenon called neural replay, in which neurons rapidly recreate the same activation sequences that occurred during the original experience. Surprisingly, neural replays can happen both before and after an experience, suggesting they help in both memory storage and also future planning.

    In a new study, neuroscientists at the University of California, Berkeley, recorded activity from hundreds of neurons simultaneously in freely flying bats. It is the first time that an ensemble of neurons — rather than just individual neurons — have been studied in concert in bats as they fly around and behave naturally. The data provided surprising new insights into neural replay and theta sequences, another phenomenon which is believed to be involved in memory and planning. 

    “For the past 20 years, we’ve been recording single neurons in bats and asking the question, ‘When animals are doing interesting things, what do individual neurons do?’” said study senior author Michael Yartsev, an associate professor of neuroscience and bioengineering and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator at UC Berkeley. “But in the brain, there are emerging properties that you only see when you’re looking at ensembles of neurons. In this study, we looked at these two phenomena — replay and theta sequences — that are only visible when you track many neurons at the same time.”

    Better understanding the role of replay and theta sequences in the brains of animals could shed light on how long-term memories are formed and stored in humans, potentially leading to new treatments for neurological disorders like Parkinson’s disease and Alzheimer’s. 

    The study, which was published online today (July 9) in the journal Nature, was supported by grants from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and the Office of Naval Research.

    ‘A whole different ball game’

    Studying neural replay and theta sequences is tricky because it requires listening in on tens or hundreds of neurons in the brain simultaneously. Over the past decade, Michael Yartsev’s lab has pioneered wireless neural recording technologies in Egyptian fruit bats, giving his team an unprecedented view inside the brains of these navigational experts as they forage in large environments. 

    Previously, the wireless recording devices were only able to detect signals from small numbers of neurons at a time. In the new study, co-first authors Angelo Forli, Wudi Fan and Kevin Qi successfully utilized high-density silicon electrode arrays that can record hundreds of neurons at once from flying bats. These electrodes can also record local field potentials, a measure of the overall electrical activity in a region of the brain.

    “It’s a whole different ball game to record such large ensembles of neurons wirelessly in a flying animal,” Yartsev said. “This was never possible before now.”

    To study neural replay and theta sequences, the researchers tracked the activity of “place cells,” a type of neuron that is found in the hippocampus of many species. Individual place cells fire when an animal is in a specific location in space, creating an internal spatial map of their environment. 

    “If you know that a place cell corresponds to a specific location in space, and the cell is active, then you can infer that the bat is in that location,” said Angelo Forli, who is a postdoctoral researcher at UC Berkeley. “If you can track multiple cells, you can know the path that the bat took.”

    The study team (from left) Angelo Fori, Wudi Fan, Michael Yartsev and Kevin Qi.

    Adam Lau/Berkeley Engineering

    But place cells aren’t only active when an animal is moving around. Experiments in rodents have shown that they exhibit hippocampal replay during rest, essentially refiring in the same sequence as they did during the movement but in a shorter, time compressed format.

    Place cells in rodents also exhibit patterns called theta sequences, which happen during movement, and are believed to represent the animal “looking ahead” just a few steps from its current location.

    “Previously, these phenomena were exclusively investigated in rodents, because that’s what the technology allowed. We wanted to find out if they also exist in bats, and if they do, are they any different from what we see in rodents?” said Forli. “We discovered a series of differences that challenge established models.”

    A fundamental unit of information processing

    In the experiment, the researchers recorded the activity of bats’ place cells as they flew freely around a large flight room and identified which sequences of place cells corresponded with specific trajectories. They were then able to identify replay events, or moments when these same neural sequences occurred when the bats were at rest.

    Most of what we know about replay has been gleaned from experiments on rodents in unnatural settings, such as a “sleep box,” to record replay events following behavioral runs. This introduces artificial boundaries between active and inactive states. In contrast, bats have many natural active periods and rest periods within the same experimental session, allowing for the capture of replay under less restrictive conditions. This led to the discovery that replays mostly occur minutes after the experience, and often at locations distant from where the experience took place. 

    Surprisingly, the researchers also found that the length of these replay events was the same for all flight trajectories, no matter how long the flight was. Essentially, if one neural sequence corresponded to a 10-meter flight, and another neural sequence corresponded to a 20-meter flight, the replays of both of those sequences were time-compressed to the same length.

    “We saw that replays for short versus long trajectories had the same duration,” Forli said. “It seems that information is cut down to the same chunk of time regardless of the length of the experience.”

    The researchers hypothesize that this constant replay duration may represent an elemental unit of information processing in the brain.

    “From a computational perspective, it’s incredibly advantageous to send fixed packets of information,” Yartsev said. “It’s very efficient because whatever is reading that information out knows it will arrive in these fixed sizes.”

    The team’s next question concerned theta sequences, a type of ensemble phenomenon that is believed to support replay and to rely on theta oscillations in the hippocampus. However, unlike rodents, bats and humans both lack continuous theta oscillations, which occur at a frequency of approximately 8 Hertz, or eight wingbeats per second. Interestingly, the researchers found sequential network activity during flight in bats, akin to theta sequences in rodents, but with one major difference: unlike rodents, the fast sequences in bats had no relationship to theta oscillations, but were, instead, synced to the bats’ 8 Hz wingbeats. 

    From the quivering of a mouse’s whiskers to the rhythms of human speech, there are countless other animal behaviors that occur at frequencies around 8 Hz. The researchers hypothesize that these theta sequences might provide a universal neural mechanism for how these behaviors are organized and directed in the animal brain. 

    “There’s something about this frequency which is ubiquitous across species, particularly mammalian species,” Yartsev said. “Our findings may provide the beginning of a mechanistic understanding of the neural basis of these behaviors, not only in rats and bats, but maybe also in other species like humans.”

    Additional support for this research was provided by the New York Stem Cell Foundation, the Vallee Foundation and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

    Related Stories

    Continue Reading

  • Assessment of Primary Health Care Physicians’ Awareness, Knowledge, and Practice of Familial Hypercholesterolemia in Jazan, Saudi Arabia

    Assessment of Primary Health Care Physicians’ Awareness, Knowledge, and Practice of Familial Hypercholesterolemia in Jazan, Saudi Arabia


    Continue Reading