Streetart – SUIKO + Imaone + FATE @ Hiroshima, Japan

SUIKO + Imaone + FATE @ Hiroshima, Japan Location: Hiroshima, Japan Artists: SUIKO + Imaone + FATE Year: 2021 USEFUL LINKS SUIKO: SUIKO in this blog …

Streetart – SUIKO + Imaone + FATE @ Hiroshima, Japan

American College of Pediatricians Leak Exposes 10,000 Confidential Files | WIRED

. A link to an unsecured Google Drive published on the group’s website pointed users last week to a large cache of sensitive documents, including financial and tax records, membership rolls, and email exchanges spanning over a decade. The more than 10,000 documents lay bare the outsize influence of a small conservative organization working to lend a veneer of medical science to evangelical beliefs on parenting, sex, procreation, and gender
— Read on www.wired.com/story/american-college-pediatricians-google-drive-leak/

Florida Republican Lawmaker Admits GOP’s Hatred of LGBTQ+ People

“Florida GOP Representative Jeff Holcomb says the quiet part out loud on the House floor today. ‘Our terrorist enemies hate homosexuals MORE THAN WE DO.’ Audible gasping in the chamber. And then there’s @RepSkidmore’s reaction,” he wrote, adding a shocked face emoji.

“He outright admits Republicans hate LGBTQ people,” wrote Harvard Law School Cyberlaw Clinic instructor and trans rights activist Alejandra Caraballo, posting a video of the moment.

 

Source: Florida Republican Lawmaker Admits GOP’s Hatred of LGBTQ+ People

Repeated blood–brain barrier opening with an implantable ultrasound device for delivery of albumin-bound paclitaxel in patients with recurrent glioblastoma: a phase 1 trial – The Lancet Oncology

LIPU-MB using a skull-implantable ultrasound device transiently opens the blood–brain barrier allowing for safe, repeated penetration of cytotoxic drugs into the brain. This study has prompted a subsequent phase 2 study combining LIPU-MB with albumin-bound paclitaxel plus carboplatin (NCT04528680), which is ongoing.

Source: Repeated blood–brain barrier opening with an implantable ultrasound device for delivery of albumin-bound paclitaxel in patients with recurrent glioblastoma: a phase 1 trial – The Lancet Oncology