Lillard's Maximum Perception Control
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junipersbird.bsky.social
Lillard's Maximum Perception Control
@junipersbird.bsky.social
Center-left feminist in North Carolina. Pro democracy, reality, & data-based decision-making. Anti gender stereotypes, extremism, & leaf blowers. Art, nature, music, & literature will sustain us.
🇺🇸 🇺🇦 🇮🇱 🌿 ♀️
🐈‍⬛️ 🏃‍♀️
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A few thoughts about Thanksgiving in the military.

My latests in @thebulwark.com
www.thebulwark.com/p/how-the-us...
How the Military Celebrates Thanksgiving
Across the world, members of our armed forces come together, share a meal, and remember that they are not alone.
www.thebulwark.com
November 26, 2025 at 1:36 PM
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Sub-Saharan Africa | Social-media fuelled “selfie safaris” drive dangerous, unethical wildlife tourism in Kruger, Maasai Mara, Serengeti and Botswana, blocking migrations and stressing wildlife. Article urges stricter park management, honest footage and real respect for animals.
Selfie safari crisis as social media drives dangerous, unethical wildlife tourism | Daily Maverick
 On a recent trip to one of my favourite places on this beleaguered planet, the Kruger National Park (KNP), a few sightings niggled me. One was a tourist with an enormous camera lens, standing on a riverbank, photographing a giant heron. Code of misconduct: tourists in the Kruger National Park push the limits with their irresponsible behaviour at a game sighting. (Photo: Kruger Sightings / David Botha) Another was a merry band of travellers at a close lion sighting with one young woman perched on the vehicle’s window ledge, camera at the ready, her back to the bushveld behind her. And, of course, in both instances it was All About The Photo (and it is illegal and potentially dangerous, with both miscreants completely unfazed by us law-abiding killjoys). advertisement Don’t want to see this? Remove ads Consider recent footage on social media. Kruger-Park-related Facebook groups are awash with photos of tourists engaging in irresponsible, often illegal, behaviour such as getting out of their cars, driving off-road, speeding or cramming around sightings. A furious Nick Kleer, professional safari guide and wildlife photographer, vented on Instagram at the sight of dozens of open safari vehicles crowding the banks of the Mara River in the Serengeti, blocking the crucial migratory and escape path of wildebeest crossing the crocodile-infested waters (some of them, with nowhere to go, fell back into the river). And, crammed in front of and on top of the vehicles, were dozens of camera-wielding tourists excitedly waiting to film the carnage. A famous crossing point along the Mara River called 'The Peninsula', or 'U'. It sees some dramatic and dusty crossings — in each direction — each year. It is also one of the crossing points that has historically been really badly affected by cars from the Maasai Mara National Reserve side. (Photo: Adam Bannister Wildlife) Other footage, by professional guide, photographer and guide trainer, Adam Bannister, shows a huge number of game-viewing vehicles thundering across the Mara plains in an insane race for prime parking at a river crossing, so guests can witness the legendary Great Migration. And then, who has not seen the astonishing footage from Botswana of the enraged elephant bearing down on tourists in a too-close mokoro? That is not the astounding part. Rather, it is the surreal sight of tourists filming the incident as the tusker literally bore down on them, upending the vessel in protective fury. And still they filmed… advertisement Don’t want to see this? Remove ads This is where we are now — wildlife viewed as entertainment. The ultimate goal? Content creation — often accompanied by bad behaviour — to garner ever more “likes” and “shares” on social media. Bannister laments the trend where anyone with a camera or smartphone either wants to mimic or better the photos of wild animals that flood social feeds. “Social media has badly damaged wildlife, and our appreciation and respect for wildlife. And there are a handful of wildlife photographers who have also played a large part in destroying ethical wildlife viewing. Social media has changed animals from sentient beings that were to be respected, into Instagram cannon fodder. They are objects that are there for likes and shares; things that get you noticed.” He says the original African safari bucket list, the Big Five, is no longer about just sightings of animals. “It has now evolved from seeing a lion into now seeing a lion doing something that you know Instagram and TikTok will respond to, something that will trigger the algorithm.” An off-road tourist brazenly engages with a lioness by sticking his arm out his open window for a close-up photo opportunity in the Kruger Natioal Park. (Photo: Kruger Sightings / Facebook) South African National Parks (SANParks), the governing body of the Kruger National Park, has noted with concern the increase in unlawful behaviour. Rey Thakhuli, general manager of communications, told Daily Maverick: “We have seen this irresponsible behaviour by visitors, and this is a worrying factor, which we discourage. This is more like one signing their death warrant, particularly those getting out their vehicles in an area full of wild animals. “The importance of responsible behaviour cannot be overemphasised. Those who would like to report unbecoming behaviour should be willing to write a statement and provide photographic or any type of evidence, if possible, so action can be taken.” advertisement Don’t want to see this? Remove ads There is no denying it: wildlife tourism in Africa is a multibillion-dollar industry, and the dollar-wielding tourists keep on coming on trains, planes and automobiles (and yes, even Uber Safaris are now a thing). More and more of them are flocking to areas that are increasingly under strain from overtourism, greed and lack of respect. They also bring with them huge expectations, as glossy websites tempt them with magnificent pictures of magnificent animals in magnificent settings. Many are beguiled into believing that the game sightings will be exclusively theirs to witness. The clamouring for footage of wild animals is also just part of the multi-layered, complicated issue that is conservation, which needs a multi-pronged approach to resolve. At the heart of it is land management, which is crucial for the protection of wilderness areas by balancing human use (local communities, poaching, development, tourism etc) with conservation goals. Three’s a crowd, four’s a traffic jam. Users rave about motorhomes and their inbuilt comfort, coffee on the go and elevated viewing, but it’s a less positive experience for others whose views are blocked by the large frames. (Photo: Robyn von Gesau ) Conservationists and developers are no doubt paying close attention this month to a David vs Goliath scenario playing out in a Kenyan courtroom where a conservation activist will hear whether his bid to stop the controversial luxury Ritz-Carlton, Maasai Mara Safari Camp’s scheduled opening is successful. Meitamei Olol Dapash, from the Maasai Education, Research and Conservation Institute, argues that the development obstructs a vital migration corridor between Maasai Mara and Tanzania’s Serengeti. advertisement Don’t want to see this? Remove ads An online petition platform says the development would “irreversibly damage critical wildlife pathways and disrupt the delicate balance that has existed for centuries between the Maasai people and the animals they have protected”. It accuses this project of prioritising “luxury profits over ecological survival and cultural sovereignty”. Dave Hamman, a concession owner and operator at Botswana’s Chitabe Camp, likens the current situation in the safari industry to “a whirlpool”. “Gone are the days when most people who came to the bush were interested in the bush, when they were birders and adventurers. Now the most important thing is whether there is a coffee machine and what the menu is. Everything has changed.”  Adam Bannister and members of the guiding team at ‘The Hilldana’, a small lodge in the Taita Hills of southeastern Kenya. (Photo: Adam Bannister Wildlife) And with it so has, in many places, the quality of guiding. “As more and more people head to wilderness areas, marginal operations spring up. But often, these in turn employ less experienced guides, many of them also in search of more ‘likes’, and so the whirlpool starts — and it is hard to get off. One thing pushes the other, and you get lower and lower and closer to the drain.” It’s no secret that many guests place immense pressure on safari guides — with offers of huge tips as leverage — to deliver more and more, to go off-road, to chase game, always in pursuit of footage. “I get it all the time,” said Bannister. “I've now been a guide for almost 20 years, and I feel confident in myself and my role as a professional to be able to say no. I believe I can get myself out of almost all situations. However, in my time with guide training and with guides, especially those who are new, that’s where the real issue starts because they don’t yet have that confidence and ability to say ‘no’ to a guest. That takes time to develop and instil.” He adds that a big problem in a lot of reserves are private guides who accompany tour parties. They rely on social media for business and deliberately seek out the least experienced local guides — someone that they can manipulate or pressure. They don’t want someone who is strong enough to say ‘no’. And all too often it is money that talks, where guests will offer to pay any fines the reserve guides may be subject to, even offering to “speak to the owners of the camp, we’ll make it our fault”. Hamman says they have strict protocols in place at Chitabe with their guides, all of whom have a deep sense of ethical game viewing, and why, in the long run, it is for the benefit of all. “We’ve always said to our guides: you are in charge of that vehicle. And we will support you 100% if a guest complains that you refused a request.” For Hamman the number one rule for a guide is “respect” — primarily for the animal and the environment. And if that means a guide feels a vehicle is disturbing a sighting — particularly where cubs are involved — the guides will make a “do not disturb” call. Respect, however, does not start and end with the guides. It starts with each person who encounters a wild animal or enters a wilderness space. As ethical game viewing becomes ever more topical, part of Bannister’s mission is to encourage more honest footage. “I find a very bizarre scenario unfolding whereby people are no longer really telling the truth on social media. They are trying to just encapsulate this idea of ‘Oh well, I’m the only one with this tiger; I’m the only one watching this crossing,’ but they’re not. They are trying to give the perception that they are there alone, so no one is really showing the truth. “My big drive is to try to start encouraging people, especially those with influence from a social media point of view, to start showing the truth, instead of showing just the leopard sitting on the rock. Zoom out and show the hundred cars looking at the leopard on the rock. Because, although it doesn’t make a great image of a beautiful leopard, it makes a very realistic image of what is going on in the year 2025.” A fingers-crossed byproduct of the social media exposure has been announcements by both Kenyan and Tanzanian authorities for action plans to streamline park regulations, improve visitor management, enforce disciplinary action against tour operators and guides violating rules, and launch awareness campaigns. It remains to be seen how this plays out. Decades ago, at a distant high school desk, I had the words of Wordsworth, who loved to wander among daffodils, drilled into me: “The world is too much with us”, where he mourns the modern world’s obsession with “getting and spending”, materialism over nature. That was in 1802. It is 223 years later. We need to stop and smell the grassy scent of elephant dung instead of careening over it and killing the dung beetles. We need to feel the thrill of the steady gaze of a wild animal through our eyes and not a camera lens. And we need to educate, through and with respect, that less can mean a whole lot more when it comes to game viewing and safaris. DM *Rey Thakhuli of SANParks says: It is unfortunate our law enforcement officials cannot always be everywhere due to the size of the Kruger Park. To assist us, people must make use of our emergency numbers 013 735 0197 or 076 801 9679 to report any infringement of rules. Staff will alert the closest law enforcement so offenders can be caught in the act. Alternatively, report the matter to the nearest camp reception/ranger station. Robyn von Geusau is a Cape Town-based writer who heads north to the bushveld as often as possible.
www.dailymaverick.co.za
November 26, 2025 at 4:15 AM
Good to hear that the male has since been disqualified and Andrea Thompson has been awarded her rightful title.

www.bbc.com/sport/weight...
November 26, 2025 at 3:52 AM
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At this point, the Washpost edit page is just trolling its readers.

This is today's actual house editorial.
November 25, 2025 at 2:05 PM
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No amount of fearmongering can take away from the fact that Social Security is reliable, timely, efficient, and has never missed a payment in its 90-year history.
November 25, 2025 at 4:28 PM
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"Trump's demand to punish anybody who merely endorses the Constitution vindicates the charge that he is the document’s greatest enemy."

www.theatlantic.com/ideas/2025/1...
Trump and Hegseth’s Hysterical Reaction to an Ad
For the president and his minions, loyalty is more important than legality.
www.theatlantic.com
November 25, 2025 at 4:31 PM
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Sen. Mark Kelly on MS NOW: "I've had a missile blow up next to my airplane. I've been nearly shot down multiple times … My wife, Gabby Giffords, meeting with her constituents, shot in the head, six people killed around her … We know what political violence is.  And we know what causes it, too."
November 25, 2025 at 4:25 PM
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Delighted to welcome The Science of Hitting to Bluesky! Alex writes one of the top publications providing deep-dive analysis on stocks like MSFT, NFLX and META. A must-read for fundamental analysts. Give him a follow ⬇️⬇️⬇️
November 25, 2025 at 4:27 PM
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As Judge Boasberg considers how to move forward with contempt proceedings re: Alien Enemies Act flights, plaintiffs provide list of names for potential witness testimony.

The list includes former DOJ official Emil Bove, who is now a federal judge on the 3rd Cir.
November 25, 2025 at 4:32 PM
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WFAE reports: CMPD, Mayor Vi Lyles and Sheriff Garry McFadden have all said CBP agents left Charlotte, but DHS insists the “Charlotte’s Web” operation is ongoing.

www.wunc.org/2025-11-24/c...
Conflicting claims of CBP departure deepen confusion in Charlotte
CMPD, Mayor Vi Lyles and Sheriff Garry McFadden have all said CBP agents left Charlotte, but DHS insists the “Charlotte’s Web” operation is ongoing.
www.wunc.org
November 25, 2025 at 4:38 PM
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The day ended here in Glastonbury in lilac loveliness. 💜
November 25, 2025 at 4:39 PM
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Contemporary Mumbai artist and Global citizen Rithika Merchant, whose paintings draw on various cultures, religions, myths and archetypal storytelling.

The Pollinator, 2023

#ContemporaryArt #Mythology
November 22, 2025 at 4:54 AM
What the shit???
Diane Cook, the MAGA Republican Legislative Aide to NC MAGA Republican Sen. Norman Sanderson (who was just arrested last month for DUI) was arrested yesterday for trying to burn two people alive in their homes. More Christian Conservative "love" from MAGA. #ncpol #ncleg www.cbs17.com/news/local-n...
Aide to NC senator arrested on first-degree arson charge
RALEIGH, N.C. (WNCN) — The legislative assistant to Republican Senator Norman Sanderson, Diane Cook, has been arrested and booked into the Wake County Detention Center. Cook is accused of “wi…
www.cbs17.com
November 25, 2025 at 4:12 PM
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Good news! Last night a court ordered the federal government to return the search-and-rescue helicopter to Newport while the lawsuit is underway.

This is a big win for public safety in our coastal communities – and a reminder that the government must follow the law.
November 25, 2025 at 3:42 PM
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The problem with this article is they asked too many lawyers and not enough historians.

As a historian, I'd say the legality of Trump's immunity and pardons depends on how he leaves office.

At 40 over 55 approval? He's immune.

At 25 over 65? He's probably not immune & self-pardons aren't legal.
November 25, 2025 at 3:20 PM
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I’m really surprised this isn’t bigger news. Just under 10 million people live in Tehran. Where can they go? Where else in Iran will have enough water? This will undoubtedly strain the country’s and the region’s politics, finances and governance capacity.
'Iran’s capital must be moved because the country “no longer has a choice,” President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Thursday in remarks carried by state media, warning that severe ecological strain has made Tehran impossible to sustain'

#Iran 🇮🇷
Iran president says capital move now a necessity as water crisis deepens
Iran’s capital must be moved because the country “no longer has a choice,” President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Thursday in remarks carried by state media, warning that severe ecological strain has mad...
www.iranintl.com
November 21, 2025 at 8:13 PM
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Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear: This slap in the face to rural America is a chance to turn it blue: Recent Democratic victories are a direct repudiation of Trump. archive.ph/Bnf3f
November 25, 2025 at 3:05 PM
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victims of the october 7th attack are suing binance, whose ceo was just pardoned by trump after inking a $2B deal with the company, for allegedly facilitating crypto transactions for hamas
Binance Faces Lawsuit by Hamas Victims Under Anti-Terrorism Law
Binance Holdings Ltd. faces a lawsuit claiming the cryptocurrency platform “knowingly facilitated” crypto transactions by Hamas before the group attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing 1,200 people a...
www.bloomberg.com
November 25, 2025 at 3:04 PM
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Google at its peak was basically the best information retrieval system in human history and they and every competitor decided going from there to “you didn’t want answers you wanted half-assed auto-complete 80%-wrong hallucinations” in a few years was the right idea
November 25, 2025 at 1:57 AM
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Trump’s effort to weaponize the justice system just hit a legal wall. It’s a reminder that even as he tries to bend the law into a tool for punishing his opponents, some institutional guardrails still hold. #holdfast #SteadyState
BREAKING: A federal judge has thrown out the criminal indictment of James Comey, ruling that Trump-installed prosecutor Lindsey Halligan was illegally appointed and had no lawful authority to bring the case. The court found her actions violated federal law and the Constitution’s Appointments Clause.
November 24, 2025 at 7:06 PM
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Dr Fadhel Kaboub argues that Africa can no longer afford to trade raw minerals for finished products: “Governments must invest in processing infrastructure. Refining, precursor production, and battery assembly should happen near the mines -not overseas”
www.standardmedia.co.ke/business/env...
How Africa plans to keep its green wealth at home
The device you are holding, built from African minerals, represents more than technology. It symbolises a choice: whether Africa rises up the value chain or remains stuck at the bottom.
www.standardmedia.co.ke
November 24, 2025 at 6:56 PM
This seems... bad.
In the memo, “Nvidia also responds to claims that the ‘current situation is analogous to historical accounting frauds (Enron, WorldCom, Lucent) that featured vendor financing and SPVs [special purpose vehicles.)’”

@barrons.com $NVDA
@firstadopter.bsky.social
www.barrons.com/articles/nvi...
November 24, 2025 at 7:14 PM
Holy shit. This is so bad.
November 24, 2025 at 2:57 PM
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Seeing these guys create giant off-balance sheet liabilities is like watching Michael Myers get up behind the couch as the teenagers are having sex
Meta’s data-center accounting gets the Jon Weil treatment:

It’s “financed with debt, and neither the data center nor the debt will be on its own balance sheet. That outcome looks too good to be true, and it probably is.”

@wsj.com $META
www.wsj.com/tech/meta-ai...
November 24, 2025 at 12:47 PM