• NEWSISOUT.COM
    Undead Voice founder Nicole Gress is rewriting the rules of trans voice training
    When Nicole Gress left traditional medical settings, she wasnt walking away from her profession: she was walking toward a new model of care. A trained speech-language pathologist, Gress, who uses she/they pronouns, saw too many transgender people hit a wall with conventional voice therapy. That frustration, combined with inspiration from the DIY innovations happening in the trans community online, led her to found Undead Voice.After wed exhausted all of my speech pathology tricks, my patients started bringing in YouTube clips, Gress recalled. Videos made by other trans people who had also gone through the speech therapy ringer and found it inadequate. They were tired of waiting for the system to work for them, so they did what our community always does, and started to figure it out themselves.When Gress shared these ideas with colleagues, she was told they were unsafe or inappropriate. Yet the same methods were already being used in singing and voice acting without concern. That double standard was the breaking point. Gress left the clinical system and immersed herself in new training. She started exploring techniques in singing, voice acting, somatic breathing, pedagogy certifications, while also listening closely to what trans people were already creating and sharing.I used everything I knew about neuroplasticity and habit formation to build a curriculum that helps people create real, lasting, habitual, automatic change in their voice so they can sound like themselves, effortlessly, Gress said. Thats when Undead Voice was born.Resonance vs pitchMost traditional voice training methods were never built for trans people in the first place, Gress explained. And yet were still expected to use them, and were confused when they dont work.She pointed to research by Stanford Universitys Lily Clifford showing resonance, not pitch, is the most powerful factor in gender perception. Yet clinical models largely ignored this. Traditional training also mimicked physical therapy: a few isolated appointments with long stretches of practice alone. That isolation stalled progress.People dont need the most support when theyre learning. They need it while theyre practicing, Gress said. Traditional models leave you to do the entire voice transition process by yourself. Theres no built-in community. No consistent emotional support. And no friends that have the same lived experience of transitioning their voice to buffer against the very real mental and emotional toll of voice dysphoria, which is often the number one reason people stop practicing Undead Voice flipped the model, offering video lessons combined with real-time feedback, peer practice groups, and a global network of thousands. Instead of years (not including time spent on waiting lists), many members complete their voice transition with Undead Voice in just four to six months.Building trust and shifting the fieldEarly on, Gress faced skepticism from medical peers. That has since shifted. These days, I hear from other speech pathologists weekly, many of whom want to get into trans voice work but dont know how, or dont feel equipped, Gress said.Her videos, once dismissed as unsafe, are now recommended starting points by peers. Undead Voice also shares data with healthcare providers, speaks at conferences, and supports parent groups navigating voice dysphoria in youth.I do think the tide is turning slowly but its not because the system is fixing itself. Its because trans people are building better models, and demanding better care, and the system cant ignore that anymore.The power of communityCommunity is the foundation of Undead Voice. When people practice alone, its easy to get stuck in fear, perfectionism, or silence. But when people practice together, everything changes because they realize theyre not alone. The community becomes a mirror, a buffer, and a source of momentum, Gress said.Members also echo that sentiment. Atticus, a trans man from Vancouver shared that once his voice aligned with his identity, he felt free to participate at work and pursue creative passions.Now that my voice reflects who I am, I dont cringe every time I open my mouth, said Atticus. I feel like myself. Being surrounded by people who get it made me want to speak again. I sing again. I act again. I participate at work. My interests came back. I feel at peace.Willow, a 52-year-old woman in Florida said she felt safer in public once she began training with peers.I was skeptical but Im now so much more confident when talking to people as Willow, she said. Having others to walk through the process with made me believe it was actually possible. And now, I love the sound of my voice.Its not just technical progress; its emotional relief, social connection, and real healing, Gress emphasized.Making access possibleCost has long been a barrier in voice training. Most traditional voice training is cost-prohibitive, Gress said, with sessions often costing $150 or more per one hour. To counter that, Undead Voice offers lifetime access to its core program and has awarded more than $1.4 million in scholarships. Undead Voice also launched Jumpstart, a free three-week series that has already reached tens of thousands.We believe that every trans and gender-diverse person deserves access to voice training, regardless of their age, zip code, income, or stage of transition, Gress said.Whats aheadUndead Voice has already worked with more than 100,000 people in over 20 countries. But for Gress, the real impact lies in the individual moments: the person who finally answered the phone without cringing, the teen who started speaking again, the parent who said they could finally hear their childs true self.In the coming years, Gress and her team plan to scale up Jumpstart, expand healthcare partnerships, and develop new technology to make affirming voice training even more accessible.This is more than a program; its a movement, Gress said. And were calling in anyone who believes in self-determination, health equity, and the power of being heard to help us build whats next.The post Undead Voice founder Nicole Gress is rewriting the rules of trans voice training appeared first on News Is Out.
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  • WWW.PRIDE.COM
    Kate Chastain teases 'House of Villains' feud with Plane Jane: 'We're on different levels'
    The shade is already being thrown.Kate Chastain and Plane Jane going head-to-head is a reality TV fan's ultimate fantasy. Thankfully, it looks like dreams do come true as the premiere for season three of House of Villains approaches.While attending BravoCon 2025, Chastain opened up on her time in the Villains mansion compared to The Traitors castle. She even hinted that she'd be down to compete on an 'All Stars' season of Traitors if the opportunity came up."Shockingly, I liked House of Villains better than The Traitors! It was so fun, so campy, and so exciting, but I'd always go back to The Traitors if Alan Cumming called me. I always do," Chastain tells PRIDE. See on Instagram It's safe to say that Chastain and Jane actually have quite a few things in common. Frankly, they have no problem sharing their honest opinions, and they don't care what other people think about them. Could this be a recipe for disaster on Villains?"Plane Jane... she's enthusiastic. She did do a performance. She's feisty. She's a plane... I'm more of a yacht. So, we're on different levels."With a cast that includes other notable villains like Tiffany 'New York' Pollard, Christine Quinn, Tom Sandoval, and more, Chastain is making it clear where she stands ahead of the competition."I mean, if she were a plane, what airline would she be? Her spirit, I love her spirit."House of Villains premieres early next year on Peacock. To see the full interview with Kate Chastain at BravoCon, check out the video at the top of the page.
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  • WWW.PRIDE.COM
    7 advanced tips for tribbing from sex experts
    Sapphic sex is vast and varied, from oral to fingering to frottage, there is something for everyone, but that also means its unlikely you are a master at everything. Thats where our LGBTQ+ sex experts come in. Theyve taught you the basics of tribbing, but now youre ready to become a certified tribbing sex god, and they have the tips and tricks to get you there. Tribbing, where you grind or rub your vulvas together, falls under the frottage umbrella and is a big part of lesbian and sapphic sex, which is why you need to study and level up your skill set.Now that youve got the basics down pat, prepare to up your game so that the queer women or trans or nonbinary partner youre sexing up sees the face of god when you rub your bits together. So whether you just passed Tribbing 101 and are ready to get your advanced degree or are a tribbing master looking for new sexy ideas to try, weve got you covered. To help you get even better at scissoring and other tribbing positions, we talked to sex educator Gabrielle Kassel for DatingAdvice.com, and Kai Korpak, a sex therapist and the assistant director at Best Therapies.1.Different positionsNow that you feel comfortable with tribbing, go from beginner to expert by experimenting with different positions. Try positions other than scissoring, Korpak tells PRIDE. You can try spooning, standing against a wall or door, T-position to name a few.2. Change up the speedWhen youre a newbie, the advice is often to take things slow, but now that youre trying to reach the advanced level, try varying your speed. Try ramping up the speed and tempo or match the mood of the music, Korpak says. Slowing down can also add some anticipation to each thrust.3.Try dildosWhile tribbing is all about rubbing your vulvas together, once youve mastered that, try adding penetration in too. With a double-ended dildo you can both be penetrated and trib at the same time. "If the dildo length is right for your bodies, your genitals will be able to meet in the apex, Kassel explains. Altogether, this means that your bodies get to enjoy a feel-good fullness and the genital-on-genital rubbing at the same time. Kassel recommends like looking for one at Fun Factory or the Banana Split Shop.4.Buy some sex furnitureTribbing is all about getting the angles just right so that you get enough contact to make your toes curl. Using pillows, yoga tools, or even buying specialty sex furniture can take you and your partner to all new levels of pleasure. Sex furniture, sex pillows and wedges, a sturdy headboard, leg spreader, yoga strap, and other a positioning tools can all go a long way for helping bring bodies into alignment in ways that make everything feel more comfortable and more pleasurable, Kassel says.5.Use a sex swingThis may seem like your taking a big swing (see what we did there?), but adding in a sex swing can make different positions possible and can set you up to play with power dynamics in a super sexy way. Because a swing makes the suspended partner essentially weightless, it can introduce a power dynamic that some people find really erotic, Kassel says. It also makes certain positions more accessible for different body types or mobility ranges, since it eliminates the need to rely on strength or flexibility to stay aligned. Just make sure the swing you buy is properly rated for your body weight and securely installed.6.Add analWith tribbing, the vulva is really the star of the show, but adding in anal stimulation can up the pleasure. Try circling the opening or insert a butt plug or well-lubed finger to up the sensations. Adding in some form of internal or external anal stimulation can heighten the overall sensation, Kassel says. The anal opening is jam-packed nerve endings, even light stimulation with an (anal-safe) vibrator or well-lubed finger can add a whole new sensation layer."7. Don't forget aftercareAfter any sexual experience, not just BDSM ones, you should be thinking about aftercare, which should include both emotional care for your partner and taking care of physical needs. Korpak says that you and your partner should stretch your hips, hydrate yourselves, and use lotion to soothe friction. After the session use a lukewarm water and gently clean the area, pat yourself dry to avoid any additional friction to the area, he recommends.Sources cited:Gabrielle Kassel, a sex educator for DatingAdvice.com. Kai Korpak, a sex therapist and the assistant director at Best Therapies.
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  • WWW.PRIDE.COM
    Kim Kardashian, Niecy Nash-Betts's 'All's Fair' renewed for season 2
    The ladies of All's Fair are coming back for round two!Ryan Murphy's legal drama, which has been slammed by critics but watched by millions of fans, has officially been renewed for a second season, per Deadline.While critics have given the show only a 3 percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes, it was watched by an impressive 3.2 million viewers globally on Hulu in its first three days and was the number one show on the streamer each of those days. It was Hulu's biggest original scripted series premiere in three years.All's Fair was also the number one show on Disney+ when it premiered.The show stars Kim Kardashian as attorney Allura Grant, who teams up with fellow lawyers Liberty Ronson (Naomi Watts) and Emerald Greene (Niecy Nash-Betts), and assistant Milan (Teyana Taylor) to start an all-female divorce legal firm."Fierce, brilliant, and emotionally complicated, they navigate high-stakes breakups, scandalous secrets, and shifting allegiances both in the courtroom and within their own ranks," the official synopsis reads. "In a world where money talks and love is a battleground, these women dont just play the game they change it."All's Fair also stars Glenn Close as Dina Standish and Sarah Paulson as Carrington Lane. Season one also featured Matthew Noszka, Judith Light, Hari Nef, O-T Fagbenle, Elizabeth Berkley, Jessica Simpson, Brooke Shields, Grace Bummer, and Kate Berlant.See on InstagramAll's Fair star Kim Kardashian has joked about the show's critical reception. She asked on Instagram, "Have you tuned in to the most critically acclaimed show of the year!?!?!? Alls Fair streaming now on @hulu and @disneyplus."See on InstagramOut100 Icon of the Year Niecy Nash-Betts celebrated the news on Instagram with several posts."The critics spoke loud but the people spoke LOUDER," she wrote. "And we love you for it!"See on InstagramAll's Fair season 1 finale is scheduled for a release on December 9 on Hulu.
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  • WWW.PRIDE.COM
    12 gay sex scenes from the 'Heated Rivalry' book that we're dying to see in the show
    The Heated Rivalry premiere is just around the corner, and while fans are dying to see Hollanov (the ship name of Shane Hollander and Ilya Rozanov) fall in love, what they're really curious about is how the super spicy sex scenes from the book are going to translate to the screen.Are they going to be just as hot, dirty, and plentiful as the book? Time will tell!Heated Rivalry is based on a gay hockey romance novel by Rachel Reid and is about Shane Hollander (Hudson Williams) and Ilya Rozanov (Connor Storrie), two of the biggest stars in Major League Hockey, bound by ambition, rivalry, and a magnetic pull neither of them fully understands, according to the official synopsis. What begins as a secret fling between two fresh-faced rookies evolves into a years-long journey of love, denial, and self-discovery.There are countless sex scenes in the book, and all of them are sinfully hot and gay as hell, which is why fans are salivating for the show to come out.Director Jacob Tierney has promised three sex scenes per episode so they can absolutely fit all of our faves in! But which ones are we dying to see brought to screen?Heated Rivalry will premiere on November 28 on HBO Max in the U.S. and Crave in Canada.Spoiler warning for the book, and potentially the series below. 1. The prologueIn the books prologue, were treated to a scene where the men hookup at the building Shane bought just so they could have secret rendezvous. The chemistry between Ilya and Shane is out of control and while a lot of books fail to have characters use lube (spit is not a good substitute!) or work to loosen their partner up, this scene does both. Were also just really looking forward to seeing a bossy Ilya and submissive Shane in the show.2. Shower blow jobsOk, so technically this is part of the prologue in Shanes building, but after they have sex, the two men end up giving each other blow jobs in the shower. There is a clip in the trailer that makes us think this one is going to be in the show, and not only will it be hot, but we cant wait to hear Ilya tell Shane hes beautiful.3. Their first time (@) Shanes very first time being with another man is with Ilya. He loses his blow job V-card, and then Ilya returns the favor. Afterward, they agree to keep it a secret. Watching Ilya and Shane discover just how much sexual chemistry they have as Shane fumbles through his first gay experience will be a thing to behold.4. The All-Star game hookup (@) The next time the pair meets up is after the All-Star game, Shane is nervous about getting caught, but after making out, Ilya tells him, On your knees. Ilya returns the favor before the two end up exchanging hand jobs in the shower. At this point, they are still fierce rivals, and the taboo nature of their relationship makes it even hotter.5. The first time they go all the way (@) Shane gets a hotel room so the two can have anal for the first time. This is fan favorite scene because not only does Shane finally bottom for the Russian hottie, but when Shane wants to tell Ilya to fuck off for teasing him, he instead threw his head back against the wall like the eager slut he apparently was. Plus, Ilya carries Shane to bed before rocking his world, and who doesnt want to see that?6. Premature...well you knowWhen the two men meet up at Shanes building to have sex, Shane is so turned on he comes just from giving Ilya a blow job. Its an undeniably hot and comical scene that tells you a lot about how much closer they have gotten over the years theyve been sneaking around. This is also where we learn that while Ilya is still sleeping with women, he hasnt hookup up with a man in two years. 7. Putting on a show (@) They meet up in Ilyas hotel room after the NHL awards, and Shane puts on a show where he masturbates and fingers himself while Ilya sits back and watches. Who knows how graphic the show is going to get, but this scene is going to need to make it in!8. The tuna melt scene (@) The tuna melt scene is a must-see, and if the trailer is anything to go by, it looks like were going to get it. The sex scene isnt one of the hottest in the book, but Ilya says yes, sweetheart to Shane when he comes. Then, he asks Shane to stay and makes him a tuna melt. Its a turning point in their relationship that every fan is hoping to see.9. Skype sexWhile Ilya is in Russia after his fathers death, the two men jerk themselves off on Skype and not only is it incredibly hot, but at this point theyve both admitted to themselves (but not each other) that theyre in love and so level of intimacy and chemistry is off the charts. 10. Salad tossingThere a lot of great sex scenes when Ilya finally agrees to stay with Shane at his cottage, but the rimming scene it top tier. If White Lotus can show tossing the salad on screen, surely Heated Rivalry can too. 11. The phone sceneIlya acts like a menace when he sinks to his knees and gives Shane a blow job while Shane is on the phone with his best friend Hayden. Its taboo, risky, and incredibly hot!12. I love you (@) After hundreds of pages of hot sex, denying they mean anything to each other, and secret yearning, Ilya and Shane finally say I love you and then have sex with Shane on top, straddling Ilya so they can look each other in the eyes. Our hearts cant take it, but we're going to need to see it on screen!
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  • WWW.PRIDE.COM
    30 sexy pics of Hasan Piker that prove the only thing that is hotter than his takes is his bod
    If there are two things the internet can agree on, its that Hasan Piker is controversial and absolutely gorgeous.The unabashed progressive political commentator has built a massive audience on both YouTube and Twitch (where he streams under the name HasanAbi), where he offers his unfiltered takes on politics and political figures across the spectrum, left and right. That approach has led to no shortage of both fair and unfair controversy including multiple temporary bans on Twitch. But Piker is also known for another of his attributes, namely, his attributes. Lets just call it what it is: Piker is incredibly good-looking, and hes not afraid to show off his chisled jaw and rippling bod online. Not sure what we mean, or just want a closer look? Keep scrolling here are 30 pics that prove the only thing hotter than his takes is well, him.And be sure to follow him on Instagram at @hasanpiker. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hasan Piker (@hasandpiker)
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    Land-use changes threaten the safety net for birds
    Nature, Published online: 26 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03594-4Alterations in land use are found to leave bird communities with fewer backup species for key ecological roles, making ecosystems vulnerable to further species loss.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    Land-use change undermines the stability of avian functional diversity
    Nature, Published online: 26 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-025-09788-0Large-scale analyses of bird species traits reveal that land-use change reduces resilience of key ecological functions more than previously thought.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    Trumps AI Genesis Mission: what are the risks and opportunities?
    Nature, Published online: 26 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03890-zNational laboratories have been instructed to broaden access to their data sets to accelerate research as part of the federal governments AI platform. But who stands to benefit?
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    Weighing up the wild-meat harvest in Amazonia
    Nature, Published online: 26 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03454-1An assessment of the food hunted across the Amazon rainforest reveals its crucial role and how human pressures, particularly deforestation, threaten the resource.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    These programmable knots harness physics to make surgical stitches safer
    Nature, Published online: 26 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03892-xLoops precisely knotted into thread can help novice surgeons to perform perfect sutures.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    NBA Cup takeaways: Knicks, Magic clinch spots in quarters
    The 2025 NBA Cup continues as group play wraps up. Here's everything you need to know about the third annual in-season tournament.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    37 games with postseason implications to fill your Rivalry Week menu
    As if the intensity of rival games weren't enough, there are high stakes everywhere you look this weekend.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Week 14 preview: Rivalry Week stakes, plus conference championship scenarios
    Our college football experts break down the stakes of the week's biggest matchups.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Bears' win in Philly sends message: 'We're for real'
    The Bears' 24-15 win over the Eagles went a long way toward legitimizing their surprising run this season, with several players saying they're "changing the culture" after winning nine of their past 10 games.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Week 13 buzz: What we're hearing on the struggling Bucs, Pickens' next deal, more
    Are the Bucs worried about their losing streak? Will the Cowboys extend George Pickens? Here's the latest intel.
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  • WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORG
    How Trumps Transportation Department Is Loosening Safety Rules Meant to Protect the Public
    On its face, the rule proposed in July by the countrys pipeline-safety regulator seemed innocuous. The regulator, a division of the U.S. Department of Transportation called the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, was proposing what looked like minor, bureaucratic changes to its process for issuing regulatory waivers. Between the lines, PHMSA watchers saw a much more consequential effort one that would curtail the power of agency experts to impose conditions aimed at preventing catastrophic pipeline failures.The rule was signed by Ben Kochman, whom the administration of President Donald Trump appointed as deputy administrator of the agency. In the proposal, Kochman noted that the Interstate Natural Gas Association of America, a powerful pipeline industry group, had criticized the policy that the new rule would change. It went unmentioned that Kochman was a director of that same trade group until January.You hear of the phrase the fox guarding the henhouse, said Bill Caram, executive director of the Pipeline Safety Trust, an advocacy group. What were worrying about in this situation is the fox designing the henhouse.The rule is part of a much larger rollback of regulations at the DOT under the second Trump administration. The agencys new leaders have touted this rollback as cutting red tape and encouraging innovation. But dozens of the regulations they have targeted sought to prevent deaths and injuries in the nations transportation and infrastructure systems.The DOTs sprawling regulatory domain stretches from air traffic control to highway and train safety to maintenance of oil pipelines and rules governing autonomous vehicles. In recent months, the agency has scrapped possible limits on subway and bus driver hours meant to keep them from falling asleep at the wheel; delayed a requirement that airplanes be equipped with an extra cockpit barrier to prevent 9/11-style takeovers; nixed a planned mandate for safer motorcycle helmets; proposed exempting school bus child-restraint systems from new crash-protection requirements; and postponed a rule that freight trains transporting hazardous materials carry emergency oxygen masks to protect crews.In total, ProPublica identified 30 regulatory actions taken by the DOT under the new administration that current and former agency officials as well as safety advocates said are at odds with the agencys mission to protect the public. Some of the regulations targeted by the new administration were required by federal legislation. Five of the targeted regulations could prevent as many as 1,000 deaths and 40,000 injuries each year, according to the agencys own prior estimates.The regulations are written in blood, said John Putnam, the agencys general counsel during the administration of former President Joe Biden. Most of them are driven by a tragedy that resulted in the loss of life. But industry groups objected to many of the rules as unjustified or burdensome and pushed for, or later commended, the DOTs recent changes to them.The DOTs safety enforcement has dropped dramatically as well. In the first eight months of Trumps second term, the agency opened 50% fewer investigations into vehicle safety defects, concluded 83% fewer enforcement cases against trucking and bus companies and started 58% fewer pipeline enforcement cases compared with the same period in the Biden administration, agency data shows. The agency has also proposed allowing subjects of DOT enforcement actions to bypass career staff and appeal directly to Trump appointees.Overseeing these decisions are dozens of political appointees who previously worked for industries regulated by the DOT. The agencys top posts are now occupied by lobbyists and consultants, former airline and railroad CEOs, alumni of autonomous vehicle technology startups and shipping and infrastructure firms, and ex-lawyers for pipeline and trucking companies. Some of the appointees previously battled against the DOT divisions they now control. Some took industry jobs after prior stints at the agency and have now cycled back into the upper ranks of the DOT.ProPublica identified 32 political appointees at the DOT with industry ties, including 11 who recently held investments in transportation companies and adjacent industries. Those appointees disclosed between $12 million and $52 million in stock holdings and other financial interests in airlines, railroads, oil and gas corporations, transportation technology firms and other businesses whose work is close enough to the agencys purview that the appointees pledged to divest or recuse themselves from matters involving those companies. Such investments by DOT leadership may be far greater, but financial disclosures are not publicly available for all of the appointees. The agency has not fulfilled a request by ProPublica for any disclosure filings from other appointees that are subject to release under federal law.ProPublicas findings are based on a review of hundreds of rulemaking documents as well as internal agency emails, financial disclosures, legal filings and other records. ProPublica also interviewed safety advocates and researchers as well as 19 current and former DOT officials, most of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retribution from the administration.Some degree of industry presence at the DOT is common, even desirable, those officials noted. The agencys regulatory responsibilities are vast, often involving arcane technical matters for which the input of engineers and operators is essential. Many of the DOTs recent deregulatory moves are backed by lengthy justifications from the administration or industry groups, and safety advocates do not view all of them as equally consequential.DOT spokesperson Nate Sizemore said in a statement that safety comes first at the agency under its new leadership. The insinuation that slashing duplicative and outdated regulations contradicts that mission isnt just wrong it ignores the fact that doing so enhances focus on enforcing the key rules that actually keep the American people secure. (He disputed that the pipeline rule signed by Kochman would reduce the agencys regulatory authority.) Regarding the industry ties of agency leadership, he added: ProPublicas gross smears are flat out lies, and these attacks on our exceptionally qualified staff are a shameful attempt to fearmonger. He did not respond to a question about what the agency viewed as lies or answer other detailed questions.The breadth and speed of the rollbacks are unprecedented, according to Marc Scribner, a senior transportation policy analyst at Reason Foundation, a libertarian think tank, who studies the agencys regulatory activity. We havent seen deregulatory rulemaking volume at USDOT like this before, Scribner said.And the number of DOT appointees who hail from industries they now regulate is also raising eyebrows among some agency veterans. Historically Republicans have been more business focused, Democrats have been more public transportation and public interest and safety focused, said one former senior DOT official. What youre seeing this time around is the industry focus on steroids.Safety advocates and former agency officials fear this will lead to deaths and injuries that could be prevented. The consequence of this, of pulling back on these safety regulations, is that more daughters, mothers, children, bread winners are going to lose their lives, said Barbara McCann, a former senior DOT safety official who served in Democratic and Republican administrations. Government is here to safeguard people, protect people, and the new leadership at DOT is not performing that role.No division of the DOT better exemplifies the alignment of industry and regulator under the second Trump administration than its pipeline office. Kochman, the appointee who signed the July proposed rule, is one of four political appointees in the division who previously worked for the pipeline industry or in closely related fields. Another is Keith Coyle, the agencys chief counsel, who, as a lawyer representing industry groups, successfully fought to undo a pipeline safety regulation as recently as 2023. The arrival of these appointees has coincided with an exodus of high-ranking civil servants from the agency.The new appointees have wasted little time. PHMSA has published 23 notices of proposed rulemaking under the new administration most of them deregulatory which is more than the Biden administration published in four years. I dont think weve ever seen anything like this, Caram said. All 23 proposals were signed by Kochman.An aerial view of Danville after the 2019 pipeline explosion. The regulations are written in blood, a former DOT official said. Most of them are driven by a tragedy that resulted in the loss of life. Michael Clevenger/Courier Journal/USA Today NetworkThe regulatory revisions largely point in the same direction. The general tone is, Weve done great on pipeline safety, so its time to start looking at how to decrease costs for the industry and improve efficiency, Caram said. Theres really nothing in there about how we can make the rules more effective or more efficient to improve safety, which is the agencys mission.In recent months, Kochman has sought to triple the monetary value of property damage caused by a hazardous liquid pipeline failure before its operators must report the accident to PHMSA. (The agency was forced to withdraw the regulation on procedural grounds.) He proposed allowing companies to transport larger quantities of lithium batteries, which are known to spontaneously explode, and appliances containing flammable gasses. He questioned the agencys existing drug and alcohol testing requirements for pipeline workers, requesting public feedback on whether those requirements impose an undue burden on affected stakeholders. He asked the same about packaging requirements for radioactive materials.Four of PHMSAs recent regulatory actions cite INGAA, the trade group for which Kochman used to work. That includes a plan to scale back a requirement that pipeline operators report emergency shutdown events, such as when pipeline systems malfunction and release flammable gases into the air. That proposal quoted regulatory language suggested by INGAA and other trade associations. PHMSA agrees with the proposed revisions, the notice reads.While PHMSAs rulemaking office has been busy, its enforcement wing has slowed dramatically. From 2002 to the end of the Biden administration, PHMSA typically proposed around $475,000 in penalties for safety violations every 30 days, according to an analysis by the Pipeline Safety Trust. In the first eight months of the new administration, that figure fell to around $8,000 in proposed penalties every 30 days, a 98% drop. (Enforcement picked up in October, Caram said.)Kochman has become a divisive figure at the agency, according to two former PHMSA employees who left this year and another federal employee familiar with the matter. An ex-congressional staffer in his late 30s with no engineering or legal credentials listed on his LinkedIn profile, Kochman has shouted at colleagues in meetings and demeaned the agencys prior work, the current and former employees said. He has dismissed carefully considered agency positions as obviously wrong and cut out career officials in determining PHMSA policy. His positions typically aligned with those of INGAA and the pipeline industry more broadly, the current and former employees said.Kochman and Coyle, both of whom also served in PHMSA under prior administrations, did not respond to requests for comment.Sizemore, the DOT spokesperson, called Kochman and Coyle dedicated public servants whose collective knowledge of pipeline and hazardous materials safety matters have proved invaluable to this Administrations efforts to modernize the agency. He said PHMSA has taken steps to advance safety, including updating its inspection and enforcement process, dispatching more personnel in response to safety incidents and protecting safety critical positions from layoffs.An INGAA spokesperson said in a statement that the groups members have a goal of operating natural gas pipeline infrastructure with zero incidents, and we will continue to engage with PHMSA to advance rulemakings that prioritize the safety of our members and the communities that they serve.Some of PHMSAs most consequential moves under the new administration occurred with no public notice. In the waning days of the Biden presidency, the agency announced new steps on two major rulemaking initiatives. One would strengthen regulations for carbon dioxide pipelines an initiative spurred by a pipeline rupture in Mississippi in 2020 that sent 45 people to the hospital. The other would crack down on leaks and was expected to eliminate as much as 500,000 metric tons of methane emissions. But because the Biden administration waited until its final days to propose the rules, they were not officially published before Trump took office.That enabled the new administration to kill the rules silently, without ever having to formally withdraw them.For appointed leadership to pull them back without replacing them with anything, and with no intention to replace them with anything, is damaging to pipeline safety, one of the former PHMSA employees said. And its contrary to what Congress told PHMSA to do.Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy frequently says safety is his top priority. But that rings hollow to Gary Wilburn. It calls to mind a sunny morning 23 years ago when Wilburn, then a volunteer firefighter, came upon the charred remains of a driver.Wilburn had responded to a crash on an interstate in western Oklahoma. The deceased man, a subsequent investigation would show, was stopped in traffic on his way home from college when a semitruck traveling an estimated 75 miles per hour smashed into his Chevrolet Camaro from behind, crushing it and causing it to burst into flames. Wilburn was on the scene for 45 minutes before finding the Camaros license plate and realizing the victim was Orbie Wilburn, his 19-year-old son. His body had been burned beyond recognition.The Chevrolet Camaro that 19-year-old Orbie Wilburn was driving in 2002 when it was hit from behind by a semitruck traveling an estimated 75 miles per hour. Courtesy of Linda WilburnSince then, Wilburn and his wife, Linda, have spent decades advocating for stronger truck safety regulations through letter-writing campaigns and conversations with members of Congress. One of their primary goals has been to secure a federal requirement for devices in big rigs that prevent them from speeding. By 2016, it seemed their efforts would finally pay off: The U.S. Department of Transportation proposed a rule mandating speed limiters in trucks like the one that killed their son. Studying possible maximum speeds of 60, 65 and 68 miles per hour, the agency estimated the regulation could prevent up to 500 deaths and 10,000 injuries each year.But many truckers hated the idea. The devices would force them to travel slower than surrounding traffic, which could itself be dangerous, they argued. Less discussed was that many truckers are paid per mile, which means the faster they go, the more money they can make.The rule stalled for years before seeming to be revived in 2022 when the Biden administration put it back in play. Then Trump appointees returned to the DOT.We want D.C. bureaucrats OUT of your trucks so were eliminating the absurd speed limiters rule, Duffy posted on social media in July. The rule was dead.It just is heartbreaking, Linda Wilburn told ProPublica. It has potential to save lives.The agency has drawn less attention to other road and vehicle safety regulations that it has targeted. In September, the DOT quietly signaled that it was delaying two possible rules, one for side underride guards on heavy trucks to prevent cars from getting crushed underneath them, another for additional seat belt warning systems in cars. The rules were estimated to prevent as many as 70 deaths and 600 injuries annually, but industry groups objected to aspects of both. Later that month, the agency said it would push back changes to its vehicle safety ratings for consumers, citing the objection of an automakers trade group. The changes were meant to prod automakers to adopt vehicle designs that would be less lethal to pedestrians.Tests from 2017 show how crashes can play out differently if a truck has only a fiberglass skirt for fuel efficiency, top, vs. a steel side underride guard, bottom. Courtesy of the Insurance Institute for Highway SafetyIf youre going to say safety is our top priority, then you should push for any initiative that is going to save lives and prevent harm, said David Harkey, president of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, a nonprofit that researches vehicle crashes.Rule delays are common when new administrations take office. But administrations may also slow-walk proposed rules that theyve inherited but dislike as a way to effectively kill them without formally withdrawing them and facing the criticism that such a step might trigger, former officials said.Among the moves most concerning to safety advocates are those related to automatic emergency braking, a technology that detects possible collisions and forces vehicles to slow down or stop. The Biden administration proposed or adopted rules that would require the technology in cars and large trucks, estimating they could prevent more than 500 deaths and 33,000 injuries each year, but industry groups criticized the proposals as impractical and dangerous.That blowback appears to have had an effect. The DOT is planning to significantly narrow the requirement for trucks, according to internal agency emails obtained by ProPublica. Those emails, from May, show that the administration plans to revise the rule to apply only to heavier trucks, not to smaller and midsized trucks as well, as originally proposed. Drivers and OOIDA oppose, one official wrote to colleagues, referring to the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association, an influential trucker trade group.Nobody cares more about highway safety than professional truck drivers, its where they make their living, an OOIDA spokesperson said in a statement. OOIDA and the small-business truckers we represent appreciate that Secretary Duffy and his team continue to listen to the men and women who keep Americas supply chain moving.Zach Cahalan, executive director of the Truck Safety Coalition, criticized the reversal. Nothing is going to do more to prevent loss of life and severity of injury than automatic emergency breaking, he said. That is by far the most consequential rule sitting at DOT.The automatic emergency braking requirement for cars could also be in jeopardy. An automakers trade group brought the DOT to court over the regulation this year. Instead of defending the proposal, the Trump administration has repeatedly asked the judge to delay the case, legal filings show. The Department is under new leadership and is reviewing the rule at issue in this litigation, which could lead to its modification, one filing reads.Scrapping that requirement would be catastrophic, one former agency official said. Pulling back that rule or slowing it down would just lead to more fatalities with virtually no benefit.Also significant, but largely unscrutinized, was the administrations decision to quietly withdraw two proposals to embed new safety requirements in major federal programs that funnel billions of dollars a year to state and local governments for road projects. That included requiring states to advance the so-called Safe System Approach to road safety, which seeks to reduce crashes and make them less severe in part through design features like roundabouts, rumble strips and high-visibility intersections. The Trump administration had little to say about why it withdrew them beyond that they did not align with agency needs, priorities, and objectives.McCann, the former DOT safety official, noted that deaths from car crashes occur in the United States at a vastly higher rate than in other developed countries. She estimated that the proposals, if adopted, eventually could have saved hundreds of lives annually. The problem with surface transportation is that people die in ones and twos and threes, but it adds up to 40,000 deaths a year, which is not enough to spark outrage, she said. The only way to solve that is to make broad systematic changes, and thats what these rules help us do, especially on the roadway side. And without them that carnage is just going to continue.The post How Trumps Transportation Department Is Loosening Safety Rules Meant to Protect the Public appeared first on ProPublica.
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    New York Moves Forward With a Brooklyn Flood Protection Plan That Falls Short of Other City Projects
    After a decade of planning, New York City broke ground in September on a $218 million plan to prevent flooding in the portside neighborhood of Red Hook in Brooklyn, even though experts say it will provide inadequate protection from storms. The project also will provide less protection than other city flood prevention projects, including a new $3.5 billion upscale development on the edge of the neighborhood.Over a decade ago, Superstorm Sandy killed 44 people and caused $19 billion in damage across New York City, swamping homes and destroying businesses in Red Hook. The city responded, pumping billions of dollars into neighborhood flood protection projects. Most of the money went to protect lower Manhattan from powerful 100-year storms defined as storms that have a 1-in-4 chance of occurring at some point during the typical 30-year home mortgage.But in Red Hook, where roughly two-thirds of residents are Black and Hispanic and earn below the citys median income, the city is instead building to protect against a 10-year storm. The planned construction is expected to raise streets and sidewalks and erect barriers and floodwalls to an elevation of up to 10 feet above sea level.Its at best temporary. At worst, it gives a false sense of security, said John Shapiro, a Pratt Institute professor whose research focuses on the impact of climate change on urban planning.Shapiro and other experts say that as the climate warms, floods and storms are striking more frequently and with greater intensity. This leaves coastal communities with a complicated choice: Retreat from the coast, or build protection against the next violent storm.Port warehouses, brick buildings with black shutters, which now house artists studios, with the Manhattan skyline in the background Shuran Huang for ProPublicaRed Hook sits on a peninsula jutting into New York Harbor, which makes it vulnerable to flooding. The neighborhood was a marsh before the city began filling it in by the 1870s. In 1939, the city added the first section of the Red Hook Houses to board dock workers. The 32 buildings of the Red Hook Houses make up one of the citys largest public housing developments and dominate the neighborhoods skyline.The neighborhood has Brooklyns last working port, along with an Amazon warehouse and an Ikea store. Artists studios are now tucked into old port buildings and trendy stores lining the cobblestone streets. In recent years the area has gentrified.Quincy Phillips was living in a third-floor apartment in the Red Hook Houses when Sandy hit. He watched as the water swamped the first floor of the building.Quincy Phillips and his family had to live without power for two weeks after Hurricane Sandy. Alex Bandoni/ProPublicaIt didnt reach past the second floor, thank God, he said. We had to roll our pants up to even walk past to get outside.The storm sent a 6-foot wave of water through the neighborhood, destroying homes, ripping metal doors from warehouses, dropping boats onto the streets and carrying cars out into the harbor.Phillips family, like several thousand others in Red Hook, lived for two weeks without power and had to rely on federal aid until his refrigerator came back on.The year after Sandy wiped out the homes of Phillips and his neighbors in Red Hook, the administration of then-Mayor Mike Bloomberg determined Red Hook was at high risk of future flooding. A 2013 city report recommended a flood protection system for the neighborhood, using a combination of infrastructure such as floodwalls and floodgates.The city said the project, now known as the Red Hook Coastal Resiliency Project, would cost $200 million but at the time was able to secure only a $50 million grant from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. The administration of subsequent Mayor Bill de Blasio tapped the citys capital budget for another $50 million. As a result, the city told consultants to only consider projects that it could afford on the smaller budget, according to a feasibility study. This would be a less ambitious 10-year storm plan.Construction on the Red Hook Coastal Resiliency Project began in September. Shuran Huang for ProPublicaNo Accounting for Sea Level RiseIn order to predict how frequently storms will occur in the future and how high floodwaters are likely to reach, scientists and engineers use historic tidal data.The models project that in Red Hook, a 100-year storm at current sea level would produce surging waves that would reach an elevation of at least 11 feet a foot higher than the current plan would protect against.That doesnt account for sea level rise. Climate experts serving on a city climate change panel have projected that by mid-century, in the worst case scenario sea levels will rise several feet. Counting that additional water height, the citys own study found that Red Hook would need to erect barriers between 15 and 18 feet. Neighborhood storm protection projects in other parts of the city are being built to an elevation of at least 16 feet.Elevation of City Flood Protection ProjectsEast Side Coastal Resiliency: 16.5 feet above sea levelBrooklyn Bridge-Montgomery Coastal Resilience: 16.5 feet (plus 1.5 feet with deployable barriers)South Battery Park City Resiliency: Up to 19.8 feetNorth/West Battery Park Resiliency: Up to 20 feetRed Hook Coastal Resiliency: 10 feetThe federal flood insurance program, which provides subsidized flood insurance to homeowners who live in high-risk flood zones, encourages communities to adopt a 100-year flood plan, said Philip Orton, an engineering professor at Stevens Institute of Technology who researches flood protection. Doing so, he said, lowers the cost of flood insurance for residents. Its rare that communities will not do it, he said. All other coastal storm protection projects in New York City meet a 100-year standard.Biden and Obama administration guidelines encouraged federally funded projects to build to an elevation of at least 2 feet over 100-year storm projections. The Trump administration revoked those during each of his terms.Last year, the city and FEMA increased funding by about $100 million for the Red Hook project. According to the citys Department of Design and Construction, the agency responsible for the project, the added funds covered a decade of inflation and paid for upgrades to park and green spaces in the area.New floodwalls at Asser Levy Playground in Manhattan are part of the East Side Coastal Resiliency Project. The walls, seen in the background, are 6.5 feet higher than the planned walls for the Red Hook project. Shuran Huang for ProPublicaThe funds also increased the elevation of the project from the original height of 8 feet to 10, taking into account greater changes to sea levels. But it didnt bring it up to the levels that are being pursued in other parts of the city.The Department of Design and Construction said a bigger project would disrupt ports, cruises and other waterfront businesses while taking away park space. When asked why Red Hook was receiving a lower level of protection than other communities, a department spokesperson said its low-lying topography and privately owned waterfront made gaining access to build and maintain a protection system difficult. The current project is sufficient, the spokesperson added, because Sandy is the only storm to strike the city since 1927 that would have overtopped the flood barrier.Michael Oppenheimer, a professor at Princeton University who served on the citys climate change panel that came up with the sea level rise projections, said the city is misusing the historical record to justify its failure to protect against future storms.Thats a pretty poor excuse, he said, adding that storms and floods like those experienced in Sandy will occur more frequently as sea levels rise.A man tries to ride his bike through Hurricane Sandy floodwaters in Red Hook on Oct. 29, 2012. The heavy flooding destroyed homes and businesses. Craig Warga/NY Daily News via Getty ImagesBernice Rosenzweig, a professor at Sarah Lawrence College who studies urban flooding and serves on the New York City Panel on Climate Change, said the project is inadequate to protect Red Hook from even todays large storms.The walls are not designed for major floods, not even our contemporary major floods, forget about major floods that will happen at the end of the 21st century, she said.Unequal ProtectionAlexa Avils, the City Council member representing Red Hook, said infrastructure planning is particularly frustrating in Red Hook. Along with community activists and residents, she argues that the system the city and the federal government use to decide how much money to spend on flood protections is biased against poor communities.It never feels like we are prioritized, and were constantly fighting with the city again for both a basic level of service and then to get these major projects done and coordinated properly, she said.To win federal grants, applicants conduct a cost-benefit analysis that needs to show flood projects save more money in the event of a storm than they cost to build, said Kristin Smith, an economics researcher at Headwaters Economics, a nonprofit that studies flood risk.That can be difficult for poor communities, she said.The benefit-cost analysis can be a barrier to qualifying for federal funding when its a lower-income neighborhood and the cost of the project is so high that you just dont have the benefits to justify it, she said.Red Hook residents, advocates and leaders say the flood barrier system proposed for the $3.5 billion housing development in the neighborhood shows how wealthy residents in the city receive greater protection.The development, called the Brooklyn Marine Terminal, would build 6,000 mostly market-rate units on the northwest side of Red Hook, according to planning documents. A city task force approved the development in September along with a plan to refurbish and upgrade the port. It promises a flood barrier system that would protect from 100-year storms.New Housing Developments Would Have Higher Flood Protection Than the Rest of Red HookNote: The proposed housing and 21 feet of protection are part of the Brooklyn Marine Terminal development plan. The 10 feet of protection is part of the Red Hook Coastal Resiliency Project and includes floodwalls and other forms of protection, like raised streets, sidewalks and floodgates. Sources: NYC Economic Development Corp., NYC Department of Design and Construction Lucas Waldron/ProPublicaThe Economic Development Corp., a city-run nonprofit organization, owns the land and plans to pay for the flood protection and other infrastructure with funding from federal grants, the citys capital budget and the state, plus some from developers.The Brooklyn Marine Terminal plan still needs to pass an environmental review and the states approval process, but it will bypass the citys more extensive process. According to the planning documents, it could take until 2038 to finish the project.The plan would protect the new development site with a 21-foot coastal floodwall, which would start on the northern end of Red Hook and extend about 1 mile north.Urban planners who conducted an analysis of the Brooklyn Marine Terminal for the City Club of New York Waterfront Committee, an advocacy group promoting flood protection for waterfronts, say its a mistake to protect the new development while the south coast of Red Hook receives a lower level of protection. That will place the new development at risk, as a storm surge can overtop those barriers and flood the area from the landward side of the development.The group said the plan serves gentrification and developer interests rather than the larger Red Hook community.Most Red Hook residents live in public housing and lack the income necessary for housing mobility in NYC, the analysis said. In contrast, most of the residents in the new development are expected to be very affluent, based on projected rents, it said.A spokesperson for the Economic Development Corp. said the city would study how to integrate the two projects but that there are no plans to further protect the peninsula.The post New York Moves Forward With a Brooklyn Flood Protection Plan That Falls Short of Other City Projects appeared first on ProPublica.
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    Ticking Time Bomb: A Pregnant Mother Kept Getting Sicker. She Died After She Couldnt Get an Abortion in Texas.
    Tierra Walker had reached her limit. In the weeks since shed learned she was pregnant, the 37-year-old dental assistant had been wracked by unexplained seizures and mostly confined to a hospital cot. With soaring blood pressure and diabetes, she knew she was at high risk of developing preeclampsia, a pregnancy complication that could end her life.Her mind was made up on the morning of Oct. 14, 2024: For the sake of her 14-year-old son, JJ, she needed to ask her doctor for an abortion to protect her health.Wouldnt you think it would be better for me to not have the baby? she asked a physician at Methodist Hospital Northeast near San Antonio, according to her aunt. Just a few years earlier, Walker had developed a dangerous case of preeclampsia that had led to the stillbirth of her twins.But the doctor, her family said, told her what many other medical providers would say in the weeks that followed: There was no emergency; nothing was wrong with her pregnancy, only her health.Just after Christmas, on his birthday, JJ found his mom draped over her bed, lifeless. An autopsy would later confirm what she had feared: Preeclampsia killed her at 20 weeks pregnant.Every day, JJ revisits photos and videos of his mom.Walkers death is one of multiple cases ProPublica is investigating in which women with underlying health conditions died after they were unable to end their pregnancies.Walker had known that abortion was illegal in Texas, but she had thought that hospitals could make an exception for patients like her, whose health was at risk.The reality: In states that ban abortion, patients with chronic conditions and other high-risk pregnancies often have nowhere to turn.They enter pregnancy sick and are expected to get sicker. Yet lawmakers who wrote the bans have refused to create exceptions for health risks. As a result, many hospitals and doctors, facing the threat of criminal charges, no longer offer these patients terminations, ProPublica found in interviews with more than 100 OB-GYNs across the country. Instead, these women are left to gamble with their lives.As Walkers blood pressure swung wildly and a blood clot threatened to kill her, she continued to press doctors at prenatal appointments and emergency room visits, asking if it was safe for her to continue the pregnancy. Although one doctor documented in her medical record that she was at high risk of clinical deterioration and/or death, she was told over and over again that she didnt need to worry, her relatives say. More than 90 doctors were involved in Walkers care, but not one offered her the option to end her pregnancy, according to medical records.Walkers case unfolded during the fall of 2024, when the dangers of abortion bans were a focus of protests, media coverage and electoral campaigns across the country. ProPublica had revealed that five women three in Texas alone had died after they were unable to access standard reproductive care under the new bans.ProPublica condensed more than 6,500 pages of Walkers medical records into a summary of her care with the guidance of two high-risk pregnancy specialists. More than a dozen OB-GYNs reviewed the case for ProPublica and said that since Walker had persistently high blood pressure, it would have been standard medical practice to advise her of the serious risks of her pregnancy early on, to revisit the conversation as new complications emerged and to offer termination at any point if she wanted it. Some described her condition as a ticking time bomb. Had Walker ended her pregnancy, every expert believed, she would not have died.Many said that her case illustrated why they think all patients need the freedom to choose how much risk they are willing to take during pregnancy. Walker expressed that she didnt want to take that risk, her family says. She had a vibrant life, a husband and son whom she loved.Under Texas abortion law, though, that didnt matter.Walkers mother, Pamela Walker, holds her daughters ashes. I Dont Know How Much More I Can TakeOn a hot September day, Walker was lying down with JJ after a walk with their two small dogs, Milo and Twinkie, when she started shaking uncontrollably.Terrified, JJ called 911, asking for an ambulance.As the only child of a single mom, JJ had always considered Walker his closest friend, coach and protector wrapped in one. In their mobile home, JJ was greeted each morning by his moms wide smile and upturned eyes, as she shot off vocabulary quizzes or grilled him on state capitals. He loved how fearlessly she went after what she wanted; in 2021, she had proposed to her boyfriend, Eric Carson, and the two eloped. Shed just been talking about moving the family to Austin for a promotion she was offered at a dental clinic.Eric Carson and Walker married in 2021. At the hospital, JJ was shocked to see her so pale and helpless, with wires snaking from her head and arms.To Walkers surprise, doctors quickly discovered that she was five weeks pregnant. They also noted hypertension at levels so high that it reduces circulation to major organs and can cause a heart attack or stroke. That, and her weight, age and medical history, put Walker at an increased risk of developing preeclampsia, a pregnancy-related blood pressure disorder, said Dr. Jennifer Lewey, director of the Penn Womens Cardiovascular Health Program and expert in hypertension.If Im seeing a patient in her first trimester and her blood pressure is this uncontrolled never mind anything else what Im talking about is: Your pregnancy will be so high risk, do we need to think about terminating the pregnancy and getting your health under control?As Walkers first trimester continued, she kept seizing. Her body convulsed, her eyes rolled back and she was often unable to speak for up to 30 minutes at a time. Some days, the episodes came in rapid waves, with little relief.For three weeks, she stayed at Methodist hospitals; doctors were not able to determine what was causing the spasms. Walker couldnt get out of bed, in case a seizure made her fall, and this left her vulnerable to blood clots. She soon developed one in her leg that posed a new lethal threat: It could travel to her lungs and kill her instantly.Carson watched over her during the day and her aunt Latanya Walker took the night shift. She was panicked that her tough niece, whose constant mantra was quit your crying, now seemed defeated. One evening, during Walkers third hospitalization, when she was about 9 weeks pregnant, she told Latanya shed had a vision during a seizure: Her grandmother and aunt, who had died years earlier, were preparing a place for her on the other side.You better tell them youre not ready to go, Latanya said.I dont know how much more I can take of this, Walker whispered.Walkers aunt, Latanya Walker, tried to advocate for her niece during her hospitalizations.The next morning, Walker called for a doctor and asked about ending her pregnancy for the sake of her health. When we get you under control, then everything will go smoothly, the doctor replied, Latanya recalled. The physician on the floor was not an OB-GYN with the expertise to give a high-risk consultation, but the Walkers didnt realize that this mattered. By the time the doctor left the room, her aunt said, tears streamed down Walkers cheeks.Dr. Elizabeth Langen, a maternal-fetal medicine specialist in Michigan who reviewed Walkers case, said a physician comfortable with high-risk pregnancies should have counseled her on the dangers of continuing and offered her an abortion. The safest thing for her was to terminate this pregnancy, thats for sure.During Walkers many hospital and prenatal visits, 21 OB-GYNs were among the more than 90 physicians involved in her care. None of them counseled her on the option or the health benefits of a termination, according to medical records.In Texas, the law bars aiding and abetting an illegal abortion. As a result, many physicians have avoided even mentioning it, according to interviews with dozens of doctors.In her condition, Walker couldnt fathom leaving the state. When her aunt suggested ordering abortion medication online, Walker was worried she could go to jail. She was spending so much time in the hospital; what if she got caught taking the pills?At 12 weeks pregnant, she was admitted to University Hospital. Doctors there noted that even on anticoagulation medication, the clotting in Walkers leg was so profound that she needed a thrombectomy to remove it.At this point, weve gone from complicated, but within the realm of normal to weve got someone with a major procedure in pregnancy that tells us something isnt going well, said Dr. Will Williams, a maternal-fetal medicine specialist in New Orleans, where an abortion ban is also in place. In my practice, wed have a frank discussion about whether this is a person wed offer a termination to at the point of thrombectomy.ProPublica reached out to five physicians who were involved in key moments of Walkers care: the hospitalist on duty on Oct. 14, 2024, when she asked about ending her pregnancy; three OB-GYNs; and a hospitalist on duty at the time of her thrombectomy. They did not respond. The hospitals Walker visited, including those run by University Health System and Methodist Healthcare, which is co-owned by HCA, did not comment on Walkers care, despite permission from her family. Although the Walkers have not pursued legal action, they have engaged a lawyer. A University Health System spokesperson said that it is the companys policy not to comment on potential litigation.In her second trimester, Walkers seizures continued and her hypertension remained out of control. At an appointment on Dec. 27, at around 20 weeks, a doctor noted spiking blood pressure and sent her to University Hospitals ER. There, doctors recorded a diagnosis of preeclampsia.The experts who reviewed Walkers vital signs for ProPublica said her blood pressure of 174 over 115 was so concerning at that point, she needed to be admitted and monitored. Most questioned her doctors choice not to label her condition as severe. The treatment for severe preeclampsia, which points to a problem with the placenta, is delivery or, at 20 weeks, an abortion.Instead, doctors lowered her blood pressure with medication and sent her home.Carson in the bedroom he shared with Walker Three days later, JJ crawled into bed with his mom and fed her soup. Im so sorry, Walker croaked. Its your birthday and it shouldnt be like this.He told his mom it was okay. He hadnt expected laser tag or a trip to Dave & Busters this year. Over the past few months, when his mom was home, he had tried his best to make things easier on her, walking the dogs when she was out of breath, checking in every hour or so with a hug. JJ knew that after missing so many days of work, she had lost her job. She was stressed about getting enough food for the house. He was relieved when he heard her snoring at least she was resting.That afternoon, when his stepdad was out grocery shopping and his grandmother was just getting back from dialysis, he cracked open the door to Walkers room.His mom was lying face-down in bed, as if she had fallen over while getting up. JJ ran over and tried to find any sign she was breathing. When he called 911, a dispatcher coached him to slide her to the rug and start CPR.I need you, he shouted as he leaned over his mom, pressing down on her chest. I need you!JJ receives prayers at church in San Antonio.We Have to Allow for More ExceptionsThe anti-abortion activists who helped shape Americas latest wave of abortion bans have long seen health exemptions as a loophole that would get in the way of their goals. They fear such exceptions, if included in the laws, would allow virtually anyone to terminate a pregnancy.In Idaho, an anti-abortion leader testifying at a state Senate hearing suggested doctors would use health exceptions to give abortions to patients with headaches.In South Dakota, a pregnant Republican lawmaker with a high risk of blood clots begged her colleagues to consider creating a health exception that would protect her; her bill never made it to a hearing.In Tennessee, an anti-abortion lobbyist with no medical training fought and defeated an amendment to the state law that would allow a health exception to prevent an emergency. He testified in the state Capitol that the carve-out was too broad since some pregnancy complications work themselves out.The refusal to entertain these broader exceptions is particularly consequential given the state of womens health. Women are entering pregnancy older and sicker than they have in decades. The rate of blood pressure disorders in pregnancy has more than doubled since 1993; they now affect up to 15% of U.S. pregnancies. And theyre most prevalent in states with restrictive abortion policies, according to a 2023 study in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology. The burden of disease falls heaviest on Black women, like Walker, for an array of reasons: neighborhood disinvestment, poor access to health care and discrimination in the medical system. Cuts to Medicaid funding and changes to the Affordable Care Act are likely to exacerbate these problems, according to experts.Other countries give pregnant women and their doctors far more control over the medical decision to terminate. Across Europe, for example, most laws permit abortion for any reason through the first trimester, when more than 90% of abortions occur. After that gestational limit, their statutes also tend to include broad health exceptions that can be used for chronic conditions, illnesses that develop in pregnancy, fetal anomalies and, in some countries, mental health.U.S. abortion bans generally restrict interventions to a far more limited set of health risks, like a life-threatening medical emergency or substantial and irreversible harm to major organs. A small subset of lawyers and doctors argue that the law can and should be interpreted to cover patients with chronic conditions that are worsening in pregnancy. But the vaguely written bans threaten criminal penalties for performing an illegal abortion in Texas, up to 99 years behind bars. In practice, few hospitals grant health exceptions, ProPublicas reporting has found.Dr. Jessica Tarleton, an OB-GYN who provides abortions in South Carolina, recalled how much changed at her hospital when the states ban was put in place: OB-GYNs who want to provide an abortion to a patient with a health risk now need to get a maternal-fetal medicine specialist to explicitly write in the chart that it is necessary, in compliance with the law. Not many doctors are willing to do so.Some people were not because of their personal beliefs, and some because they didnt want to be involved in any kind of potential legal actions, Tarleton said. They didnt want their opinion to have anything to do with a patient getting an abortion or not.Recently, for example, Cristina Nuez sued two hospitals in El Paso for their inaction in her care in 2023. She had diabetes, uncontrolled blood pressure and end-stage kidney disease when she learned she was unexpectedly pregnant at 36. Doctors wrote in her medical record that she needs termination based on threat to maternal life or health, but Nuez alleged that one hospital failed to find an anesthesiologist willing to participate. She remained pregnant for weeks, even as blood clots turned her right arm black, until an advocacy organization threatened legal action and she was able to obtain an abortion. The lawsuit is ongoing.This year, Texas Republicans passed legislation with minor amendments to their ban after ProPublica reported the deaths of three miscarrying women who did not receive critical abortion care during emergencies. In the updated law, an emergency still needs to be life-threatening to qualify for an abortion, but it no longer needs to be imminent. Doctors expect that most hospitals still wont provide abortions to women like Walker who have dangerous chronic conditions but no certain threat to their lives.ProPublica asked Sen. Bryan Hughes, the author of Texas abortion ban, about how the specific complications Walker faced should be treated by doctors under the amended law. When her pregnancy began, would she be eligible for an abortion due to her health? Would she need to wait for a diagnosis of severe preeclampsia? Is there a reason the law doesnt include an exception for health risks? ProPublica put the same questions to the 20 state senators who co-wrote the bipartisan amendment.Only Sen. Carol Alvarado, a Democrat, responded. In her view, the amendment was far too narrow. But, she said, her Republican colleagues defer to the far right of their base and oppose broader exceptions.You cant proclaim to be pro-life, but youre passing laws that are endangering women and causing death, she said. We have to allow for more exceptions.Latanya and Pamela in San AntonioSo Youd Rather Let Somebody Die?After Walker died, her family felt bewildered by her medical care. The doctors had assured them that her baby was healthy and she would be fine. The autopsy found that the fetus was indeed healthy, at just under a pound and measuring 9 inches long. But it showed that Walker had hypertensive cardiovascular disease with preeclampsia, along with an enlarged heart, dangerously full of fluid, and kidney damage signs that her condition had declined even more than she knew.In Carsons mind, the many doctors they saw cast the risks as challenges that would be overcome if his wife followed directions. She was doing what they told her to do, he said. He couldnt understand how no one suggested ending the pregnancy to keep Walker safe. Nobody said nothing.Latanya worried the law played a role. They didnt want to offer to end the pregnancy, because the government or someone says you cant? So youd rather let somebody die? she said. Now we are the ones that have to suffer.Read MoreA Striking Trend: After Texas Banned Abortion, More Women Nearly Bled to Death During MiscarriageJJ couldnt bear to stay in the home where he had found his mom, so he moved in with Latanya. Each day, he scrolls through old videos on the computer so he can hear Walkers voice.Latanya does everything she can to support him, but she knows she cant erase his pain.She recalls watching JJ steady himself at Walkers funeral, to see her one last time. Until that point, he hadnt cried.When he finally faced the open casket where his mom lay holding her fetus, JJ sank to his knees, overcome. His aunt, uncles, cousins and grandmother gathered around him and rocked him in their arms.The post Ticking Time Bomb: A Pregnant Mother Kept Getting Sicker. She Died After She Couldnt Get an Abortion in Texas. appeared first on ProPublica.
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    Gov. Greg Abbott Was Ordered to Release Some of His Emails With Elon Musk. Most Are Blacked Out.
    Months after fighting to keep secret the emails exchanged between Texas Gov. Greg Abbotts office and tech billionaire Elon Musks companies, state officials released nearly 1,400 pages to The Texas Newsroom.The records, however, reveal little about the two mens relationship or Musks influence over state government. In fact, all but about 200 of the pages are entirely blacked out.Of those that were readable, many were either already public or provided minimal information. They included old incorporation records for Musks rocket company SpaceX, a couple of agendas for the governors committee on aerospace and aviation, emails regarding a state grant awarded to SpaceX and an application from a then-Musk employee to sit on a state commission.One is an invitation to happy hour. Another is a reminder of the next SpaceX launch.The documents were provided in response to a public records request by The Texas Newsroom, which asked Abbotts office for communications with Musk and the businessmans employees dating back to last fall. Abbotts and Musks lawyers fought their release, arguing they would reveal trade secrets, potentially intimate and embarrassing exchanges or confidential legal and policymaking discussions.Abbotts spokesperson, Andrew Mahaleris, said the governors office rigorously complies with the Texas Public Information Act and releases any responsive information that is determined to not be confidential or excepted from disclosure.Open government experts say the limited disclosure is emblematic of a larger transparency problem in Texas. They pointed to a 2015 state Supreme Court decision that allowed companies to oppose the release of records by arguing that they contain competitively sensitive information. The ruling, experts said, made it harder to obtain records documenting interactions between governments and private companies.Tom Leatherbury, who directs the First Amendment Clinic at Southern Methodist Universitys Dedman School of Law, said companies took advantage of the ruling. Among the most prominent examples of the rulings effect on transparency was McAllen, Texas refusal to disclose how much money was spent to lure pop star Enrique Iglesias to the city for a concert. The city argued that such disclosures would hurt its ability to negotiate with artists for future performances. Eventually, it was revealed that Iglesias was paid nearly half a million dollars.The problem has been exacerbated, Leatherbury added, by the fact that the Office of the Attorney General, which referees public records disputes, does not have the power to investigate whether the records that companies want to withhold actually contain trade secrets.Corporations are willing to assert that information is confidential, commercial information, and more governmental bodies are willing not to second-guess the companys assertion, Leatherbury said. (Leatherbury has performed pro bono legal work for The Texas Newsroom.)Musk and his companies representatives did not respond to questions about the records.One of the richest people in the world, Musk has invested heavily in Texas. Hes relocated many of his businesses headquarters to the state and hired lobbyists who successfully pushed for several new laws that will benefit his companies.As part of an effort to track Musks clout in the state Capitol, The Texas Newsroom on April 20 asked Abbotts office for communications with employees from four of the businessmans companies: SpaceX, car manufacturer Tesla, the social media site X and Neuralink, which specializes in brain nanotechnology.The governors office said it would cost $244.64 to review the documents, which The Texas Newsroom paid. After the check was cashed, lawyers representing Abbotts office and SpaceX each sought to keep the records secret.SpaceXs lawyer sent a letter to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton dated June 26, saying that publicly releasing the emails would hurt its competitive advantage.Abbotts public information coordinator, Matthew Taylor, also asked Paxtons office for permission to withhold the documents, arguing they included private exchanges with lawyers, details about policymaking decisions and information that would reveal how the state entices companies to invest here. Taylor said some of the records were protected under an exception to public records laws known as common-law privacy because they consisted of information that is intimate and embarrassing and not of legitimate concern to the public.Releasing the Musk emails, he said, would have a chilling effect on the frank and open discussion necessary for the decision-making process.Ultimately, Paxtons office mostly sided with Abbott and Musk. In a Aug. 11 opinion, Assistant Attorney General Erin Groff wrote that many of the documents could be withheld. Groff, however, ordered the release of some records determined to be either not highly intimate or embarrassing or of legitimate public interest.A month later, the governors office released 1,374 pages of records, the vast majority of which were completely redacted.Some records included a note that appeared to explain why. A note on page 401, for example, cited the exemption for competitive bidding records for 974 redacted pages. Names and emails of Musks employees were also removed.The fact that a governmental body can redact more than 1,000 pages of documents that are directly related to a major businesss activities in Texas is certainly problematic, said Reid Pillifant, an attorney specializing in public records and media law. (Pillifant has represented a coalition of media outlets, including ProPublica and The Texas Tribune, in lawsuits seeking therelease of public information related to the May 2022 mass shooting at an Uvalde, Texas, elementary school.)He and other experts said such hurdles are becoming more common as legislation and court decisions have weakened the states public records laws.Four years after the 2015 Supreme Court decision, legislators passed a new law that was meant to ensure the release of basic information about government deals with private businesses. But open government experts said the law did not go far enough to restore transparency, adding that some local governments are still objecting to the release of contract information.Moreover, lawmakers continue to add carve-outs to what qualifies as public information every legislative session. Just this year, for example, legislators added the following exceptions to public records and open meetings laws: information relating to how government entities detect and deter fraud and discussions during public government meetings about certain military and aerospace issues.Even with the increasing challenges of accessing public records, Leatherbury and Pillifant were stumped by the governors decision to release thousands of pages only to black them out fully. Leatherbury said that the governors office may have wanted to show the volume of records responsive to the request.They wanted you to see what little you could get in the context of the entire document, even though thats kind of meaningless, he said.The Texas Newsroom has asked the Office of the Attorney General to reconsider its decision and order the release of the Musk emails. There is little other recourse to challenge the outcome.If a member of the public believes a government agency is violating the law, they can try to sue. But the experts noted that a recent Texas Supreme Court decision made it more difficult to enforce the public records law against the governor and other executive officers. Now, Leatherbury said, its not clear how challenging such a records decision would work.Every Texas citizen should care about access to these kinds of records because they shed light on how our public officials are making big decisions that affect the land where people live and how their taxpayer dollars are being spent, Pillifant said.The post Gov. Greg Abbott Was Ordered to Release Some of His Emails With Elon Musk. Most Are Blacked Out. appeared first on ProPublica.
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    Trumps Anti-Green Agenda Could Lead to 1.3 Million More Climate Deaths. The Poorest Countries Will Be Impacted Most.
    New advances in environmental science are providing a detailed understanding of the human costs of the Trump administrations approach to climate change.Increasing temperatures are already killing enormous numbers of people. A ProPublica and Guardian analysis that draws on sophisticated modeling by independent researchers found that President Donald Trumps America First agenda of expanding fossil fuels and decimating efforts to reduce emissions will add substantially to that toll, with the vast majority of deaths occurring outside the United States.Most of the people expected to die from soaring temperatures in the coming decades live in poor, hot countries in Africa and South Asia, according to recent research. Many of these countries emitted relatively little of the pollution that causes climate change and are least prepared to cope with the increasing heat.ProPublica and the Guardians analysis shows that extra greenhouse gases released in the next decade as a result of Trumps policies are expected to lead to as many as 1.3 million more temperature-related deaths worldwide in the 80 years after 2035. The actual number of people who die from heat will be much higher, but a warming planet will also result in fewer deaths from cold.Leaders from most of the worlds countries are now gathered at an international conference in Belm, Brazil, to address the escalating effects of climate change. The absence of the United States, which has 4% of the worlds population but has produced 20% of its greenhouse gases, has been pointedly noted by participants. Afghanistan, Myanmar and San Marino are the only other nations that did not send a delegation to the meeting, according to a provisional list of participants.Our calculations use modeled estimates of the additional emissions that will be released as a result of Trumps policies as well as a peer-reviewed metric for what is known as the mortality cost of carbon. That metric, which builds on Nobel Prize-winning science that has informed federal policy for more than a decade, predicts the number of temperature-related deaths from additional emissions. The estimate reflects deaths from heat-related causes, such as heat stroke and the exacerbation of existing illnesses, minus lives saved by reduced exposure to cold. It does not include the massive number of deaths expected from the broader effects of climate change, such as droughts, floods, wars, vector-borne diseases, hurricanes, wildfires and reduced crop yields.The numbers, while large, are just a fraction of the estimated 83 million temperature-related deaths that could result from all human-caused emissions over the same period if climate-warming pollution is not curtailed. But they speak to the human cost of prioritizing U.S. corporate interests over the lives of people around the globe.The sheer numbers are horrifying, said Ife Kilimanjaro, executive director of the nonprofit U.S. Climate Action Network, which works with groups around the world to combat climate change.But for us theyre more than numbers, she added. These are people with lives, with families, with hopes and dreams. They are people like us, even if they happen to live in a different part of the world.The Trump administration, sometimes with the help of congressional Republicans, has dramatically set back efforts to limit climate change, cutting tax credits for clean electricity, fuels, vehicles and manufacturing; easing pollution restrictions on coal-fired power plants; and gutting fuel standards on cars, to name just a few of the climate initiatives that were recently reversed.Prior to Trump, we had the most ambitious climate policy that the U.S. has ever come up with our best effort to date by far of addressing this growing problem, said Marshall Burke, an economist at the Doerr School of Sustainability at Stanford University.When we roll these things back, it is fundamentally affecting the damages were going to see around the world, said Burke.Responding to questions about the reversals and their projected consequences, White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers attacked what she referred to as the Green Energy Scam. America still doesnt buy the lefts bogus climate claims, she wrote, without specifically addressing the forecast of heat-related deaths.The finding that fossil fuels were causing the world to warm first made it to the White House at least 60 years ago, when advisers to President Lyndon Johnson warned that runaway emissions would lead to precisely the extreme events and rapid warming the planet is undergoing today. Scores of experts have denounced the current administrations disregard for climate science, noting there is overwhelming evidence that human-driven climate change is already causing damage that will only get worse.When Heat Becomes DeadlyThe people most likely to die from rising temperatures are those already disproportionately vulnerable to extreme heat: laborers toiling outdoors; the very old; the very young, who lose fluids especially quickly; people with disabilities and illnesses; and people who lack air conditioning and stable housing.A man holds the body of his three 3-year-old son, who died during a 2015 heatwave, outside the cold storage area at a morgue in Karachi, Pakistan. Rizwan Tabassum/AFP/Getty ImagesExtremely high temperatures kill by overwhelming the bodys ability to cool itself. Sweating often ceases. Unconsciousness, organ failure and death follow. Rising temperatures also exacerbate existing health conditions, triggering heart attacks, strokes and respiratory problems that hasten death.In recent years, climate change has caused the number of deaths from heat exposure to climb around the world. In the U.S., deaths linked to heat have increased more than 50% since 2000, according to a recent study from the Yale School of Public Health.Hundreds of people died in the Pacific Northwest in 2021, when a high pressure system trapped hot air above parts of the area and caused temperatures to soar well above 100 degrees Fahrenheit. Many of the elderly victims were found alone in their homes, without air conditioning. One farmworker collapsed in a field, another in a plant nursery. A 65-year-old took her last breath in her parked car and was essentially baked by the sun. A team of climate scientists found that the heat wave would have been virtually impossible without human-induced climate change.Still, when deaths from both heat and cold are considered together, the total number of temperature-related deaths may not appear catastrophic right away. As the planet warms in the next few decades, the global decline in people dying from cold may almost entirely offset deaths from heat. But in the second half of the century, long after Trump has left office, the number of heat-related deaths is expected to greatly outpace the reduction of deaths from cold.While the U.S. has emitted more climate-warming pollution than any other country, when deaths from both heat and cold are considered together, it is expected to suffer only up to 1% of temperature-related deaths worldwide caused by the additional carbon emissions, according to a working paper by R. Daniel Bressler, an assistant economics professor at Bentley University who developed the concept of the mortality cost of carbon.Some of the worlds poorest countries will almost certainly struggle to adapt. Niger and Somalia whose emissions are dwarfed by those of the U.S. are projected to have the worlds highest per capita death rates from increasing temperatures, Bressler found. India is expected to suffer more temperature-related deaths than any other country. Pakistan, which has just 3% of the worlds population, is expected to have between 6% and 7% of the worlds temperature-related deaths, depending on its ability to adapt to the effects of heat.Projected Temperature-Related Deaths From Additional Carbon Emissions Compared to Country PopulationHow disproportionately countries are expected to be impacted relative to their population size.Note: Some places, like South Sudan and Western Sahara, were excluded from Bresslers analysis. The number of projected deaths may vary depending on how countries adapt to heat. Source: Data from R. Daniel Bressler.People in my community will die, said Ayisha Siddiqa, a Los Angeles-based climate activist whose family continues to live in her native Pakistan.Siddiqa, who co-founded the environmental group Future Generations Tribunal, recalled the effect of heat on her family in 2022, when temperatures in Pakistan and India soared above 120 degrees Fahrenheit. Like most people in the region, the Siddiqas do not have air conditioning. Her father, she said, lost consciousness and had to be hospitalized during the deadly heat wave.Its unexplainable, she said of the heat. Its kind of like the entire air around you is sticking to your body and you cant breathe.Progress ReversedAt this time last year, the United States was on track to drastically reduce its emissions.Under President Joe Biden, the nation made landmark investments to turn away from fossil fuels, the primary driver of climate change, and harness power from the wind and the sun. Hundreds of billions of dollars were being directed toward reducing emissions through a variety of initiatives, such as putting more electric vehicles on the roads and making office buildings and homes more energy efficient.Look Up Countries Shares of Projected Temperature-Related DeathsNote: Only the 100 most populous countries are included in this table. The number of projected deaths may vary depending on how countries adapt to heat. Sources: R. Daniel Bressler, UNs World Population Prospects 2024Biden also reversed Trumps first-term decision to pull the United States out of the Paris Agreement, the international deal struck a decade ago in which countries pledged to work together to limit global warming.But as soon as he returned to the White House, Trump began to undo it all. On his first day back, in front of a crowd of cheering supporters wearing MAGA hats, he authorized the United States to again pull out of the Paris Agreement, which he previously deemed a rip-off. Just 10 days earlier, the World Meteorological Association had declared 2024 the hottest year on record.Over the next 100 days, Trump instigated more efforts to roll back climate policies than he had in his entire previous term.In March, his Environmental Protection Agency celebrated the biggest deregulatory action in U.S. history when it announced a slew of actions intended to reverse his predecessors efforts to rein in climate change. Among them were regulations that restrict emissions from cars and trucks, limit air pollution from oil and gas operations, and require power plants to capture planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions.Then came the One Big Beautiful Bill, Trumps nickname for the domestic policy megabill he signed in July. The act cut tax incentives for solar and wind energy and electric vehicles; made it easier and cheaper to drill or mine on federal lands; reversed efforts to cut emissions of methane, another greenhouse gas; and increased government support for coal.Calculating the Lives LostTo understand the consequences of these moves, ProPublica and the Guardian used the results of modeling from Rhodium Group, an independent, nonpartisan research firm that analyzed the policy changes from this year. The group came up with a high, low and midrange estimate of the amount of additional emissions expected to be released in the next 10 years as a result of the rollbacks the EPA announced in March and the bill passed this summer. (The modeling also reflects changes due to market forces and other factors.)For our calculation, our starting point was Rhodium Groups midrange number: 5.7 billion metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions through 2035. (Using the firms other estimates would result in between 571,000 and nearly 2.2 million extra temperature-related deaths due to Trumps policy changes. The Princeton University-led REPEAT Project conducted a similar analysis and came up with 6.9 billion metric tons, which would result in even more projected deaths.)To translate those emissions to deaths, ProPublica and the Guardian turned to the field of climate economics, which links human-generated emissions to measurable economic costs. A model that calculates whats known as the social cost of carbon by Nobel laureate William Nordhaus has been used in federal policy since 2009, guiding everything from requirements mandated by the Securities and Exchange Commission to EPA regulations.While Nordhaus estimated the broad economic cost of climate change, Bressler, the Bentley University professor, used Nordhaus model as a starting point but focused on just temperature-related deaths. Drawing also on public health research, Bressler estimated the amount of additional carbon dioxide expected to cause one death over 80 years: 4,434 metric tons. The figure is equivalent to the average lifetime emissions of 3.5 Americans or 146.2 Nigerians. Using the same estimate, Bressler also calculated how many deaths are expected over the course of 80 years from each additional metric ton of carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere. He published his findings in Nature Communications in 2021.In response to questions for this story, the EPA, which recently stopped considering the social cost of carbon at Trumps direction, rejected Bresslers scientific analysis. The agency called it an exercise in moral posturing, not rigorous science and said that the calculation of deaths per metric ton of carbon is based on unvalidated extrapolations and ignores the dramatic uncertainties that dominate long-term climate projections.Climate scientists, however, said that the mortality cost of carbon is a valid metric. Peer reviewers for the 2021 paper that laid out the concept described it as valuable and intuitive and relevant for designing policy. After publishing the study, Bressler went on to serve as climate staff economist on the White House Council of Economic Advisers.Others have emphasized that, because Bresslers model focuses narrowly on the direct effects of temperature, the estimates it generates are vastly lower than the total death toll from climate change. It also does not capture the serious but non-deadly effects of extreme heat, such as reduced productivity and increased misery.Bressler acknowledges that his work produces estimates and that the true number of additional deaths due to greenhouse gas emissions will depend on several unknowable factors, including how quickly people adapt to changing temperatures and market forces. Critically, future presidents and other countries could also upend predictions by taking new steps to reduce emissions.Bresslers 2021 paper previewed multiple possible futures for the planet. Under what he calls the pessimistic scenario, global emissions wouldnt level off until the end of the century. It was under this scenario that Bressler estimated that, by 2100, climate change will have caused 83 million people to die of temperature-related deaths around the world. This is the scenario that would result in 1.3 million deaths by 2115 from the additional emissions released over the next 10 years as a result of Trumps policies.If global emissions were to drop to almost zero by 2050, the total projected toll from temperature-related deaths due to climate change would fall to 9 million by 2100. Even then, Trumps policy changes this year alone would still result in an additional 613,000 deaths.Experts agree that, while both of the scenarios Bressler lays out are possible, the most likely amount of emissions will fall between these two extremes. Still, Bressler said, the projections underscore whats at stake.If you do things that add emissions, you cause deaths, he said. If you do things that reduce emissions, you save lives.The post Trumps Anti-Green Agenda Could Lead to 1.3 Million More Climate Deaths. The Poorest Countries Will Be Impacted Most. appeared first on ProPublica.
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    A Different Type of Dementia is Changing Whats Known About Cognitive Decline
    On its own, LATE dementia is less severe than Alzheimers, but in combination, it makes Alzheimers symptoms worse, scientists say.
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    Rebel Nuns Can Live in Old Abbey, if They Give Up Social Media
    After the octogenarian nuns refused to return to their senior center, the abbot has finally folded. But he has some conditions.
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    Israeli Forces Kill Two Palestinians in West Bank After They Appear to Surrender, Video Shows
    The Israeli authorities said they were investigating the shooting, which came amid days of extensive military operations in the West Bank.
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    A Hong Kong Fire Survivors Escape, in His Own Words
    In his own words, William Li, a resident of the Hong Kong apartment complex that became an inferno, recounted how he and two neighbors survived until help arrived.
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    Winter Storm in Northern U.S. Expected to Snarl Post-Thanksgiving Travel
    Forecasters say a winter storm could disrupt travel, bringing up to two feet of snow across parts of the Midwest through the holiday weekend.
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    A Bare Box Space Becomes a Mid-Century Dining Room for Under $500
    The room now feels like a warm hug when I walk in, the DIYer says.READ MORE...
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    Rebel Wilson breaks silence on 'The Deb' controversies and allegations
    Rebel Wilson has now commented on the many controversies and legal battles surrounding her directorial debut feature, The Deb, describing them as her "worst nightmare."Best known for her roles in Pitch Perfect and Bridesmaids, Wilson has been the target of two lawsuits defamation and breach of contract by The Meg producers Amanda Ghost, Gregor Cameron, and Vince Holden, in addition to the movie's star Charlotte MacInnes.In response, Wilson filed a countersuit in which she doubled down on the allegations of sexual assault, and how producers attached to the project allegedly stole money from the movie itself. Wilson also claimed that producers of The Meg were having "inappropriate behavior towards the lead actress of the film." "I felt, in my position as director, I had to report that, and the moment I did, started all the retaliation against me," Wilson told 60 Minutes Australia. "All I can say is she came to me, she made what I obviously inferred as a sexual harassment complaint, and I had a duty to then act on it."Elsewhere in the interview, Wilson brought up being "presented with texts in which [she] seemed to have clarified the 'bizarre situation' with Ghost and relayed that the incident did not actually make MacInnes uncomfortable." The director attempted to "maintain professional communication" with Ghost, though she already "very uneasy" about the situation.In her financial lawsuit, Wilson accused the producers of attempting to embezzle close to a million dollars from the movie's budget, as well as of uploading a video to Instagram in July 2024 in which she said the producers are blocking the movie from premiering at the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF). Wilson confidently alleged that this happened because "they knew it would be good for me as a first-time female director to have that profile and they blocked it as part of their retaliation against me speaking up against them." Her blasting them on social media had the intended result of getting the film to premiere at TIFF, but it was also the reason for the defamation lawsuit."It's wild it's gotten to this point," The Deb director went on. "I think it's a ridiculous waste of the Australian legal system. [MacInnes] reported something to me, I acted on it in my position as the director of the movie," Wilson said of the lawsuits. "I had a legal, ethical, moral responsibility to do that."Watch Rebel Wilson's interview with 60 Minutes Australia below.
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    Doechii giving Ayo Edebiri a lap dance is the video every lesbian needs to see today
    Dodger Stadium got some incredibly steamy sapphic action this weekend when Doechii got hot and heavy on stage with actress Ayo Edebiri.The Anxiety singer performed at the Camp Flog Gnaw music festival, which ran from Nov. 23 to Nov. 24 at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles and featured performances by other queer artists like GloRilla and Kali Uchis. The impressive concert, where Doechii entered on a giant slide, included a spicy appearance by Edebiri during Crazy.Doechii is frequently provocative on stage, including that time she scissored with Katy Perry on stage during the 2024 MTV VMAs, and this weekends performance was no different.During the song, The Bear star was seated at a school desk when Doechii jumped on top of it before she sank down and started humping the air in front of Edebiri.Edebiri responded to the sexy lap dance by fanning herself with her hand and then grabbing Doechiis thighs as the desk spun around. (@) (@) (@) (@) (@) (@) (@) This isnt the first time Edebiri and Doechii have been linked. The two stars were also co-chairs of the 2025 Met Gala, which was themed Superfine: Tailoring Black Style.Watching Doechii be so sexy with other women on stage is exactly what every lesbian needed in their social media feed today. Heres hoping we get many more sapphic moments like this in the future!
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    Sexy pics of Damian Hardung shirtless on a bed go viral & gays are obsessed
    The gays are loving every episode of Maxton HallThe World Between Us. The second season of the hit young adult romance drama series is streaming now on Amazon Prime Video, and the show's leading man, Damian Hardung, is getting a lot of steamy attention online.The handsome actor is showing a lot of skin in the popular show, and fans are naturally going feral every time his sexy body hits their screens. The latest episode of Maxton Hall was no exception. Check out the highlights below. (@) (@) (@) (@) (@) (@) (@) (@) (@) (@)
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    9 Republican men who defy the 'hung smile' theory with their small packages
    Celebrity men frequently have us salivating over how hot they are and speculating what they may be packing, the same cant be said for famous Republican men.The concept of a hung smile is going viral right now, with people speculating that you can tell that celebs like David Corenswet, Alexander Skarsgrd, and Mike Faist are well-endowed because of their magnificent smiles. There isnt any real scientific basis for this theory, but the internet is sure that a mans bulge size can be judged by the way they show off their pearly white. Conservative men, on the other hand, will make you dry as a bone the second they try to smile.A knowing smile on a sexy celebrity will have you smiling to yourself, but watching a Republican man try to morph his face from hateful scorn to a deranged smile (think of the Grinchs creepy smile at the beginning of the story before his heart grows three sizes) when they think about taking away peoples healthcare, banning books, or ICE raids, will have you shaking in your boots.This is the opposite of a hung smile aka small d*ck energy in action.There may be no official study showing that a great smile is correlated to a large member, but were pretty sure these right-wingers are proof positive that a bad smile is just a giant neon sign pointing out what theyrelacking. Stephen MillerTrump's Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller is not only short AOC says hes 410 and we know what that means but he also has a disturbing piranha smile that is the textbook definition of the opposite of a hung smile. Plus, hes an anti-LGBTQ+ white supremacist puppeteering the downfall of American democracy. Mike JohnsonIf carrying water for the Trump administration and doing whatever it takes to keep the Jeffrey Epstein files from being released wasnt enough to let us know what Speaker Mike Johnson is packing, his weasel smile would prove he only has a Vienna sausage in his pants. Joe RoganConservative podcast host Joe Rogan may have big muscles but his smile is pure small d*ck energy. Jesse WattersFox News host Jesse Watters is known for making a slew of homophobic, transphobic, misogynistic, and racist comments on air. He may be more conventionally attractive than most Republican men, but its all covering up a black heart, and probably a small you-know-what. JD VanceVice President JD Vance has a smile only a couch could love.Bill MaherConservative provocateur Bill Maher has been sliding further and further to the right every year. If he once possessed a hung smile it has since shriveled up and died off.Elon MuskElon Musk, who spent the first half of 2025 dismantling democracy for the Trump administration, and is so transphobic that his own daughter disowned him, has a smile that will turn your stomach. Tucker CarlsonDisgraced former Fox News host Tucker Carlson spends his days as an ultra-conservative commentator who cant stop obsessing about Pete Buttigiegs sex life. If his smile didnt already give him away, constantly claiming Buttigieg isnt actually gay is major small d*ck energy.Ben ShapiroIf hung smile ever ended up in Merriam-Webster, a photo of ultra-conservative agitator and political commentator Ben Shapiros photo would be under the definition for whatever the opposite is.
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  • WWW.PRIDE.COM
    Viral hung smile meme has people guessing which hot male celebs are packing
    People love speculating how well hung celebrities are and use every metric in the book, from the obvious d*ck print in pants *cough* Jon Hamm *cough* to things like forearm length, or hand and foot size. But what if there was another way to tell just what a man is packing?People on social media are now claiming that a mans smile reveals more than just his pearly whites. The social media craze has taken over TikTok and X, and posits the idea that you can tell how well-endowed a man is just by looking at his smile.Popular examples of celebs with a hung smile are David Corenswet if the way he looks in his Superman suit is anything to go by, this metric seems accurate and Alexander Skarsgrd.There may not be any scientific basis for a mans bulge size being connected to his smile, but TikToker Stephen Brenland (@stephenbrenland), explained that "a certain specific group of men can do this smile, and its because theyre actually hung if you know what I mean.@stephenbrenlandHung smile explanation #datingadvice #hungsmile #whatisahungsmile #confidence #attractionHe added, per the New York Post, When a man is well-endowed [] he gives this specific smile and its not like Im so happy, its more like a smug smirk, sometimes with teeth.The viral term "hung smile has become shorthand for talking about a man having a big member, and while the celebrity smiles in questions are likely just evidence that these men are hot, Justin Dubin, a Florida urologist and podcast host, told Slate that people are also probably responding to a mans self confidence, comparing hung smiles to big dick energy.If you have a perceived larger penis size, youll have a more favorable image to yourself, Dubin said. Because youre more confident in yourself, maybe you do have a big dick energy because of the fact you believe you have a bigger dick.But is there an actual scientific way to tell what a man is packing? Turns out there is, but you have to get so close you may as well look at the actualmeat of the issue at that point. According to a 2019 study from Oxford Academic, there is a correlation between someone's anogenital distance (AGD) and the size of their pole. The study showed that there is a direct positive relation with testicular volume and penile length and circumference. Basically, if you have a large AGD, you probably also have a larger "testicular volumes, penile measures and seminal parameter.Ok, so no study has been done yet to see if smiles are directly related to what a man has in his pants, but if there is a correlation, these celebrities are absolutely well-hung. David Corenswet (@) David Corenswet could get us to agree to anything with that smile alone...and what it might symbolize doesn't hurt either!Alexander Skarsgrd (@) Alexander Skarsgrd has never not been hot, but he's been exuding BDE and showing off that "hung smile" left and right while promoting his gay BDSM film, Pillion.Mike Faist (@) Is this why both Zendaya and Mike Faist were interested in Josh O'Connor?Rick Gonzalez (@) With a smile that...big...Law & Order: Organized Crime star Rick Gonzalez can frisk us anytime!Ioan Gruffudd (@) I mean, Mr. Fantastic's power is extreme elasticity, so it tracks that a certain part of his body can expand. It also doesn't hurt that Ioan Gruffudd has turned into a totally daddy.Hugh Jackman (@) If we were going by hand size, then Wolverine would have everyone beat with those massive claws, but Hugh Jackman is also winning with that smile.Zohran Mamdani (@) Zohran Mamdani is not only New York City's best hope for a leftist leader, but he's also gaining popularity for his megawatt smile. Jensen Ackles (@) Whether he's hunting monsters in Supernatural or fighting fascist superhero Homelander in The Boys, Jensen Ackles' smile has us believing he's packing exactly what we want.Julia Roberts (@) And for the sapphics out there, wed like to submit Julia Roberts for your consideration.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    This is what lightning on Mars sounds like
    Nature, Published online: 26 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03896-7Distinctive sounds of Martian 'micro-lightning' recorded by NASAs Perseverance rover for the first time plus, the final outcomes of the UNs COP30 climate conference.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    Author Correction: Photocatalytic low-temperature defluorination of PFASs
    Nature, Published online: 26 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-025-09871-6Author Correction: Photocatalytic low-temperature defluorination of PFASs
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    ADHD diagnoses are growing. Whats going on?
    Nature, Published online: 26 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03855-2More children and adults are being diagnosed with ADHD in some countries. Science is helping to understand why and how best to provide support.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    NSD2 targeting reverses plasticity and drug resistance in prostate cancer
    Nature, Published online: 26 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-025-09727-zInhibition of the histone methyltransferase NSD2 and the androgen receptor in preclinical models can reverse lineage plasticity to suppress tumour growth and promote cell death in multiple subtypes of castration-resistant prostate cancer.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    Why the world must wake up to Chinas science leadership
    Nature, Published online: 26 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03853-4The nations next generation of scientists and technologists will shape the coming decades.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Arch rallies Longhorns, hands Aggies first loss
    Trailing at the half, No. 16 Texas, backed by a standout effort from quarterback Arch Manning, rallied to defeat rival Texas A&M 27-17, spoiling the No. 3 Aggies' undefeated season and SEC title-game hopes at Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    LSU scores 100 for record 7th straight game
    No. 5 LSU set an NCAA record with its seventh consecutive 100-point game Friday night, routing Marist 113-53 at the Paradise Jam tournament.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    UGA tops Tech, clinches SEC title berth hours later
    Georgia coach Kirby Smart said his team would welcome a potential SEC title game berth after the Bulldogs finished the regular season with a win over Georgia Tech.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    'SmackDown' highlights: The Survivor Series elimination tag team match made sense
    Friday's "SmackDown" had it all. A Survivor Series elimination tag team match and more.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    WWE Survivor Series: Key stats and info to know before WarGames
    As we approach Saturday's WWE premium live event, let's catch up on some notes and stats for each match.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    South Africans Were Promised Job, but Ended Up Going to War for Russia
    The South African government is investigating how more than a dozen men unwittingly ended up on the front line in Russias war on Ukraine.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Where Hundreds of Undocumented Migrants Have Died in Custody
    Malaysia launched a year of enforcement in response to a surge in undocumented migrants, many of them from Myanmar. Some faced nightmarish fates.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Seattles Gas Works Park Seen As A Public Nuisance After a Death
    For years, architects and design experts have resisted safety changes at Seattles Gas Works Park, but after a teenager died there this summer, his parents want it declared a public nuisance.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Hamnet Reimagines Shakespeare for the TikTok Generation
    Our love of his plays have led to a centuries-long fascination with the writer. So why does each new fictional iteration get his life so wrong?
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