Spyke

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Does each country have a book/library of the laws of the land that a commoner can consult to check if they're about to do something illegal?

In the US, no. This is why lawyers get paid so much money to research and analyze whether their clients’ activities may or may not be legal. For many areas of the law, relevant statutes, regulations, and agency interpretations are publicly available and may be compiled and discussed at a high level in a treatise. However, a specific question or set of facts (such as raccoon husbandry in a specific location) would require research or analysis beyond what a treatise might describe. And treatises are expensive, full of legal jargon, and usually not publicly available. Welcome to the Law!

science

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One injection stops diabetes in its tracks - Salk Institute for Biological Studies

OP links to a 2014 study, but recent research as of 2022 continues to show promise. Pretty cool.

https://www.salk.edu/news-release/salk-researchers-find-a-new-route-for-regulating-blood-sugar-levels-independent-of-insulin/

“Previously, the lab showed that injecting FGF1 dramatically lowered blood glucose in mice and that chronic FGF1 treatment relieved insulin resistance. But how it worked remained a mystery.

In the current work, the team investigated the mechanisms behind these phenomena and how they were linked. First, they showed that FGF1 suppresses lipolysis, as insulin does. Then they showed that FGF1 regulates the production of glucose in the liver, as insulin does. These similarities led the group to wonder if FGF1 and insulin use the same signaling (communication) pathways to regulate blood glucose.”

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What about the same communities on different instances?

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I hadn’t thought about it this way, and I definitely agree. Similar communities on the same topic may evolve to offer a different vibe or different focus. The more a user interacts with the communities, the more differences they would discover (and appreciate??!?). Or people might just get frustrated and give up. Who knows. We are all humans, I suppose.

news

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Workers are historically stressed out and disengaged

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I’m really not sure how to solve for 1. So much of modern white collar work is patently pointless (or counterproductive). Definitely hard to stay engaged, especially when few of the benefits of increased productivity actually accrue to the folks doing the work. The disingenuous messaging of bullet 2 often highlights the difference in priorities between those who benefit from from increased productivity and those who just, you know, end up having to work more.

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With all of the negative headlines dominating the news these days, it can be difficult to spot signs of progress. What makes you optimistic about the future?

I am hopeful that human ingenuity and the acceleration of communication and information sharing can outpace some of the long term problems that we created (such as climate change and growing wealth inequality). I’m not hopeful enough to be “optimistic,” but I’m hopeful that there will be a path where civilization endures in such a way as to create some as-yet unforeseen opportunities and advancements for the generations to come. Maybe it’s just pessimism in sheep’s clothing, but it’s all I’ve got.

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