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    Boom! 'Landman' Drops the Most Savage Roast on 'The View' Ever: Rich Hens Ranting About Trump and Dudes
    Landman is a hit show. 'The View' is a bunch of old hens pretending they have 'differing views' because they have one faux Republican on the show who chews her sleeve and never talks. Advertisement
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    BC Files Civil Claim Against Vaping Giant Alleging Deceptive Marketing Fuelling Youth Addiction
    A woman exhales while smoking a vaporizer outside an office tower in downtown Vancouver on Feb. 28, 2017. The Canadian Press/Darryl DyckThe B.C. government is filing a civil claim against nicotine vape
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    Laura Ingraham Just Exposed Democrats Losing Strategy With One Brutal Fact
    danielfela via Shutterstock Democrats are still searching for a path forward after the 2024 Election. They thought they stumbled into a winning hand. But Laura Ingraham just exposed Democrats' losing
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  • The 5 Best Spots To Bring A First Date In Boston, According To A Local
    The 5 Best Spots To Bring A First Date In Boston, According To A Local...
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    Did a Rogue Planet Reshape Our Solar System?
    Researchers have discovered that a close encounter with a rogue planet or brown dwarf during the Sun's early years could have triggered the reshuffling of our Solar System's giant planets. Running 3000 simulations of stellar flybys, the team found that substellar objects passing within 20 astronomical units of the young Sun could destabilise the planets' orbits just enough to match their current configuration without destroying the delicate Kuiper belt. This flyby scenario represents a new possible explanation for one of the Solar System's defining events, with roughly a 1-5 percent probability depending on how common free floating planets actually are in young star clusters.
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    A New Window on the Expansion of the Universe
    Astronomers at the University of Tokyo have used gravitational lensing to measure how fast the universe is expanding, adding weight to one of cosmology's most intriguing mysteries. Their technique exploits the way massive galaxies bend light from distant quasars, creating multiple distorted images that arrive at different times. The measurement supports recent observations showing the universe expands faster than predictions based on the early universe suggest, strengthening evidence that the "Hubble tension" represents genuine new physics rather than experimental error.
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    How and When Did Ancient Americans Celebrate the New Year?
    While modern celebrants welcome the new year on January 1 of the Gregorian calendar, the Inca, Aztec and Maya celebrated the dawn of a new year at various timesand sometimes multiple times. Given the challenges in reconciling ancient and modern calendars, pinpointing an exact New Years Day for these civilizations is no easy task. What is more certain is that in the ancient Americas, new year celebrations were often preceded by fasting and purification, followed by joyous celebrations honoring the gods and offering sacrifices to ensure their continued blessings in the year to come.Inca New Year: Inti Raymi, June 24The Sapa Inca speaks to a crowd at the Inti Raymi festival. Source: Trexperience PeruOf the big three pre-conquest civilizations, the Inca new year celebration is the easiest to pinpoint, because it happens at the same time every year and is still celebrated today. The Inca welcomed the new year at the winter solstice, which occurs in June in the southern hemisphere. Held in honor of the sun god, Inti, it is believed the celebration, Inti Raymi or Festival of the Sun, was initiated by the Sapa Inca Pachacutec in the early 15th century.The sun and the god responsible for it were essential to a prosperous year in Tawantinsuyu, the Inca Empire, so the celebration to thank Inti and ensure his continued blessings for the year to come was one of the largest in the empire. Thousands traveled to Cusco to celebrate during the festival, which, according to various sources, lasted somewhere between 9 and 15 days.The celebration was marked by a period of fasting, followed by dancing, music, sacrifice and feasting. The mummified ancestorspast Sapa Incas and other nobilitywere brought to the central plaza, where llamas were sacrificed, coca leaves were burned to forecast the future, and chicha beer was shared.After the conquest, the Inti Raymi celebration was banned by the Spanish, the last formal celebration taking place in 1535. The feast continued to be celebrated in secret until the Viceroy of Peru formally outlawed it in 1572, along with other Indigenous practices and observances. Fortunately, famed Inca historian Garcilaso de la Vega had collected stories of the festival and its elements from family and friends, which he detailed in his book, Comentarios Reales de los Incas, so, though outlawed, the details of the celebration were not lost to time.Inti Raymi celebration in Cuscos Plaza de Armas. Source: Inca RailIt was not until 1944 that the ceremony was formally revived. A group of Peruvian actors, in collaboration with the American Arts Institute in Cusco, staged a reenactment of the great festival based on de la Vegas writings. It was so popular it became an annual event, and in 2001, was officially declared part of the Cultural Heritage of the Nation.Today, a large Inti Raymi festival and reenactment is staged every year in Cusco on June 24, with smaller celebrations and processions in the days leading up to it. With reenactors dressed in traditional attire, the celebration begins at Qorikancha, the Temple of the Sun, with the opening ceremony. Participants then proceed to the Plaza de Armas, where locals and tourists alike listen to the Sapa Incas speech and observe various rituals to honor Inti, including offerings of coca and chicha. The final event takes place at the fortress of Sacsayhuamn, with additional rituals and symbolic sacrifices to the sun godfortunately the ritual llama sacrifice element is left to the imagination. Traditional dances and music are performed throughout the day, locals often prepare traditional dishes for their families in celebration, and thousands of tourists pour into the country to take it all in.Mexica New Year: Yancuic Xihuitl, March 12Yancuic Xihuitl celebration at Daybreak Star Cultural Center in 2015. Source: Seattle GlobalistTwo different calendars were used in the Aztec Empire: a 260-day ritual calendar and a 365-day annual civil calendar based on the solar year. This yearly calendar was divided into 18 20-day months, which left five empty days at the end of the cycle during which the Mexica prepared to welcome a new year.The last five days of the year, or nemontemi, meaning roughly wasted days, were considered a dangerous time. While each month in the calendar was dedicated to a particular deity, these five days had no patron or protector. Many everyday activities were put on hold to avoid calamity, and a period of fasting or reflection to prepare for the new year was observed.As with the modern new year, much of the preparation and celebration took place the night beforethough records indicate that the Aztec day began at 6 am, rather than midnight. When the new year dawned, it was heralded with the blowing of conch shells, while priests performed cleansing and other rituals designed to ensure a prosperous new year, particularly honoring the gods who would be responsible for good harvests.Chronicles from the immediate post-conquest period offer different dates for the festival, interpreted through the Julian calendar in use at the time. Most modern scholars have placed the festival as likely falling sometime in late February or early March of the current Gregorian calendar. Today, many Nahua peoples celebrate the new year on March 12, staging events full of ceremonial dances and music, and lighting candles as well as more modern fireworks. Conch shells are still blown to welcome the special day.A traditional dance group celebrates the Mexica New Year at City College on March 11, 2024, in San Francisco, California. Jeremy Word. Source: El TecoloteAn even more significant new year festival was celebrated when the renewal of the 365-day and 260-day calendar cycles coincided. This occurred every 52 years and was celebrated with the New Fire Ceremony, somewhat akin to heralding a new century today. Like the wasted days, the end of the 52-year cycle was a dangerous time. The Aztec believed that the world had ended and been recreated multiple times, and the end of any 52-year cycle could bring it to an end again.As the day approached, the people would destroy their personal belongings to rid themselves of the old, practiced ritual bloodletting, fasted and purified themselves. All fires, including sacred fires kept burning throughout the 52-year period in the temples, would be extinguished on the final day, and the Empires priests would come together and attempt to start a new fire. If it didnt catch, the world would come to an end. But if it did, it was used to relight fires throughout the region, spread by relay runners, and a great celebration ensued. Captives were sacrificed, blood offerings were made to the new fire, and the people feasted to welcome another 52-year period safe from the apocalypse.Maya New Year: July?Glyphs for the 18 months of the Mayan calendar, with their names in Yucatec Maya. Source: Dumbarton OaksIn close proximity, particularly in the Yucatan peninsula, the Aztec and Maya civilizations shared many spiritual beliefs and cultural elements, including the use of multiple calendars. Some scholars suggest both groups inherited these calendar concepts from the Mesoamerican mother culture, the Olmec. The Mayan Haab calendar mirrored the Aztec civil calendar, with 18 20-day months and a short month of 5 leftover days called Wayeb.During Wayeb, the Maya prepared for the coming new year with special cleansing rituals, fasting and reflection. The first day of the new year was, arguably, 1 Pop, though some historians suggest that a correct reading of the Mayan calendar indicates that day 1 was actually referred to as 0 Pop. The day before was called the seating of Pop, akin to New Years Eve, and was marked by divination rituals intended to predict the course of the upcoming year. Each month of the Mayan calendar cycle had a particular patron god, and so on the day before, he would take his seat to prepare for the year ahead.Though the Mayan system of calendars, particularly the long count, was precisely calculated, the Haab calendar did not take into account the discrepancy between the 365-day count and the actual length of a solar year: 365 days, 5 hours, 48 minutes, 45 seconds. What this means to modern humans is that the first day of the Mayan year does not fall on a consistent day every contemporary year. For example, according to modern calendar conversions, in 2025, 1 Pop fell on March 31, but 20 years ago, it occurred in early April. Because the beginning of a new agricultural cycle takes place in July, this is often a month for new year celebrations within the remaining Maya communities, usually around the 26th.A celebration of Wajxaqib Batz in Guatemala. Source: Agencia Guatemalteca de NoticiasHowever, celebrations of the sacred new year, meaning the first day of the Mayan ritual calendar, known today as the Tzolkin in Yucatec Maya and Chol Qij in Kiche Maya, are more common. Wajxaqib Batz is commemorated every 260 days, particularly by the Kiche Maya in present-day Guatemala. The event is marked by the selection of a new calendar keeper, a spiritual guide for the next 260 days. Because this calendars cycle is so much shorter than the 365-day modern year, Wajxaqib Batz can take place on any date; in 2025 it took place on October 5.In addition, its worth noting that the Mayan Empire had collapsed long before the conquest, leaving behind more independent communities that developed their own rituals and practices. By the time of European contact, few were left who could interpret or explain the various calendar systems used centuries earlier by their ancestorsor cared to risk encountering the Spanish to do so. Much of what is believed about the Mayan calendars, and attempts to reconcile them with the modern calendar, has come through centuries of archaeological work, which is still ongoing.
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    The 5 Best Spots To Bring A First Date In Boston, According To A Local
    Choosing a first date location can be awkward. To remove some of the guesswork, here are our local expert's recommendations for going on a first date in Boston.
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    Cat Given a Second Chance with Her Kittens Finally Sees Her Wish Come True, in Time for the Holidays
    A cat given a second chance with her kittens finally saw her wish come true, just in time for the holidays. Snowpea the cat and her five kittensAlley Cat RescueWhen volunteers at Alley Cat Rescue learned that a mother cat and her five kittens desperately needed a safe place, they stepped in without hesitation.Though exhausted and underweight, the cat, named Snowpea (aka Marian), gave everything she had to her kittens. She kept them safe, warm, and fed, even when she was starving and had nothing left to give.Snowpea needed saving just as much as her kittens did. Alley Cat RescueAs the kittens grew stronger, they began waddling around the nest, eager to explore their surroundings. At the slightest squeak, Snowpea rushed to their side, showering them with affection.The kittens kept their mom on her toes, and Snowpea rarely allowed herself a moment of rest. She was very attentive to her kittensAlley Cat RescueSoon, the foster family noticed that Snowpea was suffering from mastitis, a painful condition that made nursing extremely difficult. Still, she pushed through the discomfort and continued caring for her kittens as best she could."Many cats who give birth outdoors end up in this condition, especially when they have litter after litter, and most do," Alley Cat Rescue shared. Alley Cat RescueTo give Snowpea a chance to heal, the team began bottle-feeding the kittens while she received medical care. "She was painfully thin. We took over with bottle feeding, and she recovered with antibiotics and high-calorie food."Even during her recovery, Snowpea insisted on mothering her kittens, lovingly grooming each one after every feeding. Alley Cat RescueThe smaller kittens received extra meals to help them catch up. Soon, they grew plump and active, toddling beyond the nest with growing confidence. Snowpea seemed relieved by the support and was able to rest and rebuild her strength."With this many kittens, mama needs lots of human help." Alley Cat RescueOnce the kittens were fully weaned, Snowpea could finally focus on herself and enjoy some well-earned me-time. Raising five kittens is no small task for a cat with a tiny frame."Luckily, she won't need to worry about feeding anyone except herself for the rest of her life. She's got a great appetite, and her coat is already improved and shiny." Alley Cat RescueThe kittens' baby blues started to change color, and their coats grew thicker and fluffier. Safe from the dangers of the streets, they would never again have to wonder where their next meal would come from."That is why we work so hard together to keep them safe through rescue and foster, and to prevent suffering through spaying and neutering." Alley Cat RescueSnowpea has filled out beautifully and is no longer the weary, skinny mama she once was. "She turned out to be even more gorgeous than we'd expected."After months in foster care, she has found her forever home and is enjoying life as the center of attention she always wanted. "She is going to grace her happy new home with her beautiful fluff and precious squeak of a meow." Snowpea has blossomed into a fluffy and stunning catAlley Cat RescueThanks to the compassion and dedication of these volunteers, Snowpea and her kittens are thriving, surrounded by warmth, comfort, and love this holiday season. Alley Cat RescueShare this story with your friends. More cats and kittens at Alley Cat Rescue on Instagram and Facebook.Related story: Kitten Found Under Car Became Very Close to Two Cats Waiting for Home, They Just Got Their Wish Together
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    North Carolina State Budget Chaos, Tax Fight Freezes Deal
    North Carolina lawmakers return to Raleigh this week still without agreement on a state budget nearly six months after the legal deadline passed. Despite scheduled committee meetings, the long-delayed
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