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I thought I had messed up the pattern on the shawl I'm making, but after three false starts trying to fix it, I realized I hadn't actually messed up at all. That was odd. Obviously two pattern repeats haven't been enough to really get down how the stitches fall relative to the previous row, at least not at the start of the next repeat.
Like Shakespeare ("Twelfth Night, or what you will") or Gilbert and Sullivan ("Iolanthe, or the Peer and the Peri"), the Voting rights act is "An act to enforce the fifteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States." https://www.archives.gov/milestone-documents/voting-rights-act
One day, two executions. Florida executioners killed James Hitchcock by lethal injection on Thursday for a murder that took place nearly 50 years ago. He was tried and convicted three times — twice by non-unanimous juries. Florida Today Shortly afterward, Texas executioners killed James Broadnax by lethal injection for his role in a double murder nearly 18 years ago. The Associated Press Broadnax was convicted of felony murder in a case with lingering questions about racial bias in the selection of his capital jury, and the prosecution’s use of rap music as evidence to condemn him. The Texas TribuneTMP Context: Rap music helped send him to death row. Artists fought to spare Broadnax. The Marshall Project
The return of the gun show loophole. The Trump administration has announced 30 changes to gun regulations that will make it easier for people to buy and sell firearms without background checks or other obstacles that could prevent someone from using an illegal weapon. The deregulation came after Robert Cekada was confirmed by the Senate to lead the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. The Associated Press It’s a dramatic shift in firearm policy backed by Republicans. PBSMore: Gun violence is the leading cause of death for children and teenagers in the U.S. There’s now a national program, titled “ENOUGH! Plays to End Gun Violence,” that produces plays written by teenagers. The Trace
More trouble for James Comey? Federal prosecutors in Virginia are reportedly pursuing charges against the former FBI director for allegedly leaking classified information to a Columbia University law professor. Bloomberg Law The indictment of Comey in North Carolina earlier this week, widely seen as a baseless attempt at political retribution, has earned Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche praise from his boss, President Donald Trump. NBC NewsMore: A company called One Taste, which describes itself as an “orgasmic meditation” venture but which prosecutors call a “sex cult,” is now lobbying the Trump administration for clemency for two of its executives sentenced to prison in March. CBS News
Immigration nation. Federal immigration officials deported 15 people last month to the Democratic Republic of Congo, a country to which they had no previous ties. The Latin American immigrants, some of whom say they had pending asylum claims in the U.S., are now essentially trapped in a hotel in a nation ravaged by violence. NPR Two teenage brothers from the DRC on student visas in Mississippi were seized by ICE agents this week and sent into immigration detention in Louisiana. They were released on Thursday. The New York Times New York Gov. Kathy Hochul has proposed a more limited ban on cooperation between local law enforcement agents and federal immigration agents than legislators support. New York Focus
N/S/E/W
An update on the capital case of Christopher Barbour in Alabama. Last year, a federal judge ordered that he be given a new trial after DNA evidence taken from the scene of a 1992 rape and murder incriminated another man. Pointing to a long-ago confession, state prosecutors are still trying to block that new trial and keep Barbour on the state’s death row. AL.com
Federal prosecutors this week dropped felony conspiracy charges against a group of anti-ICE protesters in Chicago known as the “Broadview Six.” Only four of those protesters remain as defendants, and they face misdemeanor charges in a closely-watched free speech case tied to the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement operation in Illinois. Chicago Sun-Times
Louisiana prosecutors and a special grand jury have indicted the sheriff of the New Orleans jail from which 10 prisoners escaped last year. Sheriff Susan Hutson, and the jail’s chief financial officer, Bianka Brown, face misconduct charges stemming from that escape. The New York Times
The man who killed two people and injured nine more in a gun attack at Brown University in Rhode Island in December wanted retribution over perceived personal failures, FBI officials said this week. The Guardian Claudio Manuel Neves Valente acted alone and had no connection to terrorism, officials said. The Boston Globe
The homicide rate in Oakland, California, has plummeted over the past three years after city officials rejuvenated their gang violence prevention program that had been allowed to lapse. “We’re going to talk about keeping you and those you love alive and free,” says a local pastor involved in the program that includes life coaches. “If you put down the gun, start taking the (city’s) services, we’ll help you find another way.” The Associated Press
Commentary
It’s long past time for New York to reform its parole laws, says a man who once spent 34 years in solitary confinement. “The fact is, nobody gains a thing from keeping old people in prison long after they have grown into decent people who wish harm to no one, who wish they could undo the harm they caused in their younger, more foolish years, and do better in the time they have remaining in this lifetime than they did in the past.” Solitary Watch/Truthout
United States v. James Comey. “The former FBI director has an unusually strong argument for vindictive prosecution” in a case about the arrangement of seashells. Reason More conservative criticism of the Comey indictment. National Review “What Todd Blanche confessed last night is that he authorized potentially illegal spying on Jim Comey…” Emptywheel
The worst U.S. Supreme Court ruling in a century. The Republican justices’ choice to further gut the Voting Rights Act “will bleach the halls of Congress, state legislatures, and local bodies like city councils, by ending the protections of Section 2 of the act, which had provided a pathway to assure that voters of color would have some rudimentary fair representation.” Slate
Political violence is its own twisted ideology. “If you believe in political violence as a necessary or tolerable means to an end, you are not a Democrat or a Republican or an independent; you are—first and foremost—an extremist whose views are in direct conflict with the American system of self-governance as it is currently designed.” The Atlantic
Apply the aptly-named Minnesota Protocols to the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents. Labeling their killings as “summary executions and applying the Minnesota Protocol will help advance criminal and civil accountability. It will also clarify what structural changes are legally mandated by human rights treaties that should be applied to be part of U.S. law and practice to prevent these tragedies from repeating.” Just Security
Etc.
Native American organizations and their ICE contracts. Some tribal groups have backed away from deals with federal immigration officials in the face of public criticism. But so far, the Bering Straits Native Corporation in Alaska has refused to cut ties. The New Republic
Lawsuit challenges Idaho’s new law criminalizing public bathroom use. Six transgender residents sued the state this week in federal court, seeking to strike down a measure that makes it a misdemeanor offense (punishable by up to one year in prison) for using bathrooms that do not match their sex at birth. The law is the most restrictive in the U.S., applying both to public places and private businesses. The New York Times
“Even if they are seen as somebody who is exonerated, there is still a stigma as somebody who has been in prison.” People who endure wrongful convictions often find that their ordeal does not end when they are freed. Calvin Duncan, for example, overcame a wrongful conviction to become the duly elected clerk of the criminal court in New Orleans, a post that Republican legislators in Louisiana are trying to abolish. The Associated Press
“It’s given me an avenue to put into words how I feel and to remedy the absence I have, the aching in my chest.” Incarcerated women are encouraged to write by the Children's Literature Project, developed by a University of Maryland professor, which is run through Poetic Justice, a national nonprofit that organizes prison writers’ workshops. Maryland Today
How to get police to solve more crimes. “Priority areas include reducing investigator caseloads for nonfatal shootings, building better relationships with victims to encourage cooperation with police, and coordinating with prosecution to ensure high-quality arrests and convictions.” Harry Frank Guggenheim FoundationTMP Context: The hidden toll of unsolved murder cases in St. Louis. The Marshall Project
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AO3 Tag Wranglers continue to test processes for wrangling canonical additional tags (tags that appear in the auto-complete) which don't belong to any particular fandom (also known as "No Fandom" tags). This post overviews some of these upcoming changes.
In this round of updates, we continued to adjust existing canonical "No Fandom" tags to add or remove new subtag and metatag relationships. We also continued to streamline creating new canonical tags, prioritizing more straightforward updates which would have less discussion compared to renaming current canonical tags or creating new canonical tags which touch on more complex topics. This method also reviews new tags on a regular basis, so check back on AO3 News for periodic "No Fandom" tag announcements.
None of these updates change the tags users have added to works. If a user-created tag is considered to have the same meaning as a new canonical, it will be made a synonym of one of these newly created canonical tags, and works with that user-created tag will appear when the canonical tag is selected.
In short, these changes only affect which tags appear in AO3's auto-complete and filters. You can and should continue to tag your works however you prefer.
New Canonicals
The following concepts have been made new canonical tags:
Additionally, we continued to adjust existing canonical tags to add or remove new subtag and metatag relationships, which help users find related content and filter in/out content as they browse works on AO3.
While some of these tags may be tags and concepts you're intimately familiar with, others may be concepts you've never heard of before. Fortunately, our fellow OTW volunteers at Fanlore may be able to help! As you may have seen in the comments sections of previous posts, Fanlore is a fantastic resource for learning more about these common fandom concepts, and about the history and lore of fandom in general. For the curious, here's a quick look at a few articles about concepts related to this month's new canonical tags:
While we won't be announcing every change we make to No Fandom canonical tags, you can expect similar updates in the future about tags we believe will most affect users. If you're interested in the changes we'll be making, you can continue to check AO3 News or follow us on Bluesky @wranglers.archiveofourown.org or Tumblr @ao3org for future announcements.
You can also read previous updates on "No Fandom" tags as well as other wrangling updates, linked below:
For more information about AO3's tag system, check out our Tags FAQ.
In addition to providing technical help, AO3 Support also handles requests related to how tags are sorted and connected. If you have questions about specific tags, which were first used over a month ago and are unrelated to any of the new canonical tags listed above, please contact Support instead of leaving a comment on this post.
Please keep in mind that discussions about what tags to canonize and what format they should take are ongoing. As a result, not all related concepts will be canonized at the same time. This does not mean that related or similar concepts will not be canonized in the future or that we have chosen to canonize one specific concept in lieu of another, simply that we likely either haven’t gotten to that related concept yet or that it needs further discussion and will take a bit longer for us to canonize it as a result. We appreciate your patience and understanding.
Lastly, we're still working on implementing changes and connecting relevant user-created tags to these new canonicals, so it’ll be some time before these updates are complete. If you have questions about specific tags which should be connected to these new canonicals, please refrain from contacting Support about them until at least three months from now to give us adequate time to do so.
The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, OTW Legal Advocacy, and Transformative Works and Cultures. We are a fan-run, donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website.
Meet North America's smallest rabbit. And one of its least celebrated. 🐇
Pygmy rabbits don't attract much attention. They weigh less than a pound, they're cryptic by nature, and they spend a significant portion of their lives underground. They lack the charisma of megafauna, which makes them easy to overlook in conservation conversations.
DB note: I really take umbrage with the idea any rabbit lacks charisma! But we continue:
As a sagebrush obligate species, the pygmy rabbit's survival is tightly bound to the health of the sagebrush steppe, an ecosystem that supports more than 20 vertebrate species of conservation concern. Where pygmy rabbits persist, sagebrush habitat is generally intact. Where they disappear, it's often a signal that something broader is breaking down.
The USGS Northwest Climate Adaptation Science Center is studying a specific and underexplored vulnerability: the relationship between pygmy rabbits and the microclimates beneath the snow. Pygmy rabbits rely on burrows and other spaces beneath the snow for refuge from predators and temperature extremes. As snowpack patterns shift with changing weather, those refuges may become less reliable, with consequences for survival, reproduction, and predator avoidance that aren't yet well understood.
To address that gap, researchers are using a physics-based computer model to simulate subsurface temperature and moisture conditions, then linking those outputs to biological models of habitat use, energy balance, and predator avoidance.
The project’s multidisciplinary team of physical and biological scientists as well as cooperating state and federal managers will integrate this work into decision-support tools to add transparency, repeatability, and rigor to the land management decision-making process.
Platform Decay (Murderbot 8) by Martha Wells (5 May)
Radiant Star (Imperial Radch) by Ann Leckie (12 May)
Call Me Traitor by Everina Maxwell (1 Dec)
Unrivaled (Game Changers 7) by Rachel Reid (1 Jun 2027)
Books acquired in April:
and unread:
Greater Good (Star Wars: Thrawn Ascendancy 2) by Timothy Zahn
and previously read:
Warhorse by Timothy Zahn
Borrowed books read in April:
Like Real People Do by E.L. Massey
Like You've Nothing Left to Prove by E.L. Massey
Daughter of the Deep by Rick Riordan
Rereads in April:
Ocean's Echo by Everina Maxwell
April had a lot of ice hockey and a lot of driving (including two separate Nationals tournaments), and thus relatively little reading. One day I will actually read the Thrawn books, honest ...
"Mankind have a great aversion to intellectual labor; but even supposing knowledge to be easily attainable, more people would be content to be ignorant than would take even a little trouble to acquire it."
Free Comic Book Day, the first Saturday in May, is the annual event where local comic shops distribute a variety of special comics from a number of publishers, at no cost to the customer!
Many Local Comic Shops will be hosting events or parties, many with guests, often involving local creators.
Scans_Daily exists to celebrate the comic medium in all it's many and varied forms and, as always, we actively encourage you to participate in your local comic shops' events if possible.
Maybe pick up some of the free comics that are being released as part of the event from pretty much every comic publisher with access to a printing press.
And maybe buy some other comics or graphic novels too.
As always, we encourage you to try something new, something you've perhaps heard of, but never got around to picking up. Something from an independent publisher you've heard of but never tried.. or even one you've never heard of.
Or maybe something you have seen somewhere on S_D, we have a long history to choose from!
Indulge your curiosity! Expand your horizons a little!
Never picked up a non-cape comic? Then maybe try a slice of life comic. Or a sports based one.
Not sure funny animals are for you? Why not find out!
Be tempted by that manga with the interesting cover... or the Filipno komic... or Korean manwha. Many comics stores have entire sections devoted to such things, or may be able to order them for you.
This year, for the first time, games shops are also getting involved with the event, so maybe check them out as well!
The fact you are also supporting a local small business is all to the good too!
So go, participate as much as you feel comfortable with and, if you find something new and interesting (or even old and interesting), feel free to share your recommendations with us here!
Hey Alexa, how long can a beaver hold its breath? I’m asking because I was kayaking last night at Totier Creek off the James River and I spotted a beaver swimming from one bank to another, his little head sticking up like a thumb and his body and paddle of a tail cutting a V through the smooth water. And suddenly he went under and never came back up. Believe me, I watched for him in all directions for, like, 10 minutes. The thing was gone.
Alexa didn’t care much about my explanation for the question, nor my decision to call the animal a “he,” but she did tell me beavers can hold their breath for up to 15 minutes on a single dive, plenty of time to get across a waterway without being bothered by a curious human in a kayak who was hoping for a closer view.
For stuff like that, this AI thing is awesome. It may not have all the answers yet, but it has a lot of them and at least when typing your question into a chatbot you can insist on a certain type of source (give me answers only from Nat Geo or National Wildlife or Beavers International magazine or a professional journal) to ensure the answer is credible. (You got me: There is no Beavers International. But if there were I would trust it fully for beaver facts.)
Next, I’ll admit this, with some hesitation: Recently for work I needed to quickly turn around a Q&A I’d done with a scientist, and the transcribed Zoom interview was all over the place and way too long. Desperate, I pasted the whole thing into a chatbot and asked it to organize it logically and cut out the ums and the time codes and the repetition and put it into a Q&A format at about 1,000 words. CHAT did all those things in less time than it took me to blow my nose, which was so helpful I wanted to cry. (Explains the runny nose.) How can one ignore these tools when facing this type of time-consuming effort? I decided I was okay with using AI in this way.
But where’s the line?
As a writer, I’m both amazed and terrified by all the things these tools can do. It’s not news that those in my profession are having to rethink how we do our work, not wanting to misuse AI but also wanting to be smart about how it can make our lives easier. The line is rodent-hair fine. (Beavers are the second largest rodents on Earth, after the capybara, AI told me.) Ask a bot to organize an interview logically? I’m okay with that. Ask it to cut 500 words without losing the gist of the text? Sure. But ask it to write an introduction to the interview based on the interviewee’s bio and papers on her website? Not okay with me. Creating text, actually writing for me what I would otherwise have to write, is a step too far. For me. At least right now.
It’s that last thought that scares me the most. Because consider this: If I have to write a press release about a scientific paper, it will take me quite some time to read the material, digest it, figure out what’s essential, and organize it properly. It’s not creative writing. It’s not based on my thoughts and intellect, nor, ultimately, any unique skills I might have. It’s filler for a template that helps someone else decide whether to go deeper into the subject. Why do I care if AI writes it or if I do?
And what about coming up with intelligent questions for an interview? I’ve always prided myself on asking things that are a little off to the side, not just the standard queries that will provide fodder for a standard article. Now, a bot can generate a long list of creative questions in, literally, about 2 seconds. Should I let it?
I’m still deciding. I’m sure all my writer friends are also looking for what’s okay and where that edge of the shore lies. Maybe they, too, are standing on the rocks and dipping in a toe to see how it feels. Are they, am I, willing to get a little muddy? More important, how’s the water if you fall in?
I guess I’d like to know from other writers and artists, what’s your line? We’re well beyond using bots as researchers, to sift through vast sums of information and answer questions about beavers (or WWII or cat allergies). As a kid I would have had to page through the Ba-Be volume of Encyclopedia Britannica, or ask a teacher or my mom to get the answer. That’s what research once looked like to me. The Internet is now Britannica, and my mom is gone so I’ve gotten pretty good at finding other experts these days.
But writing is a different story. If I’d wanted to write an essay about a beaver, it would have been based not only on my research but my thoughts and ideas of what was worthy of coverage; it would have been written in my style, organized my way. Yes, I would have plagiarized Britannica something fierce, but hey, I was seven years old. Later I’d learn to make it mine.
In this incredible and worrysome time of rapidly advancing computer tech, we have a lot to learn. About beavers, but also about boundaries, about the future of creating. All the arts are at risk of drastic change; hell, they are already something other than what they were. We have to think hard about truth and what we present as “ours.” And about how to keep up with those who take the leap if we prefer to stay there on shore. (Torturing this analogy to death, I know, but it’s an appropriate one. Because the beaver.)
Where’s your edge, writers? Have you put a foot into the river yet? Or are you trying to stay put as the shoreline erodes?