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‘There’s a way to fly mindfully. Like, I don’t have my own plane any more’: can DJ megastar Alok make dance music more sustainable?

The Brazilian musician, who collaborates with Indigenous artists and puts millions into philanthropy, explains his mission – and defends his jetsetting

When Alok, the most successful Brazilian DJ of his generation, was brainstorming the concept for his new live show, he considered calling it Rave New World. “But when I asked a gen Z kid, the daughter of my creative director, she made me realise how pretentious my idea was,” he says. “The grownups trying to find an easy way out for all of our problems.” Instead, “I started figuring out that it’s not about a new world, it’s about this world. We need to ‘Rave the World’.”

That new title might still seem trite to some, or hypocritical, coming from someone at the heart of a dance music industry with a heavy carbon footprint from constant flying: when I meet Alok, he’s about to board another plane at a private airport outside São Paulo. But dance music has often had a utopian bent to it, and Alok – who champions Indigenous Brazilians in his work and has partnered with the UN on climate initiatives – is certainly making efforts to better the world.

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JD Vance has written another book? Couldn’t he just concentrate on his day job? | Arwa Mahdawi

As the US tries to limit the damage from the Iran war, its vice-president has admitted he doesn’t understand diplomacy. Of course not: he’s been too busy churning out another memoir

Has JD Vance been injecting Barron Trump’s new energy drink straight into his veins? It would explain a few things, including how the man manages to juggle so much. First there’s the parenting: Vance has three young kids and a baby due soon. Then there’s the vice-presidenting. But despite his long to-do list, Vance still makes time for endless holidays. And he’s even managed to get some writing done: the bestselling Hillbilly Elegy author recently published his second book. It’s a memoir about his spiritual journey called Communion: Finding My Way Back to Faith.

So, should you find your way to a bookshop to buy a copy? Most book critics seem to say no. It’s hard to know exactly what regular readers think because two of the biggest review platforms have restricted feedback. Amazon says reviews are limited to verified purchasers because of “unusual review activity” (translation: a torrent of one-star reviews), while Amazon-owned Goodreads has suspended reviews altogether. It’s a shame that Usha Vance, a voracious reader whose Goodreads account notes she just finished Communion (shortly after reading Death Comes for the Archbishop), hasn’t had a chance to give hubby a five-star review.

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xiffy

Public posts from @xiffy@mastodon.nl

@fedor
You aced math!
Maar ik zou dat verbruik "fors" noemen.

Wel.nl

Minder lezen, Meer weten.

Hardenberg legt nieuwe dwangsom op omdat azc nog open is

HARDENBERG (ANP) - De gemeente Hardenberg verhoogt de dwangsom voor opvangorgaan COA, omdat een asielzoekerscentrum nog altijd open is. Voortaan moet de organisatie 64.000 euro per dag betalen. De teller stopt als de locatie leeg is of als het maximum van 5,76 miljoen euro is bereikt. Dat kan over drie maanden het geval zijn.

Het azc had in maart moeten sluiten. Toen verliepen de overeenkomsten en vergunningen. Toch bleef de opvang aan de Jachthuisweg open, omdat het COA niet op tijd een andere opvangplek kon vinden voor de ruim vierhonderd bewoners. De gemeente legde daarom een dwangsom van 55.000 euro op voor elke dag dat er nog mensen in de opvang zaten. Deze week is het maximale bedrag van 4,95 miljoen euro bereikt. In het gebouw verblijven nog meer dan honderd mensen.

Volgens Hardenberg is er nog altijd "geen duidelijk perspectief op sluiting van de locatie". De dwangsom moet zorgen voor "voldoende druk", aldus de gemeente dinsdag.


Verhoging gokbelasting levert staat veel minder op dan verwacht

DEN HAAG (ANP) - De verhoging van de kansspelbelasting levert de staat veel minder geld op dan gedacht, maakte de Kansspelautoriteit bekend. In januari vorig jaar ging de gokbelasting omhoog van 30,5 procent naar 34,2 procent en in 2026 is het tarief verder verhoogd naar 37,8 procent. De maatregel moest zorgen voor extra inkomsten voor de overheid.

De maatregel zou vorig jaar naar verwachting 108 miljoen euro extra opleveren ten opzichte van het jaar ervoor. Maar uiteindelijk werd slechts 2 miljoen euro extra opgehaald. De regering rekende voor dit jaar op 216 miljoen euro extra door de hogere belasting op gokken. Dit werd echter maar 57 miljoen euro aan extra belastinginkomsten.

"Bovendien zorgt de belastingverhoging voor een daling van de inkomsten uit staatsdeelnemingen, waardoor de extra opbrengst voor de staat nog lager uitvalt", aldus de Kansspelautoriteit.


Nieuwe topman Heineken krijgt 25 miljoen euro in aandelen

AMSTERDAM (ANP/BLOOMBERG) - De nieuwe topman van Heineken heeft voor bijna 25 miljoen euro aan aandelen in de Nederlandse bierbrouwer gekregen. Dat bedrag dient voor Rafael Oliveira als compensatie voor de bonus die hij misloopt door te vertrekken bij zijn huidige werkgever, koffie- en theeconcern JDE Peet's.

Oliveira ontvangt 346.300 aandelen, die over een periode van vijf jaar in vijf rondes vrijkomen, bevestigt een woordvoerder van Heineken na berichtgeving van persbureau Bloomberg. Een aandeel Heineken sloot maandag op 71 euro. Na de aankondiging van de Braziliaan als topman van de bierbrouwer steeg het aandeel ruim 2 procent.

Oliveira zou bij JDE Peet's, het moederbedrijf van Douwe Egberts en Pickwick, nog een aanzienlijke bonus krijgen voor de overname van het koffieconcern door Keurig Dr Pepper. Daar was hij als topman nauw bij betrokken. Voorwaarde voor de beloning was dat hij zijn termijn van vier jaar vol zou maken. Oliveira was sinds november 2024 topman van JDE Peet's.


OM in cassatie in zaak over dodelijke aanvaring Waddenzee

DEN HAAG (ANP) - Het Openbaar Ministerie gaat in cassatie bij de Hoge Raad in de zaak over een dodelijke aanvaring tussen een snelboot en een watertaxi op de Waddenzee in oktober 2022. Dat meldt een woordvoerder van het ressortsparket, het onderdeel van het OM dat over hoger beroep en cassatie gaat. Vorige week werd de 50-jarige kapitein van de snelboot in hoger beroep vrijgesproken.

De snelboot Tiger en de watertaxi Stormloper botsten op 21 oktober 2022 op elkaar in het Schuitengat bij Terschelling. Vier passagiers van de watertaxi kwamen daardoor om het leven, onder wie een 12-jarige jongen van wie het lichaam nooit is gevonden. De kapitein van de snelboot en de schipper van de watertaxi kregen vorig jaar van de rechtbank allebei een taakstraf en een voorwaardelijke celstraf van drie maanden opgelegd. Het gerechtshof oordeelde vorige week echter dat de schuld van de kapitein van de snelboot niet kan worden bewezen.

Het OM heeft dinsdag de advocaat van de slachtoffers, de nabestaanden en de vrijgesproken schipper geïnformeerd over het besluit in cassatie te gaan. Die beslissing moet binnen twee weken na het arrest worden genomen, laat de woordvoerder weten. De komende tijd bekijkt het OM welke punten in het cassatieberoep worden aangevochten en wordt de afweging gemaakt of die procedure wordt doorgezet.

In een cassatieprocedure wordt een zaak niet opnieuw inhoudelijk behandeld, maar kijkt de Hoge Raad of een rechtbank of gerechtshof de juiste juridische procedures heeft gevolgd. In dit geval gaat het om het hof in Leeuwarden.


Met ov-staking willen bonden druk zetten op kabinet, maar publieke steun is nog beperkt

In heel Nederland rijdt woensdagochtend vroeg het openbaar vervoer niet. Met de beperkte staking willen de vakbonden de druk opvoeren op het kabinet om bezuinigingen in de sociale zekerheid te schrappen. De bonden moeten balanceren, ook om de steun van het publiek niet te verliezen.

MetaFilter

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Compassionate Use

Retatrutide is a powerful new weight loss drug from Eli Lily currently in clinical trials. Despite the clinical trials not yet being concluded, in April Eli Lilly and the FDA permitted one individual access to the drug through the FDA's compassionate use program, which gives patients with serious and immediately life-threatening medical issues access to experimental treatments. The patient was a 79-year old man with refractory obesity, obstructive sleep apnea, and pulmonary hypertension, high blood pressure in the lungs which can be life-threatening. STAT / Archive.

404 Media

404 Media is an independent media company founded by technology journalists Jason Koebler, Emanuel Maiberg, Samantha Cole, and Joseph Cox.

Libraries Not Doing Pride Displays Say They ‘Shouldn’t Be Judged’

Libraries Not Doing Pride Displays Say They ‘Shouldn’t Be Judged’

This story was reported with support from the MuckRock foundation. 

Around this time last year, Rachel Rodman was happily employed as a library clerk and program assistant with the Crawford County Library District in the east-central part of Missouri. Rodman didn’t think anything of the display she curated for Pride month last June, highlighting LGBTQ+ books from the district’s collection in the one room library within a community center. Rodman says she was given free reign to create displays and had no reason to suspect that her actions would lead to her firing. The display was up for five days before Rodman says her branch manager left her a handwritten note telling her to remove it. Rodman refused, posting to Facebook on June 5, 2025 that she wouldn’t deny a marginalized group’s right to visibility because the district feared community backlash. 

“I take my job very seriously,” Rodman wrote, adding, “I will not yield, and I’m not sorry about it.” 

The next day, she was fired. Public records obtained by 404 Media offer insight into Rodman’s dismissal and how the decision reflected poorly on the library. It represents one of hundreds of public records requests filed in jurisdictions in which we’ve received a tip or followed up on incidents of censorship and self-censorship related to LGBTQ+ focused or Pride-related book displays. Records from a handful of public libraries show a willingness from library leadership to tolerate acts of self-censorship in anticipation of unwanted attention from certain community members, and in some cases, religious leaders. This tends to show up in hesitancy to organize cultural heritage programming and LGBTQ+ book displays. 

In a statement to 404 Media, Rodman says that because public libraries are funded through taxpayer dollars, reducing visibility of a marginalized group constitutes a refusal to openly support all patrons. 

“It’s never enough to just carry the books as available material,” Rodman told 404 Media. “Everyone deserves and should be able to find themselves publicly represented, but especially in communities where censorship is already such a huge issue. It’s in those communities that minorities of any kind already feel repressed and underrepresented.”

In one email exchange from libraries in east-central Missouri, Crawford County Library District’s director told other area library directors that the firing “was not discrimination,” but rather, to “protect” employees and patrons. The situation “does look bad,” she wrote, before making it worse by accusing the employee of playing “victim.” The issue, according to Rodman and the records, was that in 2022, the library tried to host  a “Rainbow Storytime” event, but canceled it  because the library had received death threats. 

“Regardless of whether the library actually instructed the employee to remove the display, we’re in rural Missouri,” Steven Campbell, director of the Scenic Regional Library in Union, Missouri, wrote. “It’s an extremely challenging political and social environment. We all need to make our own decisions. Not everyone has a Board or appointing authority that will back them on LGBT issues. If someone thinks losing their job or receiving deaths over a display is worth it, that’s great. I admire them. Not everyone is willing to make those sacrifices, and that shouldn’t be judged.” 

Censorship experts and professional associations disagree, but they acknowledge that small and rural libraries have different challenges than their metro-area counterparts. A lot of these systems are very small, with very few salaried staff and limited acquisition budgets. Nor are they discounting the fact that it’s hard to be a librarian right now,  thanks in large part to the work of some very well-funded astroturfers. The American Library Association’s Office for Intellectual Freedom found that in 2025, over 90 percent of all book challenges could be linked to pressure groups or key decision-makers like public officials and government employees or library boards or library administrators. 

“When a library chooses to engage in censorship-lite out of fear, by just trying to keep the peace and but still do the good work of the library, it’s the patrons who pay the price, no matter what” Kate Laughlin, executive director of the National Association for Rural and Small Libraries, told 404 Media. “It is the community who is the victim, not the library and the librarians.”

In public records obtained by 404 Media, librarians regularly discussed the challenges they face with their leadership. Some of the things we've read include:

  • "I am not calling attention to Pride Month online, but I don't call attention to other recognized holidays unless it is part of a program... each time that I promote this piece of the collection I have push back from a parent."
  • "If it is in the children's area, maybe a good compromise would be to move it to another area."
  • "I have made a compromise by taking the time and trouble of changing the wording on the sign that she disapproved... I want to keep the Pride Month display up where it is for 10 more business days. Pride Month ends on June 30 and then it will be taken down."
  • “Everyone knows the stuff we’re dealing with regarding LGBT issues. It’s no cakewalk for anyone.”
  • “As a library director in a small town I have had apprehensions about doing outward pride displays in my community.”
  • “My assumption is that we will get more complaints as Pride month gets underway.”

The American Library Association’s Office for Intellectual Freedom is seeing fewer public Pride displays in libraries this year compared to  recent years, citing the chilling effect of censorship.

“There is no obligation to have any display about anything,” Sarah Lamdan, executive director of the ALA Office for Intellectual Freedom told 404 Media. “It’s all about what a community is interested in. But if somebody thinks that a Pride display might be something that would be appreciated by any member of their community, or they want to put up a Pride display, that shouldn’t be a source of fear or incrimination.” 

Lamdan says there’s a difference between being a library that doesn’t do displays of any kind, and libraries that have done displays in the past who choose not to do them due to external pressure. 

One underexplored throughline here involves religious influence in local politics. CatholicVote, a political action committee that coordinates “Hide the Pride” campaigns since 2022, has donated to library defunding campaigns. Over the years, there have been a number of pastors challenging LGBTQ+ collections and displays. Take for instance, an incident that happened in June 2024 in which a local pastor checked out dozens of books from those collections and posted on social media for his congregants to do the same.  

Emails obtained by 404 Media from the time of the incident show library workers from neighboring systems who had LGBTQ+ titles wrapped up in the “Hide the Pride”-style incident wishing the library hadn’t drawn further attention to the issue through its Facebook channel

“Personally, I think Wichita’s decision to call attention to this on Facebook was a bad idea,” Tom Taylor, director of the Andover Public Library, said in one email to other cc’d library workers. “It just gives more people the idea.” 

When asked for clarification as to what he meant by “bad idea,” Taylor told 404 Media that states like Kansas have patron privacy laws that protect everyone—including religious leaders—from public borrowing disclosure. He also said that the Andover Public Library doesn’t have any Pride-specific events planned this year, but the library has signs that help users locate frequently challenged books. 

Taylor said that he believes challenged books should still be available to check out, even if they aren’t promoted within the library.

“If you don’t order [the book] because you don’t want to have a controversy, that’s what we call censorship by omission,” he added. “To avoid buying them because you’re afraid there might be a controversy, that’s not how professional libraries work, in my opinion.” 

Ashley Stewart, a campaign strategist with EveryLibrary Institute, says she can relate to some of the pressure from religious leaders that administrators may be going through. As a former library director for a system in southwestern Illinois, she was on the receiving end of death threats from local ministerial alliances because the library hosted a Drag Queen Story Hour event in 2022 for Pride month.

“No matter where you go in the community, you’re getting—I don’t know if it’s harassment—but people are absolutely letting their feelings be heard that they think that you should not be doing a certain program or not having a certain display,” Stewart told 404 Media.