Several men appear in photos on the nearly 10,000-acre Zorro ranch, which included a 26,700 sq ft mansion
For years, Jeffrey Epstein took respite at a sprawling ranch in the desert scrub outside Santa Fe, New Mexico. Epstein’s nearly 10,000-acre (4,000-hectare) property – known as Zorro ranch – was dotted with cholla cactus and Angus cattle, and came to include a 26,700 sq ft mansion, as well as a private runway and hangar.
For years, Epstein abused teenage girls and young women on this ranch with impunity, according to testimony from several women. In court proceedings, survivors detailed horror after horror they say unfolded on this isolated expanse of land.
Continue reading...With the end of the New Start treaty, we face a potentially catastrophic arms race. It can still be prevented
The risk of nuclear war is greater now than in decades – and rising. The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists recently set its famous Doomsday Clock closer to midnight, indicating a level of risk equivalent to the 1980s, when US and Soviet nuclear stockpiles were increasing rapidly. In those years, massive waves of disarmament protest arose in Europe and the United States. Political leaders responded, the cold war ended, and many people stopped worrying about the bomb.
Today, the bomb is back. Political tensions are rising, and nuclear weapons have spread to other countries, including Israel, India, Pakistan and North Korea. China is rapidly increasing its nuclear arsenal. The US-Russia arms competition may accelerate soon with the expiration on 5 February of the last remaining arms control agreement, the New Start treaty. To prevent the growing nuclear threat, we need a new global peace movement.
David Cortright, a visiting scholar at Cornell University’s Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies, was the executive director of Sane, the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy, during the 1980s
Continue reading...This unofficial diagnosis describes the anxiety-driven, compulsive obsession with living as long as possible. While it might seem healthy to monitor your diet, exercise and biomarkers, it can come at a huge emotional cost
It was a pitta bread that finally broke Jason Wood. It arrived with hummus instead of the vegetable crudites he had preordered in a restaurant that he had painstakingly researched, as he always did, weeks before he and his husband visited. “In that moment, I just snapped,” he recalls. “I hit rock bottom, I got angry … I started crying, I started shaking. I just felt like I couldn’t do it any more, like I had been crushed by all this pressure I put on myself.”
Today, Wood, 40, speaks calmly. Neat and groomed, he seems orderly by nature. But at that time, his attempts to control every aspect of his life had spiralled. He painstakingly monitored what he ate (sometimes only organic, sometimes raw or unprocessed; calories painstakingly counted), his exercise regime (twice a day, seven days a week), and tracked every bodily function from his heart rate to his blood pressure, body fat and sleep “schedule”. He even monitored his glucose levels repeatedly throughout the day. “I was living by those numbers,” he says.
Continue reading...The series in which readers answer other readers’ questions explores the sounds and music that play on repeat mentally – and how to escape their aural clutches
• This week’s question: can you acquire courage?
I know a song that’ll get on your nerves, get on your nerves, get on your nerves. I know a so … you get the gist! Why does a song sometimes get stuck in our heads? (And good luck stopping this one now!) Laura Ashton, Haslemere, Surrey
Send new questions to nq@theguardian.com.
Continue reading...Kick-off at Amex Stadium 2pm (GMT)
Email Daniel with your thoughts
I’ll probably end up looking silly, but I quite fancy Palace here. Brighton lack a reliable scorer – though Katsoulas’ brilliant goal against Bournemouth tells us he knows where the goal is – and I think Palace have the speed of foot and of pass to cause them problems.
So where is the game? Brighton will expect – and probably allowed – to have more of the ball, with Mitoma and Rutter staying narrow and Kadioglu and De Cuyper keeping width outside them – especially useful when facing a three-at-the-back system. The space will be in behind the wing-backs and down the sides of the centre-backs, though I’d also expect Katsoulas to target the space in behind.
Continue reading...The gruesome finish to the US star’s comeback, at age 41 and with a ruptured ACL, is a reminder of skiing’s unforgiving nature
There was always a version of this story that ended in a single, violent instant. Lindsey Vonn was 13th to push out of the start gate on Sunday in Cortina d’Ampezzo knowing exactly what she was racing with: a fully ruptured ACL in her left knee, a heavy brace wrapped around the joint, and the accumulated wear of a career spent flirting with speed and consequence.
She barely made it out of the opening phase of the run.
Continue reading...by_no_means_a_photographer has added a photo to the pool:
Weed head framed against an overcast summer sky. Getting this framing required laying down on some hard, rocky, prickly ground, on a day where I had already seen a couple of highly venomous snakes nearby. After a bit of slithering along the ground myself I managed to get the flower head with the sky in the background and also include the foreground flower and the branches in the top left. After getting in a few shots, I stood up and realised it wasn't the snakes I should have been worrying about, I had been laying next to an ants' nest and they were all over me. I am glad I was in an isolated area, as I would have looked a bit odd jumping around like an idiot and thrashing my arms around to try and get the buggers off me (if you have seen the size of the ants in this area, and felt their bite, you would know why it was a matter of urgency. However, half an hour later I was still finding them crawling through my beard and hair though.
This was literally the first time in over a month that I have left the house for anything other than work or shopping. Also the first time I have picked up my camera in over a month. Despite the ants (and the swarms of flies), it was nice to get back to doing what I enjoy.
LIVIGNO (ANP) - Snowboardster Michelle Dekker vond de uitschakeling in de achtste finales op de parallelreuzenslalom bij de Olympische Spelen onnodig. De 29-jarige Nederlandse had in haar race tegen de Oostenrijkse Sabine Payer een voorsprong, maar werd in het laatste deel voorbijgestreefd en kwam 0,13 seconde te kort voor een plaats bij de laatste acht.
"Je ziet dat de verschillen superklein zijn en dat een klein foutje op deze piste meteen fataal kan zijn", aldus Dekker. "Op een gegeven moment had ik halverwege nog een kleine voorsprong. Daarna maakte ik dat foutje, maar kwam ik nog redelijk dichtbij. Het was helaas net niet goed genoeg."
De nederlaag was extra pijnlijk, omdat Payer in de kwartfinale de favoriete titelverdedigster Ester Ledecka uitschakelde. "Je zag vandaag dat best veel favorieten er vroeg uitlagen. Snowboardracen is sowieso een sport waarin de verschillen klein zijn. Deze baan is heel vlak en je ziet gewoon dat herstellen na een foutje hier bijna niet lukt."
Ze noemt het de ‘plastisfeer’, de organismen die leven op alle plastic snippers in de oceanen. „We willen onderzoeken of er enzymen zijn die biologisch afbreekbare kunststoffen kunnen afbreken in zee.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.