is all part of a clever survival strategy to evade predators. then the metamorphosis from nymph to adult happens relatively quickly. so, here we have a fully grown female that s now ready to mate and lay her eggs. she ll only live 4 6 weeks, though, after being underground for 17 years. cos this is when they re most vulnerable, right here, - cos their body is so soft. it s a magical time for entomologist drjessica ware, whose16 year old daughter wasn t even alive the last time she saw these insects. the world was a very different place back then. george bush was president, and facebook was just launched. you know, a lot people - for centuries have been calling these things locusts, but they re the opposite of locusts because they re not - actually a plague, they re not destroying crops. . they re actually living their life i completely in exclusion of humans, and they re great nutrition. i m going to put two on this one. yes, you heard that right, these
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The legal salvos show that a groundswell against compulsory immunization is being coordinated, at least in part, from a law office on Park Avenue in midtown Manhattan. And they offer a window into a wide-ranging and well-resourced effort to contest vaccine requirements in workplaces and other settings critical to the country’s reopening.
A New York firm has filed suit or sent letters to employers in several states, part of an effort spearheaded by one of the largest anti-vaccination groups in the country.
THOMAS LOHNES/AFP via Getty ImagesThis story was produced in partnership with Coda Story.The first vaccine is always the hardest.Before she took her baby son to the clinic to get his routine two-month shots, Anita Emly, 34, cried through the night. For several years, she had immersed herself in pseudoscience and anti-vaccine propaganda, filled with horror stories of autism, paralysis and death. Terrified by what she had read, she began to refuse vaccinations for her children.Emly gave birth to her son in February 2020, shortly before the coronavirus started to tear through her home city of New York. In response to the chaos around her, she did something remarkable: she changed her mind.Growing up in Astoria, Queens, Emly’s family were sometimes distrustful of doctors. She described how her father, a first-generation Indian immigrant, preferred to save western medicine for emergencies. “He would kind of laugh, like, ‘Haha, Tylenol,’” she said, explaini