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Why are we so obsessed with UFOs? Here s how aliens invaded (and conquered) pop culture

Why are we so obsessed with UFOs? Here s how aliens invaded (and conquered) pop culture
msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Science refutes United Cacao s claim it didn t deforest Peruvian Amazon

Science refutes United Cacao’s claim it didn’t deforest Peruvian Amazon Years of satellite imagery and analysis reveals that United Cacao, a company once publicly traded on the London Stock Exchange, deforested nearly 2,000 hectares (about 5,000 acres) of primary forest in the Peruvian Amazon. The evidence refutes the company’s narrative that farmers had degraded the land before it arrived. The deforestation, as well as other legal violations, have led to sanctions against a successor to United Cacao’s Peruvian subsidiary, now called Tamshi SAC. But Tamshi is now claiming that Mongabay Latam improperly used the term “deforestation” and has sued for defamation.

Innovation in a Regulatory Labyrinth

Innovation in a Regulatory Labyrinth “Regulations don’t always work as planned,” says Tom W. Bell, Professor of Chapman University’s Dale E. Fowler School of Law in  They Say It Can’t Be Done, a documentary [1] highlighting four world-changing technologies and how the people working in those fields view the current regulatory environment. Toward the start of the film, Professor Bell says that when people advocate for regulations, “[t]hey don’t necessarily want more regulations. They want problems fixed.” However, “regulations don’t always work as planned” and can be “like trying to fix a watch with a sledgehammer sometimes.”

Nary a drop of reason found at City Council meeting - Sedona Red Rock News

Sedona Red Rock News Candace Carr Strauss, president and CEO of the Sedona Chamber of Commerce and Tourism Bureau, begins her presentation to the Sedona City Council by addressing falsehoods she had heard circulating throughout Sedona on Wednesday, April 28. Several people spreading these falsehoods later spoke during the call to the public. I don’t go to many Sedona City Council meetings for several reasons: I have staff journalists who go in my stead and report what occurs; I have a 2-year-old who has unrelenting storytime demands; and because I believe in data, math and logic so passionately that I would fill council chamber with my tears.

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