THE GUARDIAN: Houston volunteers face thousands in fines for feeding homeless

Houston volunteers face thousands in fines for feeding homeless
Police have issued 44 tickets in a crackdown on food sharing after the mayor vowed to ‘retake’ the downtown public library

Read in The Guardian: https://apple.news/AteO9yW2jQnargIKvIJcXFA

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Best Wishes and Hugs,Scottie

Two found dead in Rio Grande where Texas’ floating barrier and razor wire sparked federal lawsuit

Check out this article from USA TODAY:

Two found dead in Rio Grande where Texas’ floating barrier and razor wire sparked federal lawsuit

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2023/08/03/two-dead-in-rio-grande-where-texas-installed-razor-wire-and-buoys/70522492007/

Best Wishes and Hugs,
Scottie

The Science of Biological Sex

The medical science is in, the debate is over.  Yes it is hard for some people to understand or change.  All their lives they really thought biology of sex, who was male or female came down to if your part was an outtie or an innie.  If it dangled outside the body or if you could put something in it.  That is not how biologists classify male and female anymore.  The notion that sex is not strictly binary is not even scientifically controversial. Among experts it is a given, an unavoidable conclusion derived from actually understanding the biology of sex.  It is more accurate to describe biological sex in humans as bimodal, but not strictly binary.  In order for sex to be binary there would need to be two non-overlapping and unambiguous ends to that continuum, but there clearly isn’t. There is every conceivable type of overlap in the middle – hence bimodal, but not binary.

There are two paraghraps that address the question of gametes and of sexual organs, again proving that they are not binary.  Also the article address differences in sexual organs and how they are not the rare differences they once were thought to be.  They are in fact much more common.   This article is very informative and easy to read.  It is a bit longer than some want to read but if you want to know the truth about sex, trans gender, and biology you will read it.  If not you will repeat and stick to the same failed incorrect talking points.   Hugs

Steven Novella on July 13, 2022

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For example, in a recent article by James Lyons-Weiler (“Biology is the biology is the biology“) he begins:

Most of us are born male or female. This is not our “assigned gender”: it’s our biological sex. An individuals’s sex is determined in animals (and plants) via the chromosomes one is born with.

For most of us, we ARE male, or we ARE female. Unfortunately, early scientific articles conflated “gender” and “sex”, and much of society conflate them this as well. Depending on context, someone might need to know your sex (karyotype).

Biological sex is not binary

It is absolutely true that humans display sexual dimorphism, with a typical male and typical female set of traits. There is no third sex, or pole, or sexual archetype. This can be distinguished, for example, from body type which is understood as trimodal – ectomorphic, endomorphic, and mesomorphic – forming a triangle with individuals falling somewhere between the three poles. Biological sex has only two poles, with one axis of variation between them. (See the main image for a good visual representation of binary vs bimodal.)

It is also true that most people tend to cluster around one of the two poles of biological sex. At first glance, looking superficially at the human population, it may seem binary. This is because binary and bimodal can look very similar if you don’t dig down into the details – so let’s do that.

First we need to consider all the traits relevant to sex that vary along this bimodal distribution. The language and concepts for these traits have been evolving too, but here is a current generally accepted scheme for organizing these traits:

  • Genetic sex
  • Morphological sex, which includes reproductive organs, external genitalia, gametes and secondary morphological sexual characteristics (sometimes these and genetic sex are referred to collectively as biological sex, but this is problematic for reasons I will go over)
  • Sexual orientation (sexual attraction)
  • Gender identity (how one understands and feels about their own gender)
  • Gender expression (how one expresses their gender to the world)

We surveyed the medical literature from 1955 to the present for studies of the frequency of deviation from the ideal male or female. We conclude that this frequency may be as high as 2% of live births. The frequency of individuals receiving “corrective” genital surgery, however, probably runs between 1 and 2 per 1,000 live births (0.1-0.2%).

If what I have discussed up to this point were all there were to sex, I honestly don’t think the topic would be that controversial. All biological traits vary in a complex and messy way, and sexual characteristics are no exception (why would they be?). Most of the controversy surrounds sexual dimorphism and the brain. Again, here we see that there are statistical differences only, with greater variation within the sexes than between them.

This is where communicating these ideas gets tricky, because some experts might express this reality by saying that there are more than two sexes. I think this may be counterproductive conceptually. I prefer the “bimodal but not binary” approach. But understand the real point – a strictly binary definition of biological sex cannot possibly capture all of the actual variation, which includes many possible states of sexual orientation. You can also see, on the other side, that claiming there are only two sexes because “gametes” is hopelessly reductionist and poorly informed.

And now gender

Denying difference out of existence

Some people, however, may accept the specific arguments but reject the conclusion with what I consider to be dubious logic. One approach is to say – what is the practical difference between bimodal and binary? Why should sexuality in any way be defined by the 2% (to use a representative round figure) rather than the 98%? But this misses the actual issue, which is how we think about the 2% – are they part of biological diversity or can we define them out of existence?

A 2018 study found:

Overall it’s too early to form a confident conclusion, but the data is trending in the exact same direction as similar research into sexual orientation – the brains of trans individuals appear to be different than their cis counterparts.

Author

  • Steven NovellaFounder and currently Executive Editor of Science-Based Medicine Steven Novella, MD is an academic clinical neurologist at the Yale University School of Medicine. He is also the host and producer of the popular weekly science podcast, The Skeptics’ Guide to the Universe, and the author of the NeuroLogicaBlog, a daily blog that covers news and issues in neuroscience, but also general science, scientific skepticism, philosophy of science, critical thinking, and the intersection of science with the media and society. Dr. Novella also has produced two courses with The Great Courses, and published a book on critical thinking – also called The Skeptics Guide to the Universe.View all posts 

How cruise ships got so big

Today’s cruise ships are several times as big as the Titanic.

Cruise ships are freaking big. They’re the biggest passenger vessels humans have ever built. In size and appearance, they look nothing like almost any other boat. So how did they get that way?

The predecessor of today’s cruise ships was the ocean liner: big, beautiful ships that sailed across the Atlantic. But ocean liners had a totally different purpose from cruise ships: They were for transportation. Everything about them was designed to facilitate an ocean voyage from one continent to another.

But air travel changed that. Planes eliminated the main reason to take a ship somewhere, and ocean liner business plummeted. So the industry pivoted and began selling a ship as the destination itself. The cruise ship was born. But the ocean liners, built for a voyage, weren’t ideal for the purposes of a cruise, and over the next few decades, the cruise ship began its evolution. And it has culminated in the behemoths we see today.

Let’s talk about Texas, definitions, and people….

Is the Barbie Movie Woke? – Trae Crowder – STAND UP CLIP

Talked about Barbie bein woke this weekend at my shows. (I’m new to posting these vertical standup clips on YT so forgive me if it’s weird or not workin right.) See me live: http://www.traecrowder.com

Thirsty Thor’sday … From Ten Bears

If I read the map right, this badly affects the food growing regions of the US.   But a large segment of the US doesn’t think climate change is harmful to them.  Food wars anyone?  Hunger games mean anything?   Hugs

THE WASHINGTON POST: An abortion ban made them teen parents. This is life two years later.

An abortion ban made them teen parents. This is life two years later.
Brooke and Billy High, first featured in a widely read Washington Post story last year, are caring for their twin daughters in a new city, trying their best to hold it all together.

Read in The Washington Post: https://apple.news/Ae3b0wj9XQ5iJwfvuVIL4Og

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Best Wishes and Hugs,Scottie

THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS: A body was found in Texas’s anti-migrant buoys on the Mexican border

A body was found in Texas’s anti-migrant buoys on the Mexican border
The Justice Department has asked a federal court to order Gov. Greg Abbott to remove the floating barriers.

Read in The Dallas Morning News: https://apple.news/AjGYl3GyERoSCcULq2z5oYg

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Best Wishes and Hugs,Scottie

NEWS & OBSERVER: Wake schools have changed the rules on book challenges. Here’s what’s new.

Wake schools have changed the rules on book challenges. Here’s what’s new.
With efforts by some groups to get books removed from schools, the Wake County school board has approved a limit on how often challenges can be filed.

Read in News & Observer: https://apple.news/AvGOt-HWbQr-m8Diy8VdBhQ

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Best Wishes and Hugs,Scottie