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Colorado #civilunions bill killed along with 30 others in late-night game of political chicken: http://t.co/zq0by13L
— Dan Petty (@danielpetty) May 9, 2012
North Carolina wasn’t the only state grappling with the gay marriage issue tonight.
KDVR-TV reporter Eli Stokols, Denver Post political reporter Lynn Bartels, and others live-tweeted late tonight as Democratic Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper, state GOP leaders, and the rest of the Colorado legislature came to an insurmountable impasse on a hotly-contested civil unions bill — along with dozens of other bills:
Hickenlooper & McNulty have finished their chat. Not much optimism now about ending stalemate, salvaging #civilunions, other bills #COleg
— Eli Stokols (@EliStokols) May 9, 2012
Ferrandino back on floor, but not much has changed. 75 minutes left before #civilunions, everything else is dead. #COleg
— Eli Stokols (@EliStokols) May 9, 2012
Boos rain down on @RepMcNulty after he tells press "differences won't be resolved tonight." Crowd chanting "shame on you." #COleg
— Eli Stokols (@EliStokols) May 9, 2012
Stunning. List of bills that will die tonight just handed out. More than 30. #coleg
— Lynn Bartels (@lynn_bartels) May 9, 2012
House gallery boos McNulty, chants "shame on you!" #civilunions #coleg
— patrick malone (@pmalonenm) May 9, 2012
McNulty: "These things happen. It is unfortunate. But the timing is such that we are not able to work through that impasse." #coleg
— John Schroyer (@Johnschroyer) May 9, 2012
"Unfortunately, we just didn't have that Hickenlooper magic at the end," Ferrandino said. #coleg
— John Schroyer (@Johnschroyer) May 9, 2012
The story:
A bill to allow same-sex couples to form civil unions died on the calendar late Tuesday, taking down more than 30 other measures with it in a dramatic game of political chicken in which no one would blink.
When Republican Speaker Frank McNulty acknowledged there was an impasse and abruptly ended his news conference on the House floor, Coloradans watching in the gallery started chanting: “Shame on you! Shame on you!”
Everyone was kicked out of the gallery after someone yelled, “I hope you (expletive) die!”
The stunning turn of events on the second-to-last day of the 2012 session had been brewing since Thursday, when a Republican lawmaker voted with Democrats to pass the civil unions bill out of committee.
Social conservatives who believed the bill would die in the GOP-controlled Judiciary Committee for the second year in a row were enraged and lobbied McNulty and House Majority Leader Amy Stephens to use every procedure to kill Senate Bill 2.
Progressive Democrat Rep. Jared Polis is on a tear:
#fail Congrats @RepMcNulty 4 creating more dysfunction than DC, & thanx 4 assuring Dems the Speakers Gavel next term @lynn_bartels #coleg
— Jared Polis (@jaredpolis) May 9, 2012
Gov should call immediate special session for the next few days to work through their backlog of bills and get them all done #coleg
— Jared Polis (@jaredpolis) May 9, 2012

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From the Sun Sentinel:
Status update: It was bad idea to steal a judge’s nameplate and then post a picture of yourself holding it on your girlfriend’s Facebook page.
That’s exactly what Steven Mulhall, 21, of Coral Springs, is accused of doing.
Mulhall posted the photograph of himself holding the stolen nameplate, which was pried from the door of Broward Circuit Judge Michael Orlando courtroom on Natalie Coma Toze Segura Facebook account, according to arrest records.
Read more: http://twitchy.com/2012/03/09/dumb-crime-formerly-steven-mulhall-now-nameplate-guy/
A team of researchers recently discovered that the NYC subway is crawling with germs. Here’s how grossed out/freaked out you should actually be.
The Wall Street Journal created an interactive map of the findings (screen shot of that above).
BuzzFeed Life talked to one of the study authors, Chris Mason, Ph.D., geneticist at Weill Cornell Medical College, about the research, and just how grossed out you should actually be.
1. Yes, it is so, so many bacteria — but most of them are totally not a big deal.
“The vast majority of what we found are benign or inert for human health,” Mason says. And some of them may even be helpful to our health — like the bacteria associated with cleaning up toxins.
2. You should not be afraid to ride the subway, guys.
Mason isn’t. In fact, he says he’s even less freaked out now than he might have been before he did this study. “If anything, it makes me more confident,” he says. “I ride the subway every day, I bring my daughter on it with me, and the study has actually made me much more confident to grab a pole and hang on than I ever was before.”
3. It’s true, the researchers don’t even know what a lot of these bacteria even are.
“About half the DNA that we touch every day… we have no idea what they are,” Mason says. “It’s completely unclassified.”
4. But that’s an exciting thing, not scary. (At least for the researchers, anyway).
“We know based on these data that the vast majority of the DNA we touch is benign,” Mason says. “And even though a lot of it is unknown, I get excited about that because I’m surrounded by things that have never been seen before that are right under my fingertips. Much like looking at a rainforest, even. I can explore it and find new species, different animals, different plants. So I find that very exciting and invigorating to think about. Not a concern.”
The Wall Street Journal’s interactive tool also lets you search the subway system by bacteria type. Shown here is antibiotic resistant bacteria. You can also sort by sunscreen, mozzarella cheese, and Kimchi and sauerkraut, if you’re so inclined.
5. That thing you read about the “germs that can cause bubonic plague uptown“? Don’t sweat it.
Don’t you think we’d notice if the bubonic plague were actually sweeping through our subway system and/or the Upper West Side?
“There’s been no documented case of any of the diseases that are associated with some of the DNA we found,” Mason says. “That’s additional evidence that there’s no reason whatsoever to be concerned. It’s really a testament I supposed to what the immune system can do.” The human body: AMAZING.
6. The more dense the population, the greater the diversity of bacteria.
“If you look at an average station in the Bronx, for example, it will have more unique species of bacteria than a station in Manhattan or Staten Island,” Mason says, because the Bronx has greater population density.
7. But more diverse bacteria might actually be a good thing, especially for younger people.
This is due to the “hygiene hypothesis,” Mason says. “It’s a hypothesis being studied in microbiology that thinks about the immune system. Martin Blaser recently wrote a book about this, called Missing Microbes. The idea actually is that when you’re younger, your immune system needs to have the ability for target practice, essentially — it needs to be exposed to antigens. In the absence of that, you’ll actually have a higher risk of asthma and allergies later in life. So to some degree, the greater bacterial diversity found in the surfaces is probably a good thing.” (He pointed out that they didn’t study this specifically in their research, but it’s a general idea that microbiologists are paying attention to lately.)
The Wall Street Journal tool shows that there were 96 types of bacteria found at Atlantic Av-Barclays Center station in Brooklyn. Those bacteria include UTI bugs, food poisoning, and bacteria from heart-valve infections, among many others.
8. The railings contained the greatest diversity of bacteria.
Mason and his colleagues swabbed railings, seats, turnstiles, kiosks, and trashcans — basically everything that gets a LOT of use all day every day in a subway.
9. But those same metal railings had less total DNA on them than the wooden benches did.
So the bacteria on the poles was most diverse, but there was less of it total compared to other surfaces. “Metal in general is a good idea versus say wood, which can absorb a lot of things,” Mason says. The same can probably be said about seats with fabric on them (looking at you, San Francisco), but they didn’t test that in this study.
10. The bacterial DNA left in some stations could actually predict the ancestry of the people who live in that area.
This didn’t apply to high-traffic areas or to places with a lot of tourists, but in neighborhoods that lean predominantly toward one specific race or ethnicity, the subway bacteria reflected that.
“There are ancestry informative markers, genetic markers that can tell you where you come from in the world, whether you’re Finnish, or you’re British, Japanese, and so on,” Mason says. “There’s a catalogue of genetic variants that are known to be distributed around the world. And we can use the knowledge of human genetic variation, and take that data and combine it with census data, and when we blend those two together we see a mirror of them on the surface of the subway.”
As you can see from the WSJ tool, bacteria from mozzarella cheese was found all over the city. New Yorkers love their pizza.
11. Hurricane Sandy impacted the bacteria in South Ferry Station.
“One of the most notable stations was the South Ferry Station,” Mason says. “So it had a unique mixture, and also some lower levels of bacteria. It was a very unique station in that regard, and it’s because it had been so flooded.”
12. There’s a lot of cheese bacteria in the subway because New Yorkers love their pizza.
Oh, and Mason doesn’t think that people are just barfing up pizza on the subway all the time (we asked him). “I think it’s because people eat pizza and they don’t wash their hands after they eat it and they touch the subway railings.” Sounds about right.
13. No subway stations are better or worse than others when it comes to nasty bugs.
“When we looked at one station every hour on the hour, the microbial diversity changes so fast because you have tens of thousands of hands touching every surface,” Mason says. “To say that one station is better or worse than another at one snapshot in time would be unfair to that station, because it could be different the next day. And also everything that would be there would likely be normal healthy things anyway. So I don’t want people to avoid a subway station just because of one dataset from one or two days.”
Read more: http://www.buzzfeed.com/carolynkylstra/subway-bacteria
Jonathan Hoenig, aka the “Capitalist Pig,” was in Chicago today, where he witnessed a rally that wasn’t so much “pro-Palestine” as it was anti-Israel:
http://twitter.com/#!/JonathanHoenig/status/486979977464672256 http://twitter.com/#!/JonathanHoenig/status/486982032422350848 http://twitter.com/#!/JonathanHoenig/status/486984503152242691 http://twitter.com/#!/JonathanHoenig/status/486987164513607680 http://twitter.com/#!/JonathanHoenig/status/486988236745474048 http://twitter.com/#!/JonathanHoenig/status/486989441810956290 http://twitter.com/#!/JonathanHoenig/status/486990718754234368 http://twitter.com/#!/JonathanHoenig/status/486992132134035458 http://twitter.com/#!/JonathanHoenig/status/486993214323560449 http://twitter.com/#!/JonathanHoenig/status/486994393446879232 http://twitter.com/#!/JonathanHoenig/status/486995504564166657 http://twitter.com/#!/JonathanHoenig/status/486997859942686720Ignorance on parade.
http://twitter.com/#!/LilMissRightie/status/486985468240990208That’s putting it mildly.
http://twitter.com/#!/AnthonyBialy/status/486984952383156224***
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The top pinned images from its male users, according to Pinterest, are about fashion, hiking, and DIY.
And while Pinterest will not share a figure for the exact number of men using the site, the company offered a glimpse this week into what content men are pinning the most: fashion, hiking, and DIY.
These three images above, specifically, have been repinned the most in the past month, Larkin Brown said, a researcher at Pinterest: a close-up shot of a dapper-looking suit, a stuffed military daypack for hiking, and a beautiful infographic on how to build a platform bed.
The popularity of specific images and categories on Pinterest are hard to quantify because images can be pinned and repinned multiple times throughout the system, Mithya Srinivasan, a representative from Pinterest, told BuzzFeed Life. “Nothing is numerically ranked,” Srinivasan said. But the company’s data scientists said that repins are the most effective way to measure an item’s influence.
To an obsessive observer of Pinterest trends (which I am), one thing that seems to differ between the popular pins of women and men — or at least what the company said are the popular male pins — is the overall quality of the photos and the buy-ability. That is, the photos Pinterest said men pin were more likely to be products linked to a merchandiser’s site than just a photo of a person wearing that item. And while some of the most repinned photos on Pinterest at large might be a gritty shot of a beige casserole or someone’s random gray hallway, the top male pins the company sent BuzzFeed Life all looked professionally produced.
This could be related to Pinterest’s new partnership with brands, which can promote pins targeted to certain interests or demographics, or because of Pinterest’s own work to increase their number of male users by saturating the men’s fashion and other traditionally masculine categories. Or, maybe men just like looking at pretty pictures.
Read more: http://www.buzzfeed.com/jessicaprobus/this-is-what-men-pin-according-to-pinterest