The first opposite-sex European bison twins born in the Stegaliai enclosure of Dzūkija National Park have been released into the wild, Lithuanian authorities announced Tuesday.
Along with the twins, two additional males and ten adult females were also released, according to the Vytautas Magnus University Academy of Agriculture.
The academy said the birth of these twins is a first in Europe. The animals have been registered in the European Bison Pedigree Book (EBPB), and it marks the first time in recorded history that twins of different sexes survived and were successfully released into the wild after strengthening in a controlled environment.
“The birth of European bison twins is an extremely rare phenomenon even on a global scale,” said Artūras Kibiša of the Vytautas Magnus University Academy of Agriculture. “There have been only a few cases in the entire modern history of monitoring the species.”
Since 2022, Lithuania has been carrying out a relocation program aimed at creating genetically strong and ecologically balanced herds of European bison living freely in the wild.
Over the past three years, a total of 46 young bison from free populations in Panevėžys, Kėdainiai, and Kaunas districts have been relocated to Dzūkija National Park. A specially equipped 103-hectare enclosure with quarantine and acclimatisation zones ensures the animals adapt smoothly before release.
“Our memory is not like a video camera,” Bridge said. “Your memory reframes and edits events to create a story to fit your current world. It’s built to be current.” (Source)
The unreliability of human memory is not a new topic, but this study fairly convincingly shows how our memories conform to what we are doing and/or how we have been using them.
One can plausibly extrapolate from this that humans change how they remember and understand themselves and others based on the data of now. A moment of extraneous frustration, for example, may cause us to see someone nearby us in a different light, through no fault of theirs.
If our frustration is with how we are being (mis)understood or with our difficulty in expressing our thoughts, the implications for how we understand the person we are speaking with may be even more serious.
Experienced FIML partners will surely have realized that even minor misunderstandings can lead to large acts of “reframing” events in an emotional way that can be seriously distorted.
Beyond innocent misunderstandings (which, unfortunately, can have tragic consequences), this area of shifting memories is where a good deal of interpersonal abuse occurs. In the worst cases, one (or both) partners abuse normal human malleability to lie. In less bad cases, one (or both) partners is easily excited by their own distortions and quickly comes to believe them, effectively lying to themselves as well as their partner.
In other cases, individuals or entire groups of people may decide to tell a significant lie (slanted history, for example) and then hurl their lie passionately at others. This frequently causes the person being lied to to react with shame or concern based on the liars’ emotional display and not on the facts of the matter. A person being subjected to such verbal abuse will often conclude that if the other person is so passionate, they must have a serious point that should be considered; and this can cause large distortions of well-known facts in the victim’s mind.
All of this is a major reason the Human Realm is characterized by delusion and a large part of Buddhist practice is geared toward removing delusion.
There has been a long history of mind-control, Zionist infiltration and bribery to move Christians into this delusion. This is an example of the danger of holding mere words to be sacred. The words are changed and the faithful fall for it. Below is a brief explanation of how it happened. ABN
China has installed a new floating barrier at Scarborough Shoal, according to satellite imagery, as tensions rise between Beijing and Manila over the disputed atoll in the South China Sea.
The barrier was seen blocking the entrance to the lagoon at the shoal in the image obtained by Satellogic, a geospatial company headquartered in Montevideo, Uruguay.
Tensions over Scarborough Shoal – known as Huangyan Island in China and Panatag Shoal in the Philippines – have intensified in recent months, with confrontations between their coastguards as well as warships.
That came a day after Manila said its coastguard aircraft had experienced “aggressive interference” from a Chinese helicopter and a J-16 fighter jet during a routine flight.
The string of purges in the PLA suggests an existential struggle between the old and new guard. And now there’s a clear winner.
On October 17, China announced the ouster from the Communist Party of General He Weidong, the second-highest ranking officer in the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) and a member of the 24-man Politburo, for corruption. His dismissal, and that of Admiral Miao Hua, are shocking.
President Xi Jinping had helicoptered He into the Central Military Commission (CMC) just three years ago and promoted Miao Hua in 2017 to rejuvenate the leadership of the military high command. Now He has become the first CMC vice chairman to be removed from power in over four decades. Moreover, the ouster follows an unprecedented number of dismissals and disappearance of senior military officers since mid-2023. In fact, amid the successive ousters, the CMC is now down to just four members.
My assessment is that this is a purge triggered by a power struggle between the CMC’s first-ranked vice chairman, Zhang Youxia, and the ambitious up-from-the-troops ordinary soldiers, He Weidong and Miao Hua.
Zhang represents the old, princeling elite of the PLA. His father was a Red Army hero of the 1920s and 1930s and was equal in stature to Xi Jinping’s father. Zhang Youxia built his military career on being a hero during the 1979 border war against the Vietnamese. My friends who have met him tell me he is a tough old soldier in the Maoist tradition: profane, entitled, and intolerant.
PLA General Zhang Youxia, pictured here during a 2017 meeting with Russia’s Vladimir Putin, seems to have emerged victorious in the power struggles within China’s military.
Eastern Europeans are deeply aware of what being conquered entails and still have living memories of it.
In today’s Europe and West, we should look up to Eastern Europeans in areas such as cultural preservation, the importance of ethnic cohesion, the importance of expanding ethnic cohesion to include all Whites and anyone else who truly supports the preservation and development of the West.
An Algerian woman who stands accused of torturing, raping, and killing a 12-year-old girl is said to have received ‘an almost sexual pleasure’ while carrying out the violent acts.
Dahbia Benkired, 27, an Algerian migrant living in France, allegedly lured schoolgirl Lola Daviet into her apartment on October 14, 2022. She is currently on day four of her six-day trial at the Paris Assize Court.
Benkired, who had been homeless and reportedly earning money as a prostitute at the time, is accused of partially severing Lola’s head and suffocating her as revenge for the girl’s mother refusing to give her a key to an apartment block.
But in court on Wednesday, Nicolas Estano, 47, a clinical psychologist and expert witness, claimed it was text messages between Benkired and her ex-partner Mustapha M, that led her to allegedly committing the gruesome crimes.
What is the relationship between subjectivity and speech?
Speech is a narrow band compared to subjectivity.
When we awake early in the morning and lie alone in the dark, we often experience the richness of our subjectivity. It can be scary or peaceful or angry or blissful. It can be rich with imagery or memory, sounds, music, emotions.
Then something in us moves and we get up.
Normally, our subjective world starts to close down at this point, especially if we are living with someone. At some point, we will start talking, maybe drink some coffee, while we begin the process of fully awakening the communicative mind. I want to avoid calling this communicative aspect of our minds “objective” because there is nothing particularly objective about it and there is nothing particularly non-objective about our “subjective” mind as described above.
The subjective mind that we experience before arising or in meditation is like a vast mountain range, while the communicative mind—the speaking and listening mind—is like a tiled patio with a few chairs and a table within that mountain range of subjectivity.
Neither of them is better or worse and neither of them can be avoided or removed. Still, the speaking mind does tend to ignore the mountains, our subjectivity, while the subjective mind generally finds it hard to speak at all.
In FIML practice we place great emphasis on removing mistakes while we are speaking, listening, or communicating. This is like cleaning up the patio, making sure the chairs do not have rain on them or that the table does not wobble. Once the patio has been cleaned up, it is time to bring in more communion with your partner about the mountains all around you.
When your partner looks at the mountains—their subjectivity—it’s not the same view that you will have of your subjectivity. But still you are both human and you surely care about one another, so in many respects your subjectivities are not so different. Can you find more ways to share them? Can you find more ways to refer to them as you speak and listen?
FIML practice is capable of completely removing the snowball effects of inevitable mistakes in communication. Once you can do that, start adding more subjectivity, more of the mountains and happy clouds around you.