The Daily Populous

Saturday April 17th, 2021 day edition

image for GOP Rep. Adam Kinzinger Calls on Party to Expel 'White Supremacy Caucus' Led By Marjorie Taylor Greene

Republican Illinois Representative Adam Kinzinger has called on congressional GOP leaders to expel members of the "America First Caucus," a newly formed group co-created by Republican Georgia Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene.

Kinzinger referred to the group as the "White Supremacy Caucus."

Anglo-Saxon is a term for white people related to Germanic inhabitants of 5th century England.

"I believe anyone that joins this caucus should have their committees stripped, and the Republican conference should expel them from conference participation," Kinzinger wrote in a Friday evening tweet.

"While we can't prevent someone from calling themselves Republican, we can loudly say they don't belong to us.".

I believe anyone that joins this caucus should have their committees stripped, and the Republican conference should expel them from conference participation.

While we can’t prevent someone from calling themselves Republican, we can loudly say they don’t belong to us. »

Tech Time Warp: Quite the Hotmail hack, eh?

Authored by smartermsp.com

Once, though, Hotmail was hip—and quite a target for hackers.

were the first advertising-supported web-based email services, freeing users from ISP-tied accounts such as those provided by AOL and CompuServe.

Through a spokesman, a group called Hackers Unite announced in Swedish media it had gained access to every single Hotmail account using a web browser. »

The Food We Eat Is Contributing to the Rise of Superbugs, Report Suggests

Authored by newsweek.com

Researchers have detected the building blocks of superbugs—bacteria resistant to the antibiotics used to fight them—in the environment near large factory farms in the United States.

But this overuse of antibiotics can lead to the emergence of superbugs, which are considered one of the most significant global health threats.

The WAP researchers found that all the water and soil samples they tested returned a positive result for at least one ARG. »

Dietary cocoa improves health of obese mice; likely has implications for humans

Authored by news.psu.edu

It used a commercially available cocoa product at a “physiologically achievable dose” — meaning its equivalent could be duplicated by humans.

“Doing the calculations, for people it works out to about 10 tablespoons of cocoa powder a day,” he said.

Cocoa-treated mice also had 56% lower levels of oxidative stress and 75% lower levels of DNA damage in the liver compared to high-fat-fed control mice. »