John Oliver Wants To Make You Finally Care About Gerrymandering

Gerrymandering might not be the most exciting topic in politics, but as John Oliver pointed out on HBO’s “Last Week Tonight” on Sunday, it’s one of the most important. 

It’s the practice of redrawing district boundaries so one party has a better chance of winning.  

“Gerrymandering has become a very precise science,” Oliver said. “Interestingly, it is one of the few remaining types of science in which the Republican Party currently believes.” 

While the GOP has certainly benefitted most in recent years, Oliver noted that the Democrats have been pretty good at it themselves at times.

Oliver said neither party should be allowed to “dilute our votes” by redrawing district maps.

“Everyone, every one of us, should get an equal chance to make a bad decision which fucks things up for everybody else,” he said. 

See his full explanation above. 

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Climate Change Is Ruining Farmers' Lives, But Only A Few Will Admit It

When Christina Carter started growing vegetables 12 years ago, she looked forward to winters because they offered her the chance to recover from the strenuous growing and harvesting seasons.

That’s no longer the case. Summers are hotter and stormier than they used to be, and fall never seems to come. A true winter also seems to be a thing of the past, but that doesn’t mean spring won’t bring the occasional surprise hailstorm.

Today, Carter, who owns and operates the Ten Mile Farm in Old Fort, North Carolina, is managing crops and dealing with repairs and maintenance to her farm year-round.

“We used to have December, January and February off,” Carter said with a laugh.

Though the lack of an off-season presents the opportunity of feeding people year-round, it comes with many challenges, too. Intense, sudden rainfall can knock out a whole crop, causing carrots to rot in the ground or beans to die out from overly saturated soil. The work days are becoming longer and sweatier.

“We have neighbors who’ve lived out here their whole lives and they say they’ve never seen that kind of hail or that much rain,” Carter told The Huffington Post. “They know that it’s different and that it’s more intense.”

Carter said she believes climate change is to blame for such extremes, and making her farm more adaptable to such wild weather has been on her mind practically from the start. It’s the reason she grows a rotating variety of some 60 different vegetables, uses cover crops and avoids pesticides and fertilizers made with chemicals.

But she also knows that most farmers aren’t like her.

“It’s easier [for them] to pretend that it’s just liberal jibber-jabber,” Carter said.

In many ways, farmers are uniquely vulnerable to the effects of climate change.

Federal research indicates that extreme weather events like droughts and floods can harm crops and reduce yields — in one example, $210 million worth of Michigan cherries were lost due to a premature budding. Warmer weather can also mean more weeds and pests for crops, and more heat stress and disease for livestock.

The limited research available on the topic indicates that most farmers agree that climate change is happening. Yet only a few — perhaps about 16 percent, according to one survey of Iowa farmers — seem to believe that human activities are a primary cause of it.

They maintain this position even as a growing body of research shows that farming is a leading contributor to climate change and is responsible for as much as one-third of global greenhouse gas emissions. Livestock are a major source of these emissions, and the use of synthetic fertilizers is another factor.

And many of these farmers probably won’t change their viewpoints anytime soon, as the Trump administration expresses climate skepticism and works to dismantle climate change-fighting initiatives

Certain sustainable practices can lessen the negative effect that farming has on the environment. But not many farmers have adopted them, even as consumer demand for sustainably produced food is rising: For example, certified organic cropland, which by definition adheres to many sustainable farming practices, still represent just 0.8 percent of overall U.S. cropland.

Nevertheless, farmers like Carter are determined to make changes. HuffPost recently spoke to farmers across the country who are adjusting their farming practices to prepare for a warmer, stormier future.

Anne Schwagerl ― Browns Valley, Minnesota

Anne Schwagerl said she thinks there’s a growing curiosity about resilient farming practices in Browns Valley, a town of about 590 people near the border of South Dakota. 

Schwagerl, who is surrounded by conventional farmers, grows a variety of crops that includes corn and soybeans grown without genetically modified organisms and organic alfalfa, barley, oats and wheat. She also rotationally grazes pigs on her Prairie Point Farm, which she and her husband established five years ago. 

Their environmentally conscious approach touches everything they do. In order to reduce their energy use, they compost the pigs’ manure to fertilize their crops and use their own crops to feed the hogs. And they also use cover crops, which can reduce soil erosion and increase nutrient retention. 

Schwagerl said she was initially shocked when one of her neighbors, a conventional farmer, asked her about the cover crops.

“This man farms 10,000 acres, which is very big — by my own standards, it’s mind-boggling when I think about how busy I am with a 300-acre farm,” Schwagerl said. “So for him to say something like he’s thinking about doing cover crops is crazy.”

The more Schwagerl thought about her neighbor’s curiosity, though, the less it surprised her. She said all kinds of farmers share the goal of being responsible stewards of the land.

“I think farmers big and small alike see that the writing is on the wall,” Schwagerl said. “Farmers have to do something because they care about the land and leaving it to the next generation. They’re going to find a way to make things work one way or another.” 

Walker Miller ― Six Mile, South Carolina

When Walker Miller first established his pick-your-own fruit farm, climate change was “the farthest thought from my mind.” Miller and his wife Ann began growing a variety of fruits in the foothills of the South Carolina mountains, a 45-minute drive west of Greenville, some 37 years ago.

Their Happy Berry farm specializes in grapes, blueberries and blackberries. They’ve developed a large following for their fruit selection ― which has grown to include the likes of Goji berries and persimmons ― and free-range eggs.

Miller is worried, however. Warmer winters mean the temperature rarely drops low enough to kill off the bacterium that causes Pierce’s, a disease that threatens his grape crop. More trees are being downed on his 22-acre lot as a result of more frequent extreme storms. Warmer winters can also usher in premature blooms, which means he has to use a wind machine to protect against frost.

Miller has already run his wind machine three times this year in an effort to save his crops, which he said is unusual. 

“It wasn’t like that before, but it’s like that now and it’s getting worse,” he told HuffPost. “I consider it to be the major threat to the success of our farm.”

But Miller has a plan. In fact, it’s a 35-page climate mitigation and adaptation plan that outlines how Happy Berry has approached climate resilience.

One of the more unusual elements of Miller’s plan is the planting of pine trees amongst the farm’s orchards — an effort to protect against frost, overheating and storms. So far it seems to be going better than a “failed” experiment with shade cloth, he said.

“I’m probably considered a radical,” he said of his approach to the farm, adding that he believes the stakes are too high to go about it any other way.

“It is the most serious problem that we as a civilization face,” Miller said in reference to climate change. “I’m trying to encourage the farmers in South Carolina and the nation to have a plan like I’ve got. I go around and talk to anybody who will give me an audience. But people have got to have the will to do this.”

Tyler Hoyt ― Mancos, Colorado

Tyler Hoyt is at the beginning of his farming life and still getting the lay of the land. He started growing vegetables and raising pigs, hens and dairy goats in southwestern Colorado in 2014.

The region can be very arid, but it’s been very wet since he started Green Table Farm. Often too wet.

“It makes you feel like a pro, like you can grow whatever you want, but other times we’re seeing deluges of water,” Hoyt said.

He knows he’s overdue for another dry, lean year — like the drought that hit in 2013 ― so he’s preparing by using a water-conserving drip irrigation system on his fields.

“Farmers basically had not even planted [in 2013] because it wasn’t even worth it,” Hoyt said. “There was no water for it.”

He also plants many crops that are indigenous to the region and require little, if any, water, like certain types of corn, beans, pumpkins and squash.

Like Schwagerl, Hoyt sees some of his conventional farmer neighbors — who mostly raise cattle, horses or pigs, not vegetables — coming around on more climate-resilient practices.

But he said most longtime farmers probably won’t come around until there are better economic incentives for such practices. Carbon sequestration credits could encourage people to adopt cover cropping and green manuring, for example.

“When you’re talking about climate, it’s best to just talk about economics and how it can relate to their pocketbook,” Hoyt said. “I don’t ever want to say the words ‘climate change’ with the conventional crowd.”

Tony Schultz ― Athens, Wisconsin

Tony Schultz bought the land where he’s been farming for the past decade from his father, who had operated it as conventional dairy farm.

Since then, Schultz has transitioned Stoney Acres Farm into a diversified organic operation. He sells a range of food including vegetables, wheat, beef, pork and maple syrup at farmers markets and through a community-supported agriculture program.

But perhaps the most unusual thing Stoney Acres does is host a weekly “pizza on the farm” night where everything that goes into the pizza, except for the cheese, comes directly from the farm. 

“We wanted to limit our footprint and be as sustainable as we possibly could, knowing that agriculture is an inherent imposition on nature,” Schultz said.

He’s been upfront about his interest in sustainability from the start — even though it cost him at least one CSA customer a few years back. (“The message was something along the lines of ‘I loved your tomatoes, but Al Gore doesn’t get it,’” he said.)

And despite living in a county that turned out overwhelmingly in support of Donald Trump in last fall’s election, he has stuck to his convictions (although he admits climate change isn’t the conversation he typically starts with).

Like Hoyt, Schultz said environmental stewardship and economic success are connected. And business resiliency is a good place for the conversation to start.

“I’m listening first,” Schultz said. “You have to go where they are, not where you are. You start where they are.”

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Clare Hinz ― Herbster, Wisconsin

As a farmer, you also have to start where you are, adapting your practices to fit the conditions you’re handed.

A three-hour drive north of Schultz, on the shores of Lake Superior, is Clare Hinz’s Elsewhere Farm

One of the first things Hinz did about a decade ago, when she moved from Chicago to start a farm in far-northern Wisconsin, was buy a tractor.

That same year, Hinz dealt with a massive flood that wiped out her crops. Not long afterward, she realized her farming plan wasn’t going to get the job done. And that the tractor wouldn’t be of much use to her.

Instead, Hinz opted to follow a style of farming originated by the Aztecs in the pre-colonial days: She grows vegetables in chinampas. The practice involves growing crops in raised beds surrounded by ditches that can hold water without drowning the plants. It is resistant to both extremely dry and extremely wet conditions.

“I farm in mud boots many months of the summer, but I rarely have to irrigate,” Hinz said.

It’s extra work, too — without the use of a tractor, she has to cultivate the crops by hand. But she felt it was the best approach to growing vegetables in a region not well-suited to more traditional methods.

Hinz also raises rare animals on her farm, including Icelandic chickens and her particularly unusual guinea hogs, which were once very popular due to their high fat content but are now considered a threatened species.

She’s been watching her animals a lot lately, looking for signs of hope at a time when she feels the Trump administration and its backers are trumpeting a “paradigm of scarcity” she refuses to accept.

“I look at them every day and they remind me that nature is tough,” Hinz said. “Like we’re going to do this and we’re going to pull through.”

Unlike Schultz and Hoyt, Hinz said that talking about climate change without saying “climate change” skirts the issue.

“It’s climate change and we need to call it like it is, because we need solidarity with all the growers all over the world who are facing the same thing,” she said.

She said she hopes to see more of her peers approach the issue head-on and resist the tide of denial. And for that, she feels optimistic.

“The farming community has always been farming in resistance to dominant forces,” she said. “The attitude is just rolling up our sleeves some more, here we go. We have to keep working.”

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Joseph Erbentraut covers promising innovations and challenges in the areas of food, water, agriculture and our climate. Follow Erbentraut on Twitter at @robojojo. Tips? Email joseph.erbentraut@huffingtonpost.com.

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People With Migraines Are Three Times More Likely To Have Anxiety

Migraines are never pleasant, but new research suggests that they may have a more damaging effect on mental health than we realized. 

New research from the University of Toronto, published online last month in the journal Headache, found that people with migraines are three times more likely to develop generalized anxiety disorder than those who do not suffer from migraines. 

For the study, the researchers analyzed mental health surveys from more than 2,200 Canadian adults with migraines and nearly 20,000 adults without migraines. The analysis revealed that 2 percent of people without migraines suffer from generalized anxiety disorder, compared to 6 percent of people with migraines.

And despite the fact that anxiety is much more common in women, the study showed that men with migraines were two times more likely to develop anxiety than women with migraines.

“We were surprised at the finding because women usually have a higher prevalence of anxiety disorders than men,” said Dr. Esme Fuller-Thomson, a professor of social work at the University of Toronto and the study’s lead author. The researchers speculate that men who have migraines are more susceptible to anxiety disorders because they’re less likely than women to take medication for pain, “so their migraine symptoms may be more severe and anxiety producing.”

There are many possible reasons for the migraine-anxiety connection, including biological, environmental and emotional factors. Debilitating chronic pain (which 30 percent of migraine sufferers said they experienced) and difficulties managing household responsibilities (which 28 percent said they experienced) were the two main factors causing anxiety in migraine patients, according to the study.

“We were not surprised that chronic pain played a strong role in the link between migraines and generalized anxiety disorders,” said study co-author Dr. Janay Jayanthikumar, who is a researcher in social work at the University of Toronto. “The unpredictable and uncontrollable nature of migraine pain can be extremely anxiety-producing, as it often interferes with family and work responsibilities with little or no warning.”

Lack of social support was also a huge factor ― those who did not have at least one close friend to confide in were five times more likely to have anxiety. It’s well known that social support is one of the most important tools we have for protecting mental health.

Although migraines and mental health issues are rarely discussed together, research has identified many links between the two. People with migraines are also twice as likely to suffer from depression, and previous research suggests that migraines are more common in patients with bipolar disorder. Studies have also shown that people with migraines are more likely to have panic disorders and agoraphobia. 

Fuller-Thomson urged medical professionals to be more aware of these issues when treating their patients. 

“Doctors and other health professionals need to be especially aware of the fact that their migraine patients may be experiencing mental health problems such as depression and anxiety disorders,” Fuller-Thomson said. “Targeted screening for these problems and referral to mental health professionals may be warranted for patients with migraines who are particularly vulnerable.”

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Jay Z Reminds Us Tidal Is Still A Thing By Pulling Music From Spotify

Jay Z has pulled much of his music from Spotify, a main competitor to the streaming service he co-owns, Tidal.

Late last week, the service honored the hip-hop icon and entrepreneur’s request to remove most of his catalog, Billboard reports, excluding collaborations with other artists including R. Kelly, Kanye and Linkin Park. A 2010 hits collection, including tracks “Izzo” and “99 Problems,” is still available at time of publication, as well.

While earlier reports claimed Jay Z also pulled his work from Apple Music, his catalog remains in place on that service.

The move is an evident attempt to draw more subscribers over to Tidal, the self-proclaimed artist-friendly service that has lagged behind Spotify and Apple in subscribers. While Spotify boasts around 50 million users and Apple 20 million, Tidal claimed last year it reached the 3 million subscriber mark ― but that number is thought to be significantly lower.

As TechRadar points out, one particular reason for the move may be that Spotify is preparing to launch a higher quality audio feature that’s been a main selling point for Tidal, which bills itself as “the first music service with High Fidelity sound quality.” Spotify Hi-Fi, as the new service would reportedly be called, would allow users CD-quality streaming.

Maybe it was also just that time for Jay Z to pack up and go. He’s been an outspoken critic of tech companies over artists’ pay, blasting Google (which owns YouTube), Spotify and Apple at a New York event in 2015 by rapping: “Them n****s pay you a tenth of what you’re supposed to get / You know n****s die for equal pay, right? / You know when I work I ain’t ya slave, right?”

As for music by Jay Z’s wife, Beyoncé, it’s safe on Spotify ― for now.

The Huffington Post has reached out to Jay Z’s reps, along with Spotify, and will update this post accordingly.

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LG G6 reliability put to the Rube Goldberg machine test

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Google says AlphaGo AI helps humans become better players

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Fox Hires Law Firm To Investigate Bill O'Reilly Sex Harassment Claims

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The parent company of Fox News has reportedly hired a law firm to investigate sexual harassment claims against “The O’Reilly Factor” host Bill O’Reilly

21st Century Fox investigates all complaints and we have asked the law firm Paul Weiss to continue assisting the company in these serious matters,” 21st Century Fox said in a statement given to Reuters. 

That’s the same firm hired by Fox last year to investigate sexual harassment claims against Roger Ailes, who at the time was the network’s chairman. 

Ailes ultimately resigned after the company gave him a $40 million payout.

Both Ailes and O’Reilly have denied the allegations. 

“In my more than 20 years at Fox News Channel, no one has ever filed a complaint about me with the Human Resources Department, even on the anonymous hotline,” O’Reilly said in a statement on his website.

That may have changed last week after former on-air guest Wendy Walsh went public with her claims against O’Reilly. Her attorney, Lisa Bloom, said on Twitter that they called the hotline to file a complaint

A spokesman for O’Reilly told the New York Times there’s “nothing special” about the network’s decision to engage a law firm, saying it was “already retained by the company to look into all hotline calls.”

The Times had reported last week that the network has paid out $13 million over the years to settle five claims of sexual harassment against O’Reilly. Dozens of companies have pulled their ads from the show since the report. 

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Dallas hack sets of 156 warning sirens for 90 minutes

Some computer hacking incidents are frightening, like those that play with your personal information. Some seem like playful, but still illegal, antics of children. Then there are those in the middle, bordering on being a nuisance, but with potentially disastrous results. Such was the situation the residents of Dallas found themselves in when, in the dead of night, the city’s … Continue reading

What Is Rosa Parks' House Doing In Berlin?

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If you want to visit the home where civil rights legend Rosa Parks lived, you’ve got a trip ahead of you — all the way across the Atlantic Ocean. That’s because her home is in the backyard of an American artist living in Germany.

It seems like back-of-the-bus treatment for the black woman who had the guts in 1955 to refuse to give up her seat to a white man in Alabama and go to the back of the bus. Instead, she gave birth to the civil rights movement.

Why is her home in Berlin? Short answer? Detroit planned to destroy it.

When Parks’ niece Rhea McCauley found out, she purchased the home for $500 and cast around for ways to save it. She reached out to artist Ryan Mendoza, who happened to be in Detroit at the time. Though they both appealed to Detroit’s mayor to protect the building, they said he had no interest. So they dissembled the home, packed it in shipping containers, transported it to Germany, and put it back together in an expensive operation that took several months, reported Deutsche Welle.

“It is something that is precious,” McCauley told The Associated Press. “It is priceless, yet it is being mistreated. That’s what I saw and that’s how it felt. So when I met Ryan and he said, ‘Let’s bring it to Berlin and restore it,’ I said yes.”

Mendoza, who was born in New York, is stunned that Germany ended up with what he considers a treasure. “The Rosa Parks house should actually be a national monument and not a demolition project,” he told Deutsche Welle.

“The basic question, the fundamental question I ask myself: ‘Is the house worthless or is the house  priceless?’ For the American institutions so far the house has been deemed worthless,” he told Agence France-Presse. “It was put on a demolition list; that’s not a detail.”

Mendoza believes it’s apt that the house stands in a country that tore down a wall, and has left a nation planning to build a wall.

Hundreds of people turned out to see the official unveiling of the home in Berlin last week. The interior still needs some work, but Mendoza has installed a sound exhibit for the home including a telephone interview with Parks.

McCauley said she hopes one day the U.S. will “grow up” and ask for its treasure back.

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Homemade thrill ride speeds up if you're not scared enough

Roller coasters don’t care how scared you are, they always follow their pre-programmed circuit to a “T.” That gave Dutch artist Daniel de Bruin an idea: What if a ride could measure your fear and amp up the thrills based on that? Since he’s also a de…