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Ben Hutchison @aldaviva.com

I agree, and I also hate reading headlines about scientists "rushing" or "scrambling" to explain or fix something. No, they're just working on it, and you're trying to drum up ad revenue by misrepresenting it as an emergency or crisis. They're not football players.

aug 27, 2025, 4:08 pm • 1 0

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Nicklas Johnson @spatula75.bsky.social

For extra LOLs, search Google News for the specific word "baffled". Almost every time that word comes up it's a technology story or a story about scientists being "baffled" by something fairly mundane.

aug 27, 2025, 4:20 pm • 0 0 • view
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Nicklas Johnson @spatula75.bsky.social

Examples from today: * A glacier losing stability in a warming world * A rapidly moving interstellar object giving off light from the side facing the sun * A trail camera capturing a light source (probably other trail cameras) * Brighter-than-expected objects in the early universe etc.

aug 27, 2025, 4:20 pm • 0 0 • view
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Ben Hutchison @aldaviva.com

How very baffling. A related headline word is "quietly," when you want to imply there's a conspiracy afoot, but really something simply got updated without an accompanying press release, marching band, and jet flyover. Drives me nuts.

aug 27, 2025, 4:26 pm • 0 0 • view
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Nicklas Johnson @spatula75.bsky.social

That just sounds like some news outlet got butthurt that something of some small note happened and nobody alerted them.

aug 27, 2025, 4:55 pm • 0 0 • view