In the wild, stingrays pin prey like crabs or small fish to the sandy bottom using their wide, disc-shaped bodies. In an aquarium, they use the glass as a secondary barrier to "pinch" and secure the fish, making escape nearly impossible
MesaZona > Table of Contents : Here's The Menu. Enjoy
Sunday, May 03, 2026
How Do So Many People Already Own Elon Musk’s SpaceX? . . .Special purpose vehicles, or SPVs.
"Anthony Scaramucci has said he owns shares of SpaceX. So does 2 Chainz, the rapper; Betsy DeVos, the former education secretary; and the hosts of a podcast called “Rich Habits” and more than 150 of its followers.
Elon Musk’s rocket and satellite company is about to hold what could be the largest initial public offering ever, allowing anyone to own its stock after 24 years as a private firm. So why does it seem that so many people already do?
The answer lies in the opaque market for private company shares, driven largely by what are known as special purpose vehicles, or SPVs. These legal entities, which are designed to hold assets like equities, have become a popular way to invest in private company stock as groups of investors can pool money for a single investment. . ."
SpaceX, founded in 2002, is among the private companies that investors have formed the most SPVs for, according to a tally by The New York Times.
- More than 170 such investment vehicles with the name “SpaceX” or “Space Exploration” in them were set up mostly in the past six years, according to Securities and Exchange Commission filings.
- Not all of the entities that own SpaceX stock include the company in their names.
How Elon Musk’s SpaceX Secretly Allows Investment From China
As a U.S. military contractor, SpaceX sees allowing Chinese ownership as fraught. But it will allow the investment if it comes through secrecy hubs like the Cayman Islands, court records say. “It is certainly a policy of obfuscation,” an expert said.
Source: Reuters
SpaceX IPO filing reveals unusual control structure for Elon Musk, reported by Reuters. Only Musk can effectively remove himself as CEO or chairman through voting rights tied to super-voting Class B shares He will hold dominant voting power, allowing control over board elections and decisions, enabling tight oversight of board.
Experts say this goes beyond typical dual-class governance models used in tech IPOs.Investors warned their influence over company direction will be highly limited under proposed struc
businessbulls.in 23h
Saturday, May 02, 2026
FORGET HEALTHSPAN. . . Mid-life Men Face Pressure to Extend ‘Hotspan’ What It Means to Be Hot, Healthy in Middle Age
- The Shift: Previously, midlife was seen as a time of stability and "arrival". Now, it is often a period of high-maintenance reassessment.
- The Pressure: Men who once expected to "get off the hamster wheel" of competition find themselves still sprinting—this time against the mirror.
- Social Media and Media Imagery: Constant exposure to unrealistic examples of "eternally youthful" celebrities, like Brad Pitt or George Clooney, creates a standard that many feel they must match.
- Advancements in Longevity Culture: The rise of longevity science has normalized the idea of fighting aging through everything from strict nutrition to cosmetic surgery
Coffee Doesn't Just Wake You Up — It May Help Protect Your Body From Aging
For now, the research does not change current recommendations around coffee consumption, and individual responses can vary. However, it offers something researchers have long been missing—a clearer understanding of why coffee appears to support long-term health.
"I think it helps explain why coffee has the effects that it does," Safe said. "It's not just an observation—there's a mechanism behind it."
Coffee doesn't just wake you up—a key biological pathway illuminates widespread health effects
May 2, 2026 | by Camryn Haines | edited by Lisa Lock, reviewed by Robert Egan
- Now, new research from the Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences (VMBS) suggests that compounds in coffee may work, in part, by activating a receptor in the body known as NR4A1—a protein increasingly recognized for its role in aging, stress response and disease.
Connecting coffee to a biological mechanism
The findings, recently published in Nutrients, provide one of the first direct connections between coffee and this receptor, offering a potential explanation for the beverage's widespread health effects.
Brewed Coffee and Its Components Act Through Orphan Nuclear Receptor 4A1 ( NR4A1)
"Coffee has well-known health-promoting properties," said Dr. Stephen Safe, distinguished professor and Sid Kyle Endowed Chair in Veterinary Toxicology in VMBS' Department of Veterinary Physiology and Pharmacology.
"What we've shown is that some of those effects may be linked to how coffee compounds interact with this receptor, which is involved in protecting the body from stress-induced damage."
A receptor tied to aging and disease
NR4A1 belongs to a family of nuclear receptors that help regulate gene activity in response to stress and damage in the body. In previous work, Safe and collaborators described NR4A1 as a "nutrient sensor"—a receptor that responds to compounds found in the diet and plays a role in maintaining health as the body ages.
- Research has shown that NR4A1 is involved in a wide range of biological processes, including inflammation, metabolism and tissue repair—all of which are closely tied to age-related diseases such as cancer, neurodegeneration and metabolic disorders.
- While coffee has long been associated with reduced risk of conditions like Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease and metabolic disease, most studies have been observational, leaving scientists searching for a clear biological explanation.
- Safe's team hypothesized that some of coffee's benefits could be linked to NR4A1.
The study was conducted in collaboration with researchers from across Texas A&M, including Dr. Robert Chapkin, Dr. Roger Norton, Dr. James Cai and Dr. Shoshana Eitan, whose work helped demonstrate coffee's protective effects in neurological models.
In their study, researchers found that multiple compounds in coffee—particularly polyhydroxy and polyphenolic compounds such as caffeic acid—bind to the receptor and influence its activity.
"What we're saying is that at least part of coffee's health benefits may come through binding and activating this receptor," Safe said.
- The team also found that these compounds could influence cell behavior in ways consistent with disease protection, including reducing cellular damage and slowing cancer cell growth in laboratory models.
- Importantly, when NR4A1 was removed from cells, those protective effects disappeared—further supporting the receptor's role in mediating coffee's impact.
More than just caffeine
While caffeine is the major individual component of coffee, the study suggests that it may not be the primary driver of these health effects.
- "Caffeine binds the receptor, but it doesn't do much in our models," Safe said.
- "The polyhydroxy and polyphenolic compounds are much more active."
This may help explain why both regular and decaffeinated coffee have been associated with similar health benefits in large population studies.
A complex but promising pathway
Despite the findings, Safe emphasized that coffee's effects are likely not limited to a single pathway. "There are many receptors and many mechanisms involved," he said. "What we're showing is that this could be one of the important pathways."
The study is primarily mechanistic, meaning it focuses on how biological processes work rather than proving direct cause-and-effect in humans. "There's still a lot of work to be done," Safe said.
"We've made the connection, but we need to better understand how important that connection is."
The findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that diet—particularly plant-based compounds—plays a critical role in regulating aging and disease processes.
Because NR4A1 is involved in multiple conditions, the research could also inform future efforts to develop new therapies. Safe's team is already exploring synthetic compounds that target the receptor more effectively than natural dietary compounds, with the goal of developing treatments for cancer and other diseases.
At the same time, the work reinforces the potential benefits of everyday dietary choices. "Coffee is a very complex mixture of compounds," Safe said. "It's a very potent combination."
Amanuel Hailemariam et al, Brewed Coffee and Its Components Act Through Orphan Nuclear Receptor 4A1 (NR4A1), Nutrients (2026). DOI: 10.3390/nu18060877
TRANSPARENCY: Stingray Traps Fish Against Aquarium Glass...and eats it
In the wild, stingrays pin prey like crabs or small fish to the sandy bottom using their wide, disc-shaped bodies. In an aquarium, they use...
-
Flash News: Ukraine Intercepts Russian Kh-59 Cruise Missile Using US VAMPIRE Air Defense System Mounted on Boat. Ukrainian forces have made ...















