University of Alabama-Huntsville shooter (Dr. Amy Bishop?)
Alleged University of Alabama-Huntsville school shooter Dr. Amy Bishop would have been a Harvard-educated neurobiologist who joined the faculty of UAH in 2003.
Her development together with her husband, Jim Anderson, of the “portable cell incubator” placed third inside a state-wide competition, and won the couple $25,000 of seed money in a business competition.

picture from AL.COM
Mr. Anderson, as well reportedly in custody, is said to be the primary science officer of Cherokee Labsystems in Huntsville.
Dr. Bishop’s profile have been pulled from UAH’s site, but Google’s cache reveals her instances research focussed to the role of gasses about the central nervous system, especially nitrous oxide.
Her lab was working to the development of a “neural computer,” the “Neuristor,” which would use living neurons—taken either from stem cells or fish.
She also developed the InQ, a “precision instrument concerned with the precision and consistency of cell growth in laboratory experimentation.”
Dr. Bishop has numerous articles in journals to her credit score, including studies inside the International Journal of General Medicine and Toxicology.
Google Suggests Christianity is Bullshit But Not Islam
I’ll send you over there to see the whole thing, but here’s a partial of it.
It goes on and on like that with Judaism, Buddhism, and Hinduism all with similar Google suggestions. Like, “Judaism is false” and “Hinduism is wrong”.
But what of Islam? Islam is ….
And yes, I double checked Google to see if it was real. It is.
I’m pretty sure people have sent me something on this before in the past, and maybe we’ve covered it, but if we have let me just reiterate what I think is obviously going on here: Google is scared.
Because even if the suggestions are automatically generated based on a proprietary algorithm someone could get killed for suggesting that “Islam is Bullshit”. Which is pretty good motivation for overriding the system.
CNN’s Tatton’s Future Plans Mistery
CNN isn’t uttering a word — yet.
But today the network’s Wolf Blitzer bid farewell to online correspondent Abbi Tatton, who has been with CNN for a decade.
After Blitzer looked back at favorite moments with Tatton over the years (including a segment where he made her repeat the word “ass” in her native English accent), Tatton expressed her feelings about her final day at CNN.
“It’s my last day, very very sad for us,” Tatton said. “What an amazing 10 years I’ve had. Very hard to leave, but exciting things ahead.”
Blitzer told her, “You’ll always be a valued member of the Wolf Pack.”







