by Associated Press on (#5WDE4)
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Updated | 2024-10-14 22:45 |
by Edward Helmore on (#5WDCE)
The company promised to eliminate gestation crates 10 years ago but says pandemic disruptions delayed the planOne of Wall Street’s most fearsome activist investors has launched a campaign to force McDonald’s to change the way it buys pork for its Bacon McDouble Cheeseburgers, Sausage McMuffins and McRib sandwiches.Carl Icahn, whose long history as an asset stripper precedes him, plans to challenge the practice used by some of McDonald’s pork suppliers of confining pregnant pigs in small crates and not in group housing. Continue reading...
by Maya Yang on (#5WDCF)
Brigham Young University police say ‘volatile mixture suddenly exploded into a fireball’ on SundayAfter a student’s failed attempt at creating rocket fuel in a dorm room displaced 22 people, police at Brigham Young University (BYU) in Utah reminded students to “keep your experiments in the lab”.The unnamed student attempted to concoct homemade rocket fuel on a stove in their dorm on Sunday afternoon. Continue reading...
by Maya Yang and agencies on (#5WD46)
Jury reaches decision after several hours on charges against Greg and Travis McMichael and William ‘Roddie’ BryanThe three men convicted of murdering Ahmaud Arbery were found guilty of federal hate crimes on Tuesday, for violating Arbery’s civil rights and targeting him because he was Black.A jury of eight white people, three Black people and one Hispanic person, reached its decision after several hours of deliberation on the charges against father and son Greg and Travis McMichael and neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan. Continue reading...
by Martin Pengelly on (#5WDAB)
Teen who shot dead two men and injured another during anti-racism protests in Wisconsin has become a rightwing celebrityKyle Rittenhouse, the teen who shot dead two men and injured another during anti-racism protests in Kenosha, Wisconsin, in 2020, has announced the formation of a group to fund lawsuits against reporters – and also Whoopi Goldberg.In November, after a controversial trial, Rittenhouse was found not guilty on all charges related to the shootings, which he carried out with an assault rifle while purportedly providing security in the protest-racked city. Continue reading...
by Martin Pengelly on (#5WD3D)
by Marina Hyde on (#5WD1P)
We live in an age of sentimental hardmen – just listen to the Russian leader’s aggressively maudlin demands for ‘respect’It says a lot about the Ukrainian people’s awful options that the big question is whether Vladimir Putin is crazy or just pretending to be crazy. For some, last night’s entirely improvised, heavily staged speech to his security council was an indication that the Russian president has finally gone mad – a remote diagnosis that suggests we might look back on such things as the annexing of Crimea and the deployment of nerve agent in historic Wiltshire as “his good years”.I should say right off the bat that I have no idea whether Putin has or hasn’t gone mad – however unfashionable not knowing things may be these days. As Russian tanks roll into Ukraine and the western powers debate whether it technically is or isn’t an invasion, you have to say this phoney war really does boast an unbelievable headcount of phoneys.Marina Hyde is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...
by Associated Press in Midvale, Utah on (#5WCZD)
Incident occurred following a dispute over his order at a drive-thru in suburban Salt Lake CityInvestigators believe a man told his four-year-old child to fire a gun at officers following a dispute over his order at a McDonald’s drive-thru in suburban Salt Lake City on Monday, police said.An officer was able to swipe at the gun as it was fired, directing the bullet away. Continue reading...
by Associated Press on (#5WCZM)
by Martin Pengelly in New York on (#5WCZN)
Neil Cavuto returns to Fox Business to say doctors told him only vaccination saved his life this timeThe Fox anchor Neil Cavuto returned to the air on Monday, to say he nearly died from a second bout with the coronavirus and to tell detractors including those who sent death threats over his support for vaccines: “So sorry to disappoint you.”More than 935,000 Americans have died of Covid-19 in the last two years. The seven-day average daily death rate is just under 2,000 – the vast majority unvaccinated. Continue reading...
by Thomas Zimmer on (#5WCVG)
Republicans could not be clearer about their cynicism, yet some establishment Democrats act as if politics as usual is still an optionOver the past few weeks, President Joe Biden has repeatedly emphasized his friendship with Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell. At the National Prayer Breakfast in early February, for instance, he praised McConnell as “a man of your word. And you’re a man of honor. Thank you for being my friend.”Biden’s publicly professed affinity is weirdly at odds with the political situation. Going back to the Obama era, McConnell has led the Republican Party in a strategy of near-total obstruction which he has pursued with ruthless cynicism. It is true that he has, at times, signaled distance to Donald Trump and condemned the January 6 insurrection. But McConnell is also sabotaging any effort to counter the Republican party’s ongoing authoritarian assault on the political system.Thomas Zimmer is a visiting professor at Georgetown University, focused on the history of democracy and its discontents in the United States, and a Guardian US contributing opinion writer Continue reading...
by Nicola Slawson on (#5WCVC)
US ambassador to UN says Putin’s claims about ‘peacekeeping’ operation are ‘nonsense’. Plus: how AI is tackling the biodiversity crisis
by Ian Bond on (#5WCVH)
The Russian leader has shown he cares enough about Ukraine to shed blood over it. He needs to know the gain won’t be worth the painVladimir Putin’s recognition of two Russian-backed separatist regions in eastern Ukraine as independent, along with his subsequent deployment of troops and tanks to the regions, has moved Europe closer to the brink of war.Despite many differences, there are echoes of 1938 in current developments. Putin may not be Hitler; Ukraine in 2022 isn’t Czechoslovakia in 1938; and French president Emmanuel Macron, Olaf Scholz, the German chancellor, and their western colleagues aren’t some sort of collective Chamberlain. But 1938 does carry important lessons: the most important being that deterrence may seem more expensive and risky than accommodation today, but it is essential for Europe’s long-term security.Ian Bond is the director of foreign policy at the independent thinktank, the Centre for European Reform, and a former British diplomat. Continue reading...
by Ryan Baldi on (#5WCT1)
The Scottish midfielder has always been happy to forge his own path. And at the age of 26, his rich football education looks like it is paying offNearly 10 years on from his professional debut, and more than 4,000 miles from home, the man once labelled the “Scottish Messi” and who drew interest as a teen from the likes of Real Madrid, Manchester United and Liverpool has at last, in Major League Soccer’s Vancouver Whitecaps, found a home at which he can deliver on his vast potential.Now 26, Ryan Gauld has come a long way in his career – both in terms of distance covered and experiences logged – as he gets ready for the start of the new MLS season, which starts on Saturday. He was once the 17-year-old star of a vibrant young Dundee United side, before a seven-year stint in Portugal brought mixed fortunes. Continue reading...
by Nick Bowlin on (#5WCT0)
It is a diverse and complicated place poorly served by stereotypes and simplistic solutions• This essay originally appeared in the DriftOne evening a few summers ago, I walked from my house to the county fairgrounds. It was a long July day, and the sun still hung above the hills that surround the small western Colorado town where I live. People packed the bleachers of an outdoor arena to watch a rodeo.Shortly before the bullriding began, a rodeo clown strolled to the center of the dirt field and began his night with a joke. It went something like this: Continue reading...
by Joan E Greve in Washington on (#5WCSV)
Despite wide public support for banning lawmakers from trading stocks, members of both parties have expressed anxiety about the ideaNancy Pelosi likely did not expect to set off such a firestorm with her use of three words: free market economy.When the House speaker was asked in December whether she supports proposals to ban members and their spouses from trading individual stocks, she said no. “We’re a free market economy,” Pelosi said. “They should be able to participate in that.” Continue reading...
by Mark Sweney on (#5WCT2)
Investors rattled by risk of fully fledged invasion, pushing shares lower around the world
by Associated Press on (#5WCKJ)
by Hallie Golden on (#5WBQZ)
The suit charges that diluting Indigenous power violates their voting rights and will handicap tribe members who run for officeDays before a new legislative map for North Dakota was set to be introduced in the state house, leaders of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa and Spirit Lake Nation sent a letter to the governor and other state lawmakers urging them to rethink the proposal.“All citizens deserve to have their voices heard and to be treated fairly and equally under the law,” they wrote, arguing that the proposed map was illegal, diluting the strength of their communities’ voice. Continue reading...
by Maya Yang and agencies on (#5WCDQ)
Prosecutor makes closing arguments in hate crimes trial of Travis and Gregory McMichael and William ‘Roddie’ BryanThree white men who chased and killed Ahmaud Arbery on a residential street acted out of “pent-up racial anger” and should be convicted of hate crimes, a federal prosecutor told a jury on Monday.Travis McMichael, the man who pulled the trigger and fatally shot Arbery, “was just looking for a reason” to hurt a Black person when he saw the 25-year-old jogging on his street, the prosecutor argued, citing a slew of racist comments and videos McMichael had posted online. Continue reading...
by Guardian sport on (#5WCB3)
on (#5WC7B)
New Zealand defender Meikayla Moore scored three goals - for the US women’s national team - as the Americans won 5-0 on Sunday in the second round of matches in the SheBelieves Cup.The US, who drew with the Czech Republic 0-0 in their tournament opener on Thursday, got all the help they needed thanks to Moore’s own goals in the fifth, sixth and 36th minutes.The US took over from there as Ashley Hatch made it 4-0 with a header in the 51st minute, before Mallory Pugh scored in the third minute of second-half stoppage time.
The Credit Suisse leaks expose an industry that has got away with too much for too long | Prem Sikka
by Prem Sikka on (#5WC0P)
I won’t be holding my breath for government action or an inquiry into its actions – or into any other bank for that matter
by Donald McRae on (#5WC11)
Scotland’s undisputed world light-welterweight champion is one of five men in history to hold all four belts in his division but is still awaiting the recognition he deservesSweat pours down Josh Taylor’s face as the rope whirrs above his head and his feet blur beneath him. The best boxer in Britain, and one of the leading pound-for-pound fighters in the world, skips faster and faster in a stark and anonymous building in Harlow, Essex. We’re in the gym where Taylor has spent so much of the past two months preparing to defend his undisputed world light‑welterweight titles against Jack Catterall in Glasgow on Saturday.In his last bout, nine months ago, Taylor became the first British fighter, and the fifth man in boxing’s four-belt history, to win the WBA, WBC, IBF and WBO titles in his division. He defeated the previously unbeaten José Ramírez in a thrilling battle, twice knocking down the tough American on his way to a unanimous victory on points in Las Vegas. Continue reading...
by Marilynne Robinson on (#5WBW8)
The tasks before Biden are vast and the dangers great. He must hold steady and persevereJoseph R Biden has the weight of the world on his shoulders. These words are as true of him as they have ever been of any mortal soul. Until his term ends, he will be alone with the gravest decisions that have ever confronted an American leader. Things might have gone very badly for Abraham Lincoln, but the varieties of loss and destruction now possible if the systems of order fail are great beyond imagining.The design of our government poses one human being against all our troubles, however difficult or threatening. This is only truer now that this president has to deal with an opposition committed to seeing him fail – or be perceived as failing, which for most purposes is the same thing. Our champion in the present trial-by-history is a fine old man of truly vast experience who may or may not show signs of aging which may or may not reflect on his judgment and competence. I am a few days more than a year younger than Biden, so I am sensitive to the association of age with cognitive slippage and less inclined to credit it than the generality of people seem to be. Old as I am, I remember that the press ridiculed Eisenhower for supposedly being inarticulate. No doubt Biden remembers this as well.Marilynne Robinson is an American novelist and essayist. Her latest book is Jack Continue reading...
by Nicola Slawson on (#5WBW3)
Two leaders could meet if necessary but no concrete plans in place, says spokesperson. Plus: meet the ‘millennial parent whisperer’• Don’t already get First Thing in your inbox? Sign up hereGood morning.Vladimir Putin’s spokesperson, Dmitri Peskov, has said it is “premature” to talk about specific plans for a summit between Putin and Joe Biden, after an announcement on Sunday from the French president, Emmanuel Macron, thathis Russian and US counterparts had agreed in principle to attend talks aimed at de-escalating the Ukraine crisis.What did Peskov say? He said Putin and Biden could meet if they considered it necessary, but emphasised that it was “premature to talk about specific plans for a summit” and no concrete plans were in place.Is the threat of a Russian attack still predicted? Yes. The US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, said: “Everything we are seeing suggests that this is dead serious, that we are on the brink of an invasion.”What has the bank said about the revelations? “Credit Suisse strongly rejects the allegations and inferences about the bank’s purported business practices,” it said in a statement. Continue reading...
by Steve Mesler and Jeff Porter on (#5WBTN)
The Olympic movement risks lurching even further into an existential crisis if major problems aren’t addressed, and many of the levers for change are in the hands of US stakeholdersHere is an argument you won’t often hear from a US gold medallist. Russia isn’t solely to blame for the crisis in the Olympic movement. The real problem is wider and more serious – and it represents a threat to the whole Olympic movement with Russia currently at the center.How might we view Russia? They could be seen like a kid behind you on an airplane who keeps kicking your seat. And yet when you turn around and ask them to stop, they keep going. If the parent doesn’t hold the child accountable, what reason is there for behavior change? In this case the IOC executive board are the parents, and IOC president Thomas Bach is ultimately responsible. Continue reading...
by Rich Tenorio on (#5WBTM)
Jackie Robinson is rightfully lauded for his role in the desegregation of baseball. But many others, from writers to train porters, helped the processDecades after the installation of a color barrier in professional baseball, one of the nation’s top Black athletes – Jackie Robinson – stood on a Major League field for a tryout. Infield practice, batting practice, fungoes – he did it all, including some memorable shots against the wall in left field.This did not take place at the Brooklyn Dodgers’ Ebbets Field, where Robinson would integrate the majors on 15 April 1947 though. Rather, it happened two years earlier, almost to the day, at Fenway Park. On 16 April 1945, the Boston Red Sox held a tryout for three Black players – Robinson, Sam Jethroe and Marvin Williams. No job offers resulted, and the Red Sox ended up becoming the last MLB team to integrate, over a decade later. That the tryout took place at all is a testament to two determined individuals – Isadore Muchnick, a white Boston city councilor, and Wendell Smith, a Black sportswriter. A new book honors such advocates in the long battle for integration on the diamond – Before Brooklyn: The Unsung Heroes Who Helped Break Baseball’s Color Barrier by Boston-based journalist Ted Reinstein. Continue reading...
by Ed Pilkington on (#5WBR0)
Mark Finchem, a supporter of the ex-president’s ‘big lie’ about the 2020 election, could soon oversee voting in the stateLast September, Donald Trump released a statement through his Save America website. “It is my great honor to endorse a true warrior,” he proclaimed, “a patriot who has fought for our country, who was willing to say what few others had the courage to say, who has my Complete and Total Endorsement.”Former US presidents usually reserve their most gushing praise – replete with Capital Letters – for global allies or people they are promoting for high office. A candidate for the US Senate, perhaps, or someone vying to become governor of one of the biggest states. Continue reading...
by Alexandra Villarreal in Austin on (#5WBM7)
Judges, scholars and attorneys all concerned whether people due in court will receive notice before their hearingsAmerica’s immigration courts are struggling to function at the most basic level, with judges who are already woefully understaffed and often undertrained now overwhelmed by a growing backlog of more than 1.6m cases, industry leaders have warned.The system is so damaged that judges, scholars and attorneys all share concerns about whether immigrants due in court will even receive notice before their hearings so they know to show up and aren’t ordered deported in absentia – an urgent concern made worse by volatile immigration policies at the US-Mexico border. Continue reading...
on (#5WBHK)
A helicopter has crashed into the water off Miami Beach, just a few feet away from swimmers in a crowded stretch popular with tourists. A video shared by police captured the chopper descending over the ocean and crashing into the water as sunbathers packed the beach and others swam. Two of the three passengers onboard were taken to a nearby hospital in stable condition, police said, adding that no one else appeared to be injured
by Ewan Murray on (#5WBHN)
by Associated Press in Palm Beach, Florida on (#5WBFX)
Palm Beach county sheriff says Sondra Wiener, 87, and 90-year-old husband Marvin Wiener found dead on ThursdayThe sister of the Wall Street fraudster Bernie Madoff and her husband were found dead in Florida in what investigators said was an apparent murder-suicide.The Palm Beach county sheriff’s office on Sunday identified the couple as 87-year-old Sondra Wiener of Boynton Beach and her 90-year-old husband, Marvin Wiener. Continue reading...
by Associated Press on (#5WBF8)
by Associated Press in Virginia Beach on (#5WBF6)
Adonis Lattimore of Landstown high school, who also has just one finger on his right hand, wins 106lb weight classA Virginia high school senior who was born with no right leg and a left leg that ends at the middle of his thigh took home a state wrestling championship – surprising everyone but himself.“Really if you work hard, you can do anything – even win a state championship without legs,” Adonis Lattimore said on Saturday, after winning first place in the Virginia high school league class 6, 106lb weight class at the Virginia Beach Sports Center. Continue reading...
by Ed Pilkington in New York on (#5WB6W)
by Associated Press in Portland, Oregon on (#5WB38)
Authorities describe confrontation in Normandale Park between homeowner and participants in police violence protestOne person was killed and five wounded in a shooting on Saturday night at a Portland park where a march was planned to protest police violence.The shooting at Normandale Park happened during a confrontation between an armed homeowner and armed protesters, Portland police said. Continue reading...
by Associated Press in Bridgewater Township on (#5WBEP)
Youth, 15, was shoved to couch but not restrained while 14-year-old was handcuffed in incident that went viralA New Jersey teen who was involved in a mall fight that went viral has said police were wrong to treat him differently than the other youth in the altercation, who is Black.“I don’t understand why they arrested him and not me,” he said. “I say, that was just plain old racist. I don’t condone that at all.” Continue reading...
by Ed Pilkington in New York on (#5WBDV)
Apple App Store lists rightwing Twitter alternative but ex-congressman tapped to lead company indicates slow rolloutDonald Trump’s rightwing riposte to Twitter – his new social media app Truth Social – is supposed to launch on Monday. But the rollout of what the former president hopes will be the start of a new media empire continues to be shrouded in confusion and secrecy.Devin Nunes, the former Republican congressman and Trump loyalist who heads Trump Media & Technology Group (TMTG), told Fox News on Sunday Truth Social would make its debut on the Apple App Store this week. The app is featured on the store, with the notice “Expected Feb 21”. Continue reading...
by Reuters in Moscow on (#5WBDP)
by Andriy Zagorodnyuk on (#5WBDX)
We Ukrainians are ready to fight. But war can still be averted if the west shows the Kremlin what Russia has to lose
by Ewan Murray on (#5WBBH)
by Martin Pengelly in New York on (#5WBB5)
South Carolinian tells Fox News ‘Everybody wants to be on President Trump’s bandwagon, without any question’
by Simon Tisdall on (#5WB9Z)
It’s easy to see the prime minister starting a western-backed insurgency that, knowing him as we do, he will not finish Continue reading...
by Martin Pengelly on (#5WB9S)
Covid closures and attempt to rename schools deemed named for figures linked to injustice, including Abraham Lincoln, fueled voteSan Francisco school board members recalled from their posts this week allowed themselves to become distracted by politics, the city’s mayor said on Sunday.Voters overwhelmingly approved the recall of board president Gabriela López, vice-president Faauuga Moliga and commissioner Alison Collins. Continue reading...
by Martin Pengelly in New York on (#5WB8K)
Justices have been chosen on grounds of identity before, as Trump did when he picked a woman to replace Ruth Bader GinsburgThe Republican senator Ted Cruz complained on Sunday that Joe Biden’s promise to nominate a Black woman to the supreme court was an instance of racial discrimination – but also claimed the GOP would not drag the eventual nominee “into the gutter” in confirmation hearings.“Democrats today believe in racial discrimination,” Cruz told Fox News Sunday. “They’re they’re committed to it as a political proposition. I think it is wrong to stand up and say, ‘We’re going to discriminate.’” Continue reading...
by Guardian sport on (#5WB8M)
by Martin Belam (now), with Luke McLaughlin, Jonathan on (#5WASY)
Team GB’s women won curling gold before a Beijing closing ceremony to a Games embroiled in controversy
by Jon Henley on (#5WB35)
Apparent suicide of Jean-Luc Brunel in Paris jail ends case against him unless other suspects are foundVictims of a French modelling agent’s alleged sexual abuse have expressed shock and dismay after he was found dead in his cell, in an apparent echo of the prison suicide of his close associate, the disgraced US financier Jeffrey Epstein.Paris police are investigating the death of Jean-Luc Brunel, 75, who had been charged with the rape of minors and was also being held on suspicion of trafficking underage girls for sex, whose body was found in La Santé prison early on Saturday. Continue reading...