The European Commission aims to make eating habits across the Continent more sustainable.
The cheeseburgers of 2030 won’t be the same as they are today — or at least that’s Brussels’ plan.Â
The European Commission’s recently unveiled Farm to Fork strategy aims to change eating habits across the Continent over the next decade to make the agri-food system more sustainable.
It includes a set of legislative proposals and the targets that, at least on paper, would make European food healthier, more nutritious and more plant-based — and consumer choices more conscious.Â
As the name suggests, the Commission’s program will affect the whole food supply chain — from how food is grown and cultivated to the final meal on European plates. But what does it mean in practice? POLITICO looked into what the EU’s ideal burger of the future might look like, if the strategy gets implemented.
MILAN — Ask the hundreds of protesters who donned orange high-vis jackets and gathered in squares across Italy over the past week why they’re there and you’ll get as many different answers.
Some are angry with Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte and his government’s handling of the coronavirus crisis. Others are worried about vaccines, which they say inject mercury into people’s veins, or the judiciary system, or 5G wireless technology. Some say the country’s lockdown measures have left them struggling to make ends meet.
What unites them is a sense of anger — and a charismatic figurehead, Antonio Pappalardo, a former carabinieri known to his followers as “the general.â€
At a rally in Rome to mark Italy’s Republic Day on June 2, Pappalardo wore a bright orange tie and energetically led the crowd in chants of liberta, liberta, liberta! The former general drew on a mix of populist and nationalist catchphrases. He promised to give power back to the people. He insulted the government. And he railed against “fake news†and criticism from politicians and high-profile figures including Vasco Rossi, one of Italy’s most famous rock stars.
In the crowd, people shouted, “no to Bill Gates’ vaccine†and “5G is killing us all,†and hugged each other at the general’s insistence that COVID-19 is not a real threat. Few wore masks, and Pappalardo called out those who did, saying, “I cannot look a woman in the face without knowing if she’s beautiful or ugly.”
“I am ashamed of them and their lack of respect for all the victims, for those who have lost loved ones” — Cristina Longhini, pharmacist
Pappalardo, who is 73, served briefly in the Italian parliament in the early 1990s, then stood in a number of elections in the 2000s before he founded the Gilet Arancioni, or Orange Jackets, last year.
The inspiration for the movement struck Pappalardo in 2019 after a meeting with Didier Tauzin, a former French general with close ties to France’s Yellow Jackets movement. “When we met, we said that together we could revolutionize Europe,†Pappalardo told POLITICO.
It took a pandemic, but the combustible mix of frustration and fear across a broad cross-section of the Italian population has put Pappalardo on the political map.
The Orange Jackets have three main goals, he said. First, unseat the Conte government, which he accuses of having destroyed the country economy by confining Italians’ to their homes for months “without reason.â€
Second, take Italy out of the European Union and ditch the euro. And third, spread the message that COVID-19 — which Pappalardo dismisses as no more than a “bad flu†— is being used as an excuse for abuses of power.
The fledgling movement has been met with harsh criticism from across the political spectrum.
“I am ashamed of them and their lack of respect for all the victims, for those who have lost loved ones,” said Cristina Longhini, a young pharmacist from Bergamo whose father died of COVID-19.
“According to the Orange Jackets, are we crying over something that didn’t happen?†she said. “Our lives have been destroyed.â€
In Milan, which also saw Orange Jacket protests this week, the left-wing mayor Giuseppe Sala called the rally “an act of irresponsibility†while the city is still in a “difficult situation.â€
Denying the pandemic should be a crime, Luca Zaia, the far-right governor of Veneto, said in a television broadcast this week, likening Papparlardo’s statements to Holocaust denial.
“I am for freedom of thought, but there is a limit beyond which you cannot go,†the League politician said.
A protester takes a selfie at an Orange Jacket rally in Rome on June 2 | Vincenzo Pinto/AFP via Getty Images
Far-right leaders Matteo Salvini and Giorgia Meloni, the head of Fratelli d’Italia, have trod a little more carefully. Just hours before Pappalardo took the stage in Rome, they had appeared on the same square to protest the Conte government, drawing on much of the same anger that is mobilizing people to put on orange jackets.
Meloni, the leader of the far-right Brothers of Italy, has made clear that her party has nothing to do with the movement, but speaking to La Repubblica made sure to note “we understand the strong social unease of the people.†Salvini, meanwhile, has condemned rebukes of President Sergio Mattarella, saying people should be “ashamed,” but stopped short of linking those statements to the movement itself or speaking out against it.
For his part, Pappalardo says he’s not seeking acceptance from any party, and that the only thing that interests him is giving voice to the people.
“People are enthusiastic, and finally someone is saying the things that everyone is thinking,†he said. “They treat me worse than a mobster, worse than [Mafia boss] Toto Riina, especially the communists, but I’m stronger than ever.”
Getty Scott Morrison On Black Lives Matter Protests Amid Coronavirus: ‘I Say Don’t Go’
Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Friday issued a stern health warning to those planning to attend Black Lives Matter protests around the country this weekend.Â
“The health advice is very clear, that it’s not a good idea to go,†he told reporters.Â
“Let’s find a better way and another way to express these sentiments, rather than putting your own health at risk, the health of others at risk, and the great gains we have been able to make as a country in recent months.â€Â
Since George Floyd, a Black man, died in Minnesota after a white police officer knelt on his neck for more than eight minutes, cities across the United States have taken to the streets to protest racist police violence. There have been 10,000 people arrested in the US alone.Â
People in Perth and Sydney have protested this week against police violence and mourned not just Floyd but Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander lives lost at the hands of police (David Dungay, Kumanjayi Walker and Tane Chatfield to name a few).
“Stop Black Deaths In Custody†protests are planned in most major Australian cities for this weekend but the PM has made it clear, people should still be very wary of contracting coronavirus.Â
“The risks of people coming into close proximity are real,†he said adding that if people couldn’t honour veterans on ANZAC Day in the usual way this year, they should find an alternate way to support the Black Lives Matter movement.Â
“Let’s say to those who had the absolute agony of not being able to say goodbye to a loved one, let’s thank them by showing responsibility this weekend.â€
Award winning recording artist Briggs said that ANZAC Day, known for its dawn service and booze-fuelled 2-Up betting game, was quite different to protesting Black deaths in custody.Â
Protesting Indigenous deaths in custody isn’t a sanctioned national public holiday. https://t.co/15jZIrEisK
Cities across the United States have taken to the streets to protest racist police violence for more than eight days straight.Â
There have been 10,000 people arrested in the US alone.Â
People in Perth and Sydney have protested this week against police violence and mourned not just Floyd but Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander lives lost at the hands of police (David Dungay, Kumanjayi Walker and Tane Chatfield to name a few).
“The risk is great, I don’t deny that. I am an at-risk person,†Indigenous academic Marcia Langton told ABC Radio.
“I do appeal to everybody to wear masks and social distance at the protest. But at the same time, every time an Aboriginal person goes out on the street we are at risk.â€
WASHINGTON — The Justice Department is urging U.S. attorneys nationwide to use federal courts — where more serious charges are available — to prosecute people suspected of violence or property damage during the protests over George Floyd’s death.
Attorney General William Barr said Thursday that federal agents have arrested 51 people for acts of violence since the protests began. The U.S. Marshals service said 21 federal courthouses have been damaged in 15 states, and the ATF said it was investigating 847 separate cases of arson and 76 incidents involving explosives.
Investigators said social media photos and videos have led to some of the arrests.
“We’re seeing people who are exploiting this situation to pursue violent, extremist agendas, anarchists like antifa and other agitators,” said FBI Director Christopher Wray.
Barr said a “witch’s brew” of extremists with many different motivations were involved. On Wednesday, authorities revealed that the FBI arrested three members of a radical right-wing group called Boogaloo in Las Vegas, accusing them of planning to attack police during the demonstrations.
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Law enforcement officials say in many cases, people travel from other states to reach the scene of protests, then rely on informal networks to supply them with bricks, gasoline and advice on where to strike.
“We have absolutely seen outside agitators across the country,” said a Justice Department official who is helping to coordinate the federal response.
The official said he was aware of at least two cases of violence caused by members of antifa, which is a loosely organized radical leftist group, though he declined to say where they occurred.
“The violence and property damage is being caused by a combination of opportunistic looters and plain thugs taking advantage of the situation,” the official said.
Investigators said social media photos and videos as well as tips from the public have led to some of the arrests.
In Nashville, 25-year-old Wesley Somers was charged with helping to set fire to the city hall building. Court documents said he was identified through video clips and pictures posted by people nearby.
Prosecutors said photos taken by a witness led to the arrest of 31-year-old Timothy O’Donnell, charged with setting fire to a police vehicle in Chicago.
A 28-year-old Illinois man, Matthew Rupert, was arrested after investigators said they found a two-hour video posted to his Facebook account.
“In the video, Rupert passes out explosives he indicates he possessed, encourages others to throw his explosives at law enforcement officers, actively damages property, appears to light a building on fire, and loots businesses in Minneapolis,” court documents said.
Prosecutors in Buffalo, New York, said video helped identify 20-year-old Courtland Renford, charged with throwing a burning laundry basket into city hall.
“Many have suffered from the violence instigated through these radicals and extremists, including members of our own law enforcement family — officers killed or gravely injured while just doing their jobs, fulfilling their duty to the public by trying to keep everyone safe,” Wray said.
Pete Williams
Pete Williams is an NBC News correspondent who covers the Justice Department and the Supreme Court, based in Washington.
Paying workers unemployed due to COVID-19 an extra $600 per week for the rest of the year would boost economic growth in the short term and help people afford food and shelter, the Congressional Budget Office said Thursday.Â
That would seem like good news. But the report may actually harm Democratic efforts to keep the benefits in place beyond their July 31 expiration date.
As the budget office explains, the extra cash may “weaken incentives to work as people compared the benefits available during unemployment to their potential earnings, and those weakened incentives would in turn tend to decrease output and employment.â€
In other words, people who can already afford basic necessities may be less likely to take low-paying jobs, resulting in a higher national unemployment rate.Â
“Unemployment insurance is meant to help Americans who lose their job until they can get back on their feet and return to work,â€Â Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), the top Republican on the Senate committee that oversees benefits, said Thursday. “Democrats’ proposal would turn that upside down and encourage unemployment, government dependence and reduced productivity.â€
The CBO said it expects an unemployment rate of 16% in the third quarter of the year without the benefits.Â
“There’s no way Republicans can look at this scenario and think Congress has done enough for unemployed workers in the face of a once-in-a-century pandemic,†said Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), the top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee.Â
Growth would be higher this year with the benefits, the budget office said, but lower next year. The report also noted that 5 out of 6 unemployment recipients would receive more from the benefits than from work.Â
Grassley said that if people are receiving public benefits instead of working, it’s “unhealthy for the economy and it’s unhealthy for the individual.â€
Grassley’s word choice is ironic, considering Congress boosted jobless pay in the first place to help people stay home and avoid catching the highly transmissible coronavirus that has killed more than 110,000 Americans so far.Â
Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) says letting workers continue to collect benefits rather than return to work during the coronavirus pandemic is “unhealthy for the economy and it’s unhealthy for the individual.”
The pandemic halted much of normal life in America and has severely damaged the economy in several sectors, such as dining, retail, leisure and hospitality.
In response, Congress swiftly passed the expanded unemployment benefits, which handed laid-off workers an additional $600 a week on top of what states already give out in unemployment. Democrats wanted a more precise wage replacement but settled on $600 because it’s roughly the difference between the average weekly benefits and the average wage. Some lawmakers had wanted to make up the actual difference in what laid-off workers received at their jobs and what they would receive on unemployment, but the Trump administration warned that such a process could be slow and difficult to calculate.Â
Lawmakers opted, instead, to just give everyone an additional $600.
Since that stimulus package was enacted in late March, Republicans have become increasingly critical of the policy, arguing that it disincentivizes work, as many workers actually now make more — or at least about the same — on unemployment. And the GOP has repeatedly signaled that it would not agree to extend the extra $600 for unemployment past its July 31 expiration.
Just this week, the ranking Republican on the Ways and Means Committee, Kevin Brady of Texas, proposed a one-time, $1,200 bonus for workers who come back to jobs before the July 31 deadline. And Republicans seem intent on pushing policies like that, which could force people back into their jobs despite a continuing risk of contracting coronavirus, rather than allowing people to stay home.
Democrats, for their part, have hinted that they would be willing to accept a lower number than $600 if they can keep extra benefits in place.
“To pay for food, housing, and other living expenses while unemployed, people can draw on their savings, borrow money, sell assets (such as cars or jewelry), or use funds received from other people or the government,†the CBO said, noting that many people who lose their jobs have no savings.
“The additional $600 per week in unemployment benefits under current law allows people to continue to consume goods and services that they might otherwise be unable to afford and to save for future contingencies,†the budget office said. Â
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(Reuters) – Data center server maker Super Micro Computer Inc is looking to open a new site in the United States to assemble computers, possibly in Oregon, the East Coast or Midwest, Chief Executive Officer Charles Liang told Reuters on Thursday.
Supermicro supplies servers to cloud computing companies, both designing and manufacturing its own machines. That puts it somewhere between companies like Hewlett-Packard Enterprise Co. that design systems but tap contract manufacturers to make them or manufacturers like Quanta Computer Inc that make machines designed by others.
Liang said in an interview that server assembly was currently almost evenly split between Supermicro facilities in Taiwan and company headquarters in San Jose, California, although the company maintains some operations in China to supply its Chinese customers.
He said Supermicro was examining expansion in Asia – “in Taiwan or another country,†without giving further details – and in the United States.
“We have been in San Jose for 27 years. I like the Bay Area a lot. However, when customers want high volumes, they do want a lower price,†he said. “We are looking for a second location, maybe in Oregon, or on the East Coast or in the Midwest.â€
The company also plans to expand its operations in San Jose this year with a facility called Building 23 that will include 90,000 square feet (8,360 square metres) of production space and 118,000 square feet (10,960 square metres) of warehouse storage.
The moves come as Supermicro moves into the market for 5G networks, which are expected to use more data center-like equipment than previous networks. Liang said Supermicro was working with two telecommunications carriers in Europe, “two to three†in Asia, and was in talks with two in the United States, but declined to name them.
He said the 5G equipment could be made in the United States if customers requested it.
“Most 5G telecommunications customers are happy with our production combination – USA and Taiwan,†Liang said. “If a customer wants 100% done in the USA, we can do that, too.â€
According to the most recent figures as of June 30, 2019, Supermicro had 3,670 full-time employees, including 2,281 in the San Jose facilities.
Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by Peter Cooney
More than two years ago, Fox News television host Laura Ingraham asked LeBron James to “shut up and dribble†when the superstar was publicly critical of U.S. President Donald Trump.
On Thursday, in the wake of widespread protests about racial injustices following the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, James posted a powerful video on Instagram to explain why he won’t fulfill Ingraham’s request.
The video is a series of sentences that cleverly transition in sync with the sound of a basketball’s bounce.
First, they are sports themed: “Shut up and dribbleâ€; “Shut up and tackle.â€
Then, they become more general: “Shut up and get paidâ€; “Shut up and just do your job.â€
Next, they start telling the story of an encounter with police: “Shut up and do you live around here?â€; “Shut up and you fit the description.â€
That leads to sentences that loosely depict the injustice Floyd faced when Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin put all his weight on a prone Floyd’s neck for more than eight minutes: “Shut up and get on the groundâ€; “Shut up and lay still.â€
Finally, James closes with a statement and a question: “This is why we can’t just stick to sports. Do you understand now?â€
NEW YORK — Baseball players reaffirmed their stance for full prorated pay, leaving a huge gap with teams that could scuttle plans to start the coronavirus-delayed season around the Fourth of July and may leave owners focusing on a schedule as short as 50 games.
More than 100 players, including the union’s executive board, held a two-hour digital meeting with officials of the Major League Baseball Players Association on Thursday, a day after the union’s offer was rejected by Major League Baseball.
Major League Baseball Players Association Executive Director Tony Clark today released the following statement: pic.twitter.com/jEdgARWhQy
— MLBPA Communications (@MLBPA_News) June 5, 2020
“Earlier this week, Major League Baseball communicated its intention to schedule a dramatically shortened 2020 season unless players negotiate salary concessions,†union head Tony Clark said in a statement. “The concessions being sought are in addition to billions in player salary reductions that have already been agreed upon. This threat came in response to an association proposal aimed at charting a path forward.â€
“Rather than engage, the league replied it will shorten the season unless players agree to further salary reductions,†Clark added.
Players originally were set to earn about $4 billion in 2020 salaries, exclusive of guaranteed money such as signing bonuses, termination pay and option buyouts. The union’s plan would cut that to around $2.8 billion and management to approximately $1.2 billion-plus a $200 million bonus pool if the post-season is completed.
MLB last week proposed an 82-game season with an additional sliding scale of pay cuts that would leave a player at the $563,500 minimum with 47% of his original salary and top stars Mike Trout and Gerrit Cole at less than 22% of the $36 million they had been set to earn.
Players countered Sunday with a plan for a 114-game regular season with no pay cuts beyond the prorated salaries they agreed to on March 26. That would leave each player with about 70 per cent of his original pay.
MLB rejected that Wednesday, when Deputy Commissioner Dan Halem wrote in a letter to union chief negotiator Bruce Meyer informing him “we do not have any reason to believe that a negotiated solution for an 82-game season is possible.â€
“Nonetheless, the commissioner is committed to playing baseball in 2020,†Halem said in the letter, which was obtained by The Associated Press. “He has started discussions with ownership about staging a shorter season without fans.â€
Management officials have said they are considering a slate of perhaps 50 games or fewer. There has not been a schedule averaging fewer than 82 games per team since 1879.
“The overwhelming consensus of the board is that players are ready to report, ready to get back on the field, and they are willing to do so under unprecedented conditions that could affect the health and safety of not just themselves, but their families as well,†Clark said in a statement. “The league’s demand for additional concessions was resoundingly rejected.â€
Baseball’s March 26 deal allows games if there are no government restrictions on playing in front of fans and no relevant travel limitations. The sides agreed to “discuss in good faith†the economic feasibility of playing in empty ballparks, which appears to be the likely option.
MLB says that without fans it would average a loss of $640,000 for each additional game played. The union disputes the teams’ financial figures.
Teams also worry about a second wave of the new coronavirus this fall and don’t want to play past October, fearing $787 million in broadcast revenue for the post-season could be lost. MLB proposed expanding the playoffs from 10 teams to 14, which would generate additional broadcast rights to sell, and players have offered to guarantee the larger playoffs for both 2020 and 2021.
While baseball has reverted to the economic bickering that led to eight work stoppages from 1972-95, the NBA announced plans Thursday to resume its regular season with 22 teams on July 31, the NHL is moving ahead with plans for an expanded Stanley Cup playoffs this summer and MLS is planning to have teams return with a tournament in July.
“In this time of unprecedented suffering at home and abroad, players want nothing more than to get back to work,†Clark said. “But we cannot do this alone.â€
Before we begin, anyone still rattled by that magnitude 5.5 earthquake in Southern California? Hear what Lucy Jones has to say about aftershocks that happen long after the original temblor. The last magnitude 5.0 aftershock following the 1994 Northridge quake happened in 1997.
After nights of mostly peaceful demonstrations in the name of George Floyd, some large cities announced they will not enforce curfews on Thursday. San Francisco, Los Angeles, Los Angeles County and San Jose lifted their curfews.
Curfew remains in place for other cities, including Oakland, Sacramento and Santa Clara.Â
Death of Sean Monterrosa; arrest of Amaurie Johnson
The Vallejo police chief has refused to say whether the shooting and killing of a protester who had a hammer in his waistband constituted as excessive force. Sean Monterrosa, 22, was killed by a Vallejo officer outside a Walgreens during a night of looting. Police Chief Shawny Williams said the officer mistook the hammer for a pistol. Now an assemblyman is calling for the state attorney general or a federal agency to investigate. It’s the only known death from an officer-involved shooting in California related to looting since George Floyd’s death.
In the San Diego suburb of La Mesa, 100 National Guard members were called in to assist on the day that police body camera footage was released of a controversial arrest. Amaurie Johnson, a 23-year-old black man, was stopped from smoking on a trolley platform and arrested on suspicion of assaulting an officer and resisting arrest. The body camera video does not show Johnson assaulting an officer. Unrest in La Mesa led to two banks and an office building being burned to the ground. City Hall also caught fire but the blaze was extinguished.
An Orange County sheriff’s deputy is placed on administrative leave and being investigated after a video surfaced showing patches on his uniform from a right-wing paramilitary group. Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes said the deputy’s decision to wear the patches “is unacceptable and deeply concerning to me.”
Quarantine for the homeless and ‘testing deserts’
A rescue mission in Stockton is now ready to house homeless men who have tested positive for COVID-19. The head of the Gospel Center Rescue Mission sees this as a sort of pilot program that could help prepare San Joaquin County in the event a second wave of infections comes later in the year.
“The coordination for eight people with such things as laundry, meals and contracting will be lessons learned that will actually apply to 200 people in this quarantine area,†Wayne Richardson said.
San Joaquin County hasn’t been hit hard by the coronavirus, unlike southeast Los Angeles, where 41% of the population are essential workers and nearly all are Latino. Many say it’s hard to get tested for the virus because they live in “testing deserts.”Â
Because of the coronavirus, the Wooden family had to break the tradition of visiting a Tarzana cafe on the anniversary of the Bruins coach’s death. Instead the family remembers in their own personal ways.
“Love is the most important word in the English language, followed by balance,†Robbins said, repeating one of Wooden’s teachings. “And I think love is something that our world needs right now. The world would be a better place if people would love one another.â€
In California is a roundup of news from across USA TODAY Network newsrooms. Also contributing: LAist, Vallejo Times-Herald, Associated Press, CalMatters, Los Angeles Times, Orange County Register, CNN, SFGate and ESPN.Â
Read or Share this story: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2020/06/04/california-george-floyd-john-wooden-curfew-coronavirus-thurs-news/3143441001/
“Yeah, there are a few in there,†Mr. Rubenstein responded, adding an emoji of a frowning face.
Mr. Scales objected again in the Opinion section’s Slack channel shortly after it was published online, calling the Op-Ed “highly inappropriate.†At the time he was unaware that the essay had already appeared online, he said in an interview.
Mr. Rubenstein referred a request for comment to a spokeswoman, who did not reply to inquiries.
In a video meeting of the opinion department on Thursday afternoon, Mr. Bennet and James Dao, the deputy editorial page editor, acknowledged that there had been a breakdown in the process of preparing the essay for publication, according to four people who attended it. The editors said that the article had been fact-checked, but added that they would fact-check it again. Mr. Dao did not reply to a request for comment.
Mr. Baquet, the executive editor, who oversees the news division, which is run separately from the opinion department, said he heard from a number of reporters and editors who believed that the Op-Ed did not meet the standards of The Times.
“When my newsroom is agitated, I respond to that,†he said.
He acknowledged that some readers might not be aware of the wall separating the news and opinion departments. He said he first saw the Op-Ed when it was posted online.
“I’ve had very sophisticated people say to me, ‘I had no idea that opinion and news were separate,’†he said, adding, “I don’t think we’ve always done the best job in the world explaining that to people and making the distinction.â€
Mr. Baquet declined to comment on the substance of the Op-Ed, but said he agreed with those who believe the opinion section should include a wide range of views.
In the days leading up to the Op-Ed’s publication, Mr. Cotton called for military action against what he saw as violent protests in a series of tweets. In one he called for “No quarter for insurrectionists, anarchists, rioters, and looters.†Giving “no quarter†to enemy combatants is considered a war crime in modern international conflicts, under a statute of the International Criminal Court.
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