low More than 900 COVID-19 cases at Cargill plant, but governments allow it to reopen By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 18:05:13 +0000 Karl NerenbergCargill Incorporated is the largest privately held company in the United States, and that means it is essentially a family business. You cannot buy Cargill shares on the Toronto, New York or any other stock exchange. The descendants of William Cargill, who founded the company in 1865 as a grain storage operation, own 90 per cent of the company. But if it is a family business, Cargill is no mom-and-pop operation. The company has grown over the past century and a half into a multi-tentacled corporate behemoth, involved in everything from grain to livestock to potash to steel to transport to financial services. In 2018, Cargill and its various subsidiaries reported revenues of over $110 billion. Cargill has operations on five continents, in more than 70 countries, including Canada, and the company's meat-packing plant in High River, Alberta is a tiny piece of that worldwide empire. In this country, however, the High River plant has an extremely high profile. It is one of the epicentres of COVID-19 in Canada -- in all of North America, in fact -- with over 900 reported cases out of 2,000 employees. That's almost half the workforce. Two people have died in connection with the Cargill outbreak -- one, a plant worker originally from Vietnam; the other, an infected plant worker's father, who had been visiting from the Philippines. Cargill initially resisted pleas from workers and their union to close the plant, but finally relented, in late April. After only two weeks, it hastily reopened, on Monday, May 4, giving the largely immigrant workforce the Hobson's choice of either going back to a potentially fatal workplace or losing their jobs. Neither the workers, nor their union think the plant has become safe. The union, the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW), has gone to court to force a shutdown, until Cargill can absolutely guarantee safe and healthy conditions for all employees. The UFCW does not think the notoriously low-paid plant workers should have to risk their lives to fatten the balance sheet of a U.S.-based transnational corporation that ranks number 15 on the Fortune 500. Kenney and Trump on the same wavelength Alberta Premier Jason Kenney has a different view from that of the union and the workers it represents. The premier, and former Harper Conservative government cabinet minister, appropriates a concept meant to describe access to necessary basic foodstuffs we all need for sustenance – food security – and applies it to the much different situation of the High River plant. The Cargill workers have to do their part, the Alberta premier argues, to ensure food security for Canadians. The truth is that Canada's food security does not depend on meat from Cargill or any other commercial operation. If our local butcher runs out of hamburger for the barbecue, we all have other nutritious options. There are, for instance, the protein-packed pulses -- chickpeas, lentils and the like -- that farmers in Saskatchewan grow in great quantity. In the U.S., as in Canada, COVID-19 has been particularly hard on the meat-packing industry, forcing more than 20 plant closures, and causing meat shortages on grocery shelves. Some fast food chains have even had to take hamburgers off the menu. Corporate executives in the meat industry told U.S. President Trump that they were reluctant to reopen their U.S.-based plants for fear of lawsuits. The U.S. is a far more litigious country than Canada. The president's response was to give the corporations cover, by invoking the U.S. Defense Protection Act (DPA). In effect, the president is forcing the corporations to reopen their plants. The purpose of the DPA is to allow a president to harness the resources of private industry to serve public needs in time of war or national emergency. Many have urged Trump to invoke the act to assure production of personal protective equipment for front-line workers during the pandemic, but he has refused. Now, Trump is using the extraordinary powers of the DPA to force workers back to dangerous plants, while shielding their bosses from responsibility. As for the High River Cargill plant workers, they fall under provincial labour jurisdiction. And the Alberta premier has already indicated he will not lift a finger to protect them. But there might be a way that federal authorities could step in. Jagmeet Singh urges Trudeau government to act In Canada, it is the federal government that has authority over food safety, and NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh believes the Trudeau team should assertively use that power to protect the Cargill workers. Singh put the question to Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland during the House of Commons' weekly face-to-face session on Wednesday, May 6. "Food safety and worker safety cannot be divorced," Singh told the House. "Will the government ensure that the Cargill workers are in safe work conditions?" Freeland, in a manner all-too-typical of Liberal politicians, dissimulated, offering sympathy but no action. "The member opposite is quite right that where the federal government has particular authority in food processing is to guarantee the safety of the foods processed there for Canadians to eat," she said, and then expressed some vague sentiments of concern. "When it comes to Cargill and food processing, I agree with the member opposite that it's something we all need to be particularly concerned about, and we have been." The NDP leader was not satisfied. "Will the government commit to using the authority that it has under food safety to ensure that workers are also safe, because there's no way that food can truly be safe if workers are in dangerous conditions and if workers are contracting COVID-19?" Singh asked, adding: "If workers are dying, the food can't be safe." Freeland would not budge. The Trudeau government wants to get credit for caring, without pushing the envelope in dealing with the most prickly and confrontational provincial government in the country, Alberta's. "I think we all understand there is a very clear difference between the duty to inspect food which is produced and to ensure that that food is safe for Canadians, and even more sacred duty to ensure that workers are working in safe conditions," Freeland answered. "We take both of those extremely seriously and we are aware what falls specifically in our jurisdictions. Having said that, we care very much about all Canadian workers." Freeland's assertion that responsibility for the safety of a product that consumers eat does not include making sure a processing plant is not an active breeder of a deadly virus reflects a narrow and limited understanding of the federal role. There is no evidence of food borne transmission of COVID-19, or of food packaging carrying the virus, according to authorities in both the U.S. and Canada. But experts have not always got it right about COVID-19 since the outbreak at the beginning of this year. At this stage, all we know for sure is that there remain many unanswered questions about it. 'The worst company in the world' What is not in doubt is the kind of company we're dealing with. Not too long ago the U.S. environmental organization Mighty Earth undertook a study of the social and environmental impact of Cargill's operations and issued a report they called "The Worst Company in the World." The report opens by stating "when it comes to addressing the most important problems facing our world, including the destruction of the natural environment, the pollution of our air and water, the warming of the globe, the displacement of Indigenous peoples, child labor, and global poverty, Cargill is not only consistently in last place, but is driving these problems at a scale that dwarfs their closest competitors." The report details how Cargill has become more powerful than governments and has betrayed repeated promises to adhere to high environmental standards. "Nowhere is Cargill's pattern of deception and destruction more apparent than in its participation in the destruction of the lungs of the planet, the world's forests. Despite repeated and highly publicized promises to the contrary, Cargill has continued to bulldoze ancient ecosystems, sometimes within the bounds of lax laws -- and, too often, outside those bounds as well." With the advent to power of virulently anti-environmental Trump in the U.S. and Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil, there is now virtually no limit, Mighty Earth says, to Cargill's capacity to ravage rainforests, savannahs and other vital habitats. Mighty Earth cites many examples. One of those is that of "the Gran Chaco, a 110-million-hectare ecosystem spanning Argentina, Bolivia, and Paraguay." This ecosystem "is one of the largest remaining continuous tracts of native vegetation in South America, second in size only to the Amazon rainforest. These forests are home to vibrant communities of Indigenous Peoples … who have depended on and coexisted with the Chaco forest for millennia." Cargill, the report tells us, is now actively endangering both the people and other inhabitants of the Gran Chaco to produce a cash crop -- soy -- that feeds the animals which become Big Macs and Whoppers. "Once the impenetrable stronghold of creatures like the screaming hairy armadillo, the jaguar, and the giant anteater, Cargill has infiltrated the Gran Chaco, bulldozing and burning to make way for vast fields of genetically modified soy." Mighty Earth also documents Cargill's use of violence to subdue Indigenous peoples, its exploitative labour practices, including child labour, and its predatory practices that have driven competitors out of certain businesses. This is the company that Jason Kenney says must be allowed to operate, uninhibited by health concerns, to assure our food security. If you believe that, you might also believe that injecting bleach into your veins can cure COVID-19, or that, as many opinion leaders in the U.S. say, it is necessary to accept that thousands must die in the interests of what they call the economy. The owners of Cargill are not personally offering to sacrifice their lives. They are offering their employees' lives instead. Karl Nerenberg has been a journalist and filmmaker for more than 25 years. He is rabble's politics reporter. Image: Alberta Newsroom/Flickr Full Article
low More than 900 COVID-19 cases at Cargill plant, but governments allow it to reopen By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 18:22:02 +0000 May 7, 2020More than 900 COVID-19 cases at Cargill plant, but governments allow it to reopenNeither the workers, nor their union think the plant has become safe. The UFCW is taking legal action to force a shutdown, until Cargill can absolutely guarantee safe conditions for all employees. Full Article
low City hall payouts for injuries, damages hit eight-year low in 2019 By windsorstar.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 00:01:15 +0000 City of Windsor payouts on personal injury and property damage claims totaled $2.1 million in 2019, the lowest number in eight years. The total — for settlements as well as court decisions — was well below the $3 million budgeted for the hundreds of claims made each year against the city for everything from trip-and-falls, […] Full Article Local News Dana Paladino lawsuits potholes slip and fall trip and fall
low Robot with origami leaves can follow the sun like a real plant By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Mon, 09 Mar 2020 20:00:27 +0000 A robot can recreate the mechanism plants use to transport water to bend itself towards the sun and open its leaves like a real plant Full Article
low New Standard Adds Low-Power Wireless Charging to NFC By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 19:00:55 +0000 It's called the Wireless Charging Specification, or WLC for short. Full Article
low Mervyn King's brutal analysis of banking sector exposed in blow to coronavirus recovery By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 08:46:00 +0100 MERVYN KING, the former governor of the Bank of England, once issued a brutal analysis of the global banking system and argued for its reinvention, it can be revealed as the Government fine-tunes its economic response to the coronavirus pandemic. Full Article
low Weird star was born when two white dwarfs merged instead of blowing up By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Mon, 02 Mar 2020 16:00:11 +0000 White dwarf stars are common in the galaxy, but astronomers have found one that doesn't seem to obey the rules. They think it was born when two smaller white dwarfs merged together Full Article
low An ancient river on Mars may have flowed for 100,000 years By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 16:00:23 +0000 We’ve found a 200-metre cliff in Mars's Hellas basin, the first evidence of a river that flowed on the planet for more than 100,000 years Full Article
low A large chunk of Mercury may have been blown away by the sun By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 10:00:04 +0000 Mercury is much denser than the other rocky planets in the solar system, and that may be because a collision vaporised its surface and the debris was blown away by the sun Full Article
low UAV-Based LiDAR Can Measure Shallow Water Depth By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Mon, 21 Oct 2019 04:00:00 GMT The topography and bathymetry payload for UAV Full Article robotics robotics/drones Sponsored
low SnotBot Drone Swoops Over Blowholes to Track Whale Health By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Mon, 25 Nov 2019 17:04:00 GMT The SnotBot project uses drones, data, and deep learning to tell us about the health of whales and the oceans Full Article robotics robotics/drones
low The Eddy Recap: The Low End By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 08:00:09 -0400 An overlooked member of The Eddy band steps into the spotlight for a bittersweet—mostly bitter—story about his troubled past and uncertain future. Full Article tv tv recaps overnights recaps the eddy
low RPGCast – Episode 468: “Is There A Clown In It?” By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 07 Jul 2018 19:25:36 +0000 Chris loses a filling. Anna Marie steals the Switch again. Kelley loses a child. And Alex luvs the muv. No dogs were harmed in the filming of this podcast. Full Article News Podcasts RPG Cast
low 'It's a great look': jewellery follows clothing into genderless fashion By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-03-13T13:02:36Z Zayn Malik and Virgil Abloh are among male celebrities decking out their ears, necks and wristsThere was a time when wearing a boyband-style dogtag was seen as the peak of male adornment, but now men are increasingly embracing jewellery, stacking rings and bracelets and adorning ears with multiple gems.This week, the former One Direction singer Zayn Malik was announced as the face of the unisex jewellery label Martyre. Virgil Abloh, a weather vane for fashion’s direction of travel, this week launched more office supplies-inspired jewellery – paperclip bracelets, earrings and necklaces decorated with colourful diamonds – and was pictured wearing one of the collection’s bejewelled necklaces. Continue reading... Full Article Men's fashion Accessories Fashion Men Life and style Zayn Malik Virgil Abloh Music
low Regularly attending religious services associated with lower risk of deaths of despair, study finds By www.sciencedaily.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 13:36:27 EDT People who attended religious services at least once a week were significantly less likely to die from 'deaths of despair,' including deaths related to suicide, drug overdose, and alcohol poisoning, according to new research. Full Article
low Cholesterol lowering drugs linked to improved gut bacteria composition in obese people By www.sciencedaily.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 13:36:39 EDT Obese Europeans who are treated with cholesterol lowering drugs have not only lower values of blood LDL cholesterol and markers of inflammation but in addition a more healthy gut bacteria profile than those obese who are not prescribed statins. Full Article
low Coronavirus forces Russia to hold slimmed down Victory Day in blow to Putin By news.yahoo.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 01:00:00 -0400 Full Article
low Dear fellow motherless daughters: Here's how I've learned to cope on Mother's Day By news.yahoo.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 04:00:00 -0400 Marisa Bardach Ramel is co-author of “The Goodbye Diaries: A Mother-Daughter Memoir,” written with her mother Sally Bardach. As Mother’s Day approaches, I long to sit beside you, pour you some tea and talk about all the things. Full Article
low Portugal's low-income households struggle to survive pandemic By news.yahoo.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 07:40:14 -0400 Full Article
low For a Georgia Police Force, a Bungled Shooting Case Follows a Trail of Woes By news.yahoo.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 10:44:12 -0400 BRUNSWICK, Ga. -- When the Glynn County Police Department arrived at the scene of a fatal shooting in February in southeastern Georgia, officers encountered a former colleague with the victim's blood on his hands.They took down his version of events and let him and his adult son, who had fired the shots, go home.Later that day, Wanda Cooper, the mother of the 25-year-old victim, Ahmaud Arbery, received a call from a police investigator. She recounted later that the investigator said her son had been involved in a burglary and was killed by "the homeowner," an inaccurate version of what had happened.More than two months after that fatal confrontation, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, which took over the case this week, arrested the former officer, Gregory McMichael, and his son, Travis McMichael, on charges of murder and aggravated assault.The charges -- which came after the release of a graphic video showing the killing as the two white men confront Arbery, who was African American -- made clear the depths of the local department's bungling of the case, which was just the latest in a series of troubling episodes involving its officers.And it was one element of the broader potential breakdown of the justice system in South Georgia. Attorney General Chris Carr, through a spokeswoman, said Friday that he planned to start a review of all of the relevant players in that system.Carr's office has already determined that George E. Barnhill, a district attorney who was assigned the case in February but recused himself late last month, should have never taken it on. Among his many conflicts: His son once worked alongside one of the suspects at the local prosecutor's office.S. Lee Merritt, a lawyer representing Arbery's family, has called for a federal civil rights investigation focused not only on the men who pursued Arbery but also the broader justice system."It's small-town America," Merritt said in an interview Thursday. "Those counties, the law enforcement community there, they know each other well; they recycle officers in between themselves -- it's a very tight-knit community."Over the years, Glynn County police officers have been accused of covering up allegations of misconduct, tampering with a crime scene, interfering in an investigation of a police shooting and retaliating against fellow officers who cooperated with outside investigators.The police chief was indicted days after Arbery's killing on charges related to an alleged cover-up of an officer's sexual relationship with an informant. The chief, John Powell, had been hired to clean up the department, which the Glynn County manager described last fall as suffering from poor training, outdated policies and "a culture of cronyism."The Glynn County force was the sort of department where disciplinary records went missing and where evidence room standards were not maintained, leading the state to strip it of its accreditation.Arbery was killed after the McMichaels confronted him while he was running in the Satilla Shores neighborhood just outside of Brunswick, the Glynn County seat. But neither of the McMichaels was arrested immediately after the slaying, which occurred Feb. 23 about 1 p.m.According to a police report, Gregory McMichael said that he saw Arbery running through his neighborhood and thought that he looked like the suspect in a rash of recent break-ins. McMichael, 64, told authorities that he and his son, Travis McMichael, 34, armed themselves and began chasing him in a truck.Gregory McMichael had been a Glynn County police officer from 1982 to 1989 and later worked as an investigator in the local prosecutor's office, before retiring last year.Darren W. Penn, a lawyer and a department critic, said the Ahmaud Arbery case was "another symptom or sign of a police department that appears willing to protect those that they know."Penn is representing a woman who is suing the department over claims that it failed to intervene with her estranged son-in-law, a Glynn County officer, who killed her daughter, a friend and himself in 2018.County officials and a police spokesman could not be reached Friday for comment.From the start, McMichael's connections to the police department and the prosecutor's office presented other challenges.The first district attorney assigned to the case, Jackie Johnson, recused herself because she had worked with McMichael. The second prosecutor, Barnhill, advised Glynn County police that there was "insufficient probable cause" to issue arrest warrants, according to an internal document.Finally, the case moved to Tom Durden, the district attorney in Georgia's Atlantic Judicial Circuit in Hinesville, who this week formally asked the state bureau of investigation to get involved, according to a GBI statement. A Justice Department spokesperson said this week that the FBI was assisting in the investigation.Bob Coleman, a county commissioner at large, was critical of Johnson, saying she should have given the case to the state attorney general, not Barnhill. After the Georgia Bureau of Investigation made arrests this week, Coleman said, "That's what should have happened a long time ago before the sun went down. They killed a person in the bright sunlight."Glynn County is a marshy coastal corner of Georgia about 300 miles southeast of Atlanta with about 85,000 residents, and is known mostly for its mellow barrier islands and its rich African American coastal culture.Like many Southern communities, its history is studded with racial violence, including three late 19th-century lynchings. Today, the county is about 70% white and 27% black, according to census figures.On Friday, hundreds gathered under the moss-draped trees outside the Glynn County courthouse to protest, arguing that the handling of the case had been botched as months went by without charges."I will never call the Glynn County police to my house!" one of Arbery's aunts said.Mario Baggs, a lifelong resident of Brunswick, said he believed that race was a factor in Arbery's killing, given the unfair treatment black men have long received."The black man is an endangered species," Baggs, 46, said. "We need justice; we need relief; we need the world to pay attention."Yet he also believed that Arbery's case fit into a larger pattern of dysfunction.Over the last decade, the Glynn County Police Department, which has 122 officers, has faced at least 17 lawsuits, including allegations of illegal search and seizure.One suit accused the department of wrongfully killing an unarmed white woman after officers fired through her car windshield. An investigation into that shooting found that Glynn County officers had tried to interfere with the inquiry to protect the officers involved.One of the officers in that shooting later killed his estranged wife and a friend. The wife's mother accused police of ignoring several alarming encounters in the months before the killings.Powell, the police chief, was arrested this year along with three other department officials after an investigation into a disbanded narcotics task force. The inquiry found that Powell had actively tried to shield wrongdoing by the task force. That led to his indictment on charges including violating the oath of office, criminal attempt to commit a felony and influencing a witness.As details of Arbery's death slowly emerged and were reported in The Brunswick News, Arbery's mother, increasingly distraught, called the department. She said that she had been told one thing but that the newspaper had reported something else entirely.Cooper's faith was shaken. "It's hard when you can't really believe what authority tells you, you know?" she said. "When you just cannot believe the people that's supposed to look out for all people. And when you question that, it's not a good feeling."Attempts to reach Gregory McMichael late last month were unsuccessful. In a brief phone conversation late last month, Travis McMichael, who runs a company that gives custom boat tours, declined to comment, citing the continuing investigation.The two men made a brief appearance in Glynn County Magistrate Court on Friday afternoon, but court officials said they did not enter a plea. No information about their lawyers was immediately available.Questions about the handling of Arbery's case extend beyond the police department and to Barnhill, the prosecutor who told police that there was insufficient probable cause to arrest the McMichaels.In an email Barnhill wrote to the state attorney general's office April 7, he asked to be taken off the case, stating that his son, an assistant district attorney in the Brunswick prosecutor's office, had handled a felony probation revocation case involving Arbery. He also said Gregory McMichael had helped with "a previous prosecution of Arbery."Court records show that Arbery was convicted of shoplifting and of violating probation in 2018; according to local news reports, he was indicted five years earlier for taking a handgun to a basketball game.Barnhill's office most recently drew attention beyond south Georgia for its prosecution of a black woman in rural Coffee County who had helped a first-time voter use a voting machine in the 2012 election. In 2018, a jury found the woman not guilty of multiple felonies. Her lawyers called the case "a racially motivated targeted prosecution."J. Peter Murphy, a Glynn County commissioner, on Friday defended the Police Department's decision to make no arrests in the shooting of Arbery. Murphy said the agency had been advised not to make arrests by both Barnhill and officials at the office of Johnson, the district attorney in Brunswick who formally asked to be taken off the case four days after the shooting. Neither prosecutor could be reached for comment."Tell me what the agency did wrong when its men and women were told several times not to arrest anyone?" Murphy said, referring to police. "What were they supposed to do? Cuff these guys and walk them into the jail and have no one prosecute them?"This article originally appeared in The New York Times.(C) 2020 The New York Times Company Full Article
low Gwyneth Paltrow said starring in Shallow Hal was a 'disaster' – here’s why she is right By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-03-02T17:10:48Z The actor said wearing a fat suit for the 2001 movie taught her what it is like to be humiliated as an obese person. Why are TV and film characters so rarely treated with dignity and respect?‘Disaster” is how Gwyneth Paltrow has summed up her role in the 2001 film Shallow Hal, which will surprise few people who have actually seen it. Jack Black plays Hal, a man so shallow he has to be hypnotised in order to date a fat woman, who, through his boggled eyes, he sees as a very thin woman.The nastiness of Shallow Hal, which has long appalled critics and fans alike, was front and centre in the trailer, where Hal’s friend attempts to “rescue” him from speaking to a fat woman, Rosemary, who is, in fact, willowy Paltrow dressed in a fat suit. But because he cannot see what she looks like, he falls for her “inner beauty”. It is an uncomfortable mix – a film that pretends to preach body acceptance while simultaneously inviting laughter at bodies that don’t fit into jeans size six and under. Take the scene where she is called a “rhino”, or the one where she cannonballs into a swimming pool causing a tidal wave. The message built into the script’s DNA is simple: fat is funny; it is OK to laugh at fat people. Continue reading... Full Article Gwyneth Paltrow Film Obesity
low Jobs Report Reveals Racial Inequality in Unemployment at an Historic Low, Thanks to Pandemic By www.newsweek.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 11:19:00 -0400 More than 20 million Americans lost their jobs in the last month, and unemployment among African-Americans has hit 16.7 percent. Full Article
low Deep, Perennial or Semi-Perennial Rivers Flowed on Early Mars By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 15:24:54 +0000 While the present-day Martian surface is generally dry and cold, its sedimentary rocks contain compelling evidence for the former presence of liquid water. According to a new analysis of orbital images of 3.7-billion-year-old sedimentary layers at Izola mensa, an outcrop in the northwestern rim of the Hellas impact crater on Mars, deep rivers were active [...] Full Article Planetary Science Space Exploration Face on Mars Hellas basin Hellas Planitia HiRISE Izola mensa Mars Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter NASA Noachian River Solar System Water
low U.S. watchdog agency says coronavirus whistleblower should be reinstated By feeds.reuters.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 07:30:06 -0400 A U.S. government watchdog agency has recommended the temporary reinstatement of a whistleblower who says he was removed as director of a government research office because he raised concerns about coronavirus preparedness, his lawyers said on Friday. Full Article domesticNews
low Following are the top foreign stories at 2000 hours By in.news.yahoo.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 09:55:50 -0500 Full Article
low Higher step count linked to lower yearly risk of death, up to a point By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Tue, 24 Mar 2020 14:56:12 +0000 An analysis of the daily steps taken by about 5000 people in the US has found that a higher step count is linked to a lower yearly risk of death, although the effect tails off above 12,000 steps Full Article
low Suresh Raina, Irfan Pathan want BCCI to allow Indian players to participate in foreign T20 leagues By in.news.yahoo.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 08:19:42 -0500 Full Article
low White House won't consider another stimulus bill in May -Kudlow By feeds.reuters.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 16:06:46 -0400 The White House has halted talks with Congress over any further coronavirus stimulus package as it waits for more information about how U.S. state reopenings affect the economy, White House top economic adviser Larry Kudlow told reporters on Friday. Full Article politicsNews
low U.S. watchdog agency says coronavirus whistleblower should be reinstated By feeds.reuters.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 07:30:06 -0400 A U.S. government watchdog agency has recommended the temporary reinstatement of a whistleblower who says he was removed as director of a government research office because he raised concerns about coronavirus preparedness, his lawyers said on Friday. Full Article politicsNews
low Portugal's low-income households struggle to survive pandemic By feeds.reuters.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 08:02:25 -0400 One in four Portuguese with a monthly household income of 650 euros ($705) or less have lost all their income because of the economic impact of the coronavirus outbreak, a study by the National School of Public Health showed on Saturday. Full Article worldNews
low 'Weird' exoplanet 800 light-years from Earth has yellow skies and iron rain By www.foxnews.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 14:48:57 GMT Researchers have found the weird exoplanet WASP-79b, nearly 800 light-years from Earth, does not have a blue sky as our planet does. Instead, its skies are yellow. Full Article 94517b45-1ea9-5095-a5cb-d4c86471c82a fox-news/science/air-and-space/planets fox-news/science/air-and-space/nasa fox-news/science fnc fnc/science article Fox News Chris Ciaccia
low Sharon Osbourne 'heartbroken' that children followed dad Ozzy into drug addiction By www.music-news.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 12:00:00 +0100 Sharon Osbourne hoped seeing their father''s battle with addiction would put her children off, but she was wrong. Full Article
low Sanders' bid to collect delegates takes blow as New York cancels its Democratic presidential primary By www.nbcnews.com Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 18:40:36 GMT Bernie Sanders' bid to collect convention delegates hits snag as New York cancels Democratic presidential primary Full Article
low 'The privilege to say goodbye': Hospitals move to allow family visits for people dying of coronavirus By www.nbcnews.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 08:56:00 GMT After stories of people not being allowed to say goodbye to loved ones dying of coronavirus, hospitals around the world are moving to change the rules. Full Article
low The 'mind-blowing' story of the ex-Green Beret who tried to oust Venezuela's Maduro By www.nbcnews.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 12:04:00 GMT Jordan Goudreau once pushed a plan to protect U.S. schools. Then he moved on to a more daring pursuit, which also didn't end well. Full Article
low Even for Bill Barr, the DOJ's treatment of Michael Flynn is a corrupt new low By www.nbcnews.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 08:46:00 GMT There is absolutely no legitimate basis in law or in fact to dismiss Flynn’s guilty plea. Full Article
low Taiwan baseball fans allowed inside stadium but sit apart By www.foxnews.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 14:09:41 GMT There were fans in the stands for baseball in Taiwan on Friday, albeit spaced far apart as a safeguard against the spread of the coronavirus. Full Article f6a7b517-7f26-5c54-9d62-c1d6e8a07956 fox-news/sports fox-news/sports/mlb fox-news/health/infectious-disease/coronavirus fnc fnc/sports article Associated Press
low Dr. Ben Carson: America's economy can reopen 'imminently' by following coronavirus health guidelines, data By www.foxnews.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 15:31:59 GMT America can take its next steps toward reopening by placing an emphasis on emerging health data and closely examining how early states are performing, Housing and Urban Development Secretary Dr. Ben Carson asserted Saturday. Full Article a315e19d-c491-5411-a1da-31493189ba40 fox-news/media/fox-news-flash fox-news/shows/fox-friends-weekend fox-news/health fox-news/science fox-news/health/infectious-disease/coronavirus fox-news/politics/regulation/business fox-news/us/economy fox-news/science/wild-nature/viruses fox-news/us/economy/jobs fox-news/politics fox-news/politics/executive/white-house fnc fnc/media article Fox News Julia Musto
low Major blow to Keystone XL pipeline as judge revokes key permit By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-04-16T01:33:19Z Campaigners welcomed Wednesday’s ruling as a victory for tribal rights and environmental protectionThe controversial Keystone XL tar sands pipeline has been dealt a major setback, after a judge revoked a key permit issued by the US army corps of engineers without properly assessing the impact on endangered species.In a legal challenge brought by a coalition of environmental groups, a federal judge in Montana ordered the army corps to suspend all filling and dredging activities until it conducts formal consultations compliant with the Endangered Species Act. Continue reading... Full Article Keystone XL pipeline Montana Environment Tar sands Indigenous peoples US news Oil Energy Fossil fuels
low Capitals to terminate Brendan Leipsic's contract following fallout from leaked messages By feeds.foxnews.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 17:00:08 GMT The Washington Capitals announced Friday that forward Brendan Leipsic was placed on unconditional waivers after his private messages were leaked on social media Wednesday. Full Article b8eca209-c414-5dcd-a2b2-1b2d95960cfc fox-news/sports/nhl fox-news/sports/nhl/washington-capitals fnc fnc/sports article Fox News Paulina Dedaj
low Taiwan baseball fans allowed inside stadium but sit apart By feeds.foxnews.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 14:09:41 GMT There were fans in the stands for baseball in Taiwan on Friday, albeit spaced far apart as a safeguard against the spread of the coronavirus. Full Article f6a7b517-7f26-5c54-9d62-c1d6e8a07956 fox-news/sports fox-news/sports/mlb fox-news/health/infectious-disease/coronavirus fnc fnc/sports article Associated Press
low Ontario reports 346 new coronavirus cases marking lowest increase in over a month By globalnews.ca Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 14:41:05 +0000 It's the lowest reported increase in cases since April 6. Full Article Canada Health Canada Coronavirus Coronavirus Coronavirus Cases Coronavirus In Canada coronavirus news coronavirus update COVID-19 covid-19 canada covid-19 news Ontario Coronavirus Ontario coronavirus cases Ontario COVID-19
low Deep-Sea Squids Glow to Communicate in the Dark By www.smithsonianmag.com Published On :: Mon, 06 Apr 2020 12:00:00 +0000 Researchers suggest that the Humboldt squid uses bioluminescent backlighting for visual cues in the dark deep sea Full Article
low Vitamin D linked to low virus death rate, study finds By www.sciencedaily.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 13:10:12 EDT A new study has found an association between low average levels of vitamin D and high numbers of COVID-19 cases and mortality rates across 20 European countries. Full Article
low More future Navy SEALs resume war preparations following COVID-19 pause By www.foxnews.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 21:14:00 GMT Future Navy SEALs will conduct combat scenarios six-feet apart, emulate high-risk combat scenarios, study in smaller classrooms and be directed by megaphones at farther distances, because more candidates for the special operations unit are again competing, training and preparing for war following temporary delays caused by COVID 19. Full Article c6459114-af34-5822-978a-76ea7c3d48d1 fox-news/tech/topics/us-navy fnc fnc/tech article Warrior Maven Kris Osborn
low Facebook to allow employees to work remotely until year end By feeds.reuters.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 05:48:24 -0400 Facebook Inc said on Friday it would allow its workers who are able to work remotely to do so until the end of the year as the coronavirus pandemic forces governments to extend stay-at-home orders to curb the spread of the disease. Full Article technologyNews
low Exclusive: U.S. drafts rule to allow Huawei and U.S. firms to work together on 5G standards - sources By feeds.reuters.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 10:34:06 -0400 The U.S. Department of Commerce is close to signing off on a new rule that would allow U.S. companies to work with China's Huawei Technologies on setting standards for next generation 5G networks, people familiar with the matter said. Full Article technologyNews
low 'Full-flower supermoon' rises on world starting to emerge from pandemic lockdowns By feeds.reuters.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 06:02:59 -0400 The last "supermoon" of 2020 rose in the night sky on Thursday over a world beginning to re-emerge after weeks of coronavirus-related lockdowns. Full Article scienceNews
low When am I allowed to go outside during the coronavirus lockdown? By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-03-26T14:42:00Z Follow our live coronavirus updates HERE Coronavirus: The symptoms Full Article
low Chief constable condemns man who bit policewoman during coronavirus lockdown as 'lowest of the low' By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-10T13:39:59Z Read our live coronavirus updates HERE Coronavirus: The symptoms Full Article