Politics
L.A.-area bakers, chefs join a bake sale this weekend to help Ukraine
Humanitarian organizations are working to help Ukrainians in search of meals and shelter in the course of the Russian invasion — and in Los Angeles, dozens of members of the meals neighborhood have joined their ranks. On March 5, roughly 40 bakers, cooks and meals retailers will take part in a fundraiser benefiting two nongovernmental organizations at present serving to Ukrainians on the bottom.
“It simply seems like we’re in an emergency state of affairs, a humanitarian disaster. You’ll be able to’t wait on this one,” stated farmer and organizer Sherry Mandell, including, “I feel as a society all of us have this collective feeling that it’s form of an anxiousness that we need to do one thing, however what can we do?”
You’ll be able to order baked items and different gadgets from taking part eating places by Collect for Good, a grass-roots fundraising group.
Mandell, who helps run the Tehachapi Heritage Grain Venture, teamed up with Steph Chen, the baker-owner of Sugarbear Bakes, to launch Collect for Good in early 2017. Since its inception the group’s occasions — individuals are usually L.A.-area bakers and cooks — have raised greater than $120,000 for numerous nonprofits and assist teams, together with the ACLU and Asian Individuals Advancing Justice.
Collect for Good will donate proceeds from Saturday’s baked-good gross sales and raffles to World Central Kitchen, which is feeding Ukrainians alongside the border in numerous places and inside the nation and to Libereco Partnership for Human Rights (PHR), a Swiss-German group supplying drugs and different on-the-ground assist to Ukrainians on the frontlines, in addition to sources for folks attempting to depart the nation.
“There’s positively a collective feeling of heaviness and dread,” stated Chen. “I really feel like I open up the information or see completely different retailers that I comply with on social media and it’s getting worse and worse and worse, and it’s fairly troublesome to really feel like you might want to simply sit on the facet.”
Taking part bakers and cooks inform Collect for Good of the gadgets they intend to promote and designate a recipient or recipients. As Chen and Mandell obtain descriptions and ordering procedures, which range by participant, they’re added to their web site. Greater than two dozen of the fundraiser’s individuals are situated within the L.A. space, whereas others might be present in Orange County and Ojai, and as distant because the Bay Space.
Donors vary from homespun operations to among the nation’s most lauded eating places, together with A.O.C., Rustic Canyon, Gjusta, pop-up Panhead LA, new pizzeria Quarter Sheets and Botanica.
For pastry chef Laura Hoang — who sells desserts at Chinatown restaurant Pearl River Deli and thru pop-up and wholesale bakery Snacks by Largwa — taking part in Collect for Good’s fundraiser isn’t merely a way of elevating funds. It’s a technique to present help for her co-worker. Masha Kaznachey, who serves as an accountant for Pearl River Deli, just lately flew to Ukraine to reunite along with her household and assist these on the bottom.
“[Kaznachey] is without doubt one of the high supporters of PRD, and our hearts exit to her household and to her,” Hoang stated. “I don’t know if anybody at PRD can perceive what she’s going by, however what we will do is put extra effort within the kitchen towards this reduction effort.”
Hoang shall be raffling eight loaves of milk bread from the restaurant, every feeding roughly 4 folks, to be picked up on the winners’ comfort. It marks each the primary time she is promoting the bread retail and her first participation in a Collect for Good fundraiser.
Whereas a lot of the gadgets on provide are baked items, a few of L.A.’s most notable eating places are donating proceeds from dishes on their dinner menus. At Santa Monica’s Rustic Canyon, all Saturday gross sales of the trout-roe-smothered pork chop shall be donated to World Central Kitchen and Libereco PHR. Along with promoting sticky buns and Basque cheesecake for the fundraiser, A.O.C. is providing a rooster dinner that serves 4.
Chen and Mandell are raffling hand pies and promoting tortillas, respectively, for the fundraiser. For the co-founders, their occasions don’t simply function a method to donate, however as an impetus for dialogue.
“While you’re shopping for or doing a raffle, it’s not simply in regards to the pies, it’s not simply in regards to the meals,” stated Mandell. “It’s actually in regards to the dialog: It’s sparking curiosity and dialog between the general public, the neighborhood. If we see one thing that feels prefer it must be talked about, we’ll do one thing.”
Collect for Good’s crew of volunteers aren’t the one ones fundraising this week. West Hollywood cocktail bar Staff Solely just lately invested in a case of Ukrainian-made Khor vodka and concocted a drink additionally benefiting World Central Kitchen. The Pruzhnyy cocktail, which is offered till the Khor runs out, additionally contains apricot, honey and lemon, and prices $20 with 100% of the proceeds donating to the group. In Culver Metropolis “Prime Chef’s” Shirley Chung is promoting blue and yellow varenyky-inspired dumplings at her restaurant, Ms Chi Cafe; the “freedom dumplings” are full of rooster, mushroom, dill, cabbage and sunchoke, with 100% of the proceeds donated to UNICEF and World Central Kitchen.
Discover extra data on Collect for Good’s Ukrainian-aid fundraiser at andgatherforgood.com/ukraine.
Politics
Why Does Trump Want Greenland?
President-elect Donald J. Trump’s attention returned Tuesday to an idea that has fascinated him for years: acquiring Greenland for the United States. In a news conference on Tuesday, he refused to rule out using military or economic force to take the territory from Denmark, a U.S. ally.
“We need Greenland for national security purposes,” he said, arguing that Denmark should give it up to “protect the free world.” He threatened to impose tariffs on Denmark if it did not.
Earlier in the day, Mr. Trump wrote on social media that the potential American acquisition of the Arctic territory “is a deal that must happen” and uploaded photos of his eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., who was visiting Greenland.
“MAKE GREENLAND GREAT AGAIN,” the president-elect added.
After the news conference, Denmark sharply rebuked the proposal, saying that the world’s largest island is not for sale.
During his first term, Mr. Trump urged his aides to explore ways to purchase Greenland, a semiautonomous territory known for its natural resources and strategical location for new shipping routes that can open up as the Arctic ice melts. A few weeks ago, Mr. Trump reignited the conversation through social media, asserting that “the ownership and control of Greenland is an absolute necessity.”
Greenland’s vast ice sheets and glaciers are quickly retreating as the Earth warms through accelerating climate change. That melting of ice could allow drilling for oil and mining for minerals such as copper, lithium, nickel and cobalt. Those mineral resources are essential to rapidly growing industries that make wind turbines, transmission lines, batteries and electric vehicles.
Because of higher temperatures, an estimated 11,000 square miles of Greenland’s ice sheets and glaciers have already melted in the past three decades, an area roughly the size of Massachusetts.
In 2023, the Danish government published a report that detailed Greenland’s potential as a rich deposit of valuable minerals. The Arctic island has “favorable conditions for the formations of ore deposition, including many of the critical raw minerals.”
The melting ice in the Arctic is also opening up a new strategic asset in geopolitics: shorter and more efficient shipping routes. Navigating through the Arctic Sea from Western Europe to East Asia, for example, is about 40 percent shorter compared to sailing through the Suez Canal. Ship traffic in the Arctic has already surged 37 percent over the past decade, according to a recent Arctic Council report.
China has shown significant interest in a new route through the Arctic, and in November, China and Russia agreed to work together to develop Arctic shipping routes.
Mr. Trump has repeatedly called climate change a “hoax.” But one of his former national security advisers, Robert C. O’Brien, suggested that its consequences are one of the reasons that Mr. Trump is interested in making Greenland a U.S. territory.
“Greenland is a highway from the Arctic all the way to North America, to the United States,” he told Fox News. “It’s strategically very important to the Arctic, which is going to be the critical battleground of the future because as the climate gets warmer, the Arctic is going to be a pathway that maybe cuts down on the usage of the Panama Canal.”
Politics
Outgoing WH official calls for US to bolster cybersecurity workforce by hiring non-degree holders
The White House’s outgoing cyber czar, Harry Coker, called for three key things to meet the growing threat of digital attacks: more funding, deregulation and opening up cyber jobs to those without college degrees.
As adversaries like Iran, China and Russia lob near-constant attacks on the U.S. digital infrastructure, “we have to prioritize cybersecurity within federal budgets” President Joe Biden’s national cyber director said at an event with the Foundation for Defense of Democracies in Washington, D.C.
“I would love for the incoming administration, or any administration, to recognize the priority of cybersecurity,” Coker said.
He added that he understands the U.S. is in a “tough budget situation.”
“I get that, and I support making progress towards reducing the deficit, but we have to prioritize cybersecurity within our current budgets,” he said.
At the same time, the Biden appointee railed against “duplicative federal regulation” and said he’d heard from those working to protect the nation’s online infrastructure that they spend “a staggering 30 to 50%” of their time working to comply with regulation, rather than ensuring protection from hacks.
“Armed with the industry’s call to streamline, we worked with Congress to write bipartisan legislation that would bring all stakeholders, including independent regulators, to the table to advance the regulatory harmonization,” he went on.
TOP REPUBLICAN DEMANDS ‘COSTS’ FOR CHINA AFTER IT HACKED TREASURY DEPT IN YEAR MARKED BY CCP ESPIONAGE
“Many of us were disappointed that this has not become law yet, but we have laid the groundwork for the next administration in Congress to do the right thing for our partners in the private sector.”
His urging comes as the U.S. is grappling with the fallout of one of China’s biggest attacks on American infrastructure in history, dubbed Salt Typhoon.
A Chinese intelligence group infiltrated nine U.S. telecommunications giants and gained access to the private text messages and phone calls of Americans, including senior government officials and prominent political figures.
The Salt Typhoon hackers also gained access to an exhaustive list of phone numbers the Justice Department had wiretapped to monitor people suspected of espionage, granting them insight into which Chinese spies the U.S. had caught onto and which they had missed.
FBI’S NEW WARNING ABOUT AI-DRIVEN SCAMS THAT ARE AFTER YOUR CASH
China was also behind a “major” hack of the Treasury Department in December, gaining access to unclassified documents and the workstations of government employees.
And earlier this year, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo’s communications were intercepted by Chinese intelligence, just as she was making determinations about new export controls on semiconductors and other key technologies. The same hacking group also targeted officials at the State Department and members of Congress.
Amid this onslaught of attacks, Coker said the cyber industry is suffering a recruitment issue.
CLICK TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
“Today there are nearly 500,000 open cyber jobs in this great nation,” he said.
“The federal government is leading by example… removing federal employee and contractor hiring from a focus on college degrees to a focus on what we’re really after: skills.
“When we do away with the four-year college degree requirement, we expand our talent pool,” Coker went on. “Many Americans don’t have the time or the means to go to college for four years, but they can do it for two years or less.”
Politics
Opinion: What antiabortion activists want next
The state of Texas filed a major lawsuit on Dec. 12 against a New York doctor who mailed abortion pills to a Collin County, Texas, woman, arguing that the doctor was practicing medicine without a Texas license and violating the state’s abortion ban. The suit raises messy legal questions about whether one state can haul a doctor abiding by the law in another state into its courts, or enforce a judgment if it wins. More than that, however, the suit is a window into the next battlefield over abortion rights — and how abortion pills and telemedicine are reshaping the politics of abortion in America.
The antiabortion movement’s endgame is establishing fetal personhood — the idea that life and constitutional rights begin at the moment sperm fertilizes an egg. Fetal personhood was referenced in the 2024 GOP platform and embraced in a strategy endorsed by most leading antiabortion groups. It has been a focal point of the movement’s efforts for 50 years.
But with blue states and many red states reaffirming a right to abortion, fetal personhood doesn’t seem like it’s going to come to pass anytime soon. In the meantime, abortion opponents have set their sights on shutting down access to abortion pills — mifepristone and misoprostol. The Supreme Court rebuffed one Texas lawsuit targeting mifepristone in June (on the basis of standing), but as the new case indicates, that hasn’t discouraged the antiabortion movement.
Here’s why: Medication abortion, also called chemical abortion, has made it difficult to enforce abortion bans in the states where they exist — indeed, even with Roe vs. Wade reversed, studies show an increase in the number of abortions performed annually in the U.S. Abortion pills also make it harder to frighten doctors and harder to stigmatize the termination of pregnancy.
When all abortions were surgical, the procedure had to take place in bricks-and-mortar facilities. The clinics became targets for protest and sometimes violence and vandalism. Abortion pills, however, can be prescribed remotely, through a telehealth consultation, and they are taken at home very early in a pregnancy. Pills make abortion more private, distancing patients from clinic protests, and their effects may resemble miscarriage, which already occurs in up to 20% of known pregnancies — so much so that physicians have no reliable way of telling the symptoms apart. Along with backlash against the reversal of Roe, the nature of medication abortion seems to be reshaping how Americans think about terminating a pregnancy: The number of those who see abortion as a moral decision has increased in recent years.
The Texas lawsuit is part of a much broader antiabortion strategy that will unfold in the new year. Besides targeting telemedicine and pills, antiabortion groups plan to pursue anyone who aids or abets abortion — for example, internet service providers that allow websites to provide information about abortion pills and where to get them. Other proposals copy a Louisiana law that designates safe and effective drugs used in abortion as “controlled substances.”
In addition to these maneuvers, look for abortion opponents to lobby the Trump administration to reinterpret the Comstock Act, a 19th century obscenity law, to make it illegal to send anything used in abortions by mail. That could create the equivalent of a nationwide ban, which Congress so far won’t legislate and voters don’t want.
And there are other steps the Trump administration could take that would dramatically change abortion access. In 2023, the Food and Drug Administration made changes to the restrictions governing mifepristone and telemedicine abortion appointments. Ever since, antiabortion groups have developed a grab-bag of arguments against the FDA’s rules. They argue that the consensus of peer-reviewed studies is wrong and that mifepristone is extremely dangerous. They also have argued that mifepristone and fetal “remains” are an environmental hazard polluting groundwater.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who would have oversight of the FDA if he is confirmed as Trump’s pick to be secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, said he was pro-choice on the campaign trail, but he also has signaled openness to the antiabortion movement. Claims about drug safety and environmental hazards might resonate with Kennedy, who is an opponent of Big Pharma and once worked in environmental law.
The Supreme Court decision overturning Roe has done nothing to end abortion battles; instead, it has given them new life. Fights over telemedicine consultations, mail-order access to abortion pills and FDA safety rules could make abortion bans far more effective, reshape the procedure in states that protect abortion rights and expand the power of one state to dictate policy in another.
Most important: If abortion opponents succeed in making abortion pills inaccessible, the stigma surrounding abortion may well increase, and access to the procedure decrease. That’s why antiabortion groups have been relentless in their pursuit of pills. Nothing less than Americans’ view of abortion itself is on the line.
Mary Ziegler is a law professor at UC Davis. Her latest book, “Personhood: The New Civil War over Reproduction,” is scheduled for publication in April.
-
Business7 days ago
These are the top 7 issues facing the struggling restaurant industry in 2025
-
Culture7 days ago
The 25 worst losses in college football history, including Baylor’s 2024 entry at Colorado
-
Sports6 days ago
The top out-of-contract players available as free transfers: Kimmich, De Bruyne, Van Dijk…
-
Politics5 days ago
New Orleans attacker had 'remote detonator' for explosives in French Quarter, Biden says
-
Politics5 days ago
Carter's judicial picks reshaped the federal bench across the country
-
Politics3 days ago
Who Are the Recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom?
-
Health2 days ago
Ozempic ‘microdosing’ is the new weight-loss trend: Should you try it?
-
World7 days ago
Ivory Coast says French troops to leave country after decades