Florida
Pres. Biden, Florida Gov. DeSantis to hold dueling fundraisers this week in Silicon Valley
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — A surprise in the skies over Marin County Friday as military aircraft flew maneuvers near Larkspur ahead of President Joe Biden’s visit to the Bay Area.
On Monday, the president will visit the Lucy Evans Baylands Nature Interpretive Center and Preserve in Palo Alto where he’ll announce $600 million in new investments for climate projects.
“What the president is going to do is emphasize climate change and what the Biden administration has been doing around green jobs it’s a victory lap,” said political science Professor David McCuan from Sonoma State University.
Next, Biden will reportedly head to private fundraisers, one in Los Gatos at the home of Microsoft Chief Technology Officer Kevin Scott, another in Atherton at venture capitalist Steve Westley’s home, where $6,600 will get you in the door.
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Republican candidate, Florida Gov. Ron Desantis will be in nearby Woodside for his own fundraiser.
“When he actually holds his fundraiser, he’ll only be a couple of miles from where the President of the United States is holding his fundraiser roughly at the same time,” said McCuan.
Earlier in the day, Desantis will be in the state capitol.
“He’s making a point to fly into Sacramento, where three dozen migrants were sent a few weeks ago,” McCuan said.
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Both Desantis and Biden know networking among donors is everything on the campaign trail.
“They have to come and punch their ticket here, raise money and meet the influentials because it’s that network effect that’s as important as anything else,” McCuan said.
And there’s no time to lose, the end of the fundraising quarter is June 30, Teddy Schleifer from Puck News says that deadline matters.
“The numbers get looked at, they try to show strength every dollar you get can show you had a strong second quarter,” Schleifer said.
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But will all the fundraising be enough to surpass Trump – the former president who has only gained support despite efforts to impeach and indict him.
“The elephant in the room is clearly Donald Trump, he’ll remain the one everyone wants to talk about maybe dances around,” McCuan said.
On Tuesday, Biden Will reportedly be in Marin County to attend a fundraiser with tech and climate entrepreneurs. Governor Gavin Newsom is reportedly on the guest list.
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Florida
Florida agricultural losses add up following Hurricane Helene
Hurricane Helene, a major storm that made landfall in late September in Taylor County, inflicted up to $162.2 million in agricultural losses in Florida.
The University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, or UF/IFAS, on Tuesday released a report estimating losses from Helene. Helene closely followed the path of Hurricane Debby, which made landfall in August in Taylor County.
Combined, the two storms caused estimated agricultural losses of $134 million to $425 million, according to Tuesday’s report and an earlier UF/IFAS report about Debby.
Helene resulted in an estimated $40.3 million to $162.2 million in losses, with the total expected to be narrowed in the coming months. Debby led to an estimated $93.7 million to $263.2 million in losses.
“There were some things that weren’t in the path or weren’t at risk of Hurricane Helene because they were already damaged by Hurricane Debby,” Christa Court, UF/IFAS economic impact analysis program director, said Tuesday during a conference call with reporters.
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A damage survey showed larger effects from Debby, which was a more rain-intense storm with more flooding than Helene, which moved rapidly through Florida before heading north, Court said.
Court also said some farmers had not replanted between Debby, which made landfall Aug. 5, and Helene, which made landfall Sept. 26.
Hurricane Milton hit the state Oct. 9, making landfall in Sarasota County. Data on the impacts from Milton is still being collected.
During a legislative organization session Tuesday, Senate President Ben Albritton, a Wauchula Republican who is a citrus grower, expressed a need to help farmers, along with homeowners, affected by the storms.
“In the days following hurricanes Helene and Milton, I spent time with several senators whose constituents were catastrophically impacted. The devastation is heartbreaking. Florida agriculture was heavily impacted. And many of our coastal communities suffered from tornadoes, wind and flooding,” Albritton said. “What’s worse is that many of these communities were still recovering from hurricanes Debbie, Idalia and Ian. Be assured, together, we are going to recover, and we are going to rebuild.”
Helene, which made landfall with 140 mph sustained winds, affected more than 6 million acres of agricultural land in Florida, mostly in North Florida’s Big Bend region, with two-thirds of the land used for livestock grazing.
Field and row crops took the biggest financial hit, with estimated losses between $12.76 million and $48.16 million, followed by losses in livestock and animal production between $11.79 million and $44.4 million.
Vegetable and melon production sustained $10.47 million to $38.22 million in losses and greenhouses and nurseries received $2.16 million to $15 million in losses. Fruit and tree-nut losses were estimated at $3.17 million to $12.13 million.
The UF/IFAS figures are mostly tied to the current growing season and don’t include damage to items such as fertilizer and feed or repairs for damaged and destroyed infrastructure.
While Helene and Debby made landfall in North Florida, Milton cut a path across the central part of the state, which includes the heart of the citrus industry.
Court said Milton data will include losses from tornadoes outside of areas where hurricane-force winds occurred.
Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson has estimated that Milton might have caused between $1.5 billion and $2.5 billion in losses.
Debby affected more than 2.2 million acres of agricultural land in Florida.
As examples of the damage, livestock losses from Debby are estimated between $41.1 million and $98.5 million. Flooding caused field crops to suffer between $19.3 million and $53.1 million in losses. Greenhouses and nurseries had up to $53.6 million in losses, including from power outages that hindered cooling and irrigation.
Debby interrupted the planting schedule for vegetables, melons and potatoes and resulted in $12.1 million to $32.1 million in anticipated losses.
Florida
Florida Gators Myles Graham has Season-Best Performance Against LSU
The Florida Gators have been plagued by the injury bug all season. It’s taken a few key players on both sides of the ball each week and left them trying to fill the void with others.
However, they have tons of depth on this roster and it showed once again on Saturday. While the Gators were without starting linebacker Grayson Howard against LSU, true freshman Myles Graham made sure there was little drop-off in talent on the field.
According to PFF, Graham was graded out as the best true freshman linebacker in the country in Week 12 against the Tigers with a PFF grade of 77.6. He accounted for seven tackles in this game and five of them were assisted while the other two were solo. His seven tackles were also his highest in a single game this season.
Additionally, PFF gave him an 82.7 tackling grade in this contest, which is the highest he has received all season and also the highest of any Gator defender on Saturday.
The young star in the making has been shining over these past few weeks as well, so it is no surprise seeing him perform like this.
From the first week of the season against Miami to the Tennessee game near the middle of October, Graham only totaled five tackles and all of them were assisted. In the last four though, he has 17 tackles, (10 assists and seven solo) one tackle-for-loss and one sack.
It is unclear yet as to when Howard will be back for the Gators. Like every week prior, we’ll have to wait for the availability report for that. But if his absence extends into this weekend, then the Gators will have a dependable replacement in Myles Graham.
Florida
Florida professor finds evidence that ancient Egyptians drank hallucinogenic cocktails
A professor at the University of South Florida (USF) analyzed a 2,000-year-old Egyptian mug and discovered that the ancient object once held a psychedelic concoction used in a magical ritual.
The mug studied was an Egyptian Bes mug donated to the Tampa Museum of Art in 1984. The mug is one of few still in existence.
Research into the rare mug began in 2021, USF professor Davide Tanasi told Fox News Digital via email.
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These mugs displayed the head of Bes, according to the press release.
Many of Bes’ worshipers were ancient Egyptian newlyweds, according to the Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum, as the god of fertility and childbirth.
Tanasi and his team scraped a sample of tiny particles from inside the vase to analyze.
The team originally thought the vessel would have contained an alcoholic beverage, but what they ended up finding was far different from their original theories.
Advanced DNA and chemical analysis found the vase contained what Tanasi described as a “cocktail” of different components.
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Included in the mix was an alcoholic base, Tanasi told Fox News Digital, with flavoring agents like honey and or royal jelly sesame seeds, pine nuts or oil from Mediterranean pine and licorice.
Also included in the mix were several different medicinal and psychotropic substances, including Syrian rue, blue water lily and cleome species, Tanasi said.
Human fluids including blood, breast milk and mucus were also part of the concoction, according to Tanasi.
The bodily fluids in particular served as a large indicator that the mix was used in ancient ritual practices, according to the research.
“It was then a magical potion, meant to inebriate, satiate and induce hallucinations,” Tanasi said of the mixture.
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This first-of-its-kind finding provides physical evidence that mirrors written records and myths about ancient Egyptian rituals.
“At this point, we believe that the psychotropic substances found in it were used for ‘incubation rituals’ connected with the cult of Bes,” Tanasi told Fox News Digital.
“Incubation rituals are religious practices where people sleep in a sacred space to receive a dream from a deity that may provide healing or an oracle,” Tanasi said.
“In [the] Greek cult of Asklepios, god of medicine, sick worshipers had to spend the night in the sanctuary and wait to be visited by the god curing them during their dreams. Those dreams were triggered by drugs (pharmaka) dispensed by the priests. So, our research confirms an earlier practice that has later comparisons in several other cultures.”
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The mug is now on display at the Tampa Museum of Art as part of its “Prelude: An Introduction to the Permanent Collection” exhibit.
As far as further research goes, Tanasi said he hopes similar analysis continues.
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“To prove that the concoction that we found was the base recipe for a standard beverage administered during the rituals in honor of Bes, we plan as [a] next step to hopefully carry out the same analyses done on the example from the Tampa Museum of Art on other examples of [the] Bes Mug, kept at the Allan Pierson Museum in Amsterdam,” he said.
These, he added, “were produced with the same mold used for the Tampa one, to assess whether there was one and only recipe for this magical potion for Bes.”
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