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Despite record amounts of trash, some Angelenos are optimistic we'll dig our way out

Despite record amounts of trash, some Angelenos are optimistic we'll dig our way out

It doesn't take an awful lot of investigating to see that we're swimming in an ocean of waste: There are the maxed-out landfills, illegal trash dumping in the desert, choked-up rivers, strangled sea turtles and skyrocketing trash collection fees.
But there's disagreement about what it portends about our future relationship with waste.
Many in the waste and environmental space believe the current situation is so untenable that strict anti-plastic and waste laws will soon be implemented — and we'll have less persistent waste. Others, however, are more cynical, and point to a slew of economic, production, marketing, judicial and policy indicators that suggest things are likely only to get worse.
By the time 2050 rolls around, 'great swaths of California land will have become sacrifice zones contaminated with microplastics and toxic chemicals from uncontrolled dumping of organics with high levels of plastics, synthetic textile and other nonorganic contamination,' said Jan Dell, president and founder of the Laguna Beach-based nonprofit Last Beach Cleanup. 'Some residences and neighborhoods will be declared uninhabitable.'
She noted the rampant dumping that's already happening in the Antelope Valley, and suggested that even if the state's landmark plastic legislation is implemented in a way that legislators intended — which includes a requirement that would reduce the amount of single-use plastic sold and distributed in the state — 'CalRecycle will never make [it] ... work. They can't even effectively ban foam cups.'
She and others, including Susan Keefe of Beyond Plastics, another nonprofit, said the plastic and packaging industries have invested too much in ramping up plastic production to allow legislation or bans to stop them. And consumers have become so accustomed to the convenience of single-use plastic that change is unlikely to happen without a push from the government.
'It's hard to be super positive when you see how much waste we generate,' said Keefe, Beyond Plastic's Southern California director. 'I think that we're going to see more illegal dumping, more waste incineration plants built, and we'll run out of landfills. If we continue on the trajectory that we're on, I don't see how we're not going to be swimming in it.'
But others, including several waste experts and community organizers across the Los Angeles region, say change is afoot. And by the time 2050 rolls around, we'll all have adopted new, less polluting, ways of consuming and discarding products.
There are no data or widespread evidence to back up these claims; just hope, determination and a few small-scale examples in which community-organized composting and educational outreach campaigns — with help from groups such as LA Compost and Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy, or LAANE — appeared to have taken hold and made local change.
'By 2050 we'll be in a completely new paradigm,' said Ryan Jackson, executive director of LA Compost — a composting advocacy organization — and former director of the city's Department of Public Works. 'We'll be in a resource recovery model, where nothing's wasted, and we'll be enjoying a circular economy. ... It feels dramatic, but from what we've seen up close with our organization, it's very much possible.'
Jackson sees the shift as one driven organically by neighborhoods and communities that have had an opportunity to see how they could live differently. Members of his organization, which has worked in schools, community gardens and farmers markets from Long Beach to Calabasas, say they've witnessed positive shifts in behavior and attitudes when community compost hubs have been established.
But, along with others, he says that government needs to play a role, too.
'We're looking at a future [in 2050] where we think the city will be in a much better place because RecycLA will have been in effect for 30 years,' said Victor Sanchez, the executive director of Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy, or LAANE.
RecycLA is a 2017 Los Angeles-based recycling program, which — in a public partnership with private waste hauling companies — promotes recycling and requires the diversion of waste material from landfills on an escalating basis. Its primary purpose is to get L.A. closer to 'zero waste' — a plan adopted by the county's supervisors in 2022, which lays out a framework designed to reduce the use of landfills, maximize the use of natural resources and recover materials for beneficial use or reuse.
The idea behind it is to create a circular economy, in which products and packages are designed and manufactured with materials that can be reused, composted or recycled.
So far, the law has been met with mixed success. Diversion from landfill has increased, but so too has a surge of illegal waste dumping in the Antelope Valley suggesting the law may be having some unintended consequences. Critics point to a dearth of recycling and composting infrastructure in the city and county as part of the problem.
There has also been trouble at the state level.
In 2022, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed Senate Bill 54, which requires that product and packaging manufacturers maintain financial responsibility for their products from beginning to end — theoretically incentivizing companies to produce items that won't contribute to a glut of waste.
Specifically, the law requires that by 2032, plastic and packaging companies reduce single-use plastic packaging by 25% from 2025 levels. It also requires that the remainder of single-use plastic packaging and foodware items still being sold and marketed are 100% compostable or recyclable. In addition, packaging producers will have to bear the costs of their products' end-life (whether via recycling, composting, landfill or export) and figure out how to make it happen — removing that costly burden from consumers and local governments.
Newsom's administration has since backtracked on regulations that would have helped to achieve these goals, and instead has written new draft regulations that critics contend are industry-friendly and watered down.
Despite these regulatory failures, and an acknowledgment that 'capital' and corporate interests have a knack for influencing the implementation of laws and for finding loopholes in legislation — such as the time California banned plastic bags at retail stores, only to discover they'd created an exception for thicker 'reusable' plastic bags, and plastic bag waste actually increased — there is reason to hope, said Sanchez.
Yes, there have been some short-term failures, he said, but 'that's going to happen when you overhaul an entire system, right?'
He said he has seen 'beacons of hope' in his work with communities where people are 'breathing the air ... dealing with the smell and constant pollution,' of nearby landfill and waste sites. He said these communities know the risks, dangers and destructive consequences of our current waste system. And in many cases, they are successfully fighting for change — by pushing to shut down polluted landfills and mobilizing workers in these systems to demand fair compensation and safe working conditions.
'The challenge that's upon us is to build more shared ownership and awareness around waste. We have to make the case as to why it's important to invest in a system that works, because, at the end of the day, it's about investing in ourselves. It's really existential,' he said.
Even representatives from the city's private waste industry are hopeful — despite being on the wrong side of a lawsuit suggesting many of them are delivering unpermitted waste to the Antelope Valley.
A lawsuit filed this year in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles by Antelope Valley residents claims that waste-hauling companies including Athens Services and California Waste Services are dumping hazardous substances without authorization, which the companies deny. Athens noted that the law encourages the distribution of compostable material to 'farmers and other property owners for beneficial use.'
Jessica Aldridge, director of sustainability and zero waste services at Athens Services, an L.A.-based waste hauling company, was not in a position to answer questions about the lawsuit, but said her company is optimistic about what 'the environmental community, social justice and waste communities are trying to achieve.'
She agreed with Sanchez that while there may be some temporary political and regulatory setbacks, California lawmakers 'have a positive goal in mind, and they're setting up the regulations and the infrastructure' in pursuit of a cleaner environment and a more circular economy.
But Keefe, the Beyond Plastics advocate, says all this hope for circular economy laws and small community action is misplaced, that we're not going to make a dent in waste generation as long as single-use plastic manufacturers produce and sell their products.
'Plastic recycling is a myth,' she said, pointing to the abysmally low amount of plastic that is actually recycled, as well as the lawsuit that California's attorney general filed last year against ExxonMobil. The suit alleges that the fossil-fuel company knowingly deceived the public about plastic recycling for years, leading to the plastic pollution crisis we are facing today.
'Until we stop focusing on plastic recycling, we're never going to get there,' said Keefe.
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Controversial Princeton prof with Iran ties steps down amid criticism from dissidents, senators
Controversial Princeton prof with Iran ties steps down amid criticism from dissidents, senators

New York Post

time3 hours ago

  • New York Post

Controversial Princeton prof with Iran ties steps down amid criticism from dissidents, senators

A controversial Princeton professor with strong ties to the Iranian regime has quietly stepped down from the Ivy League school, following a campaign from dissidents to remove him. Seyed Hossein Mousavian, a Middle East security and nuclear policy specialist, retired from his position after 15 years as the head of the school's Program on Science and Global Security on June 1, according to an announcement listing retiring employees on Princeton's website. The professor is controversial for being heavily involved in Iran's chemical and nuclear programs beginning in 2004, long before the country was known to have been building up its nuclear arsenal, according to Swiss journalist Bruno Schirra. Advertisement 4 Seyed Hossain Mousavian, an Iranian security specialist, quietly stepped down from Princeton University after 15 years and amid a federal crackdown on alleged antisemitism at the school. Getty Images The move comes amid the news Princeton could lose more than $200 million in grants from the Trump administration for not tackling antisemitism on campus, The Post has learned. Iranian opposition activists as well as Texas Republican Senator Ted Cruz, a Princeton alumnus, had long urged the school to fire Mousavian. Advertisement 4 The Trump administration reportedly paused the payment of more than $200 million in grants. to the Ivy League school amid allegations of antisemitism. LightRocket via Getty Images 'It's a victory, but one has to wonder if he's staying behind the scenes somehow,' said Lawdan Bazargan, a former political prisoner in Iran, a human rights activist and member of the US-based Alliance Against Islamic Regime of Iran Apologists. The group has waged a two-year campaign to get the university to ditch Mousavian. 'We exposed the truth,' the group said in a press release last week. 'Mousavian is not a neutral scholar but a former ambassador of the [Islamic Republic of Iran] who defended the fatwas to kill author Salman Rushdie. Advertisement 4 Former Iranian Kurdish leader Sadiq Sharafkindi (left) and Nuri Dehkordi were two of the four opposition politicians killed in the Berlin restaurant Mykonos in 1992, while Mousavian was Iranian ambassador to Germany. Associated Press Shirin Ebadi, a former Iranian judge who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2003, has also previously accused Mousavian of supporting the fatwa. Before being hired by Princeton in 2009, Mousavian had also worked as a diplomat and editor of the Tehran Times, the English-language newspaper which is a mouthpiece for the regime. Mousavian was also Iran's ambassador to Germany in 1992 when four dissidents were murdered in the back of a restaurant in Berlin. Advertisement The group of dissidents which campaigned to get him fired from Princeton has previously alleged when Mousavian was ambassador to Germany, 23 Iranians were killed in Europe for being enemies of the mullahs. In 1997, a German court concluded that the Iranian leadership, including the foreign ministry, masterminded the murders and that the headquarters for plotting them was the Iranian embassy, but did not name Mousavian. During the trial, German newspaper Tagesspiegel reported a former Iranian spy, Abolghasem Mesbahi, said under oath, 'Mousavian was involved in most of the crimes that took place in Europe. 4 Former Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad tours a nuclear facility in 2008. The country's nuclear program is much older than many Western intelligence sources had predicted. AP 'Specifically, in Germany, it concerns the crimes that were committed against Iranian opposition members.' Following the trial Mousavian was called back to Tehran. Mousavian, whose Princeton email address is still active and who is still prominently featured on the school's website, did not return a request for comment Tuesday. He wrote of his retirement on Twitter: 'After 15 years of service at Princeton University, I retired at my own request at the end of May 2025. Advertisement 'I am deeply grateful to the university officials for their support and especially for their commitment to freedom of expression.' The retirement coincides with the imminent publication of a 2004 interview with Mousavian by Schirra. The interview, which is now being published by the Middle East Research Institute, a US-based nonprofit that studies extremism, suggests Iran's nuclear program was secretly active for decades before Western intelligence sources warned of its existence. Advertisement 'After Iraq's attack [in 1980], we announced our defensive chemical and nuclear programs,' said Mousavian in the interview, who was then deputy of Iran's National Security Council. In April, Cruz urged the school to fire Mousavian, saying: 'His presence at Princeton makes students feel justifiably afraid for their safety.'

US grand jury indicts one of Haiti's most powerful gang leaders and one of his friends
US grand jury indicts one of Haiti's most powerful gang leaders and one of his friends

The Hill

time3 hours ago

  • The Hill

US grand jury indicts one of Haiti's most powerful gang leaders and one of his friends

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I don't think the issue is being able to find him,' Johnston said, adding that the indictment doesn't represent a threat to Chérizier since he lives in Haiti. 'It's hard to see how it'll have much of an effect.' A policeman turned gang leader Chérizier is a former elite police officer who was fired in December 2018 and was later accused of organizing large-scale massacres in the slums of Grand Ravine in 2017, in La Saline in 2018 and in Bel-Air in 2019. More than 100 people were killed in the massacres, which Chérizier has denied organizing. 'Haiti is a hotspot right now … there is incredible violence going on there,' U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro said Tuesday, calling La Saline killings 'notorious because (Chérizier) both planned and participated' in the slaughter. In June 2020, Chérizier created the ' G9 Family and Allies,' an alliance that grew from nine gangs in lower Delmas and the Cite Soleil and La Saline slums to include more than a dozen gangs, according to a U.N. Security Council report. The alliance was blamed for the killings of some 145 people in Cite Soleil and the rape of multiple women. In December 2020, the U.S. Treasury Department issued civil sanctions against Chérizier and others accused of being involved in the massacres. The G-9 alliance later became part of the Viv Ansanm gang federation created in September 2023 that saw the merging of Haiti's two biggest gangs that were once bitter enemies: G-9 and G- Pèp. Since then, the federation has taken control of 90% of Port-au-Prince. It launched multiple attacks on key government infrastructure in February 2024 and raided Haiti's two biggest prisons, releasing more than 4,000 inmates. It also forced Haiti's main international airport to close for nearly three months. The surge in violence led to the resignation of former Prime Minister Ariel Henry, who was locked out of his country while on an official visit to Kenya. The gang federation continues to attack once peaceful communities in Port-au-Prince, and it is accused of helping gangs in Haiti's central region. 'We want to change everything' Also indicted is Bazile Richardson, whom officials say is a naturalized U.S. citizen from Haiti who grew up with Chérizier and lives in Fayetteville, North Carolina. Both are accused of leading a 'wide-ranging conspiracy' by directly soliciting money transfers from members of the Haitian diaspora to raise funds for Chérizier's gang activities in Haiti, according to the indictment. It stated that the money was used to pay the salaries of gang members and buy weapons from illegal dealers in Haiti. Most of the firearms are smuggled in from the U.S. since Haiti does not produce weapons. According to the indictment, there are two other unnamed co-conspirators from Haiti who live in New York and Massachusetts, and five others who live in Haiti. Chérizier could not be immediately reached for comment. It was not immediately clear if Richardson had an attorney. The indictment noted that Chérizier and Richardson have acknowledged the sanctions against Chérizier, adding that the alleged conspiracy began around December 2020 and continued through January of this year. One voice memo that an unidentified co-conspirator in Haiti allegedly sent to Richardson stated: 'If I have backup, we will take the power, and you will be able to come back to your country. You will need to serve in the new government.' Richardson forwarded the alleged memo to Chérizier in June 2022, nearly a year after former President Jovenel Moïse was killed at his private residence. Another person identified only as a Haitian co-conspirator allegedly sent a voice memo to Richardson saying, 'we want to start a revolution in Haiti and are trying to collect funds.' Part of the plan was to have 1,000 individuals give $20 each or 1 million Haitians abroad give $1 each, as well as collect money from 1,000 people for each of Haiti's 10 regions, according to the indictment. 'With this money, they can buy pick-up trucks, weapons, ammunition, clothing to include T-shirts, boots and hats. We want to change everything in Haiti,' according to one alleged voice memo. In June 2021, Chérizier held a press conference announcing the start of a revolution. A crackdown on violence The indictment comes as gang violence continues to surge in Haiti's capital and beyond, with gunmen kidnapping an Irish missionary and seven other people, including a 3-year-old, from an orphanage earlier this month. The office of Haiti's prime minister did not immediately return a message seeking comment on the indictment. Johnston said the broader strategy in the fight against gangs remains unclear. 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YouTube's silencing of Ethiopian journalists aids authoritarianism
YouTube's silencing of Ethiopian journalists aids authoritarianism

The Hill

time7 hours ago

  • The Hill

YouTube's silencing of Ethiopian journalists aids authoritarianism

With over 120 million people, Ethiopia is Africa's second most populous country and one of the world's oldest civilizations. Strategically located in the Horn of Africa, it carries immense geopolitical importance. Yet despite its rich history, Ethiopia today is among the most repressive environments for press freedom. The government continues to stifle independent journalism through censorship, harassment and arbitrary detention. According to the 2024 World Press Freedom Index by Reporters Without Borders, Ethiopia is ranked 141st out of 180 countries for media freedom. The Committee to Protect Journalists further confirms that Ethiopia is one of sub-Saharan Africa's top jailers of journalists, holding six journalists in prison as of Dec. 1, 2024, making it second only to Eritrea in the region. Since the outbreak of government-led conflict in the Amhara region in 2023 — compounded by ongoing unrest in all parts of the country — journalists have faced escalating threats and imprisonment for simply reporting the truth. In August 2023, the Ethiopian government declared a state of emergency covering the Amhara region and beyond. This has been criticized by Amnesty International as a pretext for authoritarian control. The Committee to Protect Journalists has documented misuse of anti-terror laws and prolonged detentions in unofficial facilities. Among those unjustly detained is Meskerem Abera, founder of Ethio Nikat Media. Amnesty International has stated that the charges against her appear politically motivated as part of a broader crackdown on journalists critical of the government. Equally emblematic is the case of Dereje Habtewold, a veteran journalist sentenced to imprisonment in exile by the former Ethiopian People Revolutionary Democratic Front regime. In exile, he continued to report through Ethiopian Satellite Network TV, a YouTube-based outlet serving the diaspora. But YouTube — owned by Google — is increasingly undermining that mission. According to a recent Ethiopian Satellite Network TV statement, Maede Zenachannel (where Habtewold serves as main reporter) was arbitrarily terminated on July 21, 2025, followed by Ethiopian Satellite Network TV's main YouTube channel on July 30, 2025. YouTube issued only vague references to violations of 'community standards,' offering no transparency or meaningful recourse. Other independent Ethiopian media outlets — such as Zewdu Show, Ethio 360 and 14 channels affiliated with the Amhara Media Council including Merja TV, Ethio 251 Media, Ghion TV Multimedia — have also been removed from YouTube without warning or justification. These outlets, many with hundreds of thousands or even millions of subscribers, have served as lifelines for independent news, especially as press freedom deteriorates inside Ethiopia. Even American journalists are being swept up in this wave of silencing. Salome Mulugeta, founder of Hello Ethiopia, has had her YouTube channel blocked for more than eight months. YouTube has provided the same non-compliant to community standards justification for blocking her channel. YouTube CEO Neal Mohan's 2022 testimony before U.S. Congress included a powerful statement: ' YouTube's mission is to give everyone a voice and show them the world.' That mission is commendable, but it must be upheld consistently. Ethiopian journalists and diaspora media leaders cannot accept the selective enforcement of content standards, particularly those Mohan outlined to then-Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) and the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs. When principles of fairness and transparency are applied unevenly, it erodes YouTube's credibility and also enables authoritarian regimes to shape the global narrative without challenge. YouTube plays a critical role in amplifying the voices of exiled and independent journalists, especially those reporting on crises ignored by state-controlled or mainstream outlets. Yet its opaque and seemingly biased moderation practices increasingly threaten that role. By disproportionately targeting content critical of the Abiy Ahmed regime, particularly reporting on war on Amhara region, human rights abuses, the imprisonment of civilians and opposition party leaders, systemic corruption, religious persecution and the erosion of the rule of law — YouTube risks becoming complicit in suppressing truth. These actions contribute to an information vacuum, embolden authoritarianism and undermine the democratic values the platform claims to uphold. This is not just an Ethiopian diaspora journalist problem. As artificial intelligence and algorithms increasingly control what content is visible — and what is silenced — the unchecked power of tech platforms threatens global press freedom. Congress must take concrete steps to remedy this. Hold public hearings on content moderation, compelling tech executives to explain how and why journalistic content — especially from politically sensitive regions — is being removed. Demand transparency from YouTube and Google regarding their moderation policies, enforcement data and algorithmic biases that may disproportionately affect dissident voices. Introduce legislation to establish clear standards and oversight for how tech platforms manage news and political speech globally. Pass resolutions affirming U.S. support for press freedom and working with international organizations to pressure governments — like Ethiopia's — to halt the persecution of journalists. Invest in independent journalism, including training, digital security and tools to help reporters navigate censorship and algorithmic suppression. Failure to act now risks normalizing the dangerous precedent that global tech platforms can silence journalists without accountability, while authoritarian governments cheer them on. When truth tellers are digitally erased and propaganda prevails, the foundation of democracy itself begins to crack.

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