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Democrats set out to study male voters with ‘Sam Project'

Democrats set out to study male voters with ‘Sam Project'

CNN07-06-2025
By: Emily DeCiccio
Ilyse Hogue, co-founder of Speaking with American Men Project, argues that men support progressive policies but feel abandoned by the Democratic Party.
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The US plans to build a $750M fly factory in Texas to stop a flesh-eating cattle parasite
The US plans to build a $750M fly factory in Texas to stop a flesh-eating cattle parasite

Yahoo

time41 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

The US plans to build a $750M fly factory in Texas to stop a flesh-eating cattle parasite

The U.S. plans to build a $750 million factory in southern Texas to breed billions of sterile flies, ramping up its efforts to keep flesh-eating maggots in Mexico from crossing the border and damaging the American cattle industry. Secretary Brooke Rollins announced Friday that the U.S. Department of Agriculture hopes to be producing and releasing sterile male New World screwworm flies into the wild within a year from the new factory on Moore Air Base outside Edinburg, Texas, about 20 miles (32 kilometers) from the border. She also said the USDA plans to deploy $100 million in technology, such as fly traps and lures, and step up border patrols by 'tick riders' mounted on horseback and train dogs to sniff out the parasite. In addition, Rollins said the U.S. border will remain closed to cattle, horse and bison imports from Mexico until the U.S. sees that the pest is being pushed back south toward Panama, where the fly had been contained through late last year through the breeding of sterile flies there. The U.S. has closed its border to those imports three times in the past eight months, the last in July, following a report of an infestation about 370 miles (595 kilometers) from the Texas border. American officials worry that if the fly reaches Texas, its flesh-eating maggots could cause billions of dollars in economic losses and cause already record retail beef prices to rise even more, fueling greater inflation. The parasite also can infest wildlife, household pets and, occasionally, humans. 'Farm security is national security,' Rollins said during a news conference at the Texas State Capitol in Austin with Texas Gov. Greg Abbott. 'All Americans should be concerned. But it's certainly Texas and our border and livestock producing states that are on the front lines of this every day.' The pest was a problem for the American cattle industry for decades until the U.S. largely eradicated it in the 1970s by breeding and releasing sterile male flies to breed with wild females. It shut down fly factories on U.S. soil afterward. The Mexican cattle industry has been hit hard by infestations and the U.S. closing its border to imports. Mexico's Agriculture ministry said in a statement Friday that Mexico Agriculture and Rural Development Secretary Julio Berdegué Sacristán and Rollins signed a screwworm control action plan. It includes monitoring with fly-attracting traps and establishing that livestock can only be moved within Mexico through government-certified corrals, the statement said. And on the X social media platform, Berdegué said, 'We will continue with conversations that lead to actions that will permit the reopening of livestock exports." The new fly-breeding factory in Texas would be the first on U.S. soil in decades and represents a ramping up of the USDA's spending on breeding and releasing sterile New World screwworm flies. The sterile males are released in large enough numbers that wild females can't help but mate with them, producing sterile eggs that don't hatch. Eventually, the wild fly population shrinks away because females mate only once in their weekslong lives. In June, Rollins announced a plan to convert an existing factory for breeding fruit flies into one for breeding sterile New World Screwworm flies, as well as a plan to build a site, also on the air base near Edinburg, for gathering flies imported from Panama and releasing them from small aircraft. Those projects are expected to cost a total of $29.5 million. The Panama fly factory can breed up to 117 million flies a week, and the new Mexican fly factory is expected to produce up to 100 million more a week. Rollins said the new Texas factory would produce up to 300 million a week. She said President Donald Trump's administration wants to end the U.S. reliance on fly breeding in Mexico and Panama. 'It's a tactical move that ensures we are prepared and not just reactive, which is today what we have really been working through,' Rollins said. ___ Hanna reported from Topeka, Kansas. Associated Press writer Fabiola Sánchez in Mexico City contributed reporting. Solve the daily Crossword

How to Keep Up With President Trump
How to Keep Up With President Trump

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

How to Keep Up With President Trump

Times Insider explains who we are and what we do and delivers behind-the-scenes insights into how our journalism comes together. Erica L. Green entered Baltimore's foster care system when she was 7 years old. By the time she entered college, she had lived in six homes. From that experience, she learned how to navigate a diverse set of family structures and households. 'I'm extremely vigilant and extremely adaptable,' said Ms. Green, who credits those traits as essential to her job covering President Trump for The New York Times. 'I grew up that way. You go where the news takes you, and that means, especially under Trump, it could be in 10 different directions.' Ms. Green joined The Times in 2017, reporting on federal education policy. She saw the job as an opportunity to shine a light on an issue important to her — America's flawed education system — on a large scale. In 2023, she accepted a role as a White House correspondent. Soon after, she began reporting on the Biden administration and eventually Kamala Harris's 2024 presidential campaign. She's now covering the Trump administration, with much of her coverage focusing on how the president is attempting to roll back civil rights and change racial dynamics in the United States. 'It has become incredibly clear how important it is for people to see a Black White House reporter for The New York Times,' she said. In a recent interview, Ms. Green spoke about the day-to-day demands of the job and the challenges that come with the beat. This interview has been condensed and edited. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

A Modern Shout-Out to the Old ‘Gray Lady'
A Modern Shout-Out to the Old ‘Gray Lady'

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

A Modern Shout-Out to the Old ‘Gray Lady'

In the In Times Past column, David W. Dunlap explores New York Times history through artifacts housed in the Museum at The Times. Early in the first Trump administration, the White House sought to punish news organizations it didn't like, including The New York Times, by barring their reporters from daily press briefings. 'FAKE NEWS media knowingly doesn't tell the truth,' President Trump wrote on Twitter (now X) on Feb. 24, 2017. 'A great danger to our country. The failing @nytimes has become a joke. Likewise @CNN. Sad!' Journalists were not alone in protesting such official antagonism. Two days later, an ad hoc group of New Yorkers staged a demonstration in favor of press freedom. Their march through Midtown Manhattan began and ended at The Times's headquarters, 620 Eighth Avenue. Barbara Malmet, an artist and political activist, stenciled the cardboard placard she carried at the demonstration: 'The Gray Lady Abides.' She used a nickname for The Times going back many decades to an era when the newspaper's front page was a gray mass of type, unbroken by images. The Times was also a 'gray lady' in its circumspection, when contrasted with the sensational 'yellow' journals of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Ms. Malmet's message — along with signs like 'The Free Press Protects Us' and 'There Is No Freedom Without a Free Press' — heartened those who worked inside The Times's headquarters. Dean Baquet, the executive editor at the time, told Sarah Maslin Nir, the Times reporter who covered the event: 'I don't look at us as the enemy of the White House. I look at us as people who are aggressively covering the White House.' After the demonstration, Ms. Malmet gave her placard to Ms. Nir. In turn, Ms. Nir lent it indefinitely to the Museum at The Times. The placard is exhibited next to a photo by a freelancer, Jeff Bachner, of the small crowd huddled outside The Times on a wintry day.

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