Sunday, May 25, 2025

RFK Jr. teams up to 'save the ostriches' with NYC's own animal-loving billionaire John CatsimatidisNew Foto - RFK Jr. teams up to 'save the ostriches' with NYC's own animal-loving billionaire John Catsimatidis

Birds of a feather … Animal-loving New York City supermarket billionaire John Catsimatidis has joined forces with emu-owning federal health Commissioner Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in urging Canadian officials to take their heads out of the sandto save ostrichesat a north-of-the-border bird farm. Catsimatidis told The Post on Sunday he is grateful the head of Health and Human Services is also now sticking his neck out for the cause, which he has been pushing since last month, as first reported by The Post's Page Six. "Let's save the ostriches! They have a right to live if they are healthy," said the Gristedes supermarket founder, who also owns 770 WABC radio. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has said it needs to kill nearly 400 of the birds at the Universal Ostrich Farm in British Columbia to curb the spread of the avian flu. Catsimatidis, who also owns oil and bio-fuel businesses, said he raised the alarm after animal-rights activists alerted him to the situation. "I love animals. Let's save the whales, too," he said — noting his next project is protect whales from being imperiled by offshore wind-power set-ups. The mogul also has been known tolovepandas, once trying to convince the Chinese government to loan out the bears to the Big Apple's Central Park Zoo. As for the ostriches, Kennedy, along with the heads of the US Food and Drug Administration and National Institutes of Health, sent a May 23 letter to the Canadian agency urging it to reconsider its plan. The birds don't need to be killed to thwart the flu, wrote RFK Jr.,who famously owns a pet emu, in the letterfirst reported byRebel News. The ostriches should be preserved for long-term scientific study instead of culling or killing them, he said, echoing Catsimatidis' stance. "Ostriches can live up to 50 years, providing the opportunity for future insights into immune longevity associated with the H5N1 virus," Kennedy said in the letter co-signed by NIH Director Jay Bhattachary and FDA Commissioner Martin Makary. "The indiscriminate destruction of entire flocks without up-to-date testing and evaluation can have significant consequences, including the loss of valuable genetic stock that may help explain risk factors for H5N1 mortality," the letter said. "This may be important for future agricultural resilience." The missive added that avian influenza has been endemic in birds for thousands of years and that culling birds would be "fruitless unless we are willing to exterminate every wild bird in North America." "We're dealing with a bunch of bureaucrats in Canada. They're mean-spirited," Catstimatidis said. "Test the ostriches. They are not sick!" He added that the ostriches may have "herd immunity" whose antibodies can be studied to save human lives.

RFK Jr. teams up to ‘save the ostriches’ with NYC’s own animal-loving billionaire John Catsimatidis

RFK Jr. teams up to 'save the ostriches' with NYC's own animal-loving billionaire John Catsimatidis Birds of a feather … Animal-...
Winemakers finding Trump's tariffs hard to swallowNew Foto - Winemakers finding Trump's tariffs hard to swallow

Burgundy is one of the most prestigious wine regions in France, and the US is its biggest export market. But now Donald Trump's tariffs are threatening to price European wine out of the American marketplace. Crouched in cold mud under a thin Spring rain, vineyard employee Élodie Bonet snaps off unwanted vine shoots with her fingers and pruning clippers. "We want the vine to put all its energy into the shoots that have the flowers where the grapes are going to grow," she explains. I leave Élodie working her way down the rows of vines, and walk up to the house and winery in the Burgundy village of Morey-Saint-Denis, where I meet owner and winemaker Cécile Tremblay. She takes me down to her cellar to taste some of her prized red wines, standing among the oak barrels and old bottles with labels weathered by mould and age. They have names on them that make wine lovers go weak at the knees - Nuits-Saint-Georges, Echezeaux, Vosne-Romanée, Clos-Vougeot, and Chapelle-Chambertin. How Trump's tariffs might impact France's winemakers Trump reignites tensions with EU tariff threats Ms Tremblay sells over half of her wine abroad, under the name Domaine Cecile Tremblay. "For the United States, it's around 10% of the production; it's a big production for me!" she says. After threatening a 200% mark-up on alcohol from Europe, Donald Trump imposed a 20% tariff on practically all European Union products on 5 April. Four days later, he lowered this to 10%, with the threat that he'd hike it back up again to 20% in July, depending on how trade negotiations pan out. And now Trump is threatening a future tariff of 50% on all goods from the EU. I ask Ms Tremblay if she's worried. "Yes, sure," she says, "As everybody is." But that is all she will say on the matter. French winemakers are walking on eggshells at the moment, fearful of saying anything that might aggravate the situation. Perhaps their representatives will be more forthcoming? I get in my car and drive over to one of her neighbours - François Labet. He is the president of the Burgundy Wine Board, which represents this region's 3,500 winemakers. "The US is the largest export market for the whole region. Definitely," he tells me. "They are the biggest in volume and the biggest in value." And, until Donald Trump's re-election, the US market was booming. While French wines and spirits global exportsfell 4% last year overall, sales of Burgundy wines to the US rose sharply. In volume terms,there were up 16%from 2024, to 20.9 million bottles. This was worth €370m ($415m; £312m) in revenues, 26.2% higher than in 2023. Mr Labet says the US accounted for about a quarter of Burgundy's wine exports last year. Burgundy's reputation abroad is mainly for its red wines, which are made from the celebrated pinot noir grape. Indeed, in the English-speaking world, burgundy is not so much a wine as a colour. The French word for the same colour is bordeaux; showing they know more about their wine, because while Bordeaux wines are mostly red, two-thirds of Burgundy is actually white. These are predominantly made from the chardonnay grape. Chablis, one of the best-known examples, is extremely popular in the US. Burgundy also produces an increasingly successful sparkling wine, called Crémant de Bourgogne, and a small amount of rosé. All of which is good for Burgundy because while general red wine consumption just keeps going down, white is holding firm, and sparkling is going up. Also, the reds that come out of Burgundy are, according to Mr Labet, the kind consumers increasingly want, as they are typically lighter than New World reds. "What is interesting to see is that there is a strong de-consumption of what we call the big reds, made in the US. Wines with a lot of alcohol, aged in new wood." Less sun and lower temperatures in Burgundy, even with climate change, means less sugar in the grapes and lower alcohol content. Mr Labet remembers when, for 18 months of his first presidency, Donald Trump hit European wine with a 25% import tariff during a dispute over airlines. "We were hostages of that situation, and it really did affect our sales to the US. We had a drop of about 50% of our exports to the US." Regarding the current 10% Trump tariff, he predicts that French wine producers and US merchants will split the cost of the new import duty between them in order to maintain sales. But what will be the impact if in July Trump does decide to increase the tariff on all European Union exports to 20%, as he has threatened to do? "We will go back to the 2019 situation where the market was almost stopped," says Mr Labet. For French wines in general, things could be even worse. "When President Trump raised import duties by 25% for one-and-a-half years of his first mandate, we lost about $600m [£450m] very quickly," says Jerome Bauer, president of the French National Wines and Spirits Confederation. "But back then Champagne wasn't included, and neither were wines stronger than 14 degrees of alcohol. So you can see the scale of the threat today." The solution Mr Bauer is backing is free trade. No tariffs. But you'd expect him to say that, given that France and Europe run a big trade surplus with the US when it comes to wines and spirits. More surprising, perhaps, is the opinion of his American competitors in California and Oregon who, you might think, would be cracking open something a bit special to celebrate. "This looks horrible from our perspective. We don't like it one bit," says Rex Stoltz, vice-president of industry relations at Napa Valley Vintners, which represents 540 wineries in the sunny slopes of California's most famous wine region. "Wine is an international product. Even here in the Napa Valley, our wineries primarily get their corks from Portugal, and their oak barrels, a key component in winemaking, from France. Mr Stoltz adds: "They're already expensive and the potential is that they will get more expensive." Also, trade wars cut both ways. He says the tariffs announced against Canada are having a devastating impact on US wine exports. "Canada is the most important export market for California wines, and one of the top export markets for Napa Valley wines. Right now, there are zero Napa Valley wines on the shelves of stores in Canada. "They've removed all American alcohol beverage products from their store shelves!" Mr Stoltz adds: "We just want to compete on an even playing field with our friends and neighbours all over the world. That's our ask and that's our hope."

Winemakers finding Trump's tariffs hard to swallow

Winemakers finding Trump's tariffs hard to swallow Burgundy is one of the most prestigious wine regions in France, and the US is its big...
Hong Kong urges universities to facilitate students after Harvard banNew Foto - Hong Kong urges universities to facilitate students after Harvard ban

HONG KONG (Reuters) -Hong Kong's Education Bureau said that it had called on universities in the Chinese territory to attract top talent following a ban on Harvard University enrolling foreign students. U.S. President Donald Trump's administration revoked Harvard University's ability to enrol international students and is forcing current foreign students to transfer to other schools or lose their legal status. The ban, effective for the 2025-2026 school year, comes as the administration said Harvard fostered antisemitism and coordinated with the Chinese Communist Party. Chinese nationals make up about a fifth of Harvard's foreign student intake in 2024. "The Education Bureau has promptly called on all universities in Hong Kong to introduce facilitation measures for those eligible with a view to safeguarding the legitimate rights and interests of students and scholars, and to attract top talent," the bureau said in an emailed statement. The bureau has contacted the Harvard Club of Hong Kong to offer support for students who have been admitted to Harvard for further studies. "We will continue to keep a close eye on the needs of students whose studies have been affected by the shifting global education landscape," it said, adding that it would consider support measures as part of the city's role as an "international education hub." Hong Kong, a former British colony with a population of 7.5 million, has five universities in the top 100 of the Times Higher Education World University Rankings and was until recently regarded as one of Asia's freest academic arenas. Schools and universities in the financial hub are now obliged to integrate national security and patriotic themes into their teaching, bringing them closer in line with education in mainland China. Hong Kong's University of Science and Technology (HKUST) on Friday announced an open invitation to international undergraduate and postgraduate students at Harvard University, as well as those holding confirmed offers to continue their studies at HKUST. "The university will provide unconditional offers, streamlined admission procedures, and academic support to facilitate a seamless transition for interested students." (Reporting by Farah Master; Editing by Stephen Coates)

Hong Kong urges universities to facilitate students after Harvard ban

Hong Kong urges universities to facilitate students after Harvard ban HONG KONG (Reuters) -Hong Kong's Education Bureau said that it had...
Big-hearted Westchester teen finishes veteran hall beautification project in time for Memorial Day — after freak accidentNew Foto - Big-hearted Westchester teen finishes veteran hall beautification project in time for Memorial Day — after freak accident

A big-hearted Westchester teenager has finished a project to beautify a local veterans hall in time forMemorial Day— after a freak accident and grueling recovery prevented him from completing it for months. Joseph Mana, 18, was nearly done fixing up the Veterans of Foreign Wars hall in Yorktown Heights, installing planter boxes, pressure washing the building and refinishing a bench, for anEagle Scoutproject in October when he took a break to return to school, he and his father told The Post. "It was supposed to be done in time for Veterans Day — but then tragedy struck," his dad, Ed Mana, said. The teen, who was active in Boy Scouts troop 173, was playing touch football in fourth period gym class when another student accidentally slammed into his left leg from the side as he leaned back on it, Mana said. The impact and strange angle dislocated his knee and damaged a main artery behind it. "I was in a lot of pain and shock," Mana said. "The top of my knee was indented down at an angle." He was rushed to an emergency room, where doctors explained he needed surgery immediately to fix the artery. "After they popped it back into place, they said it could be something wrong with the vascular side," Mana said. For the next four months, the teen was forced to remain hospitalized while he recovered from three surgeries — including to repair the artery, remove pins from his ACL and fix a tendon. Ed Mana, 52, said it was hard to check his son into Blythedale Children's hospital in Valhalla knowing he'd likely be there for months. "When you have to leave [your kid] there, it's like you're leaving someone in jail. There were tears," he said. As the months passed, the teenager celebrated Halloween, New Years 'Day and his 18th birthday at the hospital. "I was upset and annoyed I couldn't see [my friends]," Joseph Mana said. He even applied to colleges while on painkillers and confined to the medical center. "I told him if you don't get in, you should write the college a letter later and say, 'I was high but not for the normal reasons,'"  Ed Mana said. Finally, in March the teen was released and advised to do physical therapy twice a week and to wear a knee brace for the next year and a half. Over the weekend, he returned to complete the vets project, which will also include a flag box, and will be unveiled in a ceremony after the town's Memorial Day parade Monday. Mana is expected to give a short speech. "Vets deserve this because they fought for our country, so we should spend our time helping them too," he said. Since his accident, Mana has been accepted to SUNY Polytechnic Institute, where he plans to study computer science.

Big-hearted Westchester teen finishes veteran hall beautification project in time for Memorial Day — after freak accident

Big-hearted Westchester teen finishes veteran hall beautification project in time for Memorial Day — after freak accident A big-hearted West...
Bestselling author calls murdered Israeli embassy employees 'genocide cheerleaders' in social media postNew Foto - Bestselling author calls murdered Israeli embassy employees 'genocide cheerleaders' in social media post

An influential anti-Israel author expressed anger on Thursday towards the twoIsraeli embassy stafferswho were murdered in Washington, D.C. last week. Author Susan Abulhawa attacked the murder victims, Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Lynn Milgrim, in an X post, calling them "genocide cheerleaders" and saying there is too much bloodshed at the hands of Israel to feel sorry for them after they were gunned down outside the Capital Jewish Museum. "Now we're supposed to feel bad for two genocide cheerleaders after watching these colonizer baby killers slaughter people by the hundreds every day for two years," Abulhawa wrote onsocial mediathe day after the soon-to-be-engaged couple were killed. Suspect Accused Of Killing Israeli Embassy Staffers In Dc Could Face More Charges Lischinsky and Milgrim were shot and killed while departing an event at the museum on Wednesday. A man authorities identified as 31-year-oldElias Rodriguezof Chicago has been charged in the killings and faces the death penalty. Upon his arrest, Rodriguez screamed, "Free Palestine!" Read On The Fox News App Abulhawa's post continued: "I've seen the inside of too many children's skulls to give a crap about the human garbage who get off on mass murder. It wouldn't surprise me if it was a false flag to focus on manufactured antisemitism instead of the actual holocaust being committed by Jewish supremacists." Antisemitism Spiking Around The World, Adl Task Force Finds In Its 1St-ever Global Report In aprevious post, Abulhawa rationalized that the murders were a natural response to Israel going unchecked for its "holocaust" in Gaza. "Natural logic: when governments fail to hold Israel accountable for an actual holocaust being committed before our very eyes, no genocidal Zionist should be safe anywhere in the world. What Mr. Rodriguez did should come as no surprise. In fact, I'm surprised it has not happened sooner," she wrote. Abulhawa also suggested that the suspect was following his conscience, adding, "Human beings with a conscience literally cannot bear to witness such evil day and day out being inflicted upon the bodies, minds, and futures of an utterly defenseless people, by such a hateful, racist, colonial state." Abulhawa is the author of several books, including "Mornings In Jenin," a novel about a Palestinian family displaced from their homes by Israel in 1948, that has sold over one million copies. Click Here For More Coverage Of Media And Culture Her social media account on X is filled with anti-Israel posts. She has also written a number of articles for the digital outlet, "The Electronic Intifada," several of which accuse Israel of committing a "holocaust." In one, titled, "Israel is dragging the world into darkness," she wrote, "Israel does not belong in the modern world. It is the child of European colonialism and Europe's genocidal anti-Semitism, imposed by force and fire and Western guilt on a land already inhabited by an indigenous people." Abulhawa did not immediately reply to Fox News Digital's request for comment. Original article source:Bestselling author calls murdered Israeli embassy employees 'genocide cheerleaders' in social media post

Bestselling author calls murdered Israeli embassy employees 'genocide cheerleaders' in social media post

Bestselling author calls murdered Israeli embassy employees 'genocide cheerleaders' in social media post An influential anti-Israel ...

 

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