âThe lunch rush is dead,â an NBC News headline announced this week. Blame it on working from home, tighter budgets, inflation or all of the above: transaction data pulled by the digital-payments app Square found that midday food spending was down 3.3% nationwide last year compared with 2019. The decrease was steeper in some cities, including Boston, Atlanta and Dallas.
While a full obit for the humble lunch break might be premature, a recent report from the University of Toronto backed up the hypothesis that Americans want to spend more on weekend luxuries than a lunch bill. The study found that foot traffic in major US cities remains low on workdays, but higher during the weekend.
âThatâs been the largest transformation in the last four or five years â the consumer habits of office workers,â Ara Kharazian, research lead at Square, told NBC News. âBut that money has gone somewhere else. Weâre seeing consumers instead spend money on the weekends.â
A perfect storm of rising meal expenses and shrinking break times is interfering with peopleâs ability to enjoy the workday ritual.
On Reddit, users said they often had to bring in food from home to eat at their desks, or wherever they could quickly shovel bites in. âI have an hour for lunch, but Subway is $10 after tax for a damn sandwich, and the actual restaurants are $20-$30,â one wrote. âIâm just going to bring my own food to work, thanks.â
âI work in construction and only get 30 minutes for lunch,â another user wrote. âIf I wanted to go out for lunch, my entire lunch break would be taken up by the drive out of the facility, picking up the food, and waiting to get back into the facility because thereâs only one entrance and security guard to check us in. So Iâm forced to bring lunch in from home and have it in the crew trailer.â
Other notable comments on the thread included: âIf lunch costs more than an hour of labor Iâm eating inâ and âAll the comments in this [subreddit] thread are depressingâ.
Lunch breaks â which have existed since the industrial revolution â have always been about more than just food. Lunch has also long been a source of tension between management and workers. By the late 19th century, factory owners began allotting a specific amount of time to break for lunch, one that would maximize worker output and make bosses the most money.
âA factory owner wanted to make sure they got the most out of their workers, so they started controlling when they could eat lunch,â said Megan Elias, an associate professor at Boston University and author of Lunch: the History of a Meal.
Before labor unions became widespread and bargained for breaks and time off, lunch was one of the few moments of the workday employees had to themselves. âThese were 12-, 14-, 16-hour days,â said Sarah Wassberg Johnson, a historian who studies food and culture. âThe lunch break allowed workers to rest in addition to eating a meal that would help them keep their energy up for the rest of the shift.â
As the 20th century unfurled, the amount of time a person spent on lunch corresponded to their social status. Factory workers tended to have the shortest breaks, while clerical employees had more freedom to head to a coffee shop, cafeteria or automat.
Upper management âflexed their authority by taking as long as they feltâ, Elias said, sometimes justifying the âworking lunchâ as a place to make deals â though how much actual work titans of industry got done during those infamous âthree-martini lunchesâ remains up for debate.
Even if they werenât out dining, workers on the lower rungs found lunch to be a highlight of the day, a sliver of freedom from the drudgery of employment. âItâs unsupervised, and you get to choose what to eat or where to go, so itâs this return to yourself,â Elias said. âLunch really breaks the control the employer has over an employee for a little while.â
To this day, itâs also a way to forge camaraderie and connections with co-workers. Adrian Einspanier wrote Lunch Bunch, a play that ran at New Yorkâs 122CC theater last year, about their friend, a public defender in the Bronx who operated a lunch-sharing program with their co-workers to distract them from their chaotic work environment.
âIt became a way they could take care of each other,â Einspanier said. âItâs a way to share the burden of this super-brutal system they were working under.â
This is not the first declaration that lunch is dead. According to Elias, in the 1990s, lunch âdisappearedâ for a while. âThere was this idea that it was weak to stop for lunch,â she said. Millennial work culture of the 2010s prioritized hustle and the grind, which gave way to the so-called âsad desk lunchâ, a totem of hypercapitalism, where office workers memed their solo, undignified meals eaten in front of a computer monitor.
âThe fact that the sad desk lunch was mocked meant that weâre still interested in connecting with others over work meals,â Elias added. âI donât know what exactly people will be eating for lunch in the future, but I do think that people will keep eating together.â
A cinema in Massachusetts has apologised to the audience at a special screening of Jaws and a Q&A with its star, Richard Dreyfuss, who reportedly made a number of sexist and transphobic comments.
Appearing at the Cabot theatre in Beverly, Massachusetts on 25 May, Dreyfuss took to the stage in a house dress to a background track of Taylor Swiftâs Love Story, shaking his hips suggestively and brandishing his walking stick like a baseball bat.
He then reportedly took on targets including Barbra Streisand, the parents of trans teenagers and the Academyâs new inclusivity rules.
No transcript of the event has been released, but social media posts suggest that he called Streisand a âgeniusâ but that he didnât listen to her as she was âa woman, and woman shouldnât have that powerâ.
Deadline reports that he also said âyou shouldnât be listening to some 10-year-old who says they want to be a boy instead of a girlâ. The Boston Globe reports that he continued by saying that allowing such young people to transition âwas bad parenting and that someday those kids might change their minds.â
However, a video from the end of the event indicates that many audience members did remain and were highly appreciative of the actor, who cautioned against a decline in critical thinking to considerable applause.
Writing on The Cabotâs Facebook page, one attender said: âWe walked out of his interview tonight along with hundred [sic] of others because of his racist homophobic misogynistic rant.â
Said another: âThis was disgusting. How could the Cabot not have vetted his act better. Apparently (I found out too late), he has a reputation for spewing this kind of racist, homophobic, misogynistic bullcrap.â
On 27 May, the venue issued a statement, saying they were âaware of, and share serious concerns, following the recent event with Richard Dreyfussâ.
They continued: âThe views expressed by Mr Dreyfuss do not reflect the values of inclusivity and respect that we uphold as an organisation. We deeply regret the distress that this has caused to many of our patrons.
âWe regret that an event that was meant to be a conversation to celebrate an iconic movie instead became a platform for political views,â it continued. âWe take full responsibility for the oversight in not anticipating the direction of the conversation and for the discomfort it caused to many patrons.â
The statement concluded: âWe are in active dialogue with our patrons about their experience and are committed to learning from this event how to better enact our mission of entertaining, educating and inspiring our community.â
The Guardian has contacted representatives for Dreyfuss for comment.
In 2023, Dreyfuss took issue with the Academy over its new diversity and inclusion requirements for Oscar contention. He told PBS: âthey make me vomit, because this is an art formâ.
âItâs also a form of commerce,â he continued, âand it makes money. But itâs an art. And no one should be telling me as an artist that I have to give in to the latest, most current idea of what morality is.â
The requirements, he went on to say, were âpatronisingâ, and he cited Laurence Olivierâs 1965 Othello, saying: âHe played a Black man brilliantly.â
âWhat are we risking?â Dreyfuss continued. âAre we really risking hurting peopleâs feelings? You canât legislate that, and you have to let life be life. And Iâm sorry, I donât think that there is a minority or a majority in the country that has to be catered to like that.â
Dreyfuss was the then-youngest-ever performer to win the leading actor Oscar in 1978 for his role in The Goodbye Girl, and was nominated in the same category for 1995âs Mr Hollandâs Opus.
He is best known for his roles in a number of seminal 1970s and 80s classics, including American Graffiti, Jaws, Close Encounters of the Third Kind and Stand By Me.
Donald Trumpâs hush-money trial enters its final stages on Tuesday as closing arguments begin in court.
For weeks, testimony has gripped America and the world amid the prospect that the former US president could be found guilty of the criminal charges. Trump, who is almost certain to secure the Republican presidential nomination, is charged with falsifying business records related to paying the adult film star Stormy Daniels $130,000 for her silence about an alleged sexual liaison.
Prosecutors argue that the payments amount to election interference as Trump was running in the 2016 race for the White House at the time and seeking to cover up a potentially damaging scandal.
But as details of the case and Trumpâs liaison with Daniels have been brought before a Manhattan jury, they have had seemingly little impact on the 2024 race â where Trump still often narrowly leads Joe Biden in head-to-head polls and is performing strongly in the swings states that are crucial to victory.
Trump denies all the charges.
The trial has played out in remarkable scenes where Trump has been in court and largely kept off the campaign trial, except at weekends and some events in and around New York City. Despite admonishments from the court, he has continued to rail against his prosecutors, and Judge Juan Merchan, on social media, labelling the trial as a âwitch huntâ.
Central to the case is the testimony of Trumpâs former lawyer and once-feared fixer Michael Cohen. Cohen gave vital evidence for the role that Trump played in the alleged hush-money scheme, but was also brutally grilled by Trumpâs lawyers for his previous history of lying and his evident dislike of his former boss and desire to see him behind bars.
What weight the jury places on the reliability of Cohenâs testimony is likely to decide the case one way or the other. If found guilty, Trump could face the prospect of jail, though that is mostly seen as unlikely. Any guilty verdict would also almost certainly trigger a lengthy series of appeals.
Trump also faces three other criminal trials: one for trying to sway the 2020 election in Georgia, another for his conduct around the January 6 attack on the Capitol and a third one related to his treatment of sensitive documents after he left the White House. However, all three have been seriously delayed and none are seen as likely to conclude â or even start â before Novemberâs presidential election.
The former head of theMossad, Israelâs foreign intelligence agency, allegedly threatened a chief prosecutor of the international criminal court in a series of secret meetings in which he tried to pressure her into abandoning a war crimes investigation, the Guardian can reveal.
Yossi Cohenâs covert contacts with the ICCâs then prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, took place in the years leading up to her decision to open a formal investigation into alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity in occupied Palestinian territories.
That investigation, launched in 2021, culminated last week when Bensoudaâs successor, Karim Khan, announced that he was seeking an arrest warrant for the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, over the countryâs conduct in its war in Gaza.
The prosecutorâs decision to apply to the ICCâs pre-trial chamber for arrest warrants for Netanyahu and his defence minister, Yoav Gallant, alongside three Hamas leaders, is an outcome Israelâs military and political establishment has long feared.
Cohenâs personal involvement in the operation against the ICC took place when he was the director of the Mossad. His activities were authorised at a high level and justified on the basis the court posed a threat of prosecutions against military personnel, according to a senior Israeli official.
Another Israeli source briefed on the operation against Bensouda said the Mossadâs objective was to compromise the prosecutor or enlist her as someone who would cooperate with Israelâs demands.
A third source familiar with the operation said Cohen was acting as Netanyahuâs âunofficial messengerâ.
Cohen, who was one of Netanyahuâs closest allies at the time and is emerging as a political force in his own right in Israel, personally led the Mossadâs involvement in an almost decade-long campaign by the country to undermine the court.
Four sources confirmed that Bensouda had briefed a small group of senior ICC officials about Cohenâs attempts to sway her, amid concerns about the increasingly persistent and threatening nature of his behaviour.
Three of those sources were familiar with Bensoudaâs formal disclosures to the ICC about the matter. They said she revealed Cohen had put pressure on her on several occasions not to proceed with a criminal investigation in the ICCâs Palestine case.
According to accounts shared with ICC officials, he is alleged to have told her: âYou should help us and let us take care of you. You donât want to be getting into things that could compromise your security or that of your family.â
One individual briefed on Cohenâs activities said he had used âdespicable tacticsâ against Bensouda as part of an ultimately unsuccessful effort to intimidate and influence her. They likened his behaviour to âstalkingâ.
The Mossad also took a keen interest in Bensoudaâs family members and obtained transcripts of secret recordings of her husband, according to two sources with direct knowledge of the situation. Israeli officials then attempted to use the material to discredit the prosecutor.
The revelations about Cohenâs operation form part of a forthcoming investigation by the Guardian, the Israeli-Palestinian publication +972 Magazine and the Hebrew-language outlet Local Call, revealing how multiple Israel intelligence agencies ran a covert âwarâ against the ICC for almost a decade.
Contacted by the Guardian, a spokesperson for Israelâs prime ministerâs office said: âThe questions forwarded to us are replete with many false and unfounded allegations meant to hurt the state of Israel.â Cohen did not respond to a request for comment. Bensouda declined to comment.
In the Mossadâs efforts to influence Bensouda, Israel received support from an unlikely ally: Joseph Kabila, the former president of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, who played a supporting role in the plot.
Revelations about the Mossadâs efforts to influence Bensouda come as the current chief prosecutor, Khan, warned in recent days that he would not hesitate to prosecute âattempts to impede, intimidate or improperly influenceâ ICC officials.
According to legal experts and former ICC officials, efforts by the Mossad to threaten or put pressure on Bensouda could amount to offences against the administration of justice under article 70 of the Rome statute, the treaty that established the court.
A spokesperson for the ICC would not to say whether Khan had reviewed his predecessorâs disclosures about her contacts with Cohen, but said Khan had never met or spoken to the head of the Mossad.
While the spokesperson declined to comment on specific allegations, they said Khanâs office had been subjected to âseveral forms of threats and communications that could be viewed as attempts to unduly influence its activitiesâ.
Bensouda sparks ire of Israel
Khanâs decision to seek arrest warrants against Netanyahu and Gallant last week marked the first time the court had taken action against leaders of a country closely allied with the US and Europe. Their alleged crimes â which include directing attacks on civilians and using starvation as a method of warfare â relate to the eight-month war in Gaza.
The ICC case, however, dates back to 2015, when Bensouda decided to open a preliminary examination into the situation in Palestine. Short of a full investigation, her inquiry was tasked with making an initial assessment of allegations of crimes by individuals in Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
Bensoudaâs decision sparked the ire of Israel, which feared its citizens could be prosecuted for their involvement in operations in Palestinian territories. Israel had long been open about its opposition to the ICC, refusing to recognise its authority. Israeli ministers intensified their attacks on the court and even vowed to try to dismantle it.
Soon after commencing the preliminary examination, Bensouda and her senior prosecutors began to receive warnings that Israeli intelligence was taking a close interest in their work.
According to two sources, there were even suspicions among senior ICC officials that Israel had cultivated sources within the courtâs prosecution division, known as the office of the prosecutor. Another later recalled that although the Mossad âdidnât leave its signatureâ, it was an assumption the agency was behind some of the activity officials had been made aware of.
Only a small group of senior figures at the ICC, however, were informed that the director of the Mossad had personally approached the chief prosecutor.
A career spy, Cohen enjoys a reputation in Israelâs intelligence community as an effective recruiter of foreign agents. He was a loyal and powerful ally of the prime minister at the time, having been appointed as director of the Mossad by Netanyahu in 2016 after working for several years at his side as his national security adviser.
As the head of the national security council between 2013 and 2016, Cohen oversaw the body that, according to multiple sources, began to coordinate a multiagency effort against the ICC once Bensouda opened the preliminary inquiry in 2015.
Cohenâs first interaction with Bensouda appears to have taken place at the Munich security conference in 2017, when the Mossad director introduced himself to the prosecutor in a brief exchange. After this encounter, Cohen subsequently âambushedâ Bensouda in a bizarre episode in a Manhattan hotel suite, according to multiple sources familiar with the incident.
Bensouda was in New York in 2018 on an official visit, and was meeting Kabila, then the president of the DRC, at his hotel. The pair had met several times before in relation to the ICCâs ongoing investigation into alleged crimes committed in his country.
The meeting, however, appears to have been a setup. At a certain point, after Bensoudaâs staff were asked to leave the room, Cohen entered, according to three sources familiar with the meeting. The surprise appearance, they said, caused alarm to Bensouda and a group of ICC officials travelling with her.
Why Kabila helped Cohen is unclear, but ties between the two men were revealed in 2022 by the Israeli publication TheMarker, which reported on a series of secretive trips the Mossad director made to the DRC throughout 2019.
According to the publication, Cohenâs trips, during which he sought Kabilaâs advice âon an issue of interest to Israelâ, and which were almost certainly approved by Netanyahu, were highly unusual and had astonished senior figures within the intelligence community.
Reporting on the DRC meetings in 2022, the Israeli broadcaster Kan 11 said Cohenâs trips related to an âextremely controversial planâ and cited official sources who described it as âone of Israelâs most sensitive secretsâ.
Multiple sources have confirmed to the Guardian the trips were partly related to the ICC operation, and Kabila, who left office in January 2019, played an important supporting role in the Mossadâs plot against Bensouda. Kabila did not respond to a request for comment.
âThreats and manipulationâ
After the surprise meeting with Kabila and Bensouda in New York, Cohen repeatedly phoned the chief prosecutor and sought meetings with her, three sources recalled. According to two people familiar with the situation, at one stage Bensouda asked Cohen how he had obtained her phone number, to which he replied: âDid you forget what I do for a living?â
Initially, the sources explained, the intelligence chief âtried to build a relationshipâ with the prosecutor and played âgood copâ in an attempt to charm her. The initial objective, they said, appeared to have been to enlist Bensouda into cooperating with Israel.
Over time, however, the tone of Cohenâs contact changed and he began to use a range of tactics, including âthreats and manipulationâ, an individual briefed on the meetings said. This prompted Bensouda to inform a small group of senior ICC officials about his behaviour.
In December 2019, the prosecutor announced that she had grounds to open a full criminal investigation into allegations of war crimes in Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem. However, she held off launching it, deciding first to request a ruling from the ICCâs pre-trial chamber to confirm the court did indeed have jurisdiction over Palestine.
Multiple sources said it was at this stage, as the judges considered the case, that Cohen escalated his attempts to persuade Bensouda not to pursue a full investigation in the event the judges gave her the green light.
Between late 2019 and early 2021, the sources said, there were at least three encounters between Cohen and Bensouda, all initiated by the spy chief. His behaviour is said to have become increasingly concerning to ICC officials.
A source familiar with Bensoudaâs accounts of the final two meetings with Cohen said he had raised questions about her security, and that of her family, in a manner that led her to believe he was threatening her.
On one occasion, Cohen is said to have shown Bensouda copies of photographs of her husband, which were taken covertly when the couple were visiting London. On another, according to sources, Cohen suggested to the prosecutor that a decision to open a full investigation would be detrimental to her career.
Four sources familiar with the situation said it was around the same time that Bensouda and other ICC officials discovered that information was circulating among diplomatic channels relating to her husband, who worked as an international affairs consultant.
Between 2019 and 2020, the Mossad had been actively seeking compromising information on the prosecutor and took an interest in her family members.
The spy agency obtained a cache of material, including transcripts of an apparent sting operation against her husband.
It is unclear who conducted the operation, or precisely what he is alleged to have said in the recordings. One possibility is that he had been targeted by the intelligence agency or by private actors of another country that wanted leverage over the ICC. Another possibility is the information was fabricated.
Once in the possession of Israel, however, the material was used by its diplomats in an unsuccessful attempt to undermine the chief prosecutor. But according to multiple sources, Israel failed to convince its allies of the significance of the material.
Three sources briefed on the information shared by Israel at a diplomatic level described the efforts as part of an unsuccessful âsmear campaignâ against Bensouda. âThey went after Fatou,â one source said, but it had âno impactâ on the prosecutorâs work.
The diplomatic efforts were part of a coordinated effort by the governments of Netanyahu and Donald Trump in the US to place public and private pressure on the prosecutor and her staff.
Between 2019 and 2020, in an unprecedented decision, the Trump administration imposed visa restrictions and sanctions on the chief prosecutor. The move was in retaliation to Bensoudaâs pursuit of a separate investigation into war crimes in Afghanistan, allegedly committed by the Taliban and both Afghan and US military personnel.
However, Mike Pompeo, then US secretary of state, linked the sanctions package to the Palestine case. âItâs clear the ICC is only putting Israel in [its] crosshairs for nakedly political purposes,â he said.
Months later, he accused Bensouda, without citing any evidence, of having âengaged in corrupt acts for her personal benefitâ.
The US sanctions were rescinded after President Joe Biden entered the White House.
In February 2021, the ICCâs pre-trial chamber issued a ruling confirming the ICC had jurisdiction in occupied Palestinian territories. The following month, Bensouda announced the opening of the criminal investigation.
âIn the end, our central concern must be for the victims of crimes, both Palestinian and Israeli, arising from the long cycle of violence and insecurity that has caused deep suffering and despair on all sides,â she said at the time.
Bensouda completed her nine-year term at the ICC three months later, leaving it to her successor, Khan, to take up the investigation. It was only after the Hamas attacks on Israel on 7 October and the ensuing war on Gaza that the ICCâs investigation gained renewed urgency, culminating in last weekâs request for arrest warrants.
It was the conclusion Israelâs political, military and intelligence establishment had feared. âThe fact they chose the head of Mossad to be the prime ministerâs unofficial messenger to [Bensouda] was to intimidate, by definition,â said a source briefed on Cohenâs operation. âIt failed.â
No elected Tory MPs have been rated as voting positively on climate issues, under a survey of parliamentary voting patterns since the Conservatives took power in 2010.
Only a single sitting Conservative was rated as “good” on climate votes in the ranking, but that was Lisa Cameron, the MP for East Kilbride, who defected from the Scottish National Party in October.
The analysis of voting patterns by VoteClimate, an organisation set up to inform UK voters on how to cast their ballots for maximum impact on climate policy, examined all of the votes in parliament since 2010 on energy, transport, finance, housing and other issues that have an impact on the climate crisis.
Labour and the Liberal Democrats dominated the list of MPs rated “very good” on the climate, for their votes on a wide range of legislation, from fracking to the burning of upland peat. MPs were awarded points for their positive votes, minus points for those that had a negative impact on the climate, and this was divided by the number of votes in which they could have taken part, in order to arrive at a final score.
VoteClimate is offering to help voters confused by parties’ environmental policies to navigate the UK’s first-past-the-post electoral system so as to maximise their positive impact on climate policies. When the parties’ manifestos are published, the site will rate the policies they contain against climate objectives.
Ben Horton, the founder of VoteClimate, told the Guardian: “We want to be able to tell people which party will reduce carbon dioxide the most, based on their manifesto.”
That information can then be mapped on to each seat. On the VoteClimate website, voters can see the results of the last election for their constituency, and a set of projected results for the current election based on previous results, boundary changes and opinion polls.
In this way, voters can check whether their seat is a two-way or three-way marginal, and judge how their vote can have the most impact, based on the policies of the parties most likely to win.
By making it easier for people to compare the climate policies of each party, Horton hopes to demonstrate the potential impact of people coordinating their votes on what he believes is a key priority for a large slice of the electorate. “We want to encourage parties to have more ambitious climate policies,” he said.
VoteClimate is also examining the social media posts of more than a thousand prospective parliamentary candidates to unearth any climate-denying opinions or views that may run counter to their parties’ stance. “This will be really useful, as if candidates come out canvassing, you will be able to see what they’ve actually said in the past,” said Horton.
So far, he has found candidates for the Reform party responsible for hundreds of social media posts that opposed net-zero policies, or cast doubt on climate science.
VoteClimate, which has about 4,000 members, has been supported on social media by high-profile green figures including the Green party peer Jenny Jones, the scientist Bill McGuire and the naturalist Chris Packham.
Shaun Spiers, executive director of the Green Alliance thinktank, said all parties should recognise that the climate and environment are key concerns for voters.
“The message for all parties is that voters care about the environment. Unless the major parties start campaigning on the environment, they will inevitably lose votes to those that are making it a major priority,” he warned.
A spokesperson for Labour said: “The choice at this election is clear. Either we have a Conservative government that pollutes our rivers with toxic sewage, is led by and funded by climate deniers, and fails to meet our climate and nature targets, [or] a Labour government that will restore nature, deliver the largest investment in clean energy in our history, so we can cut bills for families, make Britain energy independent, and tackle the climate crisis to protect our homes for our children and grandchildren.”
Joe Biden and Donald Trump marked the Memorial Day national holiday honoring Americaâs war dead with jarringly divergent messages that promised to foretell the forthcoming US presidential election campaign as a contest of sharply contrasting characters.
In a ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery, Biden paid tribute to the fallen as heroes who sacrificed themselves in the service of American democracy and ideals. Meanwhile, Trump, taking to his Truth Social site, took a very different tack â bestowing holiday wishes on those he branded âhuman scumâ and accused them of trying to destroy the country.
Biden and Trump are neck and neck in national polling for the 2024 presidential election, with Trump often narrowly ahead. Trump is, however, polling more strongly in the key swing states that will decide the contest.
The targets of Trumpâs ire on Memorial Day included the judges who presided over his various trials and a writer who won more than $80m in damages after accusing him of rape.
While his predecessor and 2024 opponent fulminated on social media, Biden â accompanied by Lloyd Austin, the US defense secretary, General CQ Brown, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, and Vice-President Kamala Harris â visited the the tomb of the unknown soldier at Arlington, final resting place for revered military heroes and US presidents.
Identifying his own family with the notion of national sacrifice, Biden highlighted his son Beau, attributing his death from brain cancer nine years ago this week to his exposure to burn pits while serving in the military in Iraq.
âThe hurt is still real, still raw,â Biden said, after describing the âblack holeâ that opens up for family members who hear the news of the death of a relative serving in wartime.
âI can still hear him saying, âitâs my duty dad, itâs my duty. Duty â that was the code my son lived by ⦠the creed the generation of service members have followed into battle on the grounds around us by fallen heroes.â
Bidenâs words seemed calculated to contrast with previous comments attributed to Trump about fallen members of the military, whom he is said to have derided as âlosersâ and âsuckersâ for allowing themselves to be killed in battle.
If so, the glaring disparity was further emphasised by Trumpâs Memorial Day outburst, which reprised previous holiday volleys of abuse aimed at his enemies and opponents.
âHappy Memorial Day to All, including the Human Scum that is working so hard to destroy our Once Great Country, & to the Radical Left, Trump Hating Federal Judge in New York that presided over, get this, TWO separate trials, that awarded a woman, who I never met before (a quick handshake at a celebrity event, 25 years ago, doesnât count!), 91 MILLION DOLLARS for âDEFAMATION,ââ he wrote.
That comment was aimed at Lewis Kaplan, the judge in a civil trial brought by the writer E Jean Carroll, who alleged that Trump raped and then defamed her.
âShe didnât know when the so-called event took place â sometime in the 1990s â never filed a police report, didnât have to produce the dress that she threatened me with (it proved negative)â¦â Trump continued in reference to Carroll.
He then turned his attention to Judge Arthur Engoron, who ruled in a civil lawsuit last year that the former president and presumptive 2024 Republican nominee had committed fraud by overvaluing his assets â and to Judge Juan Merchan, who is in charge of Trumpâs current hush money trial in which he is accused of falsifying documents to cover up an affair with a porn actor.
He referred to Engoron as âthe [New York] state wacko judge who fined me 500 Million Dollars (UNDER APPEAL) for DOING NOTHING WRONGâ before adding: âNow for Merchan!â
Prosecutors and lawyers are scheduled to present their closing arguments on Tuesday in the trial, which has been running for four weeks and in which Trump faces 34 counts of paying money to an adult film star before the 2016 presidential election, which he won over Hillary Clinton.
The framing of the forthcoming election campaign as a competition about personal character is generally thought to be beneficial to Biden, who is consistently seen to be lagging behind Trump in polls quizzing voters about who has the greatest competence over economic affairs.
Police have deployed divers and a blood detection dog in the search for a mother and her newborn baby after finding evidence she may have given birth by a Sydney riverbank.
A resident walking his dog found what police believe to be a placenta and umbilical cord next to the Cooks River at Earlwood in the city’s south-west on Monday afternoon. Police said tests on the organs had revealed them to be human.
Serious concerns were held for the welfare of the child and mother and detectives established a crime scene.
Officers urged the mother to attend her nearest hospital to receive urgent care.
Supt Christine McDonald said lights had been brought in to allow the launch of a large-scale search on Monday night. The search resumed on Tuesday morning with police divers “searching the mangroves and the water’s edge”.
McDonald said it would “take some time to work through the scene” as the placenta and umbilical cord were found amid mangroves and “it is muddy down there”.
A blood detection dog also arrived on the scene on Tuesday morning after police identified an area needing “further forensic examination”.
An area near Lang Road remained taped off on Tuesday and investigators were also searching through a grassy area outside the Canterbury rugby union club.
“Obviously our search will hopefully identify what has taken place; whether the delivery of that child occurred at this location or another location is yet to be determined,” she said. “I ask anyone with information to contact Crime Stoppers.
“It’s very important and it’s extreme urgency we find the mother and the child as soon as we can. We ask she goes to a hospital. We will be contacting hospitals.”
The Cooks River flows from Yagoona in Sydney’s outer south-west and runs into Botany Bay at Kyeemagh, 23km away.
Anyone within the vicinity of Lang Road, Wardell Road, Ewen Park and Tennent Parade on Monday who may have seen a woman in distress was urged to come forward.
“Any information is critical,” McDonald said, with police also appealing for CCTV footage. “I am deeply concerned for the safety and mental health of the mother and also for the safety of her baby.
“There is no judgment. They need to know we are concerned for them. We are wanting to know they are safe.”
Police said at this stage there was no evidence the baby had been harmed.
The placenta and umbilical cord was sent for testing on Tuesday morning to try to establish the gestation period, the gender of the child and how long the placenta and umbilical cord were at the river.
The NSW health minister, Ryan Park, said his “heart absolutely goes out” to the mother and child and repeated the advice from police – that she should attend hospital.
“You’re not in trouble, you don’t have to talk to police. The only thing I ask that you do is make your way to one of our hospitals so that we can care for you and your baby as quickly as possible,” he said.
“I don’t think anyone could even begin to imagine what this mother is going through. I certainly can’t.”
Pope Francis allegedly used an offensive slur during a discussion with bishops over admitting homosexual men into seminaries, several Italian newspapers have reported.
The pontiff, 87, is alleged to have made the remark during a closed-door meeting with bishops in Rome last week, where they were reportedly discussing whether out gay men should be admitted to Catholic seminaries, where priests are trained, a topic that the Italian bishops conference (CIE) is said to have been pondering for some time.
During the discussion, when one of the bishops asked Francis what he should do, the pope reportedly reiterated his objection to admitting gay men, saying that while it was important to embrace everyone, it was likely that a gay person could risk leading a double life. He is then alleged to have added that there was already too much “frociaggine”, a vulgar Italian word that roughly translates at “faggotness”, in some seminaries.
The story was first reported by the political gossip website Dagospia, before being covered by the Italian dailies La Repubblica and Corriere della Sera, and the news agency Adnkronos.
La Repubblica, Corriere and Adnkronos quoted unnamed bishops, who said that the pontiff meant the derogatory term as a “joke”, and that those around him were surprised and perplexed by the alleged slur. One bishop told Corriere della Sera that the pontiff might not have been aware that the term was offensive.
La Repubblica and Corriere reported that there was a meeting among bishops in November during which it was decided that homosexual men could be admitted to seminaries, so long as they did not practise their sexuality, but that the move was ultimately stopped by the pope.
Since he was elected pope in 2013, Francis has sought to adopt a more inclusive tone towards the LGBTQ+ community in his public statements, much to the disdain of conservative cardinals.
Soon after becoming pope, he famously said in response to a question about gay priests: “Who am I to judge?”
He approved a ruling in December allowing priests to bless unmarried and same-sex couples in what was a significant change of position for the Catholic church.
However, he has been clear about not allowing gay people to join the clergy. In an interview in 2018 he said he was “concerned” about what he describes as the “serious issue” of homosexuality and that being gay is a “fashion” to which the clergy is susceptible.
“In our societies it even seems that homosexuality is fashionable, and that mentality, in some way, also influences the life of the church,” he said at the time.
The Roman Catholic church’s position is that homosexual acts are sinful. A decree on training for priests in 2016 stressed the obligation of sexual abstinence, as well as barring gay men and those who support “gay culture” from holy orders.
A spokesperson for the Vatican did not respond to a request for comment.
An 81-year-old man who investigators say terrorized a southern California neighborhood for years with a slingshot has been arrested, police said.
While conducting an investigation, detectives âlearned that during the course of 9-10 years, dozens of citizens were being victimized by a serial slingshot shooterâ, the Asuza police department said in a statement.
The man is suspected of breaking windows and car windshields and of narrowly missing people with ball bearings shot from a slingshot, the statement said. No injuries were reported.
The man was arrested on Thursday after officers served a search warrant and found a slingshot and ball bearings at his home in Asuza, about 25 miles (40km) east of Los Angeles, police said.
The Azusa police Lt Jake Bushey said on Saturday that detectives learned that most of the ball bearings were shot from the suspectâs backyard.
âWeâre not aware of any kind of motive other than just malicious mischief,â Bushey told the Southern California News Group.
The man was scheduled to appear in court on Tuesday.
An Israeli airstrike that caused a huge blaze at a tented area for displaced people in Rafah has killed 45 people, medics have said, with images of charred and dismembered children prompting an outcry from global leaders and putting ceasefire talks in jeopardy.
Bombing overnight that the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said targeted senior Hamas militants in a precision strike appears to have ignited fires that spread quickly through tents and makeshift accommodation, overwhelming a nearby field hospital operated by the International Committee of the Red Cross and overstretched local hospitals.
“We pulled out people who were in an unbearable state,” Mohammed Abuassa, who rushed to the scene in the north-western neighbourhood of Tel al-Sultan, told the Associated Press. “We pulled out children who were in pieces. We pulled out young and elderly people. The fire in the camp was unreal.”
The health ministry in the Hamas-controlled area said about half of the dead were women, children and older adults. Barefoot children wandered around the smoking wreckage on Monday as searches for the dead continued and mourning families prepared to bury their loved ones.
Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said in parliament that “something unfortunately went tragically wrong” with the airstrike. “We are investigating the incident and will reach conclusions, because this is our policy,” he said.
The US, Israel’s staunchest ally and weapons supplier, described the images from the aftermath as devastating.
The strike, one of the deadliest single incidents in the eight-month war to date, came two days after the international court of justice in The Hague, which arbitrates between states, ordered Israel to stop its operation in Rafah immediately.
More than 85% of the Palestinian territory’s population had sought shelter in the area having fled fighting elsewhere, and a million people have been forced to move again since Israel’s ground operation began on 6 May. Israeli ground troops have so far probed Rafah’s southern and eastern outskirts, rather than its overcrowded centre.
Aid deliveries have slowed to a trickle, with the Rafah and nearby Kerem Shalom crossings effectively blocked.
International censure of Israel’s war against Hamas has grown steadily in tandem with the death toll and humanitarian crisis in the strip, but Israeli officials have repeatedly said that a ground operation in Rafah, where it believes Hamas’s leadership and four battalions of fighters are camped out with Israeli hostages, is necessary for “total victory”.
Friday’s order from the ICJ is binding, but not enforceable. Several countries called on Israel to obey the judges’s 13-2 majority decision in the wake of the Rafah strike.
Qatar, a key mediator between Israel and Hamas in attempts to secure a ceasefire and the release of hostages, said the Rafah casualties would complicate the protracted negotiations. The Israeli daily Haaretz reported later on Monday that Hamas had decided to pull out of the latest proposed talks over what its senior leadership described as a massacre.
Neighbouring Egypt and Jordan, which made peace with Israel decades ago, also condemned the Rafah strike.
Relations between Egypt and Israel, cool at the best of times, have reached a nadir since the Rafah operation began. The situation deteriorated further on Monday after the Israeli military confirmed there had been an exchange of fire between Israeli and Egyptian soldiers in the Rafah crossing area in which at least one member of Egypt’s security forces was killed. Both countries’ militaries are reviewing the incident.
France, a European ally of Israel, said it was outraged by the Rafah strike. “These operations must stop,” the country’s president, Emmanuel Macron, posted on X. “There are no safe areas in Rafah for Palestinian civilians. I call for full respect for international law and an immediate ceasefire.”
The EU’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, posted: “Horrified by news coming out of Rafah on Israeli strikes killing dozens of displaced persons, including small children. I condemn this in the strongest terms.”
Italy’s defence minister, Guido Crosetto, said that bombings such as Sunday night’s would have long-standing repercussions for Israel. Speaking to Sky TG24, he said: “Israel with this choice is spreading hatred, rooting hatred that will involve their children and grandchildren. I would have preferred another decision.”
The head of the African Union Commission, Moussa Faki Mahamat, said: “The state of Israel continues to violate international law with impunity and in contempt of an international court of justice ruling … ordering an end to its military action in Rafah.”
After criticism of the Rafah strike, the IDF said it had not anticipated civilian casualties, and had bombed an area outside the latest “evacuation zone” to where Palestinians have been ordered to move, although that claim appeared to contradict a previous “safe zone” map from 22 May.
The bombing had killed Hamas’s chief of staff for the West Bank and another senior official responsible for deadly attacks on Israelis, the IDF said.
About 1,200 Israelis were killed and another 250 taken hostage in Hamas’s 7 October attack that triggered the latest conflict. According to the local health ministry, more than 36,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s retaliatory operation, which has left desperate civilians without healthcare, food or water and reduced most of the coastal territory to ruins.
After a week in which Israel’s global standing had plummetted, Sunday’s attack attracted more attention than usual in the Hebrew-language media, which has often avoided daily reporting on the scenes of death and destruction in Gaza.
Several rightwing Israeli journalists celebrated the Rafah attack in appearances on Israeli television and on Twitter, likening it to this week’s Jewish bonfire festival, Lag B’Omer. Commentator Yinon Dromi retweeted another user’s post which showed a fire in Rafah, adding her own: “Happy Holidays.”
Hostilities also flared on Israel’s northern border on Monday. The powerful Lebanese group Hezbollah said it had launched a salvo of rockets at Israeli territory in response to a deadly Israeli strike outside a hospital in southern Lebanon earlier in the day.
Israel has been locked in a battle of attrition with the Iranian-backed militia since 8 October, when Hezbollah began firing missiles at the Jewish state to aid Hamas.